The Omaha m ve.. i , i , -,-':' The Ruins of Justinla's and Theodora's Palace oxi Ihe Sea of Marmora. Constantinople. Auk. ST. 'HEN Lieutenant Sidney D. Hancock, flying over th Turkish defenses of the Dardenelles recently, dropped ahell on tha Hymeneal Talace of Justinian, where lies burled the Empress Theodora, a shiver went w Turkey. For over the emplra of tha Crescent hangs tha prophecy of the famous Queen: ''When the foes of my faith come conquering, they shall know my grave and let me - sleep; When the friends of my faith come conquering, they shall know not, and move me from my bed." To the English lines has leaked the story from the Turks that the English aviator's bomb fell near the foot of Theodora's tomb, break ing the effigy In half, so that the splendid wanton now sits balN upright, staring with sightless eyes for the coming of the Christiana "of her faith." The Palace of Joy In which Theodora lived for almost three years before she was successful In manipulating the passage of the law which enabled Justinian to marry her and make her empress, was built at her request. A native of Cyprus, that Island of olive groves circled by the blue waters of the Mediterranean, Theodora loved the sea. To please her whim, the great JuBtinia built this palace . on the very extremity of a point of land Jutting out Into the 8ea of Marmora, just before It narrows In to the Dardanelles. Two Summers, at least, after she became empress, Theodora spent there, and Its name was changed to the Hymeneal Pal ace. Then the former circus girl thought Us beauties not sufficiently magnificent for her, and she lived in Summertime thereafter In a pal ace built by the emperor on the Asiatic aide of the Bosphorua. The columns of the Hymeneal Palace, stepping daintily down Into the waters of the Sea of Marmora, have made an Ideal landing place for Turkish troops and munitions. As a dwelling place, the palace has long been a ruin, but most of the columns still remain and It Is not all unroofed. Rumor tells that beneath the pal aceas, indeed, beneath every pal ace where Theodora made her home are many underground passages and dungeons. It is known t-at these have been used as a store house for explosives by the Otto man forces defending that GalU polls peninsula. It was these stores that the British aviator was trying to destroy. According to his own report, his own shell exploded, do ing considerable damage, but the underground stores, In dungeons carved out of the solid rock, were not detonated by the shock. Owing to Its position, the Hymen eal Palace is safe from destruction by the allied fleets aa long as the shelling is from the side of the Aegean Sea. Should, however, the Boapbonis be forced and the garri son entrenched on the peninsula be attacked from the Sea of Marmora side. It Is probable that the Hy meneal Palace would be blown to atoms, as It Is In the direct line of fire from the Turkish forts com manding that inlaud sea. It is of a character with the extraordinary force of Theodora' 4 ft::? - 3 i t The Empress Theodora life that over thirteen hundred fear after ahe has passed away her memory should still be power ful. History records no stranger life thsn hers, raised from a ribald clown to the throne of the llyxan tine Emperors, the august mistress of the world. So marvellous was her personal force, so unbridled her passions and ao vindictive was her revenge that Procopius of Caessrea, her backstairs bi ographer, declares that she waa demon rather than Queen. There la a shuddering horror In that mediaeval Greek relic of Pro coplua called Anecdotes," which bears out the general belief of her time that there was something in human in Theodora. No student of Byxautlce hlutory can fall to Sunday Bee Magazine V. i tl. 'VJ XT ' ... i C f T rom the Painting by Constans. note the fear of her that swayed the whole world In the century In which vhe lived. There Is some thing ao characteristic of Theodora lu the figure of the broken effigy, as reported half-sitting, listening eagerly to the fighting overhead and the groans of dying and wounded that it creates instant belief. Daughter of an animal-trainer, Acacius, the "keeper of the beara," Theodora made her first entrance into the spotlight, soon after her father's death. All the political Tings" and all the tnureh fac tions were allied to the "blue" or the green" parties of the circus, the colors being worn by char ioteers In the races. For over two hundred years bitter party rivalry " -s .. .)' i,,.,', ... J -;.. c ' . . I f ;. . . , - v Ay':. ' ... . , (,.., ; - j- ' . I -'f .....:,... .UZ'r.Zji- ' -4 'J '.' J"-f.v -..!:; ??"v.' ...j,. 'v i ...fl-.y. ' 1 s. Copyright, ms, atfi 2 5 ' ' i,;':rt'.- !f n: .i --Vim v. - v , , '-J-arJ . v rv r V ustinian, the Great Emperor, tb Btr CompAoy. Uret Britain - . ; ;.. ;.--: r .y: -; ....... ' ; -y .r:. . .'. - . . ..-. "---v.-.. , ? -it.- r.,. ..... r " f- -r - . .. -4 V '. . y ' :y-. .-y ; -y- i-r'- ... -.. -i . . .. by The Bomb of an English Airman n m . A Mosaic of the Empress Theodora in the Hal AO Ire fho M 44-1 rrvr Church of St. Vitalis, Havenna, Supposed lJlCcUlO tllC JCjiilgy to Be an Authentic Portrait. of the Great Theodora in Justinian's Ruined Palace and Gives New Life to a Strange Legend of One of History's Most Picturesque Women In sports waa the menace of the Byzantine Empire. Klfcgs were made and unmade, Popes seated and expelled by the influence of a "blue" or "green" favorite of the circus. Theodora's father was a "green." As soon as he died, Acaclus's , widow hastily married another animal-trainer, so as to keep the circus position in the family. But a more eager claimant had pulled wires even faster, and when Theo dora's mother applied she was Informed that the post was already awarded. Accordingly, at the next exhibition the widow paraded in front of the grand stand with her three daughters, aged thirteen, eleven and five years, behind her, the girls wearing the minimum of clothing prescribed by the some what lax rules of the circus. The elder sister at once was given by the "blues" a small part in the pantomime, and before she was fourteen her support was as sured by admirers. Theodora, after only a few months as an assistant to her sister, branched out for herself. She became a buffoon, or clown, her extreme youth excusing more audacious performances that even that loose time would usually tolerate. Even her worst enemies admitted that ahe was screamingly funny and her unprintable coarseness waa forgiven for this reason. At the age of seventeen she de clared that she was tired of the life of Constantinople and accom panied Ecebolus, Governor of the province of Ethiopia, to his capi tal There she remained for three years, when ve dismissed her, loaded with Jewels. Ills accusa tion was that ahe was too "fire hot In soul to be only a woman." The Ethiopians believed her to be a mere panther. Theodora returned home by easy stages, travelling through Asia Minor and making conquests wher ever she went. When at last she returned to Constantinople she was twenty-two years old, pos sessed of great riches and at the height of her attractions. rrocoplus, who has no words vile enough by which to call her, -- v .. - Who Warned the Circus Glri, RljhU Kti.tTil " v. - . cannot help but praise her beauty. He has a little fling at her by saying that she looked unhealthy, but admits that her marvellous eyes haunted a man forever if he had seen them close to him only once. "Eyes that eat up the face," he called them. She was small, dark, and radiated femininity like a spell. The only remaining pic ture of her, a mosaic in the church of St. Vitalis, Ravena, does not show her to be so beautiful, ac cording fo modern standards, but It must be remembered that mosalo does not lend Itself to portraiture. When she returned to Constan tinople, Theodora sent for Bell sarius, the commander-in-chief, whom she had met in Asia. The great General came on the Instant as did every man to whom Theo dora called and the old friendship was resumed. Through Belisarius, Theodora met Justinian, the Em peror. To meet Theodora was to become ensnared. Two weeks later the circus girl took up her residence in the Imperial palace. A friend of Theodora named An tonina was introduced to Beli sarius to compensate him for his loss, and she made the famous General a faithful and devoted wife. Although Justinian was so serl-ous-mlnded and uninipassloned a man that It was a common saying that he had "missed youth on the way to manhood," the lure of Theodora held him fast. From the day that she set foot In the pal ace the same chain of strange and demoniac events began which had haunted Ecebolus. The cords tightened closer and closer around Justinian. But there could be no marriage, for the law forbade any one of noble birth, or holding ex alted rank, to marry any woman of known dissolute life. Theodora persuaded first the em peror, then the leaders of the "blue," to annul this law, and short ly afterwards she was married to Justinian with great pomp and dis play. Not content with that, soon after she was made co-equal with him as Empress of the Roman Em pire in her own right. w,y ,.- w.. - .! Preparing lib Famous Code of Page With the reins of power in her hand, Theodora showed true great ness. Though her enemies might plot against her, the Empress al ways was the strongest Her knowledge seemed nothing less than supernatural. Scores of people declared that they had seen a fa miliar spirit at her elbow. It was known that Justinian was continual ly haunted by a shadowy clawed creature. Night after night he paced the Imperial palace at Constantinople with this Evil Thing whispering behind him, while Theodora was sunk In a strange white-faced sleep. Evil as that dark shadow may have been, Its counsels were not. The reign of Justinian Is marked in history by some of the finest re sults of the first millennium. The great code of laws, the "Pandects," and the "Institutes," were planned In those haunted cogitations. The demon may have whispered plans of extortion and extreme taxation, but save for the extravagances of Theodora the money was wisely spent. Marvellous buildings sprang up throughout the Byzan tine Empire, even the great Church of St. Sophia being the work of Justinian. At last came the plague. One out of every six persons in Con stantinople died. Both Justinian and Theodora sickened, and it was long before they evercame the in fection. But "people, like nations, never quite recover" from the plague, and Theodora grew weaker. Three years later she died from a cancer that developed from a plague spot. Wrapped in gold, her body was laid In state in the Trl clinion. Just on the point of land where the Dardanelles widens into the Sea of Marmora, the ruins of the Hy meneal Palace stand, those ruins rent apart by the bomb of the British aviator. And Theodora waits, unknowing whether the Cross or the Crescent shall sur mount the great Church of St. So phia that Justinian built In honor of the circus girl who became Em press and Mistress of the World. Law with Ilia Adrlaor uviBWE 6