Justinian was still proto-Roman. Cataphracts were landed nobility from Asia Minor, and infantry were usually farmers or unemployed city folk who volunteered. I believe there were occasional infusions of better troops by other means, like levies of Isuarian hillmen or Bulgarian archers. They went to the theme system because it increased the number of quality troops they could levy.HemlockGrey wrote:How exactly did the Empire levy and equip troops in this era? I know that from the reign of Heraclius forward the territories were organized into feudal themes which had to supply X number of troops, but how did they do it in the Justinian era?
EDIT:
Looking at the records, you really get a sense of a real manpower shortage. Belisarius stands out. To defend the capital city from the mob, he can only get a few thousand men. To attack Persia? Same story. Taking North Africa? 10-15 thousand men, more or less. Taking Italy? Shortchanged again. The last battle of his career, a life or death defense of Thrace from the Bulgarian hordes? A sparse assortment of local militia and palace guards.
Part of this was because he was too popular to risk a coup attempt, but it was also because there simply weren't troops available.