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Essential Histories
Byzantium at War
AD 600-1453
C4
2
i Routledge
Taylor & Francs Group
Wer eae T
John Haldon“Tvs haraack ection is publshed by Routleege an imprint
cf the Taylor & Francs Group, by arrangement with
(Osprey Publishing Ltd. Cxfore Egtand,
For information please adress the publisher
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Fst published 2002 under the te Earl Histories 33,
Byzantium a Wer AD 600-1453 by Osprey Publishing Lid
Fins Court Chapel Way Botley Oxford OX2 9L?
(© 2003 Orprey Pubishng Lt,
‘All ights reserved. No part ofthis book may be reprinted oF
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ow known or hereafter inented, eluding photocopy and
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witout permission in writing roe the pushers
sen 0415-9686)-5
Printed and bound in hina on acee paper
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Library of Congress Catalog Picton Data
HaldorJohn
Byzantium at War AD (00-1453 / john Halon
pcm sential Histores)
(Origrally pulsed: Oxsord: Osprey Publishing Ltd, 2002,
Includes bsigraphcal references and inex
IsAN 0415-9686 5
1. Byzantine Empee-Hitory Mitary-527-108).2. Byzantine
Empre-History Mlrary108-145%, (Tide Sones
Desa H35 2003
sp su2-2221
somrocn«eesContents
Introduction
Chronology
Background to war
The political world of Byzantium
Warring sides
Neighbours and enemies
Quttoreak
Why and how did Byzantium fight wars?
The fighting
Organising for war
Portrait of a soldier
Recruitment, discipline, and life on campaign
The world around war
War and peace
Portrait of a civilian
Metrios — a farmer
How the wars ended
Death of an empire
Conelusion and consequences
War, peace, and survival
Further reading
Byzantine rulers AD 527-1453
Index
23
29
36
47
6l
72
80
86
90
92
93
94Introduction
The Byzantine empire was not called by that
name in its own time, and indeed the term
‘Byzantine’ was used only to describe
inhabitants of Constantinople, ancient
Byzantion on the Bosphorus. The subjects of
the emperor at Constantinople referred to
themselves as Rhomaioi, Romans, because as
fat as they were concerned Constantinople,
the city of Constantine I, the first Christian
ruler of the Roman empire, had become the
capital of the Roman empire once Rome had
lost its own pre-eminent position, and it was
the Christian Roman empire that carried on
the traditions of Roman civilisation. In turn,
the latter was identified with civilised society
as such, and Orthodox Christianity was both
‘the guiding religious and spiritual force which
defended and protected that world, but was
also the guarantor of God’s continuing
support. Orthodoxy means, literally, correct
belief, and this was what the Byzantines
believed was essential to their own survival.
Thus, from the modem historian’s
perspective, ‘Byzantine’ might be paraphrased
by the more long-winded ‘medieval
Roman’ empire, for that is, in historical terms,
what ‘Byzantium’ really meant,
In its long history, from the later
Sth century, when the last vestiges of the
western half of the Roman empire were
absorbed into barbarian successor kingdoms
until the fall in battle of the last eastern
Roman emperor, Constantine XI (1448-53),
the empire was almost constantly at war. Its
strategic situation in the southern Balkans
and Asia Minor made this inevitable. It was
constantly challenged by its more or its less
powerful neighbours ~ at first, the Persian
empire in the east, later the various Islamic
powers that arose in that region ~ and by its
northern neighbours, the Slavs, the Avars (a
Turkic people) in the 6th and 7th centuries,
the Bulgars from the end of the 7th to early
Lith centuries and, in the later 11th and
12th centuries, the Hungarians, later the
Serbs and finally, after their conquests in
Greece and the southern Balkans, the
Ottoman Turks. Relations with the western
powers which arose from what remained of
the western Roman empire during the Sth
century were complicated and tense, not least
because of the political competition between
the papacy and the Constantinopolitan
patriarchate, the two major sees ~ Alexandria,
Antioch and Jerusalem were far less powerful
after the 7th century Islamic conquests ~ in
the Christian world. Byzantium survived so
long partly because internally it was
well-organised, with an efficient fiscal and
military system; and partly because these
advantages, rooted in its late Roman past
lasted well into the 11th century. But as its
western and northern neighbours grew in
resources and political stability they were able8 Essential Histories » Byzantium at War
to challenge the empire for pre-eminence,
reducing it by the early 13th century to a
second- of even third-rate rump of its former
self, subordinated to the politics of the west
and the commercial interests of Venice, Pisa
and Genoa, among others, the greatest of the
Italian merchant republics. In this book, we
will look at some of the ways in which the
medieval east Roman empire secured its long,
existence,
The Byzantine lands
The Byzantine, or medieval eastern Roman,
empire was restricted for most of its
existence to the southern Balkans and Asia
Minor - very roughly modern Greece and
modern Turkey. In the middle of the
6th century, after the success of the emperor
Justinian’s reconquests in the west, the
empire had been much more extens
including all of the north African coastal
regions from the Atlantic to Egypt, along
with south-eastern Spain, Italy and the
Balkans up to the Danube. But by the later
6th century the Italian lands were already
contested by the Lombards, while the
Visigoths of Spain soon expelled the imperial
administration from their lands. The near
eastern provinces in Sytia, Iraq and the
Transjordan region along with Egypt were all
Jost to Islam by the early 640s, and north
Africa followed suit by the 690s. In a half
century of warfare, therefore, the empire lost,
some of its wealthiest regions and much of
the revenue to support the government, the
ruling elite and vital needs such as the army.
Much of the territory that remained to
the empire was mountainous or arid, so that
ly quite
limited in extent. Nevertheless, an efficient
(for medieval times) fiscal administration
and tax segime extracted the maximum in
manpower and agricultural resources, while a
1 diplomac
an extensive network of ambassadors,
cemissaries and spies, a willingness to play off
neighbours and enemies against one another,
and to spend substantial sums on ‘subsidies!
the exploitable zones were rei
heavy reliance on well-planni
to ward off attack, all contributed to the
longevity of the state. And these measures
were essential to its survival, for although
Constantinople was itself well defended and
strategically well placed to resist attack, the
empire was surrounded on all sides by
‘enemies, real or potential, and was generally
at war on two, if not three, fronts at once
throughout much of its long history. The
10th-century Italian diplomat Liutprand of
Cremona expressed this situation well when
he described the empire as being surrounded
by the fiercest of barbarians ~ Hungarians,
Pechenegs, Khazars, Rus’ and so forth
Asia Minor was the focus of much of the
empire's military activity from the 7th until
the 13th century. There are three separate
climatic and geographical zones, consisting of
the coastal plains, the central plateau regions,
and the mountains which separate them.
While hot, dry summers and extreme cold in
winter characterise the central plateau, and
where, except for some sheltered river valleys,
the economy was mainly pastoral - sheep,
cattle ancl horses ~ the coastlands, where
most productive agricultural activity and the
highest density of settlement was located,Introduction
offered a friendlier, ‘Mediterranean’ type
climate, and were also the most important
source of revenues for the government. The
pattern of settlement was similarly strongly
differentiated - most towns and cities were
concentrated in the coastal regions, while the
mountains and plateaux were much more
sparsely settled. Similar considerations
applied to the Balkans, too, and in both cases,
this geography affected road systems and
communications. The empire needed to take
these factors into account in strategie
planning and campaign organisation, of
course, for logistical considerations ~ the
sources of manpower, food and shelter,
livestock and weapons, how to move these
around, and how they were consumed —
played a key role in the empire's at
survive in the difficult strategic situation in
which it found itself.
Armies, whether large or small, and
whether Byzantine or hostile forces, faced
many problems when campaigning in or
across Asia Minor, in particular the long
stretches of road through relatively waterless
and exposed country, and the rough
mountainous terrain separating coastal
y to
regions from central plateaux. The complex
Roman and Hellenistic road system was
partly retained during the Byzantine period,
but the empire after the 6th century
developed a range of military routes together
with a series of fortified posts and military
bases — for these same routes also served as
means of access and egress for Arab forces
Strategic needs changed, of course, and so
did the road system, with routes falling in
and out of use.
The Balkans present a rugged and
fragmented landscape falling broadly into
two zones; the coastal and riverine plains (of
Thrace, of Thessaly and of the south
Danubian area), which are productive and
fairly densely occupied; and the mountain
ranges that dominate the whole region and
represent about two-thirds of its area ~ the
Dinaric Alps in the west, stretching from
north-east to south-west; the southerly
Pindus range with which they merge, and
which together dominate western and
central Greece; and the Balkan chain itself,
ople (4tIntroduction 11
‘The conquests of the emperor Justinian re-established
the eastern Roman empire as the dominant power in
the Mediterranean,
stretching from the Morava river as far as the
Black Sea coast, with the Rhodope range
forming an arc to the south, through
Macedonia towards the plain of Thrace. The
fragmented terrain has given rise to a series
of distinct geopolitical units separated by
ridges of highlands, fanning out along river
valleys towards the coastal areas
A number of major routes served from
ancient times to give access to the interior of
the Balkan region or to pass through it from
north to south or west to east. The Balkans
are characterised by relatively narrow and
often quite high, easily controlled passes,
and this terrain was ideally sulted to guerrilla
strategy — tough campaigning conditions,
and difficult access to some regions during
the winter. The structure of communications
and the effectiveness of Byzantine political
authority demonstrate this, for there were no
obvious focal points in the ancient and
‘medieval period in the south Balkan region
apart from Thessaloniki and Constantinople,
both on the edge of the peninsula and its
fragmented landscape.
Geography affected land use in the Balkans
as it did in Asia Minor, The uplands and
mountains, dominated by forest and
woodland, and the lower foothills by
woodland, scrub and rough pasturage, were
suited to pastoral activity only. Agriculture
was limited to the plains, river valleys and
coastlands of Thessaly, Macedonia and the
Danube. The sea played an important role,
since it surrounds the Balkan peninsula apart
from along the northern boundary, and acted,
as it still does today, as an efficient means of
communication along the heavily indented
coastline and with more distant regions, ‘The
disadvantage of relatively easy seaborne
access, however, was that it opened up the
southern Balkan peninsula to invasion
One of the factors that made the Roman
army so successful and efficient was the
military road system, established for the most
part between the end of the 2nd century BC
and the middle of the 2nd century AD. The
network also facilitated commerce, civilian
traffic and the movement of information, But
in the later 4th and Sth centuries the roads
went into decline ~ a reflection of economic
and social changes across the empire and the
consequences of these for local governors and
town councils. One result was a decline in the
use of wheeled vehicles, whieh could not use
roads that were not properly maintained, and
corresponding increase in dependence on
beasts of burden.
After the 6th century a limited number
of key routes was kept up by means of
compulsory burdens imposed on local
communities. The fast post, consisting of
pack-animals, relay horses and light carts,
and the slow post, which provided ox-carts
and heavy vehicles, were amalgamated into
a single system in the 6th or 7th century,
and continued to operate until the last years
of the empire. The imperial road systems in
both the Balkans and Anatolia were less
extensive than hitherto, but remained
nevertheless effective. But the costs of
maintenance and the problem of
supervising upkeep meant that many routes
were hardly more than tracks or paths
usable only by pack-animals, with paved or
hard surfaces only near towns and fortresses.
Travel and transport by water was usually
faster and much cheaper. This was especially
so in the case of the long-distance
movement of bulk goods, such as grain, for
example. The expense of feeding
draught-oxen, drovers and carters, paying
tolls, together with the slow rate of
movement of ox-carts, added very
considerably to the price of the goods being
transported, generally well beyond the price
of ordinary subjects of the emperors, It was
really only the government and the army,
and to a certain extent the Church and a
few wealthy individuals, who could pay for
this. In contrast, shipping was much more
cost effective, since large quantities of goods
could be transported in a single vessel
handled by a small crew, relatively
inexpensively, once the capital investment
in vessel and cargo had been made.antium at War
Byzantine fortress town of Koloneia (mod.
Sebinkarahisa
This was the physical world of the later
Roman and medieval eastern Roman, or
Byzantine, empire, and this was the context
within which the politics, diplomacy, warfare
and social evolution of Byza
to be understood. Geography and physical
context were not the only factors: cultural
assumptions - the ‘thought world’ of
Byzantium, also partly determined the
complex network of causes and effects, the
results of which we call ‘history’. But means
of communication, speed of movement of
people and information were key aspects on
Which the effectiveness of armies or the
availability of resources to support a
campaign might depend. Geography affected
how the government worked, the amount of
agricultural wealth that it could make
available for specifie purposes, the
distribution and well-being of the
population, rates of production and
consumption, the availability of livestock,
tine culture are
and so forth, And geographical factors were,
of course, fundamental to warfare and the
strategic organisation of the empire
A brief survey of
Byzantine history
By the later Sth century the western part of
the Roman empire had been transformed
into a patchwork of barbarian successor
states, Emperors at Constantinople
continued to view all the lost territories as
part of their realm, however, and in some
‘cases to treat the kings of the successor
Kingdoms as their legitimate representatives,
governing Roman affairs in the provinces in
question until Constantinople could
re-establish a full administrative and military
presence, This is most obviously the case
with the Ostrogothic leader Theoderic who,
although he ruled nominally in the name of
the emperor, established a powerful state in
Italy. The leader of the Salian Franks in
northern Gaul, Clovis, bad quite deliberatelyIntrocty
adopted Orthodox Christianity in the last
years of the Sth century in order to gain
Papal and imperial recognition and support
for his rule, where he also claimed, at least
nominally, to represent Roman rule, Roman
emperors considered the west not as ‘lost’,
but rather as temporarily outside direct
imperial authority.
‘The emperor Justinian (527-65) used this
as the Justification for a series of remarkable
reconquests, aimed at restoring Rome's power
as it had been at its height - north Africa
from the Vandals by 534, Italy from the
Ostrogoths by 552. But the plan was too
ambitious to have had any chance of
permanent success. And while the emperor
nevertheless came very close to achieving a
major part of his original aims, the problems
that arose after his death illustrated the
problems his policies brought with them.
Warfare with the Persian empire in the east
meant that resources were always stretched to
the limit and there were never enough
soldiers for all fronts. Upon his death in 565
Justinian left a vastly expanded but perilously
overstretched empire, in both financial and
military terms. His successors were faced with
the reality of dealing with new enemies, a
lack of ready cash, and internal discontent
over high taxation and constant demands for
soldiers and the necessities to support them
The Persian war was renewed, while in S68
the Germanic Lombards crossed from their
homeland along the western Danube and
Drava region into Italy, in their efforts to flee
the approaching Avars, a Turkic nomadic
power which was establishing a vast steppe
‘empire. The Lombards soon overran Roman
defensive positions in the north of the
peninsula, founding a number of
independent chiefdoms in the centre and
south, while the Avars established themselves
as a major challenge to imperial power in the
northern Balkan region. Between the
mid-570s and the end of the reign of the
emperor Maurice (582~602), the empire was
able to re-establish a precarious balance in
the east and along the Danube.
Maurice was deposed in 602 following a
mutiny of the Danube forces, and the
centurion Phokas was raised to the throne.
Phokas (602-10), popularly regarded in later
Byzantine sources as a tyrant, ruled until he
was overthrown in 610, when he was in turn
replaced by Heraclius, the son of the military
governor of Africa. Heraclius was crowned
emperor and ruled until 641.
But the empire was unable to maintain its
defences against external pressure, Within a
few years the Avars and Slavs had overrun
much of the Balkans, while the Persians
occupied and set up their own provincial
governments in Syria and Egypt between 614
and 618, and continued to push into Asia
‘Minor. Italy was left to its own devices and
became increasingly autonomous. In spite of
a great siege of Constantinople by a Persian
and an Avaro-Slav army in 626, Heraclius
proved an able strategist and by 628 had
utterly destroyed the Persian armies in the
ast, restoring the situation at the end of
Maurice’s reign, The regional dominance of
the Roman empire seemed assured. But while
the Danube remained nominally the frontier,
much of the Balkan region was no longer
under imperial authority, except when an
army appeared. The financial situation of the
‘empire, whose resources were quite
exhausted by the long wars, was desperate.
The origins of Islam lie in the northern
Arabian peninsula, where different forms of
Christianity, Judaism and indigenous beliefs
coexisted, in particular in the much-travelled
trading and caravan communities of Mecca
and Medina, Mohammed was himself a
respected and established merchant who had
several times accompanied the trade
caravans north to Roman Syria. Syria and
Palestine already had substantial populations
of Arabs, both farmers and herdsmen, as well
as mercenary soldiers serving the empire as a
buffer against the Persians. Although
Mohammee!’s preaching ~ a synthesis of his
‘own beliefs with Judaic and Christian ideas
met initially with stiff resistance from b
‘own clan, by 628-29 he had established his
authority over much of the peninsula and
begun to consider the future direction of the
new Islamic community. On his death
(traditionally placed in 632) there followed a14 Essential Histories © Byzantium at War
brief period of warfare during which his
immediate successors had to fight hard to
reassert Islamic authority, The raids mounted
against both Roman and Persian territories
were in part a response to the political
demands generated by this internal conflict.
A combination of incompetence and apathy,
disaffected soldiers and inadequate defensive
arrangements resulted in a series of
disastrous Roman defeats and the loss of
Syria, Palestine, Mesopotamia and Egypt
within the short span of 10 years, so that by
642 the empire was reduced to a rump of its
former self. The Persian empire was
completely overrun and destroyed by the
650s, The Arab Islamic empire was born,
The defeats and territorial contraction
which resulted from the expansion of Islam
from the 640s in the east, on the one hand,
and the arrival of the Bulgars and
establishment of a permanent Bulgar
Khanate in the Balkans from the 680s, on
the other, radically altered the political
conditions of existence of the east Roman
state. The Balkans up to the Danube were
claimed by the empire, and when imperial
armies appeared, the local, predominantly
Slay, chieftains and leaders acknowledged
Roman authority. But this lasted only as long,
as the army was present. The Bulgars were a
new element whose nomadic military
organisation and technology enabled them
quickly to establish a political hegemony
over the region south of the Danube delta,
from which their Khans rapidly expanded
their power, so that by the end of the
7th century they were a substantial threat to
imperial claims in the region.
The resulting transformation of state
administrative structures produced an army
that was based almost entirely on defensive
principles, for which offensive warfare
became a rarity until the middle of the
8th century, and which was encouraged by
the imperial government to avoid pitched
battles and open confrontation with enemy
forces wherever possible. The field armies of
the late Roman state were transformed in
effect into provincial militias, although a
central core of full-time ‘professional’
soldiers seems always to have been
maintained by each regional military
commander. A strategy of guerilla warfare
evolved in which enemy forces were allowed
to penetrate the borderlands before being cut
off from their bases and harried and worried
until they broke up or were forced to return
to their own lands, Byzantine officers
conducted a ‘scorched earth” policy in many
regions, and local populations in endangered
regions were encouraged to keep lookouts
posted, so that they could gather their
livestock and other movable possessions and
take refuge in mountain fortresses, thereby
depriving enemy units of forage and booty.
Although individual emperors did launch
offensive expeditions in the period
¢.660-730, these were generally designed to
forestall a major enemy attack into Roman
pry in Asia Minor, or had a punitive
nature, designed more as ideologically
‘motivated revenge attacks on important
enemy targets, and with no lasting strategic
value (although they did have implications
for military morale). Although a few notable
successes were recorded, many of them failed
and resulted in substantial defeats and loss
of men and materials. The differentiation
between different arms at the tactical level ~
between light and heavy cavalry or infantry,
archers, lancers or spearmen ~ appears ta
have lessened, surviving only in a few
contexts, associated with imperially
‘maintained elite units, Byzantine armies and
Arab armies looked very much the same.
Only ftom the 730s on, during the reign
of Leo Ill (717-41), an emperor from a
military background who seized the throne
in 717, and more particularly that of his son
and successor Constantine V (741-75), a
campaigning emperor who introduced a
number of administrative reforms in the
army and established an elite field army at
Constantinople in the 760s, does this
situation begin to change. Political stability
internally, the beginnings of economic
recovery in the later 8th century and
dissension among their enemies, enabled the
Byzantines to re-establish a certain
equilibrium by the year 800. In spite ofoccasional major defeats (for example, the
annihilation of a Byzantine force following a
Bulgar surprise attack in 811, and the death
in battle of the emperor Nikephoros 1) and
an often unfavourable international political
situation, the Byzantines were able to begin a
more offensive policy with regard to the
Islamic power to the east and the Bul
the north - in the latter case, combining
diplomacy and missionary activity with
military threats. By the early 10th century
and as the Caliphate was weakened by
internal strife, the Byzantines were
beginning to establish a certain advantage
and in spite of the fierce and sometimes
successful opposition of local Muslim
warlords (such as the emirs of Aleppo in the
940s and 950s), there followed a series of
brilliant reconquests of huge swathes of
y in north Syria and Iraq, the
annihilatio}
territo
of the seco
cd Bulgarian empire
and the beginnings of the reconquest of
Sicily and southem Italy. By the death in
1025 of the soldier-emperor Basil II ‘the
Bulgar-slayer’ (976-1025) the empire was
once again the paramount political and
military power in the eastern Mediterranean
basin, rivalled only by the Fatimid Caliphate
in Egypt and Syria16 Essential Histories * Byzantium at War
But the offensive warfare that developed
from the middle of the 9th century had
important effects upon the organisation of
the armies, The provincial militias became
less suited to the requirements of such
campaigning, tied as they had become to
their localities and to the seasonal
campaigning dictated by Arab or Bulgar
raiders. Instead, regular field armies with a
more complex tactical structure and more
offensive élan developed, partly under the
auspices of a new social elite of military
commanders who were also great
landowners, partly encouraged and financed
by the state, Mercenary troops played an
increasingly important role as the state
began to commute military service in the
provincial armies for cash with which to pay
them. By the middle of the 11th century, a
large portion of the imperial armies was
made up of indigenously recruited
mercenary units together with Norman,
Russian, Turkic and Frankish mercenaries.
The successes achieved between ¢.900 and
1030 were thus based on effective
organisation and better resources than in the
preceding period, Morale and ideology also.
played a key role, while the increase in the
tactical complexity of Byzantine field armies
played a significant part, with the various
different types of arms familiar from the late
Roman period, which had all but vanished
in the period of crisis of the 7th and
8th centuries, reappearing once more. Arab
commentators remark on the effectiveness
of the Byzantine heavy cavalry ‘wedge’,
employed with, literally, crushing effect in
the Byzantine wars with both Muslims and
northern foes such as the Bulgars and the
Rus’ of Kiev.
This expansionism had its negative
results, however. Increasing state demands
clashed with greater aristocratic resistance to
tax-paying; political factionalism at court led
to policy failures, the overestimation of
imperial military strength, and neglect of
defensive structures, When Seljuk Turkish
raiding parties were able to defeat piecemeal
a major imperial force in 1071 and capture
the emperor Romanos IV, the empire could
offer no organised counter-attack, with the
result that central Asia Minor was lost
permanently to the empire. Major military
and fiscal reforms under the emperors of the
Komnenos dynasty (a military aristocratic
clan) from 1081 re-established stability and,
to a degree, the international position of the
empire. While foreign mercenary units
continued to play a prominent role, the
recruitment of indigenous Byzantine units
specialising in a variety of arms restored the
ability of the imperial armies to fight
external enemies on their own terms. This
was partly based on a reformed fiscal
administration, on the one hand, and the
raising and maintenance of troops on the
basis of grants of revenue to certain
individuals in return for the provision of
trained soldiers, both infantry and cavalry.
Increasing western influence, in the form of
the introduction of weapons such as the
crossbow and the adoption of westem heavy
cavalry tactics, differentiate this period from
the preceding century. But the successes of
the new dynasty were relatively short-lived:
overexpansion, the loss of Bulgaria and
much of the Balkans to what might be called
‘nationalist’ rebellions, and the collapse of
the empire into renewed factional strife in
the 11805 and 1190s, laid it open to external
threat. This materialised in the form of the
fourth crusade. The capture and sack of
Constantinople in 1204 and the subsequent
partition of the empire among the Venetian
‘and western victors ended the empire's role
asa major political and military power,
although it survived after the recovery of
Constantinople in 1261 and re-establishment
of an imperial regime, on an ever smaller
territorial scale, until only Constantinople
and a few Aegean islands remained. And in
1453 the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet Il
extinguished even this remnant.
There are, very roughly, five phases of
military development in the history of the
Byzantine empire: reconquest and
expansion under Justinian in the 6th
century; contraction, localisation and a
primarily defensive character in the 7th and
8th centuries; consolidation, recovery anda more offensive approach in the period crusade; second, the growth of the power
from the 9th to the early 11th century; the of Serbia in the 14th century; and third,
breakdown and reform of the structures of that of the Ottomans in the 14th and
inherited from the late ancient period sth centuries.
during the 11th and 12th centuries, with a
brief expansion back into Asia Minor under BELOW The walls of Constantinople (Sth century).
the emperors Alexios |, John I and Manuel (Author's collection)
until the 1170s; and a final, stow decline as SLOWING PAGE Athough many reves floweid
the empire shrank under the effects of, first, Roman roads Byzantine armies often used older tracks
the partition which followed the fourth and paths which predated the RomansChronology
474-475 Zeno emperor in east
475-476 Basiliscus usurps power in cast
476 Last western Roman emperor,
Romulus Augustulus, dies
476-491 Zeno (restored)
491-518 Anastasios | emperor in east
493-526 Theoderic rules Ostrogothic
kingdom of Italy
€.503 Anastasios recognises authority, as
representative of the Romans, of
Clovis, king of the Franks
507-711 Kingdom of Visigoths in Spain
518-527 Justin |
527 Justinian I becomes emperor
533-534 Belisarius reconquers Africa
(pacification completed in 540s)
534 Belisarius begins reconquest of Italy
(war lasts until 553)
537 Dedication of the new Church of the
Holy Wisdom (Hagia Sophia) in
Constantinople
540. Persian king Chostoes I takes Antioch
in
542+ Plague in the Byzantine world
550+ Avars establish rule over Slavs north
of Black Sea and Danube
552. Narses defeats Totila and last
Ostrogothic resistance in Italy
553+ Reconquest of south-east Spain
from Visigoths
558 Treaty with Avars and agreement to
pay ‘subsidies’
562 ‘Filty-year peace’ signed with Persia
564-591 Wars with Persia
566+ Slavs begin to infiltrate across Danube
frontier; pressure on frontier fortresses,
from Avars
568+ Lombards driven westward from
Danube, invade Italy,
572 Lombards besiege Ravenna
577 Major invasion of Balkans led
by Avars
584, 586 Avaro-Slav attacks on Thessaloniki
ria
591-602 Gradual success in pushing Avars
back across Danube
602 Maurice overthrown, Phokas
proclaimed emperor
603 War with Persia; situation in
Balkans deteriorates
610 Phokas overthrown by Heraclius, son.
of exarch of Africa at Carthage
611-6208 Central and northern Balkans lost
614-619 Persians occupy Syria, Palestine
and Egypt
622 Mohammed leaves Mecca for Medina
(the ‘Hijra’)
622-627 Heractius campaigns in east against
Persians
626 Combined Avaro-Slav and Persian
siege of Constantinople fails
626-628 Heraclius defeats Persian forces
in east
629 Peace with Persia
6344 Arabs begin raids into Palestine
634-646 Arab conquest and occupation of
Syria, Palestine, Mesopotamia, Egypt
(636 — battle of Gabitha/Yarmuk)
644+ Beginning of long-term raids and
plundering expeditions against
Byzantine Asia Minor
655 Sea battle of Phoenix, Byzantines
defeated by Muslim fleet
662 Constans II leads expedition through
Balkans into Italy, takes up residence
in Sicily
668 Constans assassinated; Mizizios
proclaimed emperor in Sicily, but
defeated by forces loyal to
Constantine IV
674-678 Arab blockade and yeatly sieges of
Constantinople.
‘quid fire’ (Greek fire), to destroy
Arab fleet
679-680 Arrival of Bulgars on Danube;
defeat of Byzantine forces under
Constantine IV
st recorded use of20 Essential Histories + Byzantium at War
680-681 Third council of Constantinople
(sixth ecumenical council)
685-692. Truce between caliphate and
Byzantium (Arab civil war)
691-692 Quinisext or Trullan coun
at Constantinople
693 Byzantine defeat at Sebastoupolis
698 Carthage falls to Arabs; final loss
of Africa
717-718 Siege of Constantinople; Leo,
general of Anatolikon, seizes power
and crowned as Leo III
726-730 Leo condones iconoclastic views of
some bishops. Beginnings of
Iconoclast controversy
739-740 Leo and Constantine defeat Arab
column at Akroinon
739 Earthquake hits Constantinople
741 Artabasdos, Leo’s son-in-law, rebels
against Constantine V and seizes
Constantinople
743-744 Artabasdos defeated
746+ Plague in Constantinople
750 Abbasid revolution, removal of
Umayyads from power, capital of
Caliphate moved to Baghdad
750s-770s Constantine launches major
expeditions against Bulgars and Arabs,
792 Byzantines under Constantine VI
defeated by Bulgars at Markellai
797 Constantine VI deposed by mother
Irene; blinded and dies
800 Coronation of Charlemagne by pope
in St Peters, Rome
802 Irene deposed by chief finance
minister Nikephoros (Nikephoros 1)
811 Nikephoros defeated and killed by
forces under Khan Krum after initially
successful campaign in Bulgaria
813 Bulgar victories over Byzantine forces
815 Leo V convenes synod at
Constantinople; iconoclasm
reintroduced as official policy
821-823 Rebellion of Thomas ‘the Ska
824+ Beginning of Arab conquest of Sicily
and of Crete
838 Arab invasion of Asia Minor; siege
and sack of Amorion
843 Council held in Constantinople to
reaffirm acts of seventh ecumenical
council; empress regent Theodora and
chief courtiers restore images; end of
official iconoclasm
850s Missionary activity in Bulgaria
860 Rus’ (Viking) attack on Constantinople;
mission to Chazars of St Cyril
863 Major Byzantine victory over Arabs at
Poson in Anatolia
864 Conversion of Bulgar Khan and
leaders. Council convoked by Basil |
at Constantinople to settle Photian
schism: Photios deposed, Ignatios, his
predecessor, reinstated. Bulgaria
placed under Constantinopolitan
ecclesiastical jurisdiction (contrary to
papal demands)
900+ Final loss of Sicily; Bulgar
expansionism under Tsar Symeon;
war with Byzantines
917 Bulgar victory at river Achelo
922 Peace with Bulgars
923-944 Byzantine conquests and eastward
expansion led by general
John Kourkouas
960-961 Recovery of Crete under general
Nikephoros Phokas
963+ Major Byzantine offensives in east,
creation of new frontier regions
965 Nikephoros II captures Tarsus
and Cyprus
969 Nikephoros Il captures Aleppo
and Antioch
969-976 Reign of John I Tzimiskes,
Continuation of eastern expansion;
defeat of Bulgars with help of Rus’
allies under Svyatostay; defeat of Rus!
at Silistra (971)
975 John | Invades Palestine, takes several
towns and fortresses, but withdraws
985+ Bulgar resistance in western Balkans
leads to growth of Bulgarian empire
under Tsar Samuel
989 Conversion of Viadimir of Kiev
to Christianity
990-1019 Basil II crushes Bulgar resistance;
Bulgaria reincorporated into empire,
Danube new frontier in north
1022 Armenian territories annexed to empire
1034-1041 Michael IV takes first steps in
debayement of gold currencyChronology 2
1054 Schism with papacy
1055 Seljuks take Baghdad; Norman power
in southern Italy expanding
1071 Romanos IV defeated and captured at
Mantzikert by Seljuks; beginning of
Turk occupation of central Anatolia;
Normans take Bari
1070+ Major Petcheneg advances into
Balkans; civil war within empire
1081 Alexios Komnenos rebels and defeats
Nikephoros II] and is crowned emperor
1082-1084 Norman invasion of western
Balkan provinces
1091 Seljuk-Petcheneg siege of
Constantinople; defeat of Petchenegs
1097+ First crusade; Seljuks defeated
1098-1099 Jerusalem captured; Latin
principalities and Kingdom of Jerusalem
established in Palestine and Syria
1108 Alexios defeats Normans
under Bohemund
1111 Commercial privileges granted to Pisa
1130s Alliance with German empire against
Normans of southern Italy
1138-1142. Byzantine confrontation with
Crusader principality of Antioch
1143-1180 Manuel | Komnenos:
pto-western politics become major
factor in Byzantine foreign policy
1146-1148 Second crusade
1153. Treaty of Constanz between
Frederick I (Barbarossa) and papacy
against Byzantium
55-1157 Successful imperial campaign in
Italy; commercial and political
negotiations with Genoa
1158-1159 Imperial forces march
against Antioch
1160+ Successful imperial political
involvement in Italy against German
imperial interests; Manuel defeats
Hungarians and Serbs in Balkans and
reaffirms imperial pre-eminence
1169-1170 Commercial treaties with Pisa
and Genoa
1171+ Byzantine-Venetian hostilities increase
1175-1176 Manuel plans crusade in east
1176 Defeat of imperial forces under
Manuel by Seljuk Sultan Kilidj Aslan
at Myriokephalon
1180 Manuel dies; strong anti-western
sentiments in Constantinople
1182 Massacre of westerners, especially
Italian merchants and their
dependents, in Constantinople
1185 Normans sack Thessaloniki;
Andronikos Komnenos deposed
1186+ Rebellion in Bulgaria, defeat of local
Byzantine troops, establishment of
second Bulgarian empire
1187 Defeat of third crusade at battle of
Horns of Hattin; Jerusalem retaken
by Saladin
1192. Treaties with Genoa and Pisa
1203-1204 Fourth crusade, with Venetian
financial and naval support, marches
against Constantinople; after the
capture and sack of the city in 1204,
the Latin empire is established, along
with several principalities and
other territories under Latin or
Venetian rule
1204-1205 Successor states in Nicae:
and Trebizond established.
1205. Latin emperor Baldwin I defeated
by Bulgars
1259 Michael VIII succeeds to throne in
empire of Nicaea; Nicaean army
defeats combined Latin and Epirot
army at battle of Pelagonia; fortress
town of Mistra handed over to
Byzantines (Nicaea)
1261 During absence of main Latin army
Nicaean forces enter and seize
Constantinople
1265 Pope invites Charles of Anjou,
brother of Louis IX of France, to
pport him militarily against
Manfred of Sicily and the
Hohenstaufen power in Italy
1266 Manfred of Sicily defeated at battle of
Benevento by Charles of Anjou;
Angevin plans, supported by papacy,
evolve to invacle and conquer the
Byzantine empire
1274 Gregory X summons second council
of Lyons; representatives of Byzantine
Church present; union of the
Churches agreed, under threat of
papally-approved invasion led by22. Essential Histories + Byzantium at War
Charles of Anjou; union not accepted
in the Byzantine empire
1280-1337 Ottomans take nearly all
remaining Byzantine possessions in
Asia Minor (Ephesus 1328, Brusa 1326)
1282 ‘Sicilian vespers’; death of Charles
of Anjou and end of his plans to
invade Byzantium
‘ouncil of Constantinople (‘second
synod of Blachernae’): discussed and
rejected pro-western interpretation of
the Trinity as enunciated by the
patriarch John XI Bekkos. Also rejected
decisions of Council of Lyons (1274)
1303 Andronikos I hires Catalan company
as mercenary troop
1321-1328 Civil war between Andronikos IT
and Andronikos III
1329 Turks take Nicaea
1331-1355. Stefan Dushan Kral (King)
of Serbia
1337 Turks take Nicomedia
1340+ Serbian empire under Stefan Dushan
at height of power
1341-1347 Civil war between John V
(supported by Serbs) and John VI
Kantakouzenos (with Turkish help)
1346. Stefan Dushan crowned emperor of
the Serbs and Greeks
1347 Black death reaches Constantinople
1354-1355 Civil war between John VI and
John V (backed by Genoa); Ottomans
employed as allies establish
themselves in Gallipoli and Thrace
1355 John VI abdicates and enters a
‘monastery; John V proposes union of
Churches to Pope
1365 Ottomans take Adrianople, which
becomes their capital
6 John V visits Hungary seeking
support against Ottoman threat
1371 Ottomans defeat Serbs in battle
1373 John V forced to submit to Ottoman
Sultan Mutat I; John’s son
Andronikos IV rebels, but Is defeated
1376-1379 Civil war in Byzantium:
‘Andronikos IV rebels against John V,
who is supported by his younger
son Manuel
1285
1379
1388,
1389
1393
1396
13971
John V restored with Turkish and
Venetian support
Bulgarians defeated by Ottomans
Battle of Kosovo: Serbs forced to
withdraw by Ottomans, Serb empire
‘ends; accession of Bayezit 1
Turks capture Thessaly; battle of
Imovo, Bulgarian empire destroyed
Sigismund of Hungary organises
crusade against Ottoman threat, but is
utterly defeated at Nicopolis
1402. Bayezit I besieges
Constantinople, but army withdrawn
when Turks defeated by Timur at
battle of Ankara (1402)
1399-1402 Manuel II tours Europe to elicit,
1422
1423
1430
1439
1444
1448
1451
1452
1453
1460
1461
military and financial support; in
December 1400 he stayed as a guest
of Henry IV in London
Murat I lays siege to Constantinople
Governor of Thessaloniki (a brother
of John VIII hands the city over to
the Venetians
Thessaloniki retaken by Ottomans;
populace and Venetian
garrison massacted
Council of Ferrara moves to Florence;
union of Churches formally agreed by
emperor John VIII, present at council
Hungarians and western crusaders, led
by Viadislav of Hungary and Poland,
defeated at battle of Varna; Vladislav
killed in battle
John VII dies; his brother
Constantine, Despot of the Morea,
succeeds as Constantine XI, with
coronation at Mistra in 1449
Mehmet II becomes Sultan
Union of Churches proclaimed
at Constantinople
Mehmet Il lays siege to
Constantinople; 29 May, Janissaries
break through defences and permit
main Ottoman army to enter city;
Constantine XI, the last emperor,
died in the fighting, and his body was
never identified.
Mistra falls to the Turks
Trebizond falls to the TurksBackground to war
The political world of Byzantium
The Christian Roman state was structured as
a hierarchy of administrative levels: at the
top was the emperor, understood to be God's
representative, surrounded by a palace and
household apparatus, the centre of imperial
government and administration. Civil and
fiscal government was delegated from the
emperor to the praetorian prefects, whose
prefectures were the largest territorial
Gircumseriptions in the state; each prefecture
was further divided into dioecesae or dioceses,
which had a predominantly fiscal aspect
and each diocese was divided into provinciae
or provinces, territorial units of fiscal and
judicial administration. These were further
ided into self-governing poleis or civitates,
the cities, each with its territorium or
val times, (Author's collect
hinterland (which might be more or less
extensive, according to geographical,
demographic and other factors)
Rural production dominated the
economy, but the cities were the homes of a
literate élite of landowners, Social status was
largely determined by one’s relationship to
the system of imperial titles and precedence,
whether one had held an active post in the
imperial bureaucracy, and at what level, and
so forth, although regional variations were
marked. The Church and the theological
system it represented (from the late 4th
century the official religion of the Roman
state) played a central role in the economy
of the Roman world ~ it was a major
landowner ~ as well as in imperial politics, in
influencing the moral and ethical system of
the Roman world, and in directing imperial
religious policy. The prevailing view was that24
ies * Byzantium at War
the emperor was chosen by God, that he had
to be Orthodox, and that his role was to
defend the interests of Orthodoxy and the
Roman i.e. Christian oikoumené (the
inhabited, civilised ~ Roman ~ world). 1
political implications were such that heresy
was construed as treason, and opposition to
the (Orthodox) emperor could effectively be
treated as heresy. The late Roman state was
thus a complex bureaucracy, rooted in and
imposed upon a series of overlapping social
formations structured by local variations on
essentially the same social relations of
production across the whole central and east
Mediterranean and Balkan world. Social and
political tensions were exacerbated by
religious divisions, local economic
conditions, imperial polities, and the burden
placed upon the tax-paying population as a
result of the state's needs in respect of its
administrative apparatus and, in particular,
its armies.
These structures were radically
transformed between the later 6th and early
9th centuries, and as the result of a number
of factors, the single most important being.
the Islamic conquests. By 642 all of Egypt
and the middle-eastern provinces had been
lost, Arab forces had penetrated deep into
Asia Minor and Libya, and imperial forces
had been withdrawn into Asia Minor, to be
settled across the provinces of the region as
the only available means of supporting
them. Within a period of some 12 years,
therefore, the empire lost something over
half its area and three-quarters of its
resources — a drastic loss for an imperial state
Which still had to maintain and equip a
considerable army and an effective
administrative bureaucracy if it was to
survive at all, While many of the
developments which led to this
transformation were in train long before the
7th-century crisis, it was this conjuncture
that served to bring things to a head and
promote the structural responses that
followed.
‘The changes that accompanied the
developments of the 7th century affected all
areas of social, cultural and economic life.
‘There occurred a ‘ruralisation’ of society, a
result of the devastation, abandonment,
shrinkage or displacement of many cities in
Asia Minor as a result of invasions and raids.
‘The defensive properties of ‘urban’ sites,
their direct relevance to military,
administrative or ecclesiastical needs, and so
on, played the key role in whether a city
survived or not. Constantinople became the
pre-eminent city of the empire.
‘The social elite was transformed as ‘new
men’ selected by the emperors on a more
obviously meritocratic basis increased in
number, and who were initially heavily
dependent on the emperor and on imperially
sponsored positions. Yet as a result of its
increasing grip on state positions and the
lands it accrued through the rewards
attached to such service, this elite soon
tured into an aristocracy, during the
8th and 9th centuries still very dependent
‘on the state, during the 10th and especially
the 11th increasingly independent. The state
had to compete directly with a social group
whose enormous landed wealth and
entrenched position in the apparatuses of
the state meant that it posed a real threat to
central control of fiscal resources,
‘The events of the 7th century also
produced a reassertion of central state
power over late Roman tendencies to
decentralisation. The state was both limited,
and in its turn partly defined, by the nature
of key economic relationships. This is
exemplified in the issue and circulation of
coin, the basic mechanism through which
the state converted agricultural produce into
transferable fiscal resources, Coin was issued
chiefly to oil the wheels of the state
machinery, and wealth was appropriated
and consumed through a redistributive fiscal
mechanism: the state issued gold in the
form of salaries and largesse to its
bureaucracy and armies, who exchanged a
substantial portion thereof for goods and
services in maintaining themselves. The
state could thus collect much of the coin it
put into circulation through tax, the more
so since fiscal policy generally demanded
tax in gold and offered change in bronze.There were periods when this systern was
constrained by circumstances, resulting in
the ad hoc arrangements for supplying
soldiers and raising tax in kind, for example
(as in the 7th century), and it also varied by
region. But in a society in which social
status and advancement (including the
self-identity of the aristocracy) were
connected with the state, these
arrangements considerably hindered
economic activity not directly connected
with the state's activities. For the continued
power and attraction of the imperial
establishment at Constantinople, with its
court and hierarchical system of precedence,
as well as the highly centralised fiscal
administrative structure, consumed the
whole attention of the Byzantine elite,
hindering the evolution of a more localised
aristocracy which might otherwise have
invested in the economy and society of its
‘own localities and towns, rather than in
the imperial system.
Church of the monastery at Daphni, Greece
(11th century), The crucifixion. (AKG, Bertin)
‘The growth in the power of the elite was
stimulated by two developments. In the first
place, there took place an increasing
subordination of the peasantry to both
private landlords and to holders of grants of
state revenue. In the second place the state
conceded from the later 11th century the
right to receive the revenues from certain
public (i.e. fiscal, or taxed) districts or of
certain imperial estates with their tenants,
encouraging a process of very gradual
alienation of the state’s fiscal and juridical
rights. By exploiting the award by the
emperors of fiscal exemptions of varying
sorts, landlords ~ both secular and monastic
— were able to keep a larger proportion of the
revenues extracted from their peasant
producers for themselves, as rent, w
the
government's hold on the remaining fiscal
land of the empire was constantly16 Essential Histories + Byzantium at War
challenged by the provincial elite, This had
Important consequences, for it meant that
the overall burden placed on the peasant
producers grew considerably. Tenants of
landlords with access to Imperial patronage
attempted to free themselves from many of,
these impositions through obtaining grants
of exemption of one sort or another,
although the needs and demands of the local
military meant that privileges were often.
entirely ignored, The amount of resources
lost to the state through grants of exemption
from additional taxes cannot have been
negligible, while the burden of landlords’
demands on peasant tenants is hinted at by
an 1ith-century writer who notes that
cancelling fiscal privileges freed the rural
communities from the burdens which they
owed in rents and services.
The split between the interests of the
landed and office-holding elite on the one
hand and the government which is evident
during the later 10th and 11th centuries
was papered over from the time of Alexios |
and until the end of the 12th century by
virtue of the transformation of the empire
under the Komnenos dynasty into what was,
in effect, a gigantic family estate, ruled
through a network of n
and patronage that expanded rapidly during
the 12th century and that, in uniting the
vested interests of the dominant
social-economic elite with those of a ruling
family, reunited also the interests of the
former with those of a centralised empire
The factional politics that resulted from
these developments, in particular over who
would control Constantinople and sit on
nates, relatives,Background to war 27
VETie walls of Constantinople (Sth century)
RIGH omisma of Theophiles (829-8
(620-829) ard Con
ule
Reverse: bu
Theophilo
‘of Birmingham)
Fine Arts University
the throne, become apparent in the
squabbles and civil wars which followed
the defeat of Romanos IV by the Seljuks in
1071, a situation resolved only by the
seizure of power by Alexios | in 1081, By
the end of the 12th century, if not already
a century earlier, the vast majority of
peasant producers in the empire had
become tenants, in one form or another,28 Essential Histories * Byzantium at War
he
“The walls of Constantinople (Sth century) monopolised military and higher civil
(Authors collection) offices, while the older families who had
been its former rivals dominated the
of a landlord. The elite had meanwhile bureaucratic machinery of the state. In the
crystallised into a multifactional aristocracy, _provinces local elites tended to dominate.
led by a few very powerful families, with a It was these social relations that facilitated
number of dependent subordinate and the internecine strife and factionalism
collateral clans. Under the Komnenoi, the that marks the 14th and 15th centuries
imperial family and its immediate associates in particular.Warring sides
Neighbours and
‘We have already referred to the strategically
very awkward situation of the Byzantine
state, with enemies or potential enemies on
virtually every front and with a constant
need to fight wars on more than one front at
a time. In the north and west the situation
was especially complex as a result of the
variety of neighbouring states and political
powers. From its establishment in the 680s,
the Bulgar Khanate rapidly grew in power,
and until its extinction at the hands of the
emperor Basil II, known as the ‘Bulgar-slayer’
(976-1025), represented a constant threat
to the security of imperial territory in the
Balkans. Throughout the 8th and
9th centuries and into the early
10th century, Bulgar power and influence
grew, in spite of successful counter-attacks
under the emperor Constantine V in the
760s and 770s. The nadir of Byzantine
fortunes was probably the year 811, when
the Khan Krum defeated and destroyed an
imperial army, killing the emperor
Nikephoros |. Conversion to Christianity
of elements of the ruling elite in the 860s
was intended to stabilise the situation in
favour of Byzantium; but the gradual
Byzantinisation of this elite only contributed
to the growth of an imperialistic Bulgar
politics which hoped to bring the two states
together under a Bulgar dynasty. But Bulgar
successes under the Christian Tsar Symeon in
the first 15 years of the 10th century were as
dangerous; while the reassertion of Bulgar
imperial ideology under Tsar Samuel
inaugurated a conflict ~ after a relatively
peaceful period in the middle of the
10th century ~ and led finally to the
eradication of Bulgar independence and the
recovery of much of the Balkans up to the
Danube in the early 11th century. In spite of
occasional rebellions, the region remained.
firmly in Byzantine hands until just before
enemies
the fourth crusade in 1203-1204. The Latin
division of the empire after 1204 resulted in
the rapid growth of local Balkan cultural
independence and the evolution of new
states - the Serbian empire of Stefan Dushan.
being perhaps the most remarkable. Only the
arrival of the Ottomans in the 14th century
put an end to this development.
Relations with Italy and the w
similarly complicated. As we have noted
already, Italy, north Africa and the
south-eastern comer of the Iberian peninsula
had been reconquered under Justinian, at
enormous cost, from the Ostrogoths, Vandals
and Visigoths respectively. But the appearance
of the Lombards in Italy (pursued by the
Avars, at Byzantine request) soon resulted in
the fragmentation of imperial possessions into
4 number of distinct regions under military
commanders or duces. Imperial territory in the
north-east and central regions was represented
by the exarch, an officer with military and
civil authority. But distance from
Constantinople, local cultural differentiation
and political conditions, together with the
spiritual and political power of the Popes in
Rome soon led to the gradual but inevitable
diminution of imperial power. The extinction
of the exarchate with the capture of Ravenna,
its capital, at the hands of the Lombards in
751; increased papal dependence on the
Franks for support against the Lombards, and
increasingly autonomous and mutually
competing local polities in the Italian
peninsula had led to the reduction of
imperial power to the regions of Calabria,
Bruttium and Sicily by the early 9th centu
Other political centres such as Naples
remained technically Byzantine, but were
in practice quite independent. Venice,
which grew in importance from the early
9th century, likewise remained nominally
an imperial territory.
st weresential Histories * Byzantium at War
lery of Hosios Loukas, Greece (I Ith century)
1 (AKG, Berl
Christ
The coronation by the pope of Charles
the Great ~ Charlemagne — as (western)
Roman emperor in Rome in 800 set the seal
on the political and cultural se
cast Rome and the west. Cultural
differences, expressed in particular through
ecclesiastical polities and the struggle
between Franks, Byzantines and the papacy
for dominance in the central and western
Balkans, became increasingly apparent,
complicated by rivalry within the eastern
Church. Despite various attempts at
marriage alliances between the Byzantine
and various westem courts, the growing
political, cultural and military strength of
the western world precluded any serious
reassertion of east Roman imperial power
in the central Mediterrani
Byzantine influence was struck a further
blow by the loss of Sicily to Islamic forces
ion of
during the 9th century. The weakenin
the empire in the civil wars of the middie
and later 11th century and the growth of the
Crusading movement further complicated
matters: caricatures of western arrogance and
ignorance on one side were matched by
equally inaccurate caricatures of Byzani
treachery and effeteness on the other.
Although the imperial revival under the
Komnenos dynasty during the late 11th and
12th centuries made a rapprochement
possible, including the development of a
strong pro-western faction at Constantinople
(promoted by the emperor Manuel |
(1143-80), the conflict between imperial
interests in controlling trade and commerce
and Malian merchant expansionism, coupled
with cultural suspicion and Venetian
political intrigue and opportunism, resulted
in the launching of the fourth crusade, the
sack of Constantinople, and the partition of
the eastern empire into a number of Latin
kingdoms and principalities,Warring sides 31
9 b
yan
. Soe
The Byzantines faced particular difcuities i penetrating
into the Balkans with their many narrom easiy-blocked
passes and defi
A somewhat different tone existed in
relations between Byzantium and the Rus’,
Norse settlers from the central Russian river
belt who entered the Black Sea to trade and,
raid for booty, but who had soon become
close trading partners with the empire (by
the 920s certainly), and provided mercenary
household troops for the emperors ~ from
the 980s, the famous Varangian guard.
Acceptance of Christianity under Vladimir in
the 980s and a marriage alliance between the
latter and Basil II inaugurated a long period
of Byzantine cultural and spiritual influence
on the Rus’, fundamentally inflecting the
evolution of Russian culture, the Church and
tsarist ideology. The enduring influence of
Byzantine methods of cultural penetration in
the Balkans was expressed most clearly in the
structure, organisation and ideology of the
Orthodox Church of the region.
The empire's main neighbours in the
north and west until the 10th century were
thus the Bulgars — with the various Serb and
other Slav chiefdoms and principalities in
the western Balkans supporting or being
directly controlled by now one side, now theEssential Histories + Byzantium at War
he monastery church at Daphni, Gre
other; the Rus’ beyond them, along with the
various steppe peoples ~ Chazars from the
Sth century, then during the 9th the
Magyars (who go on to establish the
Christianised kingdom of Hungary), the
Pechenegs in the 10th and 11th centuries,
and thereafter the Cumans, relations of the
Seljuks in the east. In Italy and western and
central Europe foreign relations were
dominated by the papacy and the
neighbouring Lombard Kingdom and
duchies in the former region until the later
8th century, and thereafter by the Frankish
empire in its various forms. In particular the
‘German’ empire of the Ottonian dynasty
dominated central Europe and Italy from the
10th century, and its rulers had a keen
st in eastern Europe and the Balkans.
During the 11th century the rising power of
the young kingdom of Hungary introduced a
new element into this equation. Eastern
Roman relations with the kingdom of
inter
Hungary were particularly strained during
the 1150s and 1160s, for Hungary played an
important role on the international political
stage, in particular in relation to Byzantine
policy with regard to the German empire.
Hungarian interest in the north-western
Balkans was perceived by Constantinople as
a destabilising clement and a threat to
impe
to address the issue by both military and
diplomatic pressure, sending frequent
expeditions to threaten dissicent rulers in
and
interfering in the dynastic politics of the
Hungarian court. The rise of the Italian
maritime cities, especially Venice, Pisa and
Genoa with their powerful fleets and
mercantile interests, was to play a key role in
both the political and economic life of the
empire from this time onward.
Pethaps the most dangerous foe the
Byzantines had to face in the west were the
Normans of southern Italy, who had served
originally as mercenaries in the Byzantine
armies, but who by the last decades of the
ial interests. The emperor Manuel tried
the region to follow the imperial line,Warring sides 33
century had established an independent state
of their own, and who invaded the Balkans
from Italy during the reign of Alexios 1 in
the 1090s and early 12th century. Eventually
defeated on this front, they nevertheless
went on to establish one of the most
powerful states in the central Mediterranean,
the Norman kingdom of Sicily, and
presented a major threat to Byzantine
interests throughout the century. Yet it was
not the Normans who played the key role in
diverting the fourth crusade in 1203-1204
from its original targets in the Muslim east
to Byzantium, but rather the republic of
Venice, and it was Venetian interests that
dictated the form taken by the political
fragmentation of the empire in the
period immediately thereafter,
Until the extinction of the Sassanid
empire by the Islamic armies in the 630s and
early 640s, the Persian state had been the
main opponent of the Roman empire in the
cast. Thereafter, the Umayyad (661-750) and.
then Abbasid (751-1258) Caliphates posed a
constant threat to the empire, But this
complex history falls into several phases:
650s-720s, when Arab-Islamic invasions
were a regular phenomenon aimed at the
destruction of the east Roman state;
7203-750s, when a modus vivendi had been
established, but in which Muslim attacks
remained a constant source of economic and
political dislocation; and thereafter until the
middle of the 11th century, when the
collapse and fragmentation of Abbasid
authority made it possible for the empire to
re-establish a military and political
pre-eminence in the region. The increasingly
important role of Turkic slave and mercenary
soldiers in the Caliphate from the 840s, and
the eventual arrival of the Seljuk Turks in the
1050s, was to alter this picture drastically. A
combination of internal political dissension
and a relatively minor military defeat at the
hands of the Seljuk Sultan Alp Aslan in
neral view of the monastery at Daphn, Greece
(Ith century). (Authors collectio34 Essential Histories » Byzantium at War
Psalter of Basi (/Oth century). The emperor victorious,
(Biblioteca Marciana Venice)
eastern Anatolia in 1071 (battle of
Mantzikert, mod, Malazgirt) resulted in the
imperial loss of central Asia Minor, which
henceforth became dominated by groups of
Turkic nomadic pastoralists (known as
Turkmen) who presented a constant threat
to all forms of sedentary occupation. The
growth of a series of Turkic emirates in the
region thereafter made recovery of the region
impossible; and the rise of the dynasty of
Osman — the Ottomans — from the later
13th century was eventually to prove fatal to
the east Roman empire.
‘The political world of Byzantium was thus
complex and multifaceted. The government
at Constantinople needed to run an efficient,
intelligent and above all watchful diplomaticone)
ERRANEAN
earch of Ravenna.
Beta Nags,
eth
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Pentti
arch of Cringe
59 Bit tie Lents rect
GZ Parody occupied by Skovs and Avars o 500 kam
ABOVE The Lombard invasion of Italy in 568
Sav immigration into the Balkans draratcaly reduced
Roman power in the west
RIGHT Gold histamenton iomisma of Constantine
1028). Reverse: bust of the empe
system, for it was on diplomacy, alliances,
gifts and the careful use of intelligence that
the empire depended. But when these failed
as they often did, it needed an army, and it
is the imperial armies, the way they were
maintained and how they fought, that is the
main theme of this volumeOutbreak
Why and how did Byzantium
fight wars?
Byzantine generals and rulers were generally
fully aware of the relationship between the
allocation and redistribution of resources ~
soldiets, supplies, equipment, livestock and
so forth — and the ability of the empire to
ward off hostile military action or to strike
back at its enemies, Military handbooks
and treatises dating from the 6th to the
11th centuries make it apparent that the
imbalance in resources between Byzantium
nd its enemies was recognised. Generals
were exhorted not to give battle in
nfavourable conditions, because this might
ead to waste of life and resources; indeed
the dominant motif in these works is that it
was the Byzantines who were compelled to
manoeuvre, to use delaying tactics, to
employ ambushes and other strategems to
even the odds stacked against them; but that
it was quite clearly a main war aim to win
without having to fight a decisive battle.
Victory could be achieved through a
combination of delaying tactics, intelligent
exploitation of enemy weaknesses, the
landscape, seasonal factors, and diplomacy.
Wars were costly, and for a state whose basic
income derived from agricultural production,
and which remained relatively stable as well
as being vulnerable to both natural and
man-made disasters, they were to be avoided
ifat all possible.
Another, closely related, factor in imperial
strategic thinking was manpower: from a
Byzantine perspective, they were always
‘outnumbered, and strategy as well as
diplomacy needed to take this factor into
account in dealing with enemies. One way of
evening the balance was to reduce enemy
numbers: delay the enemy forces until they
could no longer stay in the field, destroying
or removing any possible sources of
provisions and supplies, for example
misleading them with false information
about Byzantine intentions, these are all
methods which the military treatises
recommend, Avoiding battle, which was a
keystone of Byzantine strategy, would also
increase the possibility that the enemy host
might be struck by illness, run out of water
and supplies, and so on,
Defence thus had to be the prima
concern of Byzantine rulers and generals.
byzantine military dispositions were
administered upon a consistent and
logistically well-considered basis, and their
main purpose was to secure the survival of
the empire by deploying the limited
resources available to the best effect. They
‘were, necessarily, defensive in orienta
point noted quite clearly by the
mid-10th-century visitor from Italy, the
ambassador Liutprand of Cremona, with
regard to the precautions taken to secure
instantinople at night, in case of an
unexpected enemy attack. The emphasis
placed by Byzantine writers and
governments on effective and intelligent
diplomacy is not just a question of cultural
preference informed by a Christian distaste
for the shedding of blood: to the contrary,
the continued existence of the state
depended upon the deployment of a
sophisticated diplomatic arsenal. The whole
history of Byzantine foreign relations and
both the theory and practice of Byzantine
diplomacy reflect this. Diplomacy had its
military edge, of course: good relations with
the various peoples of the steppe were
essential to Byzantine interests in the
Balkans and Caucasus, because a weapon
might thereby be created that could be
turned on the enemies of the empire. Such
contacts were also an essential source of
information, of course, and much effort
expended in gathering information that
might be relevant to the empire's defence.
fon, a
‘asGoing to war was thus rarely the result of a
planned choice made by emperors or their
advisers, for the empire was perpetually
threatened from one quarter or another, and
was thus in a constant state of military
preparedness, The difference between war and
peace in the frontier areas became a matter,
not of the state of the empire as a whole in
relation to a particular neighbouring power,
but rather of the part of the empire in which
fone found oneself. While recovery of former
territories was permanently on the ideological
agenda, efforts to implement it reflected an ad
hoc reaction to an unforeseen advantage
gained through victories in battle and the
exploitation of favourable circumstances, In
real terms, the potential for the reconquest
and restoration of lost territories was severely
limited, Strategy was determined by the
interplay between resources and political
beliefs, tempered by ideological pragmatism:
most Byzantine warfare was fought not on the
basis of delivering a knock-out blow to the
enemy, but on that of attempting to reach or
maintain a state of parity or equilibrium,
though attrition, raid and counter-raid, and
destruction of the enemy's short-term
potential, Members of the government and
imperial court may have shared common
in stanbuConstantinople wah traditional houses
lection)ideals in respect of their relations with the
outside world; but the strategic dispositions of
the armies of the later Roman and Byzantine
empire were not necessarily arranged with
these concems as a priority
Resources were a key element in strategie
thinking, for obvious reasons ~ armies cannot
fight without adequate supplies, equipment,
training and shelter, But warfare was not
necessarily conducted with a purely material
advantage in mind, since ideological
superiority played an important role in
Byzantine notions of their own identity and
role in the order of things; nor was it
conducted with any longer-term strategic
objective in mind, Any damage to the enemy
was a good thing, but some ways of hitting
the enemy also carried an ideological value ~
strategically wasteful attacks against
symbolically important enemy fortresses or
towns were carried out by all medieval rulers
at one time or another, since the short-term
propaganda value, associated perhaps also
with a raising of morale, was often considered
as valuable as any real material gains. By the
same token, some theatres were ideologically
more important than others. Fighting the
barbarians in the Balkans and north of the
Danube was regarded as much less prestigious
J glorious than combating the religious foe
the Muslims in the east: an 11th-century
writer remarks: ‘There seemed nothing grand
(in fighting) the barbarians in the West ...,
but were he (the emperor Romanos Il) to
turn to those living in the east, he thought
that he could perform nobly
There is little evidence that warfare was
conducted to gain resources that could then be
deployed in a coherent way to further a given
strategy
and the wealth that usually accompanied it
were desirable in themselves, Warfare was,
conducted on the basis of inflicting maximum,
damage to the enemy’s economy and material
infrastructure ~ enslavement or killing of
populations, destruction of fortifications and
except in the sense that more territory
Ic hypertyron of Michael VI (
Obyerse:the Vingin Mary within the
Barber Institute of Fine Arts, Ui Birminghar)
urban installations, devastation of the
countryside. Equally, measures to protect one’s
‘own side had to be taken, and by the middle of
the 10th century the Byzantines had developed
both aspects of such warfare to a fine art. Both
in the war against the Arabs in the east from
the 7th to 10th centuries, and against Slavs and
Bulgars in the west, Byzantine warfare was
conducted effectively on the basis of a struggle
of attrition. This is not to suggest that there
was never a longer-term strategic aim or
ulterior motive at Issue ~ in the case of the
accelerated eastward expansion in the
LOth century and in the slightly later, but
closely related, conquest of Bulgaria under Basil
11, itis possible to suggest that this was the
case, for example. In the first case, through
an aggressive imperialism towards the minor
Muslim powers in Syria and Jazira, the
extension and consolidation of the empire's
territorial strength in the area was clearly an
important consideration; in the second case,
and partly stimulated by the first development,
the creation of a new resource-base for the
emperors and Constantinopolitan government,
independent of the power and influence of the
eastern magnates, was a significant
consideration; but it was also in the context of
an equally practical decision to eradicate the
threat from an independent Bulgaria and
reassert imperial dominance throughout the
Balkan regions. Both facets of these processes
mirror very particular structural tensionsOutbreak
within Byzantine state and society, and at the
same time they also demonstrate particularly
clearly the extent to which the foreign policies
and military strategy of a state can reflect
power relations within the society as a whole,
Warfare for ideological reasons alone was
very rare, Clearly, all defensive warfare could
be justified on a range of such grounds ~ the
threat to the empire's territory and
population, the challenge to Orthodox rule
and God's appointed ruler, the emperor at
Constantinople, challenges to Roman
sovereignty, and so forth, Offensive or
aggressive warfare was, in the Christian
Roman empire, a little more difficult to
justify, but it was readily accomplished. But
there is no doubt that the dominant element
in Byzantine military thinking throughout
the long history of the empire was defensive,
and necessarily so in view of its strategic
situation, Byzantium survived as long as it
did because it was able to defend itself,
intelligently exploit natural frontiers or
boundaries in the crisis years of the 7th and
8th centuries, and diplomatic and political
relationships thereafter, And whatever the
specific details of the process of its
political-historical withering away after
1204, the gradual demise of the Byzantine
empire went hand-in-hand with its declining
ability to muster the resources necessary to
defend itself, Strategy was, in practical terms,
a matter of pragmatic reaction to events in
the world around the empire, only loosely
informed by the political-ideological
imperatives of the Christian Roman empire.
In this respect, the political and strategic
conditions of existence of the east Roman or
Byzantine state rendered a grand strategy in
the narrower sense irrelevant ~ the strategy
of the empire was based on maintaining the
conditions appropriate to political, cultural
and ideological survival.
Defensive warfare
Wars can, crudely speaking, thus be divided
into two broad categories, defensive and
offensive, although it must be said at the
‘outset that pre-emptive attacks could count
as both, and were frequently so justified.
Defensive fighting took several forms:
guerrilla tactics against enemy invaders; major
confrontations between field armies, often
following a protracted period of manoeuvring
in which each side tried to outwit the other;
or a combination of the two. The defensive
campaigns fought against the first Islamic
armies took this form, with the imperial
forces struggling to match the mobility and
speed of the Arab raiders, who were able to
deprive the Roman commanders of the
initiative not simply by virtue of their
fast-moving, hard-hitting tactics, but also
because the type of warfare they practised
made any notion of a regular front untenable.
‘The Arab Islamic conquests radically
altered the strategic and political geography
of the whole east Mediterranean region. The
complete failure of attempts to meet and
drive back the invaders in open battle
induced a major shift in strategy whereby
open confrontations with the Muslim armies
were avoided, The field armies were
withdrawn first to north Syria and
Mesopotamia, and shortly thereafter back to
the line of the Taurus and Anti-Taurus
ranges. By the mid-640s the armies which
had operated in Syria, Palestine and
Mesopotamia had been withdrawn into
Anatolia. The regions across which they were
based were determined by the ability of these
districts to provide for the soldiers in terms
of supplies and other requirements. The field
forces thus came to be quartered across Asia
Minor and ‘Thrace, where they were now
referred to by the Greek term for these
districts, themata or ‘themes’.
‘This distribution was intended both to
meet logistical demands by providing each
army with an adequate hinterland from
which it could be supported and to meet the
strategic needs of defence. But it was a very
defensive strategy, and it meant that the
economic hinterland of the frontier incurred
substantial damage, subject as it was to
regular devastation. There resulted the
appearance by the 700s of a ‘no-man's land”
between the settled and economically safer40 Essential Histories * Byzantium at War
The ancient and rnedieval fortress at Acrocorinth Greece,
controling entry to the Peloponnese. (Author's collection)
regions on both sides, The new arrangements
did prevent the establishment by the Arabs
of permanent bases in Asia Minor itself.
‘The themata or themes were at first merely
groupings of provinces across which
different armies were based, By 730 or
thereabouts they had acquired a clear
geographical identity; and by the later
8th century some elements of fiscal as well
as military administration were set up on a
thematic basis, although the late Roman
provinces continued to subsist. The number
of themata expanded as the empire’s
economic and political situation improved,
partly through the original large military
divisions being split up into different
*provincial’ armies, and partly through the
recovery in the last years of the 8th century
and the reimposition of imperial authority
over lands once held in the southern
Balkans
The localisation of recruitment and
military identities which resulted from these
arrangements led to a distinction between
the regular elements — full-time soldiers ~
and the less competent or well-supplied
militia-like elements in each theme region.
In the 760s a small elite force, known as the
fagntata (‘the regiments’) was established
under Constantine V (741-75), which
quickly evolved into the elite field division
for campaign purposes. It had better pay and
discipline than both the regular and the
part-time provincial units, and this was the
first step in a tendency to recruit mercenary
forces, both foreign and indigenous, to form
special units and to serve for the duration of
# particular campaign or group of campaigns
As imperial power recovered in the 9th and
10th centuries, the empire reasserted its
military strength in the east, and the role
and the proportion of such full-time units
became ever more important.
Defensive strategy was determined by
several elements. To begin with, raiding
forces were to be held and turned back at the
‘Taurus and Anti-Taurus passes, wherever
possible, Where this policy of meeting and
tepulsing hostile attacks at the frontier did
hot work, local forces would harass the
invaders, keeping track of every movement
and the location of each party or group.
‘Numerous small forts and fortresses along the
major routes, located at crossroads or
locations where supplies might be stored asOutbreak
well as by the frontier passes through which
enemy forces had to pass, reinforced the local
troops. Although exposed to enemy action,
these posts were a constant threat to any
Invading force. In addition, a series of
frontier districts was set up in the 8th and
9th centuries as independent commands
along the frontier, complementing the armies
of the themes. Known as kleisourarchies
(kleisourarchiai), they emphasised the highly
localised pattern of defence.
The empire suffered many defeats,
especially in the earlier period, but it also
witnessed some major successes, particularly
where the invaders could be shadowed and
the imperial armies brought together at the
right time and place. These encounters
showed that the strategy operated by the
imperial forces could succeed, when the
armies were well led and adequate
intelligence of enemy movements was
available. But the war in the east was largely
a struggle between two equal powers, with
the imperial side having the advantage of
geography and communications to offset the
superior numbers on the side of the
Caliphate, Only in the 10th century, when
the empire went over fully to the offensive,
does this picture change. These defensive
arrangements were progressively allowed
to fall into disuse as the empire went onto
the offensive after the middle of the
10th century. And when the empire's
situation changed for the worse, as a result,
of the appearance from the 1040s and
afterwards of a host of new enemies, the lack
of an effective, deep defensive structure
permitted the Seljuk Turks to conquer and
permanently occupy central Asia Minor after
the battle of Mantzikert in 1071 with
virtually no opposition. The empire was
never again able to re-establish its power in
the region.
Pre-emptive attacks
Part of the imperial defensive strategy
entailed launching pre-emptive strikes
against the enemy, partly aimed at
containment, partly at the reassertion of
Roman ideological power. Some of these
attacks were successful, some less so. Among
the bleakest episodes in the history of the
empire is the attack launched against the
Bulgars by the emperor Nikephoros | in 811,
which ended in both the death of the
emperor and a crushing defeat. Nikephoros,
who had been the chief finance officer of the
empress Biren, came to the throne in 802
and appears to have wished to defeat the
Bulgars so comprehensively that the Bulgar
khanate could be recovered for the empire.
An expedition in 809 had reached the Bulgar
capital at Pliska in north-east Bulgaria, and
sacked it. The expedition of 811 was
intended to establish a more permanent
Roman presence in the region. Nikephoros
ordered the assembly of a large force made
up from contingents from the Asta Minor
armies supplemented by troops from the
European themata and the imperial guards
units, the fagmata, There was a ceremonial
aspect to the whole affair, since the emperor
took victory for granted after the easy win in
809, and as well as the soldiers a large
number of courtiers and palace officials also
accompanied the expedition. But the
imperial troops were eventually drawn into
an ambush, where during a night attack they
were utterly routed, The defeat was one of,
the blackest days of imperial history, no less
of a catastrophe than the battle of
Adrianople in 378 at which the emperor
Valens had died fighting the Goths. The
Bulgar khan became the most dangerous
enemy the empire had to face for the next
few years, and was able to lay siege to
Constantinople itself in 813.
Offensive warfare
Given the empire's strategic problems noted
already, most fighting could be justified in
some way or other as ‘defensive’, even where
it was clearly aggressively motivated. Such
were the wars waged in the later 10th and
carly 11th centuries against the Bulgars and
the Rus’, for example, when the justificationThe erp £750
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GA sor 0 Saracens 890-930
After the initial shock of the Arab conquests and
uge losses incureed in the middle of the 7th century
1e empire sloivly recovered, establishing a new
ministrative infrastructure based around the imps
for war was both the rejection of previously
agieed arrangements which were seen by the
emperor as dishonourable, the threat which
ensued from the Bulgars to the imperial
territories in Thrace, and the involvement of
the Rus’, In the autumn of 965, and
following the conquest by Byzantine armies
of the islands of Crete and Cyprus, as well as
of Cilicia in southern Asia Minor and its
incorporation into the empire, Bulgarian
envoys arrived at the court of the emperor
Their purpose was to request the payment of
the ‘tribute’ paid by Constantinople to the
Bulgar tsar as part of the guarantee for the
long-lasting peace which had been
established after the death of the Tsar
Symeon in 927. But the empire was in a very
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ee
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different position since the time at which
the original agreement had been made. The
emperor Nikephoros I! Phokas (963-69),
reflecting the outrage represented by the
presumptive demand of the Bulgarians, had
the envoys sent home in disgrace. Instead of
paying, he despatched a smail force to
demolish a number of Bulgarian frontier
posts, and then called in his allies to the
north, the Kiev Rus’, to attack the Bulgars in
the rear.
The steppe region stretching from the
plain of Hungary eastwards through
south Russia and north of the Caspian was
very important in imperial diplomacy, The
home of many nomadic peoples, mostly of
Turkie stock, it was always important to
keep these peoples well disposed towards the
empire. Constantinople had been able to
establish good relations with the Chazars
from the 630s, whose khans remained
faithful allies of most B:
Their strategie significance was great: they
antine emperors.The enpre st esheitt025-1030
Gort tote Nermars by 1100
GA. Ferrorylox c1071-1100
SS Fert recovered unde jon Utne
The great recong the later |Oth anc
| th centuries dramatic
the miidie east. The anv
and the P
IRered the balance of powe
the Normans int
inthe north soon transfor
were frequently invited to attack the Bulgars
from the north, for example, and exerted
crucial pressure on the latter at key
moments. They also kept the empire
informed of developments to the east, in
central Asia. But the Chazar empire
contracted during the later 9th century, as
various peoples to the east were set in
motion by the expansion of the Turkic
Pechenegs, who established themselves in
the steppe region between the Danube and
Don, The empire continued to follow the
same policy, of course, now with the
Pechenegs, whose value as a check on both
the Rus’ and the Magyars was obvious.
Yet they were a dangerous ally
The Rus’ were an am:
Igamation of
Scandinavian settlers and warriors with
indigenous Slavic peoples along the rivers
of central and western Russia. During the
9th century they had grown to be an
important political power, and by the 850s
and 860s their longships were regularly
entering the Black Sea. In the early
10th century, and following some hostilities,
trading agreements were concluded with the
empire. This developed into an alliance from
the middle of the 10th century, so that
when Nikephoros II asked for their support
in 966, their ambitious and warlike prince
Svyatoslav was only too willing to agree. In
968 he arrived on the Danube and easily
defeated the Bulgarian forces sent against
him, In 969 he had to return to Kiev to
repulse an attack from the Pechenegs, but
returned later in the year and, rapidly
‘occupying northern and eastern Bulgaria, he
deposed the tsar, Boris Il, and incorporated
Bulgaria into his own domain44 Essential Histories * Byzantium at War
‘Yeew from Acrocorinth, (Authes collection)
‘This was not a part of the emperor's
nal plan. In vain he attempted to
establish an alliance with the defeated
Bulgars, but towards the end of 969 the
emperor was assassinated, and his successor,
John I Tzimiskes, had to confront the
difficult task of removing this potentially far
more dangerous foe. Some of the Bulgar
nobility saw a chance to recover their
independence of the Byzantine state and its
culture by working with the Rus’, Svyatoslav
sent the new emperor an ultimatum to
evacuate all the European provinces and
confine the empire to Asia alone, who
realised that immediate action was essential.
In the spring of 970 a large Rus’ force
invaded Thrace, sacking the fortress of
Philippoupolis (mod. Plovdiv) and moving
on down the road to Constantinople.
‘The war that followed involved the
assembling of a major imperial army,
delaying tacties to distract and divert enemy
resources and, eventually, the complete
defeat of the Rus’ force and the return of
Svyatoslay to his own territories (although
he was killed by Pecheneg raiders on the way
home). It was a war fought initially as a
result of a rejection of what the empire's
rulers saw as an outdated and humiliating
agreement with an inferior neighbour, but
which quickly turned into a major offensive.
The result was, on the one hand, the
reincorporation of substantial parts of
eastern Bulgaria up to the Danube into
imperial territory. On the other, the
Byzantine victory encouraged the
development of a new independence
movement and the rise, during the 970s and
980s, of a new Bulgarian empire which,
under its tsar Samuel, was to be the major
foreign threat to imperial power until the
beginning of the 11th century. Only asa
result of the tireless campaigning of the
emperor Basil II, culminating in a final
victory in 1014 and the total recovery of all
the territory once held by the empire in theOutbreak 4
Bronze plaque of St Theadore (| Ith century), (Trustees
of the Brith Museum)
Balkans up to the Danube, was peace
re-established, and the Balkans became
‘once more an entirely Roman ~ from the
point of view of political and military
control ~ territory
A major shift in strategy followed these
successes as well ay successes against Islamic
powers in the east. The establishment of a
system of alliances or buffer states made the
maintenance of expensive standing forces,
Which constituted a great drain on the
treasury, less necessary. Economic and
cultural influence could be employed in
addition to the threat of military action to
maintain peace along the Danube, and
similar policies were applied in the east. The
emperors pursued a foreign policy which
Bronze plaque of Sts George and Demetrios
(( th century). (Trustees ofthe British Museum)
placed greater reliance on vassals and
neighbouring powers supplying troops, thus
limiting the demand on the empire’s own,
resources, But in the 1040s and afterwards
this strategy broke down, largely because the
balance between diplomacy and military
strength was damaged by civil war and
provincial rebellion, in turn a reflection of
important shifts in the social and political
structure of the empire. The provincial or
thematic militias had been neglected in
favour of full-time, regionally recruited
tagmata, better suited to the sort of offensive
warfare the empire had been waging since
the 950s; while reductions in the military
budget encouraged a greater dependence on
foreign mercenary troops, especially of
western knights Franks, Germans and
Normans. In 1071 such an army of mixed
Byzantine and foreign troops under the
‘emperor Romanos IV suffered a defeat at the
hands of the invacling Seljuk Turks near theries + Byzantium at War
winnie
fortress of Mantzikert in eastern Asia Minor
not @ great disaster from a purely military
perspective. Yet the civil war and internal
disruption that followed gave the invading,
Turks a free hand in central Asia Minor,
which was never again fully recovered.
Emperors from Alexios | onward spent the
period from the 1080s until the L180s
attempting to recover the situation but, in
the end, without success. The wars of the
period were fought increasingly using
western tactics and panoply, but with
[RESALE CURA MaT VM OME Exp ienpal Key rapaacny ey apa)
4 %:
xd manuscript of th
Séyfiszes (| Ith century), fo. 19. Defeat of the Bulgars by
Leo V. (Bbiioteca Nacional, Mactid)
LEFT Gold histarmenan nomisma of Issac | Korn
(1057-10 the emperag standing with
sheathed sworel (Barber Insitute of Fine Arts, University
Birmingham)
elements of a still clearly Byzantine or east
Roman tactical organisation ~ contemporaries
continue to remark on the order, cohesion
and discipline with which the multi-ethnic
and colourful Byzantine armies still fought.
Byzantium went to war for many reasons
in practical terms ~ perceived military threats
to the frontier, responses to actual invasion
and raiding from hostile neighbours, as well
as ideologically motivated wars in which
justification depended on notions of what
territories used to be Roman and could be
legitimately recovered, and on ideas about
ideological challenges to the Christian
Roman wotld view. The wars of reconquest
in the later 10th century were in part
motivated and justified on the latter
grounds, for example, even though in
Byzantium no notion of ‘holy war’
ever really evolved.
s such,The fighting
Organising for war
The evolution of
tactical administration
There were important changes in tactical
structures over the period from the 6th to
the 11th century, and again from the later
11th to the 12th centuries and beyond,
Units of the middle of the 6th century
varied considerably in their regimental
organisation, The older legions and auxiliary
forces continued to exist through the
3rd and 4th centuries, divided into alae of
cavalry and cohortes of infantry, nominally of
500 and 1,000 men respectively; although
under Constantine I (324-37), new infantry
units called auxitia often replaced these
cohortes, Newer legions, numbering
1,000-1,500, had also been created during
the 2nd and 3rd centuries, and this number
seems also to have applied to the original
legions by the 4th century. Apart from these
were units called vexillationes, originally
detachments from various units formed for a
particular reason during the period c.
150-250, which had been turned into
permanent units in their own right. This
term, vexillation, was applied in the
4th century to most of the new cavalry units,
recruited at that time, Although some of
these technical differences survived into the
6th century, the general term for most units
was by then the word muerus or its Greek
equivalent, arithmos or tagma, which simply
‘meant ‘unit’ or ‘number’ (of soldiers).
Byzantine tactics and strategy had to
adapt quickly to the situation following
the Arab conquests in the middle of the
7th century. Armies along the frontiers are
often referred to as Kaballarika themata ~
“cavalry armies’ ~ showing that light cavalry
had come to dominate the warfare of the
urinated manuscript of the History of John Skytzes
(Ith century), fol 30y The army of the rebel Thomas
the Slav massacres the inhabitants ofa captured town.
(Biblioteca Nacional, Madrid)
Suyetaely aia inet yrnv er ow
iNadepart
vane48. Essential Histories * Byzantium at War
period, much of which involved skirmishing
and hit-and-run raids. But while infantry
continued to be needed, and played an
important part in many campaigns, their
value appears slowly to have declined, to
some extent reflecting social factors, since
they were drawn mostly from the poorest of
the provincial soldiery. The development of
infantry tactics after the period of the first
Islamic conquests, along with the higher
profile of mounted warfare, therefore,
reflected the strategic situation in which the
empire found itself. During the period from
the later 7th to the 9th or early 10th.
centuries, the differences which once existed
between the different types of infantry and
cavalry were subject to a general levelling
out of the different arms, into light cavalry
and infantry. Only the tagmata at
Constantinople seem to have provided a
heavy cavalry force. It seems to have been
the responsibility of local officers in the
provinces to establish field units and to arm
them as each specific occasion required, The
sizes of units on the battlefield varied
according to tactical need: there seems to
have been no fixed number for the different
formations,with figures recommended for
the smallest infantry units, the banda, for
example, ranging from as few as 150 to as
many as 400. Several tourmai could appear
‘on campaign as a single large division, for
example, or vice versa, Most themes had two
or three divisions or tourmai, but this does
not mean that they were the same size or
could muster the same number of soldiers.
‘The provincial armies were organised into
what we would refer to as divisions, brigades
and regiments ~ tourmai, drouggoi and banda.
The first and last were also districts of their
theia, or military region. Each tourma had a
headquarters or base in a fortified town or
fortress, Fach bandon was identified with a
particular locality from which its soldiers
were recruited. Fach tourmarchés, or
commander of a fourma, was an important
figure in the military administration of his
theme, responsible for the fortresses and
strongpoints in his district, as well as for the
safety of the local population and their
goods and chattels. His most important
responsibility before the middle of the
10th century, however, was dealing with
raids into his territory and informing his
superiors of enemy movements.
Ituminated manuscript of the History of john Skytzes
(11th century), fol 34 The emperar Michae! Il receives
information from scouts and spies about the forces of
Thomas the Slav. (Bibicteca Nacional, Madeid)The fighting 49
During the course of the 10th century
the army evolved a much more offensive
tactical structure, the main causes being the
need to recruit more professional soldiers,
and the need to operate effectively on
campaigns which demanded more than the
seasonally available theme armies. The main
changes were the introduction of a corps of
heavy cavalry armed with lances and maces,
which could operate effectively alongside
infantry, and which substantially enhanced
the aggressive power of the Byzantine
cavalry, together with the revival of a corps
of disciplined, effective heavy infantry, able
to stand firm in the line of battle, confront
enemy infantry and cavalry, march long
distances and function as garrison troops
away from their home territory on a
permanent basis. At the same time, the army
leadership developed new battlefield tactics,
so that commanders had a flexible yet
hard-hitting force at their disposal that
could respond appropriately to a range of
different situations.
The remarkable successes achieved by
Byzantine armies in the second half of the
10th century in particular, under a series of
very able commanders, and described in the
historical accounts of the period,
corroborate the evidence of the tactical
treatises, In one tract a new formation of
infantry soldiers is described, consisting of
troops wielding thick-stocked, long-necked
javelins or pikes, whose task it was to face
and turn back enemy heavy cavalry attacks.
‘Twenty years later the tactic had evolved
further, so that there were in each major
infantry unit of 1,000 men 100 soldiers so
equipped, integrated with 400 ordinary
spearmen, 300 archers and 200 light
nfantry (with slings and javelins). This
important change in the role of infantry
was reflected in the changed political and
military situation of the 10th century. In
the late 6th century cavalry began to
achieve a certain pre-eminence in military
organisation and tactics, whereas the
L0th-century texts give infantry formations
equal or even preferential treatment.
Infantry became once more a key element in
the army, both in terms of numbers as well
as tactics, a clear contrast to the situation in
the preceding centuries. The new tactics
‘were embodied in a new formation, in
which infantry and cavalry worked together,
essentially a hollow square or rectangle,
depending on the terrain, designed to cope
with encircling movements from hostile
cavalry, as a refuge for Byzantine mounted
units when forced to retreat, and as a means
of strengthening infantry cohesiveness and
morale. Infantry were no longer drawn up in
a deep line with a largely defensive role, but
actively integrated into the offensive heavy
cavalry tactics of the period. And a very
important aspect of the change was a focus
on the recruitment of good infantry from
warlike peoples within the empire,
especially Armenians. The demand for
uniformity in tactical function and therefore
equipment and weaponry meant that the
Byzantine infantry of this period were more
like their classical Roman predecessors than
anything in the intervening period
New formations of cavalry appear, heavily
‘armoured troops armed from head to foot in
lamellar, mail and quilting, whose horses
were likewise protected. Face, neck, flanks
and forequarters were all to be covered with
armour to prevent enemy missiles and blows
from injuring the cavalryman’s mount
Known as kataphraktoi or klibanophorvi, they
were relatively few in number due to the
expense of maintaining them, and were the
élite strike force in each field army, drawn,
up in a broad-nosed wedge with their only
function to smash through the enemy heavy
cavalry or infantry line, disrupt his
formation, and open it up to permit
supporting horse- and foot-soldiers to exploit
the situation. Contemporary writers, both
Byzantine and Arab, comment on the effects,
of this formation on their foes. The imperial
armies achieved a powerful reputation, to
the extent that by the 1030s the mere threat
of an imperial army marching into northern,
Syria was enough to keep the local Muslim
emirs in check, Yet while these successes
were the result of a combination of good.
organisation and logistics, intelligent tactics,The fighting 5:
well-armed, trained and disciplined soldiers,
and good morale, the key always remained
the competence and effectiveness of the
general in command, An army Is only as
good as its leadership, however, and
although tactical order and training
certainly gave Byzantine armies through
much of the empire's history an obvious
advantage, incompetent officers were the
bane of the system: dependence on the
charisma and intelligence of its leaders was
one of the most significant in-built
weaknesses of the imperial military system
at the tactical level. During the middle of
the 11th century, and in a context of
short-sighted strategic planning and internal
political conflict, this produced serious
problems and led to the erosion of the
effectiveness of both the field armies and
the provincial defences.
As the demands of offensive warfare
required the employment of ever greater
numbers of professional, mercenary soldiers,
both indigenous and foreign, so many of
the provincial, thematic units of the
imperial armies were neglected, especially in
the period after the death of Basil Il in 1025.
Michael Attaleiates, a contemporary of the
Mantikert campaign who travelled with the
imperial entourage, paints a sad picture of
the state of the thematic levy raised for the
campaign of 1071, remarking that the
provincial troops were entirely untitted for
warfare - they had been neither mustered
nor paid or supplied with their traditional
provisions for many years. Yet his account
of the campaigns of the dynamic emperor
Romanos IV in the years 1068-71 shows
that the imperial armies still possessed an
order, discipline and cohesion when
properly led,
Byzantine armies in the middle and later
11th century were a mixture of regular
mercenary units from the different parts of
the empire, the older thematic soldiers, and
foreign units. ‘The growing political and
cultural influence of the world around
Byzantium, which had been held at bay for
so long, meant that the empire was
becoming more and more integrated into
the tactical world of the lands around it
Byzantine order and discipline remained a
significant element in the empire’s armies,
but the latter were a polyglot and
multi-ethnic mixture of Seljuk, Pecheneg or
Cuman horse archers, Norman, German and
Frankish knights, Bulgarian and Anatolia
light infantry, Georgians and Alans from
the Caucasus, imperial guards recruited
from outside the empire (Varangians, for
‘example, from the 1070s chiefly made up
of Anglo-Saxons who had left recently
conquered Norman England). The Byzantine
army was no longer, strictly speaking,
Byzantine,
n
One of the tactical innovations of the
period with which Byzantine soldiers and
generals had to contend was the massed
heavy cavalry charge favoured by the
Normans. Although they were quite familiar
with Norman tactics (Norman mercenaries
had served in the imperial armies in Italy and
Sicily in the 1030s and 1040s), the Byzantines$2. Essental Histories Byzantium at War
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had only rarely needed to confront it In spite of efforts under the emperors,
themselves, Most of the warfare they had of the Komnenos dynasty, many
been involved in since the 1060s had been indigenous units were re-equipped and
against light-armed, highly mobile enemies trained in western style, so that the result
such as Turks and Pechenegs. And whereas was an army no different from any other
the Byzantine heavy cavalry of the later 10th multi-ethnic, polyglot mercenary army in
century had been armed with lances and its tactics and formations. The difference
maces, they had advanced at a trot, not at lay in the superior order and tactical
the charge, with the aim of simply rolling dispositions of the imperial troops, when
over the enemy force facing them, these were properly exploited by an ableThe fighting 53
LEFT Marching order for field army in enemy territory,
late | 0th century. (Author's collection)
ey:
(2) adharce scouts
(b)_vangued
El) cavalry centve division
(62) cavalry ight wing
(€3) cavaly let wing
(4) casary cerirelsecond line
QI) infantry centre
(€2) infantry right wing
(@3) inant let wing
(64) infantry rearguard
Ce) basgagelsege train
CO rearguars
(8). emperor & household troops
(i) outrdersffank scouts
RIGHT Marching order for defies and Roman territory,
late 10th century. (Author's collection)
Key:
(@) advance scouts
(b) vanguard
(el) cavalry contre division
(€2) cavalry rah wing
(€3) cavary le wing
(€4) cavalry contre/second line
(AI) infantry centre
(2) infantry right wing
(€3) infantry lot wing
(4) infartry rearguard
(©) baggapesiege train
(9 rearguard
(@)_ emperor & household troops
(h) outriders/fank scouts
Sources: Leo, Tactica ix, (0th century),
Nikephoros Ourauos, actica, 64 (late lOxhearly | Ith
century), Anonymous, Campaign organization, 10 (970s)
commanding officer, and this is still
evident on occasion in the later years of
the 12th century. By the middle of the
13th century, and following the fall of
Constantinople to the armies of the fourth
crusade, while Byzantine technical terms,
titles, and names for types of unit continued
to be employed in the shrinking territories
of the empire, tactics, armour and weaponry
were no different from those of the
surrounding cultures and states with
whom the Byzantines were alternately at
peace and war.
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Strategy
Strategic dispositions evolved to meet the
needs of the moment. In the 6th century
and up to the period of the Arab invasions
the units established in garrisons along and
behind the frontier were called limitanei,
frontier soldiers, usually comprised of theThe empire c.1204—-1250
BB Late empire and preipatios
Venice
Enore of Nicaea
Bh Expire of trebicond a 2500mies
| Despotate of Eprus a ‘stot |LEFT The fourth crusade destroyed the unity o
‘empire, and although Constantinople was retaken in
261, the empire never recovered its former strength
and prestige.
older legions and auxiliary regiments, while
the field armies were largely formed of more
recently established units, and located across
the provinces, often well behind the
frontier, in strategic bases from which they
could meet any incursions into Roman
tertitory. One result of the loss of the
eastern and Danubian provinces during the
7th century was the disappearance of the
former and the withdrawal into Asia Minor
of the latter, where they settled down to
form the themes to which we have already
referred to in the ‘Outbreak’ chapter. In the
later 10th century new and much smaller
territories under doukes, ‘dukes’ grew up
along both the eastern and northern
frontiers, serving both as a zone of defence
and as a springboard for further advances,
At the same time, the old themes became
increasingly demilitarised with the growth
in the use of mercenaries, as we have also
nting 55
seen, The collapse of the later 11th century
brought with it a need to reorganise, and
although the changes wrought by the
Komnenoi produced a series of new themata
and new frontiers in Asia Minor, the basic
principles of 11th-century strategy ~ an
in-depth defence based in fortresses and
similar strongpoints supported by a single
imperial field force based in and around.
Constantinople - were maintained. The last
two centuries of the empire, from the 1250s
Until 1453, saw no substantial change,
although numbers were very much reduced
as the empire's resources shrank.
Logistics
There can be little doubt that one reason for
the empire’s survival from the 7th century
on was its effective logistical administration.
The road system, although both greatly
reduced in scope and degraded in quality
when compared with that of the Roman
period, remained an important asset. In
addition, the carefully managed fiscal
was closely tied into the needs of the
army, and although the exact administrative
and organisational structures evolved over
the period in question, the arrangements for
supplying the soldiers in either peacetime or
war were effective. Resources were collected
in either money or in kind, depending upon
a number of variables: whether the areas in
question supported enough market activity;
whether the agricultural or other resources
needed by the army were available and
could be stored; what the particular needs
of the army at that point in fact were; and
how many soldiers and animals needed to
be fed and housed over what length of time.
The effects of an army on the land and its
population were well understood, and there
are in the written sources of the period
syst
both recommendations to commanders not
Huminated ranuscript of the History of John Ski
th century), fol.213. Byzantine troops defeat an Aral
army in Sicily n the 1030s, Note the trumpet used for
ignals, Biblioteca Nacional, Madr56 Essential Histories + Byzantium at War
to keep concentrations of troops for too
long on Byzantine territory and descriptions
of what happened when this advice was
not followed.
When a campaign was planned, local fiscal
officials liaised with the central authorities
and the military records department at
Constantinople, so that the right amount
and type of supplies were provided for the
numbers involved. The outlay was often very
heavy, and accounts from the 10th century
show just how heavy the burden could be,
especially when the emperor and his
household were on the expedition, Each of,
the regions through which the army passed
had to put aside adequate supplies of grain,
meat (usually on the hoof) and oil or wine
for the required numbers of troops. Large
expeditionary armies — which would
generally be divided into several smaller
columns, each taking a separate route and
heading for a pre-arranged rendezvous on the
frontier ~ numbered as many as 20,000 or
more, and very occasionally as many as
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GENERAL PLAN OF CAMPThe fighting 57
30,000; but the average theme force might be
no more than 3,000-4,000, often far fewer,
confronting armies of the same size, or
shadowing larger forces until they could be
ambushed or taken on in a full-scale battle
Providing resources for such armies involved
a considerable organisational effort. In
addition to food, horses and pack-animals
had to be provided, weapons and other items
of military equipment replaced and, for
expeditions intended to take enemy
strongholds, wagons or carts carrying siege
machinery and artillery. While food and
supplies were generally provided by the
districts through which the army passed,
weapons and other equipment, as well as
cavalry mounts and pack-animals, might
come from more distant provinces. In a
10th-century account, for example, detailing
some of the preparations for an expediton by
sea, some provinces were commissioned to
produce a certain number of weapons: the
region of Thessaloniki was ordered to deliver
200,000 arrows, 3,000 heavy infantry spears
and ‘as many shields as possible’;
the region of Hellas was asked to produce
1,000 heavy infantry spears; while the
governor of Furippos in Greece, and the
commanders of the themes of Nikopolis
and of the Peloponnese all undertook to
provide 200,000 arrows and 3,000 heavy
infantry spears. The same document specifies
also that other governors or officers were
commissioned to levy thousands of nails
and similar items from their provinces for
ship construction.
LEFT Pian of field army marching camp late !Oth century
25 described in |Oth-century mittary hanebock (From G.
Dennis, Pree Byzantine Miltary Treaties p. 335, i 108)
ABOVE Section of ditch and embanienent. as described
in Oth
tury military handbook. From G. Dennis
Three Byzantine Miltary Treaties. p. 335. fg. 1OF)58 Essential Histor
Byzantium at Wai
itary manuals stressed that excess
personal baggage and servants should not
be taken by the officers or wealthier men,
since it caused problems in respect of food
and transport; and while many commanders
clearly enforced such regulations, there is
that many did not and that
discipline in this area was stack ~ with all
the consequences that brought with it. The
imperial household, on the other hand,
necessitated a vast amount of ‘excess
baggage’, since the luxuries to which the
emperors were accustomed were rarely left
behind. The imperial baggage train in the
later 9th and 10th centuries was supposed to
have almost 600 pack-animals of one sort or
another, to carry the household tents,
carpets and other furniture ~ including a
portable commode with gilded seat for the
imperial person(!), folding tables, cushions,
tableware, a private portable chapel, a
portable Turkish’ bath, with supplies,
high-quality wines, meat and fowl, spices
and herbs, as well as medicines and various
other items for personal use. Large numbers
of gifts in the form of both cash ~ gold and
silver coin ~ and richly-decorated luxury
cloths and items of clothing were also
taken, in part intended as rewards to the
provincial officers, in part as gifts and bribes
for foreign guests of distin:
deserters from the other side. The attitude
of the generals, who were generally
members of the social elite and wealthy
their own right, varied, Some led a fairly
ascetic life while on campaign, winning the
respect of their men and other observers by
sharing the soldiers’ lifestyle; others insisted
on taking as many home comforts along
with them as they could, in part in order to
stress their own status. Yet in general, the
system of campaign organisation and
logistics was efficient and effective, and kept
Byzantine armies in the field in even the
most difficult circumstances. Sometimes, of
course, in particular in the context of the
guerrilla warfare of the frontier regions, thi
logistical apparatus was irrelevant: soldiers
had to live off the land and move in
unpredictable directions in order to keep
sion yaren peat *
is whsiepaaay To vos pele
of OTA)
Tey TaFCr oman
track of and to harass enemy columns, But
even here the provincial fiscal apparatus
made it possible to claim back through the
following year's tax assessment what could
be demonstrated to have been consumed by
the army, although this, like all such
systems, tended to be cumbersome,
inefficient, slow and unfair
Where Byzantine armies failed it was
generally due to poor leadership, or to a
combination of poor morale and lack of
discipline, themselves often a direct result
of the quality and abilities of the
‘commanding officers. They defended their
territory, with varying success, for some
600 years, from the 6th and 7th centuries
well into the 12th century, if we includeyr |Coi HV UB es dp ey. ape eeefaponce SIME HER
feyectrre lela lara key oe: 6 Se levisk eam Pee
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4
the counter-offensives in Asia Minor ABOVE lurrinated manuscript ofthe History of
under the emperors Alexios 1, John II and Stes (1th century) fl. [51 b. Byzantine forces lay
Manuel I Komnenos in the period from the eh mee
| 1080s to the 1170s. For in spite of some ional Madr) “oe
often very heavy defeats, they nevertheless
maintained the territorial integrity of the FOLLOWING PAGE Late | Oth-century bate
eastern Roman state and were even able, on.
several occasions, to go over to the
offensive. The logistical arrangements
maintained by the empire were a major, CS) a eee re
environment in which the empire had to (e)ou
survive had changed sufficiently for it no (0 scone me heey cally tee
ultimately fail, G@) baggagePortrait of a soldier
Recruitment, discipline, and life
on campaign
Soldiers
‘There is no doubt that the majority of
‘ordinary soldiers in the army throughout the
history of the empire were of fairly humble
status. The ‘better-off” ordinary soldiers
among the thematic armies in the 9th and
10th centuries appear to have held a relatively
high position in their communities, however,
partly because of their special fiscal and legal
status: they were exempt from extia taxation
and a range of state impositions in terms of
labour service or providing housing and
supplies for other soldiers, officers or imperial
officials, to which the ordinary population was
always subject; and they could bestow their
property without having to adhere strictly to
Roman inheritance law about the division of
property among heirs, This gave soldiers of all
types, even when they were not especially
well paid, an enhanced social prestige, set
them apart somewhat from the ordinary
population, and gave them a sense of group
identity and solidarity.
The sources for recruitment and length
for the petiod after the middle to
the end of the 6th century are not very
informative. Before that time, it seems
that the traditional Roman regulations
probably applied, with a minimum
recruitment age of 18 years and a minimum
height requirement of about five feet six
inches. There is reason to believe that the
minimum age for recruitment in the
9th and 10th centuries was still 18 and the
maximum 40. Service beyond the age of
40 was not unusual, however, and several
of servi
examples of soldiers who served beyond
that age are known. Some sources suggest
that many officers stayed on long after
their useful career was over, as a result
adversely affecting the military effectiveness
of their uni
‘There were important differences between
the requirements applied to recruits to
‘professional’ units, such as the iagmata, and
the provincial or thematic armies, with
many of the regulations governing
admission to the first group being retained
from the late Roman legislation, whereas
thematic soldiers were required merely to
appear at the regular muster parade
appropriately equipped - with mount,
provisions for a certain number of days,
shield and spear. Some restrictions on
recruitment also existed, prohibitions on the
enlistment of heretics were applied, at least
in theory, Priests and monks were forbidden
to join the army, while those convicted of
adultery or similar crimes, those who had
already been dishonourably discharged, and
so forth, were technically disqualified from
enlisting. But it is impossible to know to
what extent such regulations were observed.
It is most likely that in the situation that
developed from the middle of the
7th century most of the formal regulations
of the Roman period had become irrelevant.
The application of such regulations was in
any event not possible for foreign units,
especially Muslims, Franks and others outside
the sphere of Byzantine religious-political
authority, nor to others, such as Armenians,
who may have belonged to non-Orthodox
communities. The further away from
Constantinople, the more likely such
regulations are to have been ignored. By the
10th century the greater diversity in origins,
military value and contexts in which soldiers
for different types of unit were recruited must,
have led to an equal diversity in their
conditions of enlistment and service, not just,
between simple thematic soldiers and soldiers,
of the imperial fagmata but between foreign
units and the mercenary soldiers recruited
for specific campaigns.All soldiers paid by the government,
whether tagmata or themata, were listed in
military registers, copies of which were
maintained in their province and in the
government department responsible at
Constantinople. Foreign units employed as
mercenaries under their own officers could
be treated in the same way or paid through,
their leaders, who would receive a lump sum
at regular intervals to be distributed to the
men. Leave was granted on a rotational
basis, and for periods of between 30 days
and three months, depending on the
situation of the unit in question
on active service, for example, or in winter
whether
quarters, The number of men who could be
absent at any given tim
officers who permitted more men to be away
could be punished. But it is not clear
whether these rules were observed or to
which types of unit they were applied.
Soldiers received no state benefits when
was restricted, and
they retired, other than their protected fiscal
status and special legal privileges, although,
there was a great deal of official rhetoric
about how the emperor and the state should
look after those who fought for the faith and
for God’s empire on earth. Until the
the 6th or middle of the 7th centuries there
was a system of state pensions or annuities,
ind of
but the conditions of the 7th century
probably made such arrang:
fin
ments
ncially impossible for the hard-pressed
government. For the ordinary soldiers of the
field armie
the provinces this was
reflected in the state
acceptance and
probable encouragement of their being
supported directly from their own
households, which by the later 8th century,
if not long before, resulted in the majority of
thematic soldiers holding landed property
from which their duties could be supported.
They had to supply provisions for a limited
period, equipment and weaponry, and
mounts when they were called up for the
yearly campaigning season. When such
provincial soldiers were too old to serve
actively, they will simply have returned to
their farms or traditional occupations
Soldiers could thus be divided into several
Enthroned figure of Chri
University of Birmingham
categories according to the conditions under
which they were recruited: self-supporting
thematic militia, full-time theme soldiers
supported by state salaries and other
emoluments; professionals recruited for
particular regiments or for particular
campaigns, All shared the same le
however, until the introduction of ever larger
numbers of foreign mercenaries in the
11th and 12th centuries rendered this
picture much more complex.
Many men who had completed their
service in the army (as well ay many who
were trying to avoid conscription or who
had deserted) entered a monastery. Most of
the evidence concerns senior officers, but
there is nevertheless some information on
al rights,
ondinary soldiers opting for this mode of
retirement, in particular those who had no
family cares. Official regulations forbidding
serving soldiers to join a monastery were
repeated from the late Roman legislation
Adopting the monastic life catered both for
the spiritual well-being of the individuals
concerned as well as providing a degree of
economic security. It offered at the same
time a way through which the soldier coulel
atone for the sins he had committed in
terms of killing the enemies of the empireand of his faith while serving the emperor.
The numbers entering monasteries among
the officers of the provinces was substantial
enough for an Arab historian to remark on
the fact, and to note that these who pursued
this life forfeited the continuation of their
cash salary, to which they were otherwise
entitled as bearers of an imperial title
Officers
There was no ‘officer corps’ in the Byzantine
army, although it is clear that the majority of
men who commanded units beyond the
level of a squad or troop came from the
wealthier elements in society, whether in the
provinces or in Constantinople, and that
service at court in one of the palace units
functioned as a sort of training school. The
sources tell us quite a lot about the middle
and upper levels of officers, and until the
12th century it is clear that there was always
a substantial meritocratic element in
advancement. Social background and
education played a role, but it was perfectly
possible for an able and compet
lower-ranking officer to rise to high position,
In all aspects of Byzantine society social
‘connections and kinship always played an
important role too, and training and ability
were generally mediated through personal
tics; for example, an officer might advance
his career through service initially in the
retinue of an important officer, from where
he might receive a junior appointment in a
local regiment, rising through the various
gtades, or being transferred to a s
position elsewhere. Some careers developed
within families serving in the same unit ~
t soldier or
there are several examples of officers’ sons
entering their father’s unit as simple troopers
or soldiers before bei
and then more senior officer grade; in othi
cases, we hear of privileged young provincial
men sent to Constantinople where, with the
14 promoted to junior
(1081-1118). Reverses
Barber Institute of Fine
help of an influential relative oF patron, they
were appointed to a junior post in the guards
before further promotion, In one case, which
was probably not untypieal, a young man
was appointed first to a small corps of elite
wu
junior command at the capital, then a
middling provincial post, before being
promoted to a senior position, all in the
course of some 10 years oF so
By the middle of the 11th century the
growth of a pow:
had brought some changes to this structure.
The provincial elite itself provided a major
source of recruits to the middle and senior
officers’ posts in the empire, and during the
rds in the palace, before receiving a
ful provincial aristocracy
later 9th and 10th centuries came to
monopolise most key provincial military
commands. ‘The increasing use of mercenaries
reduced at the same time the importance and
status of the provincial, thematic soldiery,
nto the mass of the
peasantry from which they were drawn,
thereby losing their distinctive social position
who blended back
Discipline and training
The Byzantine army, at least as represented in
the narrative histories and in the military
treatises, prided itself on its order and
discipline. Life in the army involved a very
different sort of daily routine from life in64 Essential Histories © Byzantium at War
civilian contexts or from that in less
disciplined and organised neighbouring
armies. A 6th-century military handbook
makes this abundantly clear: ‘Nature produces
but few brave men, whereas care and training
make efficient soldiers,’ notes the author.
Levels of discipline varied and were a major
cause of concem to commanders and to the
authors of all the military treatises, There are
plenty of cases of mutiny and unrest among,
the provincial armies and the examples of
troops panicking when the commander was
thought to have been killed or injured is
evidence of the variable psychological
condition of the troops. The extent to which
proper discipline was actually enforced is not
very clear in the limited sources. Usually it
Was the most able commanders who were
most likely to apply military discipline
effectively, partly a reflection of their personal
character and ability to inspire confidence
among the soldiers ~ a point also recognised
in the military treatises. Financial generosit
either on the part of individual commanders
or officers, or the government, was a crucial
Ingredient in encouraging soldiers to follow
orders and accept the discipline necessary for
effective fighting,
Discipline also varied according to the
categories of troops. A strict code certainly
prevailed in elite units such as the imperial
which had a particular
loyalty to their commanding officer. One
story recounts the tale of an officer who was
upbraided by the emperor himself for his
unkempt appearance while at his post in the
palace. Discipline was probably least effective
like thematic forces, but under
competent officers it seems to have been
effectively maintained. There existed an
official code of military discipline which is
frequently included in the military
handbooks, and effective leaders seem on the
whole to have applied it. Nikephoros Il is,
reported to have awarded punishment toa
soldier for dropping his shield because he was
too tired to continue carrying it. When his
officer ignored the order, he too was punished
severely, on the grounds that the first had
endangered his comrades as well as himself,
tagimata and in un
in the militi
while the latter had compounded the crime
and further endangered the well-being of
the whole force. Constantine V in the
8th century, Nikephoros Il, John I Tzimiskes,
Basil II in the late 10th century and Romanos
IV in the later 1060s were all regarded with
approval as strict disciplinarians, as was
Alexios I in the late 11th century. Yet
discipline often broke down,
There are some hints in the sources about
the exercises carried out by the soldiers,
descriptions corroborated by accounts of
similar exercises in the tactical manuals and
handbooks. Nikephoros Phokas put on a
series of military games and mock battles in
the hippodrome at Constantinople in the
960s — they were so realistic and frightening
that a panic occurred which claimed many
lives, But whatever the textbooks said about
the value of such exercises, sensible
‘commanders appear generally to have been
aware of the limitations of the different sorts
of troops under their command. ‘The treatises
‘on warfare often include quite simple, easily
managed tactical manoeuvres for the great
bulk of the thematic infantry, who were on
the whole not well equipped and potentially
unreliable, In contrast the well-trained and
well-equipped heavy cavalry and elite units,
were expected to implement quite complex
manoeuvres, frequently under enemy attack
on the battlefield. Skills and training,
discipline and morale went hand in hand.
The sort of exercise in particular skills
which cavalry troopers had to carry out is
illustrated in a late 6th-century manual:
[The trooper] should shoot rapidly, mounted
‘on his horse and at a canter, to the front, to the
rear, to right and to left; he should practise
Teaping onto iis horse. When mounted and at a
Canter hte should shoot one or two arrows rapidly
and put the strung bow int its case ... antd then
take the lance whict he carries on his back.
With the strung bow in its case he should hold
the lance in his hand, then quickly replace it on
hhis back and take the bow.
As well as these individual skills with bows,
lance or sword, the troops were drilled inPortrait of a soldier 65
formation, so that, in larger or smaller bodies,
they could be wheeled, moved from column.
into line and back again, form a square
against heavy cavalry attack, form into a
wedge to break through an enemy formation,
and so forth. Success on the battlefield often,
depended on the effectiveness with which
such manoeuvres might be carried out,
although it was also admitted that things
should be kept as simple as possible to avoid
confusion or being caught unprepared
mid-way through a manoeuvre — there are
examples of battles in which one of the
reasons for the collapse of the imperial forces
appears to be due to such errors
Life on campaign
As we have seen, life as a soldier in the
Byzantine army must have varied
‘enormously from century to century as the
‘empire's fortunes changed, and depending
on the commanding officers, the type of
tunit, and so forth. We have very little
evidence about individual soldiers, but there
is a good deal of information that can be
gleaned from the wide range of written
sources about what the life of an ordinary
soldier must have been like. In what follows,
therefore, I will illustrate some of the issues
by inventing a ‘typical’ soldier. Although
there is no text concerning our hypothetical
soldier, we can build up a picture of some
events in his life from several sources, so that
in the account below, all the things that
happened to him, the actions ascribed to
him or to others, the duties he carried out
and the fighting in which he was involved,
can be found in medieval sources of the
petiod from the 7th to the 12th centuries,
and are all perfectly compatible with the
actual historical context in which I will
situate him.
In this section we will follow the daily
routine of a typical cavalry trooper on.
campaign under the general Bardas Skleros in
the Balkans in 971. ‘The soldier's name was
Theodore, a fairly common and popular name,
and one shared by one of the most famous
soldier saints of the eastern Christian world,
St Theodore the recruit, one of the four patron
saints of soldiers along with saints Demetrios,
Merkourios and George.
Theodore came from the village of
Krithokomi near the fortress town of
‘Tzouroullon in Thrace. Theodore was the son
‘of a soldier himself, and the family’s land was
subject to the strateia, the military service due
from those enrolled on the thematic military
service register. His family was not well off, but
their neighbours, who were also liable to
military service, were permitted to contribute
jointly to arming and equipping a single
cavalry soldier. Theodore’s skills had brought
him into a unit of lancers, medium cavalry
armed also with bows and maces, where he
held the rank of dekarchos, commander of a
troop of 10 men, in a bandon or squadron of
50 soldiers. He served effectively on a full-time
rather than a seasonal basis and a campaign
offered him the chance of a promotion, perhaps
to second-in-command of his squadron.
In the spring of 970 the empire faced an
invasion from a large Rus’ force deep into
imperial territory in Thrace, where they took
the local garrisons by surprise and were able
to sack the fortress of Philippoupolis (mod,
Plovdiv), before advancing along the road to
Constantinople. Since the emperor John had
most of his effective field units in the east,
where they were campaigning near Antioch,
he appointed Bardas Skleros, together with
the patrikios Peter, both experienced
commanders, to take a medium-sized
force ~ numbering some 10,000 ~ and scout
the enemy dispositions in the occupied
territories, As a secondary objective they
were to exercise the troops and prevent enemy
raiders committing further depredations. At
the same time, spies ~ disguised in Bulgarian
and Rus’ costume — were sent into enemy-held
territory to learn as much as they could about
the Rus’ commander Svyatoslav’s movements.
Svyatoslav soon learned of the advancing
imperial column, and in response despatched
a force of both Rus’ and Bulgar troops, with a
supporting detachment of Petchenegs with
whom he was temporarily allied, to drive the
Romans off66 Essential Hi
orgs. Byzantium at War
luminated manuscript of the History of fon Skylitzes
({ th century), fol, S5y a, Combat staged in the
hippodrome at Constantinople between a Saracen
prisoner and the emperor's champion. (Biblioteca
Nacional. Madrid)
The march north followed the established
pattern, Bardas needed to move quickly, and
so forced the pace somewhat. Within
imperial territory he could rely on the
co-operation of local officials to supply his
troops; once in enemy territory his soldiers
and their animals had to live off the land.
But regardless of where they were, the army
always entrenched for the night. The scouts
and surveyors sent ahead to locate an
appropriate site had to ensure both an
adequate water supply as well as good
defensive properties, and preferably in
relatively open country to avoid the
possibility of surprise attack. On this
campaign the latter was difficult since the
army passed through hilly and wooded
scrubland for much of its route, Byzantine
‘camps followed a standard pattern, The
commander’s standard was set up in the
centre and each of the subordinate officers ~
Bardas had divided his force into three
divisions of about 3,500 men — were assigned
to share the four quarters into which the
‘camp was divided. The various units pitched
their tents around the perimeter, as nearly as
possible in battle order so that, in the event
of a surprise attack or the need to sally out
quickly, they would be ready for action. The
camp itself consisted of a simple ditch dug
by the soldiers themselves, with the earth
thrown inside, stamped down and
surmounted by the spears and shields of the
troops. The spears might be set up as
triskelia, made by roping three together with
the point outermost, acting as a particularly
effective barrier behind the trench. Most
camps had either two or four transverse
roads with the troops’ tents placed in the
intervals, and where the force was of mixed
infantry and cavalry the latter were placed
within the former for protection. Where
circumstances and manpower permitted, the
camp should be at least two and a half
bowshots across so that the animals could be
quartered safely in the middie sections, The
largest camps, which could contain a major
field army of over 20,000 men and animalswith their baggage, were more than a mile
along the side, with a v-shaped trench some
six to eight feet in depth,
‘Theodore’s unit, like all units, had to set
up its own rotating watch within the camp;
but the commanding officer also needed to
set up a watch for the camp as a whole. Each
unit along the perimeter provided soldiers
for this patrol, called the kerketon, and
through the use of a regularly changed
password had complete authority over access,
to and egress from the camp. Other units
had to be sent out to forage for supplies and
fodder for the horses, and they were in turn
‘accompanied by supporting troops for
protection — it was important to pitch camp.
and secure the immediate area before sunset
so that supplies could be got in as quickly as
possible. Leaving camp after sunset was
usually prohibited, except for the outer line
of pickets, groups of four men sent out to
cover the major approaches to the camp
when it was clear that no enemy was yet in
the immediate vicinity.
‘The men were organised in tent-groups
of eight, called kontoubernia, sharing a
hand-mill and basic cooking utensils as well
as a small troop of pac!
were issued with two main varieties of bread:
simple baked loaves, and double-baked ‘hard
tack’, referred to in late Roman times as
bucellatum and by the Byzantines as
paximadion or paximation, in campaign’
conditions, it was normally the soldiers
themselves who milled and baked this. The
hard tack was more easily preserved over a
longer period, was easy to produce, and
demanded fairly simple milling and baking
skills. Hard tack could be baked in field
ovens ~ Klibanoi — or simply laid in the ashes
of camp fires, an advantage when speed was
essential, and this was the case during this
expedition — although the soldiers much
preferred the best such bread, baked in thin
oval loaves cooked in a field-oven, and then
dried in the sun. The ration per diem
included two to three pounds of bread and
cither dried meat or cheese; wine was also
issued, but it is not clear how often or in
what circumstances, The amount of meat
animals. Soldiers
Portrait of a soldier 67
relative to the rest of the diet was often
minimal or absent altogether, but would still
provide a reasonable amount of nutrition,
since ancient strains of wheat and barley had
considerably higher protein content than
modern strains, and it has been shown that
the bread ration of ancient and medieval
soldiers provided adequate nutrition for the
duration of a campaign season even without
much meat.
The camp routine was marked by the
trumpet signals for the evening meal, lights
out and reveille; trumpet signals were also
employed to issue commands to the various
units and divisions to strike camp, assemble
in marching order and begin the march.
Leaving camp was always a dangerous time,
for as the troops defiled through the main
entrances they were for a while exposed to
archers or even a rapid hit-and-run charge
from enemy horsemen. particular order for
exiting camps was laid down and followed,
and once the army was out of the entrenched
area it would be drawn up for a while in a
defensive formation until the troops fell into
the marching order for the day.
The speed at which armies moved varied
according to terrain, weather and the
number and types of troops. Unaccompanied
mounted troops could cover distances of up
to 40 or $0 miles per day, provided the
horses were regularly rested and well
nourished and watered. Small units generally
moved more rapidly than large di
even up to 30 miles per day for infantry in
some contexts. Average marching speeds
were much slower: three miles per hour for
infantry on even terrain, two and a half on
broken/hilly ground. Mixed forces moved at
the speed of the slowest element; but speed.
also depended on the conditions of the roads
or tracks followed, the breadth of the
column, and its length. ‘The longer the
column, the longer it took for the rearmost
files to start moving off, which would thus
arrive at the next camp later than the
foremost groups, the delay between first and
last units being proportional to the length
and breadth of the column. Thus a division
‘of 5,000 infantry, which is what Bardas
isions,68 Essential Histories + Byzantium at War
Muminated manuscript of the History of John Skyizes
(I th century), fol. 102 a:The widow Danelis, a wealthy
landowner from the Pel
litter by servants. (Biblioteca Nacional, Madrid)
ponnese, being carried in her
probably had at his disposal, marching at the
standard infantry rate of about three miles
per hour over good ground, ordered five
abreast and with each row occupying
(minimal) two metres would stretch over a
two-kilometre distance. There would be a
gap of at the very least about 20 minutes, if
not more, between the front and rear
elements, Theodore’s column marched
three abreast along the narrow, often
wooded tracks followed by the imperial
troops on this campaign, and his division
of 1,000 cavalry would have extended back
nearly six miles, and the whole army some
14 miles, The rearmost units would be well
over one hour behind the van.
Having lett the camp Theodore’s unit was
placed in the van division, behind a screen
of scouts deployed well ahead of the column,
and ahead of the main contingent of cavalry
and infantry. The baggage train, to which a
group of units was assigned on a rotational
basis for protection, was placed in the centre,
and other units patrolled at some distance,
where the terrain allowed, on either flank.
‘On open terrain in enemy country the army
would march over a broader front in a
formation that could be rapidly deployed
into battle order; and for passing through
narrow passes or across rivers another
formation was employed.
As the march progressed some of the
scouts returned to inform the general that
the enemy was not far away, near the fortress
town of Arkadioupolis (mod. Luleburgaz).
The three divisions were given separate tasks:
two were concealed in the rough scrub and
wooded terrain through which the track ted
in the direction of the enemy, while he took
command of the third section of the army
himself. Leaving the two divisions in
ambush with clear instructions, he himself
led a fierce and unsuspected charge against
the foremost enemy units, made up of
Pecheneg mounted archers. In spite of the
greater numbers in the enemy force, he
managed to lure the enemy out of their
encampment
encouraging more and more of the enemy to
pursue but, on the assumption that the
Byzantine troops were indeed losing, without
any clear plan of attack or order. It must
have seemed as though the outnumbered
Byzantine force, which managed with
difficulty to avoid being completely
surrounded, was doomed. Yet discipline,
training and leadership told, and Skleros
finally ordered the prearranged signal to be
given for the whole force to fall back.
Meanwhile Theodore’s unit, one of the two
corps that lay in ambush, prepared itself: the
order was given to remain absolutely silent,
to place all supernumerary baggage animals
with their attendants well to the rear, to
nd withdraw in good order,Portrait ofa soldier 69
oo . Pi So i” re
Lup. 20pm re vost yacuiel-te EV TH Ua yrewpa.+ El ow ate rme a
~ a ” { , i
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check their weapons, and to deploy into a
battle order appropriate to the terrain. One
of the priests who accompanied the force
offered up a quick prayer ~ a standard
practice before battle. As the van division
approached, drew level with and then
withdrew beyond them, a single trumpet-call
ordered them to break cover and charge into
the flank of the unsuspecting enemy. Caught
in the open in close combat, the Pechenegs,
a war-like Turkic people from the Eurasian
steppe, had no chance to deploy at a
distance suitable for the use of their archery
and, after being brought to a halt ~ at which
point the van division about-faced and
counter-attacked in its turn - they turned
and fled, The Rus’ and Bulgar troops,
meanwhile, who had been hurrying to catch
them up, on the assumption that the
Romans had been routed, suddenly found
themselves caught up in the panic. As the
rout became general and the Roman forces
pushed home their advantage, heavy
casualties were inflicted on the fleeing
enemy troops. A contemporary source
remarks that the Romans lost some 550 men
and many wounded, as well as a large
number of horses, a direct result of the
fearsome archery of the Pechenegs. The
combined enemy force, however, lost several
thousand. The short encounter won an
important breathing space for the emperor
John, furnishing him also with vital
information about the composition, fighting
abilities and morale of the enemy.
After any encounter with the enemy the
commanding officers held a muster to
establish casualties, Specially detailed soldierswere deputed to check the fallen, tc
back to the temporary
xe the divisional medical
nelp the wa
Roman cam
attendants and surgeons tried to deal with
t were not likely to be fatal
those wounds
nporary treatisePortrait
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his tent, while his troops besiege
(Biblioteca Nacional, Madr
of Beneventum in Souther
EFT Gold hypenpyron of Maruel | (143-118
he emperor, standing, (Barber Institute of Fine A\
University of Birringham
(survived the extraction, but died as a result
of the infection which followed), and the
treatment of deep slashes in the back and
thigh (the victim died from blood loss).
Theodore was lucky — not only was he not
injured, but his officer had noted how he
had dashed in to rescue a comrade from the
spear of an attacking Pecheneg, and he was
cited for his bravery. He was given a golden
arm-ting (taken from one of the dead enemy
horsemen), and promoted to drakonarios ~
bearer of the unit banner, a considerable
honour, and bringing with it some extra
privileges in camp and a small rise in his roga
~ his pay.
The defeat of the enemy force gave the
emperor time to organise a major offensive,
an offensive which was, in the event, far
more successful than was originally planned.
Theodore’s unit was involved too, and
fought on the left wing at the second battle
of Dorostolon in July 971, Theodore
eventually retired to his family holding in
Thrace where, with his savings from his
salary and his promotions ~ he eventually
reached the rank of drouggarios, roughly
equivalent to brigadier ~ he invested in an
imperial title, that of kandidatos, which
brought with it a decent annuity, and
expanded his property. He ended his days as
an important local notable ~ and his
grandchildren enjoyed his tales of bravery
and fierce barbarians!The world around war
War and peace
The medieval eastern Roman world was a
society in which the virtues of peace were
extolled and war was condemned, Fighting
‘was to be avoided at all costs. Yet the
Byzantine empire nevertheless inherited the
military administrative structures and, in
many ways, the militaristic ideology of the
‘hristian Roman empire at its height.
The tensions which these traditions
generated were resolved by a political
religious ideology or world view which
melded Christian ideals on the one hand,
with the justification of war as a necessary
evil on the other, waged primarily in defence
of the Roman world and Orthodoxy -
literally, correct belief. From the 4th and Sth
centuries on in the eastern Mediterranean
and Balkan regions this blending of ideas
generated a unique culture, that could
adhere unreservedly to a pacifistic ideal, yet
on the same grounds could legitimate and
justify the maintenance of an efficient and
effective military apparatus,
This attitude is neatly summed up in the
introduction to a legal codification
promulgated by the emperors Leo Ill and
Constantine V in the year 741:
non
Since God has put in our hands the imperial
authority ... we believe that there is nothing
higher or greater that we can do than to govern
in judgement and justice ... and that thus we
may be crowned by His almighty hand with
victory over our enenties (which is a thing more
precious and honourable than the diadem which
we wear) and thus there may be peace ...
Byzantine emperors could justify their
wars on the basis that they were fighting to
preserve peace, to extend the territory of the
Christian world, and to defend God's Chosen
People — for in Christian Roman terms, the
mantle of the Chosen People had been
transferred to the Christians with the
coming of Christ. There was always a tension
between the pacifism of early Christianity,
however, and the imperial Roman, but
Christian, need to fight to defend the
empire's territorial integrity, or to recover
‘ost’ Christian lands and peoples.
Christianity never evolved an ideological
obligation to wage war against ‘infidels’
presented in the terms of Christian theology,
even if, at times, and on an ad hoc basis,
individuals have spoken and acted as though
such a justification could be made. The
13th canon of St Basil specifically states that
those who took life in warfare should abstain
from communion for a period,
As Christianity spread across the empire
during the 2nd and 3rd centuries,
pragmatism often won the day, and it seems
that considerable numbers of Christians
served in the imperial armies at this time.
‘This could not banish particular conflicts of
interest, however ~ military service required
acceptance of the emperor cult, that is, the
emperor as a God ~ and a whole range of
pagan traditions and rituals. The result is
that the history of the first three centuries
of Christianity, and the 3rd century in
particular, is full of tales of persecution and
martyrdom, as individual recruits refused to
conform to the ceremonial and ritual
observances associated with life in the army.
As a compromise solution, the 3rd-century
Christian thinker Origen argued that
Christians formed a special type of army that
did not fight wars for the emperor physically,
but instead prayed for the success of the
state, which made possible their continued
existence and the expansion of their
community. This compromise was developed
as.a response to the criticisms made by
pagan commentators about Christian
communities and their pacifism. In the end,‘The world around war 73
it was the argument about the continued
existence of the Roman state being the
necessary condition for the survival and
expansion of Christianity which won the
day, and led to the more pragmatic
compromise noted alread)
The favour shown to Christianity by the
emperor Constantine I, and his deathbed
baptism, however, led during the course of
the 4th century to a substantive
reformulation of imperial political ideology,
and this changed the situation dramatically.
The Christianisation of the emperor cult
solved one of the most difficult issues at a
blow ~ an earthly emperor selected by God to
lead the Christians, now consonant with the
Roman people ~ was clearly acceptable,
Whereas an emperor who was supposed to be
a divinity was not. Two perspectives evolved
from this situation. The first was the officially
sanctioned view which encouraged support
for the state, as personified by the orthodox
emperor, and all its undertakings. Leading
churchmen, while expressing their hope that
+ could be avoided and that
bloodshed would not be necessary, went on
to state clearly that it was praiseworthy for a
Christian to take up arms against the enemies
of the state. The Christianisation of society
developed rapidly thereafter, and as the
government became dominated by
Christians, so by the end of the 4th century
it became impossible to obtain a government
post without being a Christian,
The association between warfare and.
Christianity, the struggle for survival of the
‘chosen people’, led by the emperor chosen
violent conti
Traditional threshing in
(Author's collection)listories + Byzantium at War
5 colecto
by God, at the head of his armies became
quite explicit. All warfare was thus about
defending Christianity and the Christian
empire. At the same time a desire for peace,
and a regret that war should be necessary,
were constant motifs in imperial and Church
ideology. There were constant reminders of
the heavenly support which Byzantine
armies received. Successful warfare without
God's help was impossible. A late
6th-century text notes that
so. We urge Upon the general that his most
important concem be the love of God and
justice; building on these, he should strive to win
the favour of God, without which it is impossible
to carry out any plan, however well devised it
‘may seem, oF to overconte any’ enemy, however
weak he may be thought.
The idea is repeated throughout the
Byzantine period. Roman defeats were seen as
the result of God’s anger with the Romans,
the chosen people, who were being punished
for their sins. Only when the Romans
ured to the path of righteousness and
corrected their sins would success once again
attend Roman arms, and this idea underlies
much of the thinking in the actions of
individuals and groups in Byzantine political
history and political theory.
There was thus no notion of Holy War as
something special, to be waged under
rel
specific circumstances against particular
enemies. The Byzantine self-image was one
of a beleaguered Christian state fighting the
forces of darkness, with foes against whom it
had constantly to be on its guard and to
evolve a whole panoply of defensive
techniques, among which warfare was only
one element, and by no means necessarily
the most useful, In this sense, one might
argue that all war was ‘holy war’, since all
enemy action threatened the lands and
beliefs of the Romans.
There were occasions when the notion
that soldiers who fell in battle might be
rewarded in heaven, a notion reinforced after
the development of Islamic notions of Jihad
of which the Byzantines were quite aware
Thus in the 10th century, for example, the
soldiet-emperor Nikephoros II - known by
the somewhat chilling epithet as ‘the white
death of the Saracens’, suggested that this
might be an appropriate way to encourage
soldiers to fight. But the idea was rejected by
the Church and was never really revived. It
may have been an element of folk belief, of
course, but it was certainly never given any
official recognition. A prayer to be said
before the soldiers marched into combat is
recorded in two 10th-century texts, and it
‘es a good idea of this combination of
Christian with warlike motifs:
Lord Jesus Christ, our God, have mercy on us,
Come to the aid of us Christians and make us
worthy to fight to the death for our faith and our
brothers, strengthen our souls and our hearts andThe world around war 75
‘our whole body, the mighty Lord of battles,
through the intercession of the immaculate
Mother of God, Thy Mother, and of all the
saints, Amen.
There is a mass of evidence, therefore,
dating from the 4th century up to the very
last years of the empire, for the public and
official acceptance by both Church and court,
as well as by the ordinary population, of the
need to wage war; for the fact of divine
support for such warfare; and for the need to
maintain and rely on heavenly aid in waging,
war, Although the notion of ‘holy war’ in the
sense understood by the Crusaders, or by
non-Muslims as typical of Islam, flickered,
briefly into life in the Byzantine world,
especially in the context of the aggressive
fighting of the 10th century, it never
developed beyond this. The ways in which
warfare on behalf of the Christian Roman
state were understood did go through a
certain evolution, for it is apparent that the
Byzantines were always conscious of the need
Cornields in eastern Asia Minor (Author's collection)
to legitimate their wars, a need which
generally became more pressing in a time of
political and military expansionism such as
the 10th century. While warfare could be
justified, therefore, loss of life on the Roman
side was in particular to be avoided or
minimised, if at all possible. The emperor
Constantine V characterised as ‘noble’ his
campaign into Bulgaria in 772-73 because no
Roman soldiers died; while by the time he
compiled his military handbook or tactica
¢.900, the emperor Leo VI clearly expresses
the idea that war has to be justified in
accordance with Orthodoxy and the
continued existence of the Roman state. As
long as Roman interests, however defined,
were at stake, then warfare was acceptable
and just. War with other Orthodox Christians
was, of course, to be avoided. But even this
could be justified if the one true empire, that
of the Romans, was at risk or subject to attack
by the misguided rulers of such lands.76 Essential Histories * Byzantium at War
Warfare and east Roman society
Warfare was for much of the Byzantine
world, throughout much of its history, the
normal state of affairs, Its effects were
manifested in a number of ways. To begin
with, the ordinary population of the empire
was directly affected by hostile activity in
those areas most exposed to enemy attack,
they suffered the destruction of their crops
and dwellings, the theft or slaughter of their
ivestock, and if they were themselves
caught, possible death or enslavement. There
survive some short but evocative inscriptions
from the frontier regions of Asia Minor,
dating to the middle Byzantine period,
which commemorate individuals who died
of their wounds following a battle or raid;
other accounts tell of relatives carried off
into captivity or lost in the confusion of an
‘enemy attack and never seen again. And the
literate elite was just as aware of these
spects: warfare imposed itself upon many
facets of Byzantine literary culture, in saints!
lives, in speeches in praise of emperors, in
funeral orations, in sermons and homilies to
church congregations, in private letters
addressed to individuals. Themes such as
death, loss of property and so forth occur
frequently, and in some cases the terror
inspired by a sudden enemy raid is
graphically portrayed, Letters often bewail
the effects of warfare, with references to the
tears of orphaned children and widowed
mothers, the destruction of crops, homes,
monastic communities, the enslavement or
death of populations, driving off of livestock
and so forth,
‘The presence of Byzantine troops was no
less onerous, however. The very existence of
an army brought with it the need to supply
and provision it, to supply materials and
livestock for it when it was on campaign, to
provide lodgings and billets for officers and.
soldiers, and so on. ‘There were extensive and
burdensome logistical demands wherever an
army was present, not just a question of
demands made by the army on local
populations, but also the fact that
government intervention into the local
economy often affected the economic
equilibrium of the affected districts. This
could either take the form of fixing artificially
low prices for the sale of produce to the army,
thus harming the producers, or of by sudden
heavy demand for certain produce, thus
driving up prices for those in the private
sector. The civilian population might also be
compelled to bake bread and biscuits for the
troops as well as providing other supplies
and, in addition, they were subjected to
the plundering and pillaging of the less
well- disciplined elements of the army. Quite
apart from this was the potential for conflict
between soldiers and civilians, for the
‘outcome was seldom favourable to the latter.
Additional levies in grain were particularly
onerous, and there are frequent complaints
in the written documentation concerning
this and related burdens, usually a result of
either special requirements for particular
campaigns or the normal operational
demands made by the troops in a particular
region. In addition to these demands,
provincial populations had to provide
resources and manpower for the
maintenance of the public post, the drontos,
with its system of posting stations and
stables, stud farms and breeding ranches,
mule-trains and associated requirements, The
postal system served the needs of both the
military and the fiscal administration of the
state, It helped with the movement of
military supplies, was responsible for the
rapid transit of couriers and imperial officials
of all kinds, as well as important foreigners ~
diplomatic officials o prisoners of war, for
example. The households that were obligated
to carry out certain duties for the post were,
like households that had to support a soldier,
released from the extraordinary state
impositions, and this was an important
aspect of the smooth running of the
provincial postal system,
The nature of the burden which the
provincial population bore in support of the
army can be seen particularly clearly in a
series of documents of the later 10th and
especially the 11th century, It consisted of
imperial grants of exemption from theThe world around war 77
billeting of soldiers, the provision of supplies
for various categories of troops in transit, the
provision of horses, mules and wagons for
the army, and the delivery of charcoal and
timber for military purposes. Some accounts
in chronicles detail the sort of requirements
needed to mount major military expeditions
= large numbers of draught-animals, wagons
and foodstuffs, for example, and increases in
demands for supplies of all kinds; all were
provided by requisitions from the local
peasantry who suffered considerably from
this form of indirect taxation
Economic and demographic disruption
affected not just the people who lived in the
provinces or towns that suffered during
periods of fighting. It also directly threatened
the government's control over its resources
and the ability of the Church to maintain its
A Sth-century mosaic from Argos, showing agricultural
labour in September and October: (Author's collection)Byzantium at Way
Abandoned terraced vineyards on the Aegean island of
imnos. (Author's collection
spiritual authority and to supervise the
communities most affected, Some worries
about supposed ‘pagan’ practices and folk
beliefs appear in texts and letters of the time,
for example. Archaeological and written
information about populations fleeing from
the path of invaders or the movement of
settlements to more secure sites testifies to
the effects of warfare in certain areas. And it
took a long time for the worst affected areas
to recover. Again, the evidence suggests as
Jong as three centuries before economic and
demographic decline was halted. And the
effects of warfare were also visible on a
day-to-day basis, in the structure of defended
settlements, the shrinking and abandonment
of towns, the ubiquitous forts and fortresses
guarding key strategic points, crossroads,
passes, valleys, bridges. And according to
several reports the more gruesome effects of
warfare could be seen on the battlefields
themselves: in one text the author describes
how the bones of the soldiers slain
conflict a few years beforehand could still be
seen littering the ground over which the
battle was fought. Yet, while warfare
disrupted social and cultural life, it also
influenced the patterns of daily existence.
Different cultural traditions evolved in
regions regularly affected by fighting and
enemy action, especially in the east. The
seasonal nature of the fighting had quite a
lot to do
th this, for in many areas
distinctive cultures and societies developed
on both sides of the frontier, engendering
values and ways of life very different from
those of the interior or the metropolitan
districts around Constantinople, for
example, also encouraging intercultural
contacts, influences and traditions very
different from the mainstream. We should
bear in mind that soldiers and their families
were no more exempt from these effects
than the rest of the population. But while
the parents of young men called up for
military service wept and lamented as they
said goodbye to their sons, the more
privileged were able to deploy powerful
contacts to have them released from serving
in the army: on grounds of economic
hardship, for example!raditional ox-cart in eastern Asia Minor
The negative aspect was to some extent
balanced by an alternative set of views,
however. Popular approval and enthusiasm for
war could be encouraged, and the emperors
exploited court ceremonial at Constantinople
specifically to this end. ‘Triumphal processions,
accompanied by displays of booty and
Prisoners, hymns of thanksgiving, the
acclamations reminding the emperors (and the
crowd who were in earshot) of their Christian
duty to defend Orthodoxy and the empire, all
were directed to achieve a particular consensus
about warfare and the emperor's duty to
defend orthodoxy. Poets were commissioned
to write and declaim verse accounts of the
emperor's courage, strategic skill and military
achievements: the poet George of Pisidia thus
‘composed a series of laudatory poems in the
620s and 630s about the victories of the
emperor Heraclius over Avars and Persians,
while in the 10th century Theodosios the
Deacon similarly praised the victories of the
emperor Nikephoros Il Phokas. Other
members of the cultural and political elite
composed letters in praise of the emperor's
deeds in war, so that the glorification of
military deeds and of individual leaders or
mperors Was part of the staple production of
composers in verse and prose. As an
unfortunate but necessary means of achieving
a divinely approved end, warfare could thus be
given a very positive gloss. Such views were
not necessarily shared by the many thousands
of peasants and townspeople who suffered
over the centuries.
‘The degree to which warfare was
fundamental to the fabric of late Roman and
Byzantine society and historical
development is evident in our sources. ‘The
physical appearance of the Byzantine
countryside, social values, cultural attitudes,
government fiscal and administrative
organisation, themes in literature and art; all
these different aspects of cultural and
mate
beleaguered situation of the medieval east
Roman state and its need to fight wars,
life were directly influenced by thePortrait of a civilian
Metrios — a farmer
The effects of warfare and fighting on
Individuals and on local communities at
different times and the evidence for the
non-military perception and perspective on
war have already been alluded to in earlier
chapters. One of the problems of Byzantine
history is the fact that the written evidence,
upon which historians have to rely for
knowledge of people’s opinions and attitudes,
was nearly always produced by members of
relatively privileged social strata, We thus
have very little real idea of what ordinary
people - peasants, merchants, craftsmen,
simple soldiers ~ actually thought about their
world. Of course, we can try to establish
through the writings of the educated
something of the views and beliefs of the
nonliterate, or at least non-writing part of
society, and we can also work out through the
actions taken by certain groups at certain
times something of what they thought anel
why. For example, while writing for a limited
and very elite readership, the Princess Anna
Comnena, writing early in the 12th century,
presents a graphic description of the effects of
warfare on the provinces in the years before
her father, the emperor Alexios I, had (in her
view) rescued the empire from its troubles:
Cities were wiped out, lands ravaged, all the
territories of Rome were stained with blood.
Somte died miserably, pierced by arrow or lance;
others were driven from their homes or carried
off as prisoners of war ... Dread seized on all as
they hurried to seek refuge front impending
disaster in caves, forests, mountains and hills.
There they loudly bewailed the fate of their
friends ... mourned the loss of sons or grieved for
their daughters ... In those days no walk of life
was spared its tears and lamentation.
It is because they tended to act im large
groups and in specific circumstances about
which we often possess quite a lot of
information, soldiers are a very good group
to study in this respect. Unfortunately, less
can be said through direct evidence about
civilians, and so we will necessarily rely on a
certain amount of hypothesis in this chapter.
As we saw in the previous chapter, it is
clear that the presence of soldiers was rarely,
if ever, welcome, except perhaps when a
community or the local population at large
was suffering directly from enemy attacks
Whether the army was engaged in fighting
the enemy or not, whole communities or
individuals might still suffer at the hands of
unruly or poorly disciplined soldiers. In the
10th century, members of a small monastic
‘community on the island of
Gymnopelagesion in the Aegean were forced
to abandon their homes because of the
frequent seizure (‘requisitioning’) of their
animals and crops by passing vessels of the
imperial fleet. There are plenty of other
examples: Armenian soldiers, for instance,
notorious (at least in the view of the Greek
sources) for their lack of discipline and poor
behaviour, were especially feared by the
ordinary populace of the countryside; and an
Lith-century source recounts the tale of a
local girl who had been robbed by a unit of
Armenian troops passing through. Byzantine
writers themselves often remarked on the fact
that Roman troops could be poorly
disciplined and even ravage imperial territory
for their supplies when these were not
forthcoming or thought to be inadequate.
One commentator sums up the general
attitude to soldiers when he makes reference
to ‘the troublesome presence of soldiers’.
In the late 11th century the Archbishop
Theophylact of Ohrid in the Byzantine
provinces of Bulgaria complained in the
strongest terms about the oppressive weight
of the state demands on Church tenants, HePortrait of a civilian 81
was especially concerned with the labour
demanded for the repair, maintenance or
construction of fortifications, but he was
equally vehement about special
conscriptions for the army, which took men
away from an already weakened local
population. The oppressive demands of the
imperial fiscal officials was often such that
Theophylact remarks on the flight of
considerable numbers of villagers to the
forests, in order to escape such oppression.
While the situation seems to have worsened
in the later 11th century and afterwards,
these requisitions and demands and the
hardship they caused remained a major
burden on the rural population of the
Byzantine empire until its last years.
As in the earlier chapter which portrayed
the life of a ‘typical’ soldier, therefore, I will
look at the daily life of an ordinary
Byzantine through the eyes and experiences
of an invented individual, based on a
composite derived from a range of sources
combined together to generate an
impressionistic account: all the events
described in what follows can be found in
medieval sources of the period from the
7th to the 12th centuries. In this case, our
subject is called Metrios ~ there is a short
10th-century account of a peasant farmer of
this name from Paphlagonia, We will assume
that he was a farmer of some means in his
community, the village of Katoryaka in
Paphlagonia, and the time is the middle of
the 9th century, Although his village is
situated only three days’ travel from the
large coastal fortress town of Amastris, the
villagers rarely undertake this journey, partly
because the roads are not particularly safe —
there were always small bands of refugees
moving northwards from the most exposed
frontier zones and, while many of them
settled down in and around the smaller
towns and fortresses of the region, there
were always a few who fell into a life of
banditry and brigandage. There was also the
fact that Metrios could provide little from his
land that villages much nearer the town
could not produce, and so his markets would
have tended to be located much closer to his
home village. In spite of the distance from
the nearest active front, Katoryaka was
regularly affected by the war, lying on one of
the major routes east from Dorylaion and
Constantinople, a route frequently used by
the army. This meant that the villagers
would regularly have had to provide
accommodation and board for officers and
imperial officials ~ fiscal, military and others
~ who would frequently pass through while
carrying out their duties. Although the
disadvantages of having to put up such
people was the cause of frequent grumbling, it
also meant that the village was never short of
news, since inevitably the attendants of the
officials in question would be willing to pass
on gossip to those with whom they came into
contact in the course of their duties
We encounter Metrios at the beginning
Of an important week. In the first place, it is
the feast of the patron saint of the village,
St Mokios, and the villagers traditionally
have a fair, with a market and a great deal of
feasting, culminating in a liturgical
celebration in the village church conducted
by the local bishop, who has travelled down
specially for the occasion. The fair attracts a
good number of villagers from the
neighbouring communities who come both
to join in the festivities and to help any
relatives they may have ~ many of the village
girls marry young men from neighbouring
settlements ~ as well as a sizeable number of
traders and merchants who come, often
considerable distances, with their trains of
pack-mules to sell their wares or buy goods
that cannot be found elsewhere. It is a good
time for the villagers. They can buy goods
from the traders whom they only rarely see
in their village, in spite of its location on a,
major route; they can exchange gossip and
news; there is the chance for the youngsters
to expand their social horizons, and for the
young men and women to eye one another
up! By far the most interesting visitors to the
fair for most villagers are the traders,
especially those from far away, distant
provinces within the empire bringing the
luxury products of those regions ~ Pontic
cloths from the region around Trebizond far82. Essential Histories + Byzantium at War
Monastery church of Daphni Greece (1 Ith century) The
Parstokrator (Author's collection)
to the east, leather goods from Cappadocia
in the south, spices and exotic medicines
from Syria and the lands further to the east
that few of the villagers had even heard of,
still less visited themselves. Knowledge of
such places came from merchants alone and
the occasional slave or former prisoner of the
Arabs who had obtained his release by some
means or other,
Metrios himself faces two problems this
week. In the first place, he has to take his
two mules to the neighbouring village of
Palaiokastro to collect his injured nephew, a
soldier hurt in an accident, and whom he
has undertaken to look after, and at the same
time purchase some products he cannot get
in his own village ~ his own village produces
olives and olive oil in abundance, but good-
quality wine, a well-known product of
Palaiokastro, is difficult to come by and
Metrios wishes to stock up in this respect
(the fact that Metrios possesses two mules,
incidentally, is sign of his relative wealth —
a good mule could cost as much as 12 or
even 15 gold nomismata, the basic gold coin
and unit of account of the Byzantine world).
In addition, he has been informed by a
passing government official that he will be
required to put up an officer of a unit
passing through the area during the week of
the fair. This is his second problem, for he
must provide food and a bed for this visitor
and his servant as well as fodder for their
animals, and if he wishes to avoid having
problems he must ensure that his hospitality
Is appreciated by the officer in question.
Leaving his home shortly after dawn, his
journey to Palaiokastro takes nearly six
hours, Once there he visits the garrison
where his nephew is recovering from his
accident, leaves his mules with some of the
soldiers, whom he pays to water them and
look after them, before walking down the
hill to the village, where he stops for a drink
of wine with some acquaintances in the
village guest-house and tavern. There he rests
until the midday heat has abated, playing a
couple of games of tavli (backgammon) and
eating a light meal, before walking back up
to the fortress to collect his mules and
nephew. By late afternoon he has loaded the
broad basketwork panniers on one of the
two mules with large leather bags filled
with the wine he has purchased, and set off
homewards. Having left it fairly late in the
day, the second half of the trip is in the dark,
of course, and the fear of bandits on the road
gives Metrios and his nephew some cause for
concem, although the latter has his sword
and spear with him, But they are on a fairly
well-used road, and at this particular time of
the year there are still a number of other
travellers to be seen, mostly on their wa
his own village for the fair which begins in
two days’ time
Metrios has a day to prepare for the
artival of his unbidden military guest, but he
finds a good deal of commotion on
returning to the village. It appears that
during his absence another train of imperial
fiscal officials had arrived and, presenting a
series of documents to the village headman,
informed the villagers that, in view of the
military expedition being planned for the
summer that year, they would have to
produce an extra supply of grain and olive
oll for the army. The village had already paid
toits regular tax demands for the year, so this,
imposition, coming as it did at the time of
the fair, was especially unwelcome.
Katoryaka was not a poor community, unlike
those higher up in the mountains to the
south, so the burden could at least be
managed without substantial suffering,
Unfortunately, the tax officer in charge of
this extra assessment was a particularly
unpleasant sort, and made a lot of extra
demands in terms of hospitality and ‘gifts
from the village. With his own military
escort and the additional presence of a unit
of regular troops passing through the
village, the inhabitants had little option to
Paying up and getting rid of the official in
question as quickly as possible. Inevitably
he decided to prolong his stay to include
the fair
The arrival of the officer took place the
evening of the day before the fair. Metrios
and his wife and daughter
married some years earlier and had only
his son had
recently moved into his own house on the
other side of the village ~ greeted the officer
politely and after offering him the ustal gift
of wine and bread st
quarters. The two servants were billeted in
the outhouse which served as a storehouse
owed him to his
and occasional shelter for the mules,
Fortunately, the officer seemed a pleasant
sort of man who demanded only what was
his due, greatly to the relief of Metrios and
his family ~ particularly the daughter: the
reputation of soldiers, and officers inparticular, was only too well known, That
evening the family went to the village
church for a mass preparatory to the fair and
to mark the inauguration of the feast of the
illage’s patron saint, and the officer
accompanied them. The village priest, a
relatively learned man for such a humble
position, chose as the text for his homily a
passage from the writings of Anastasios of
Sinai, a famous holy man of a couple of
centuries ago, on the dangers to the soul
posed by lack of attention and piety during
the holy liturgy: men staring at the women
in the gallery (or at the back of the church in
the case of Metrios’ village); chattering and
discussing matters of business or village
gossip while ignoring the priest; and rushing
out at the end of the service as though
chased by dogs. The congregation listened
attentively and soberly — but the attractions
of preparing for the fair were too much, and
the rush to leave the church at the end of
the service was just what father Efthymios
did not want to see.
‘The fair opened the next day — the whole
central square of the village was filled with
stalls offering all sorts of delights and goods,
things seen at most once or twice a year in
the village. Metrios’ injured nephew, whose
military service had taken him farther afield
than most, lost no time in letting the village
know that he had seen all this before, of
course, while his unit was in Constantinople,
or Thrace, or down in Attaleia on the south
coast. In spite of the presence of the soldiers,
the event passed off with no trouble, apart
from the irritating presence of the somewhat
arrogant fiscal official. But he and his retinue
left after three days, as they had to move on
to make similar arrangements for supplying
the army in the neighbouring villages and
were keen to return to their own homes in
the regional capital at Amastris. The
highlight was the mass held on the Thursday
to honour the memory of St Mokios, after
which a great feast was held in the village
square, accompanied by much merry-
making, dancing and mu:
Metrios used the opportunities offered by
the fair to sell some of his own produce to
the soldiers and offictals as well as some of
the traders, mostly sales of olive oil of
different qualities, some six to seven gallons
in all, from which he took in nearly four
nomismnata in silver and gold, a very
handsome profit indeed and sufficient to
cover part of his next year’s tax, assuming it
‘was demanded in money (the government's
demands varied according to need,
sometimes requiring payment in produce,
sometimes in cash). The average income of a
labourer, for example, varied from nine to
12 gold nomismata per year; a soldier would
receive, in addition to his supplies and other
things provided by the government, about
12 nomismata per annum, although this did
not include private sources of income ~ many
soldiers who possessed land earned a good
deal more than this, while officers received
more again, For a single sale of produce,
Metrios had done quite well. Assuming no
other extra government demands were made
on his household, in the following year he
would be able to buy up a piece of waste land
next to one of his own plots, and expand his
production, perhaps by hiring one of the
poorer villagers as a day labourer during the
ploughing, sowing and harvest seasons.
Metrios is probably fairly typical of most
of the slightly ‘better-off” Byzantine peasants
during this period, but the majority had less
land than he had, Unlike Mettios, who
owned his own property, which he had
inherited from his father and his paternal
uncle whose children had not survived him
(one son killed in the course of military
service, another who had died of ‘fever’ aged
ine years and a daughter who had died
childbirth), many were tenants of local
landlords who extracted relatively high
rents, technically to cover the taxation on.
the estate’s lands, but frequently including a
fairly high private rent for the landowner. As
the wealthier officials and their families
bought land and office and increased their
hold on the key posts in government and
the provinces, so the general situation of the
rural population began to worsen as
landlords increased rents and the
government demanded more in taxes tomaintain its own machinery and the army
But in Metrios’s time that was still a century
F so in the future
hhere were many other trades and
occupations, of course ~ the merchants and
traders we have already noted, the villas
craftsmen such as the smith, the potter and
the leatherworkers, the townspeople of the
larger cities who had trades ranging from
gold- and silversmithing to butcher, baker,
Clothiers, fullers and dyers, cobblers, silk
importers and exporters, dairy traders, and
every other provider of foodstuffs, finished
ods and services we might expect to find
in a large town, Until the economic boom of
the later 10th and 11th centuries, however,
such urban activity was limited on the whol
to a few major cities such as Constantinople
Thessaloniki, Trebizond on the south-east
coast of the Black Sea, or Attaleia on the
southern coast of the Asia Minor peninsula,
Yet all these developments were affected in
funcamental ways by the fact that war was a
normal state of affairs for inhabitants of
the Byzantine world, and for muct
much
of the time, The presence of soldiers as
fighters, as peacekeepers, as oppressors and
as liberators was a part of this, and the
demands made by the army and the
government for its soldiers were, as we have
seen, the central pillar of the state’s financial
system. Everything was based on the need to
recruit, supply, equip and organise soldiers,
and both the economy of the state - the
and the
sue of gold coin, for example
local economies which comprised ti
were directly affected by this fundamental
xample of Metrios the
fact. The invented
farmer gives some idea of the day-to-day
existence of the rural population of the
empire and the ways in which war or aspects
of the need to organise for war had become
al part of daily existence in
Byzantium.How the wars ended
Death of an empire
The Byzantine empire survived for some
500 years from about 600 in a form which
‘grew increasingly away from its late Roman
roots. Yet although there were many
substantial changes in its geographical extent,
institutional arrangements and social structure,
remained until the early 13th century the
recognisable descendant of the eastetn Roman
empire of Justinian, By the middle of the
Lith century, however, the
political and economic context of the
12th century ~ in which it had, after all, to
survive ~ was beginning to change in ways that
set up substantial challenges to the empire and,
‘more importantly, to the ways in which it
worked and was able to respond.
Deep cultural differences and an increasing,
divergence between the Greek eastern
Mediterranean and south Balkan world, on
the one hand, and the Latin-dominated lands
of central and westem Furope had become
increasingly marked across the 8th, 9th and
10th centuries. The situation worsened as
western economic strength and political and
military aggression began to be a serious
problem for the medieval east Roman state in
the later 11th century, with the Normans on
the one hand and the German emperors on
the other presenting serious threats to
Byzantine political authority, control and
prestige in the Balkans, and with the growing,
challenge to Byzantine maritime power from
Italian commercial centres such as Venice and.
Genoa, The crusading movement, western
prejudices about Greek perfidy and effeteness,
and the expansion of the Seljuk emirates in
Asia Minor, transformed alienation and
suspicion into open conflict,
‘The real threat now came no longer from
the Islamic world to the east, but from the
Christian west, and the first conclusive
indication of the changed balance of power
the form of the fourth crusade.
nternational
cam
Intending to attack Egypt, the crusading forces,
hhad found themselves heavily indebted to the
Venetians, who had hired them the ships and.
provided some of the finance needed for the
expedition. The Venetians had been looking
for an opportunity to intervene in the
confused situation at Constantinople in order
to consolidate their trading privileges and
their hold over the commerce of the eastern
Mediterranean. The presence at Venice of
Alexios IV Angelos, a pretender to the imperial
throne, rendered the task of the Venetians in
requesting a diversion to Constantinople fairly
easy. In 1203, the crusader army arrived before
the walls of the Byzantine capital and within a
short time had succeeded in installing Alexios
IV as co-emperor, with his blind father, Isaac
IL, whom his uncle Alexios IIT had deposed,
and who had been brought out of prison after
the latter fled the city, Once installed, Alexios
IV found it impossible to pay the promised
rewards and, as the situation worsened, he
found himself increasingly isolated. Early in
1204 he was deposed and murdered by Alexios
Doukas (Alexios V); but this only exacerbated.
the problem. Although the new emperor
strengthened the defences and was able to
resist an initial crusader attack, the city fell on
12 April. The booty taken was immense ~ an
eyewitness asserts that so much booty from a
single city had not been seen since the
creation of the world, The city, full of precious,
objects, statues, liturgical and ceremonial
vestments and objects, which had never before
fallen to violent assault, was mercilessly sacked
and pillaged for three days. Much destruction
occurred, with innumerable artefacts destroyed
and precious metal objects melted down or
— some of the most spectacular objects
can still be seen in Venice today. The capture
of Constantinople in 1204 and the
establishment of a Latin empire finalised the
split between east and west, for the Latin
stoleThe empire in its last years
ZZ veetsnitatenposesions
HB S2xntne eter e402
Ottoman possesion 1450
BB Empire orrtiona
il wars and constantly
453 had 9
patriarchate was not recognised by the
Orthodox populations of the Byzantine or
formerly-Byzantine regions, The patriarch
Michael Autoreianos, elected in Nicaea in
1208, was recognised as the true patriarch of
the Constantinopolitan Church,
After the capture and execution of the
fleeing Alexios V, a Latin emperor was
elected in the person of Baldwin of Flanders,
the empire's lands were divided among the
victors, and Venice was awarded the coveted
provinces and maritime districts, Greece was
divided among several rulers and the
Principality of Achaia (in the Peloponnese)
and the duchy of the Archipelago, the
kingdom of Thessaloniki and the duchies of
Athens and Thebes were established.
In spite of this catastrophe, the empire
survived and several counter-claimants to the
imperial throne asserted their position, A
branch of the Angelos family established an
independent principality, the Despotate of
Epiros, in the westem Balkans, which lasted
until the end of the 14th century. The family
of the Komnenoi governed a more or less
autonomous region in central and eastern
Pontus, where the ‘empire’ of Trebizond now
appeared; and at Nicaea, where the noble
Constantine Laskaris continued to exercise
effective control over much of Byzantine
western Asia Minor, the empire of Nicaea
evolved, its first emperor being Constantine's
brother Theodore, the son-in-law of Alexios
UL, and thus possessed of a certain legitimacy.
Apart from these territories, the Bulgarian Tsar
Kalojan was in the process of establishing an
independent Bulgaria, and was even able to
capture the Latin emperor in 1205 after
decisively crushing his army. By the 1230s the
Bulgars were threatening to reduce the
Byzantines of Epirus to vassal status.
The Latin empire based at Constantinople
had a bleak future, The rulers of Epirus tried88 Essential Histories * Byzantium at War
with help from the German emperor
Frederick I, and later with King Manfred of
Sicily, to establish a balance in the Balkans,
with the intention of recovering
Constantinople, But the emperors of Nicaea
were in a better position strategically and
politically and succeeded in making an
alliance with Genoa. They thereby achieved a
balance of power with Venice at sea. During
the 1240s and 1250s they extended their
territories in the southern Balkans, recovering
a substantial area from its Frankish rulers. In
Asia Minor a stabilisation of the frontier with
the Seljuks was achieved for a while, and in
1261, taking advantage of the absence of
most of the Latin garrison of Constantinople
on an expedition, a small Nicaean force was
able to gain entry to the City and reclaim it
for the empire. Constantinople was the
capital of the east Roman empire once more.
By the end of the 13th century, parts of
central Greece were once again in Byzantine
hands, while they also controlled much of
central and south-eastern Peloponnese,
Nevertheless, the last two centuries of
Byzantine rule in Asia Minor and the
southern Balkans saw the loss of Asia Minor,
and the reduction of the empire to a
dependency of the growing Ottoman
Sultanate. The empire simply did not have the
resources to fight on several fronts, and even
to fight on one for more than a short period
proved an impossible burden. But the
‘empire's strategic position made warfare
unavoidable, while the imperial political
ideology meant that emperors continued to
look for ways of recovering former territory
and lost glory. For a while in the second half
of the 13th century, and under the able
emperor Michael VIIL (1259-82), the empire
marked up several successes, It was able to
expand into the Peloponnese and to force the
submission of the Frankish principalities in
the region. Alliances with Genoa and the
kingdom of Aragon and, briefly, with the
Papacy, enabled the empire once more to
influence the international scene and to resist
the powers which worked for its destruction
and partition. But the international
environment soon became much less
favourable, For with the transfer of imperial
attention back to Constantinople the Asian
provinces were neglected at the very moment
that the Mongols arrived in eastern Asia
‘Minor, where they weakened Seljuq dominion
over the nomadic Tarkmen tribes, allowing
them unrestricted access to the ill-defended
Byzantine districts. By the 1270s most of the
south-western and central coastal regions
‘were lost, independent Turkish principalities
‘or emirates, including the fledgling power of
the Ottomans, posed a growing threat to the
remaining districts, and by the mid-1330s, the
remaining Aegean regions had been lost. The
Mercenary Catalan Grand Company, hired by
the emperor Andronikos II in 1303 to help
fight the Turks and other enemies, turned
against the empire when its demands for pay
‘were not met and, after defeating the
Burgundian duke of Athens in 1311, seized
control of the region, which it held until
1388. Other mercenary companies behaved
similarly, The empire no longer had the
resources to meet any but the smallest hostile
attack, and could soon hardly even afford to
hire the mercenaries upon which it relied to
defend itself
In 1390 the last fortress in Asia Minor fell
to the Ottomans. Part of the empire's failure
can be ascribed to the
‘were fought between factions of the ruling
dynasty: war began in 1321, lasted until 1325,
flated up again in 1327, and broke out agai
in 1341. The Serbian ruler Stefan Urosh IV
Dushan (1331-S5) soon became involved on.
one side, while the other hired Turkish
mercenaries to help in the fight. The struggle,
which exhausted the small treasury, alienated
the rural and urban populations who had to
pay for it and failed to heal any of the rifts in
the elite, ended with the victory of the
‘emperor John VI Kantakouzenos in 1346, John
had been supported by a faction of the clergy
which had adopted a strongly anti-western
view, a view that had important consequences
for the last century of Byzantine culture and
politics. But politically and economically the
‘empire was in a desperate situation. The Serbs
had absorbed! Albania, eastern Macedonia and
Thessaly, and all that was left of the empire
jous civil wars thatHow the wars ef
was Thrace around Constantinople, a small
istrict around Thessaloniki (surrounded by
Serbian territory), and its lands in the
Peloponnese and the northern Aegean isles.
Each region functioned as a mote or less
autonomous province, so that Byzantium was
an empire in name and by tradition alone.
The civil wars had wrecked the economy of
these districts, which could barely afford the
minimal taxes the emperors demanded.
Galata, the Genoese trading centre on the
other side of the Golden Hom from
Constantinople, had an annual revenue seven
times as great as that of the imperial city itself!
During the civil wars, and as a result of
their fighting for Kantakouzenos, the
Ottomans began permanently to establish
‘themselves in Europe. By the beginning of the
15th century, and with the exception of some
limited areas in the Peloponnese and a few
Aegean islands, there remained no imperial
Possessions in Greece. The advance of the
Ottomans in Europe led to the ultimate
extinction of Byzantium. Having defeated and
subjugated both Serbs and Bulgars by the end
of the 14th century, the Ottoman advance
caused considerable anxiety in the west. A
‘crusade was organised under the leadership of
the Hungarian king, Sigismund, but in 1396 at
the battle of Nicopolis his army was decisively
defeated. The Byzantines attempted to play
the different elements off against one another,
supporting first the western powers and then
the Ottomans. Some Byzantines espoused a
Possible solution by arguing for a union of the
stern and westem Churches, which would
bring with it the subordination of
Constantinople to Rome. But the monasteries
and the rural population were bitterly hostile
to such a compromise. It was even argued by
some that subjection to the Turks was
preferable to union with the hated Latins
Neither party was able to assert itselt
effectively within the empire, with the result
that the western powers remained on the
‘whole apathetic to the plight of ‘the Greeks’.
In 1401 the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid began
Preparations for the siege of Constantinople,
but the empire was saved at the last minute
by the appearance of Mongol forces under
Timur (Timur Lenk, known in English as
“Tamburlane’), who invaded Asia Minor and
crushed the Ottoman forces at the battle of
Ankara in 1402. The Byzantines used the
opportunity to strengthen their control in the
Peloponnese, but the respite was of short
duration. Timur died soon after his victory
over Bayezid, his empire broke up in
internecine conflict, and Ottoman power
revived, The Sultans consolidated their
control in Anatolia, and set about expanding,
their control of the Balkans. The Byzantine
emperor John VIII travelled widely in Europe
ina vain attempt to gather support against
the Islamic threat. He even accepted the
union with the westem Church at the council
of Florence in 1439; and a last effort on the
part of the emperor led to the crusade which
ended in disaster at the battle of Varna in
Bulgaria in 1444. In 1453 Mehmet II set about
the siege of Constantinople.
The defences of the city, although
suffering from lack of maintenance, remained
both impressive and powerful, and it took
several weeks of siege before the Ottoman
forces, equipped with heavy artillery,
including cannon, were able to effect some
serious breaches and challenge the small
garrison. In spite of a valiant effort on the
part of the imperial troops and their western
allies, who were massively outnumbered, the
walls were finally breached by the elite
Janissary units on 29 May 1453. The last
emperor, Constantine XI, died fighting on
the ramparts while leading a counter-attack
His body was never found. Later, Greek
legend had it that, like King Arthur of British
legend, he had not died, and would one day
return to lead his people to victory.
Constantinople, under its Turkicised name
Istanbul (irom the Greek eis tin polin — in the
city) became the new Ottoman capital. The
Aegean islands that remained to the empire
were soon absorbed under Ottoman rule, The
Byzantine principality in the southern
Peloponnese, the despotate of Morea, fell in
1460, and Trebizond, seat of the Grand
Komnenoi, fell to a Turkish army in 1461.
The east Roman empire ~ Byzantium — was
no more.Conclusion and consequences
War, peace, and survival
The Byzantine state survived as an important
force in the Balkan and east Mediterranean.
region until the later 12th century because it
maintained an effective fiscal apparatus that
could support an efficient and well-organised
army. It was as much the changes and shifts
in the international situation as it was the
internal evolution of Byzantine social and
economic relations that led to its decline in
the 13th century and its collapse and
disappearance in the L4th and 1Sth centuries.
One of the most important reasons for its
longevity and its success in defending a
territory surrounded on all sides by hostile
forces was the system of logistical support
that it maintained almost to the end, It was
this system which permitted the state to
allocate resources from the land to its armies
as they needed them, to plan in advance the
requirements for offensive operations, to
hinder hostile appropriation of the same
resources, and thus to make the conditions
for enemy forces on Byzantine soil as difficult
as possible. The taxation system ensured the
raising of supplies in kind at the right time
and in the right place, as well as of cash in
order to purchase other requirements as well
as mercenary soldiers, livestock, and so forth
Naturally, in reality this system was by no
means as effective at all times as a simple
description might suggest, and it often
worked less to the advantage of the army
than to that of the social elite, who could
exploit it for their own ends, The whole
apparatus worked often to the disadvantage
of the producing population, who could be
very oppressed by the incessant demands of
this bureaucratic state
Other factors also played a role. Tactical
order and discipline were regarded by the
Byzantines themselves as key elements in their
success over the long term, and they were only
too aware of what could happen when these
were not respected or maintained. It is also the
case that the Byzantine military were by no
means unique in this respect. The Islamic
armies were also well organised and operated
under a strict discipline, while the crusaders in
the late 11th century soon learned the value of
particular formations and tight tactical
discipline in dealing with the fast-moving and
hard-hitting Seljuk horse archers, Yet it is clear
that Byzantium had an edge over most of its
enemies in this respect until the 11th century,
even if tactical discipline did not always
deliver the results expected because individual
officers or commanders lacked the leadership
and authority to impose and maintain it. On.
the other hand, Byzantium was not Rome, and
it is important to bear this in mind ~ the
‘medieval east Roman empire was indeed a
medieval empire, and it exhibited similar
developmental traits in terms of social
‘organisation, political structures and economic
evolution as many of its neighbours.
Another important aspect was leadership,
the other side of the disciplinary coin, as it
were, When Byzantine armies were well led, it
‘usually meant that they were well-diseiplined,
fought in coherent units and obeyed the basic
tactical rules of engagement appropriate to
their equipment and weaponry. It also meant
that they were, more often than not,
victorious, because Byzantine leaders were
supposed to observe the fundamental
principle of east Roman warfare, namely that
of ensuring that they fought only when they
‘were fairly sure they could win, and at the
same time that of minimising the loss of life
on their side, This was not mere philanthropy,
although that was certainly an important
ideological element. It was common sense in
such a beleaguered state, in which manpower
was at a premium and demographic change
could lead to serious problems for the armies
But there were plenty of foolish commanders,Conclusion and consequences 91
men whose vanity, arrogance or ignorance led
them to throw the lives of their soldiers away
in futile attacks or ill-considered actions. And
it seems often to have been the case that these
were the leaders who paid least attention to
the fundamental principles of managing
soldiers, discipline, tactical cohesion and esprit
de corps. For with good leadership usually came
god morale and self-confidence ~ crucial
igredients for successful fighting, especially in
offensive warfare.
Even with well-equipped, disciplined and
well-trained troops, the result of a battle in the
‘medieval period, as well as at other times, was,
in the end, unpredictable. The ultimate arbiter
was a combination of the soldiers’ morale and
fighting skills, the quality of the leadership,
and good luck. But as the emperor Leo VI
points out in his military handbook, or tactica,
n the early 10th century, the difference
between the good general and the bad general
was that the good general understood this,
acted in a manner appropriate to the
Circumstances, and made sure that his
dispositions could cope with sudden surprises
or changes in the conditions of battle. Another
Writer, this time the son of a famous Byzantine
general, noted at the end of the I1th century
that he had never known a diligent and alert
‘man who had not been able to make his own
good fortune on the battlefield. And while it
would be incorrect to suggest that Byzantine
defeats were due only to the incompetence or
arrogance of commanding officers, this did
nevertheless play an important role,
The Byzantine world has attracted western
popular and scholarly attention, not only
because it stood at the crossroads of east and
west, bridging very diverse cultures, but
because it evoked a romantic lost medieval
Christian world which was both eastern in
its forms yet western in its cultural
significance, For some, it had been a bastion
of Christianity against Islam; for others,
especially in the 16th and 17th centuries, it
Was a source of politically relevant
information about the Ottomans who
threatened Europe at that time. And it was to
Byzantine authors and texts that later
generations directed their attention in the
context of increasing national self-awareness
as interest grew in the pre-Renaissance and
early medieval antecedents of the formerly
Byzantine lands. And while both medieval
Islam and the Byzantine world served to
transmit the heritage of classical and Roman
civilisation to the Renaissance and beyond, it
was in particular through collections of
Byzantine manuscripts and books that many
texts were preserved, influencing in this way
the evolution and content of modern
classical scholarship,
Byzantium was, in a sense, always at war,
for as we have seen, it always had an enemy or
4 potential enemy on one front or another.
This situation necessarily inflected the whole
history of the empire and determined in part
at least its social structure and the way in
which the state as well as the political system
could evolve. Byzantium made war against its
enemies over a period of some 700 years, from
the 7th to the 14th and 15th centuries. In this
sense, we might also assert that war made
Byzantium what it was.Further reading
Angold, M., The Byzantine Empire 1025-1204.
A Political History, London, Longman, 1984.
Bartusis, M.C., The Late Byzantine Army. Arms
and Society, 1204-1453, Philadelphia, U.
Penn, Press, 1992.
Dixon, Karen R. and Southern, Pat , The Late
Roman Army, London, Routledge, 1996.
Elton, H., Warfare in Roman Europe, A.D.
350-425, Oxford, Blackwell, 1996.
Haldon, J. F, State, Army and Society in
Byzantium. Approaches to Military, Social
and Administrative History, Aldershot:
Variorum, 1995.
Haldon, J. F,, Warfare, State and Society in the
yzantine World, 565-1204, London,
Routledge, 1999.
Haldon, J. B,, Byzantium, A History, Stroud,
‘Tempus, 2000.
Haldon, J. F,, The Byzantine Wars, Stroud.
‘Tempus, 2001,
Kaegi, W. E., J, Byzantine Military Unrest
471-843. An Interpretation, Amsterdam,
Hakkert, 1981.
MoGeer, Eric, Sowing the Dragon's Teeth.
Byzantine Warfare in the Tenth Century,
Dumbarton Oaks Studies XXXII,
Washington DC, Dumbarton Oaks,
1995.
Miller, T. S. and Nesbitt, J. S. (eds)., Peace and
War in Byzantium, Wasbington DC,
CUA, 1995,
Nicolle, D., Medieval Warfare Source Book, 2.
Christian Europe and its Neighbours,
London, Arms & Armour Press, 1996.
Oikonomides, N. (ed.)., Byzantium at War,
Athens, National Research
Foundation, 1997.
Whittow, M., The Making of Orthodox
Byzantium, 600-1025, London,
MacMillan, 1996,Byzantine rulers
AD 527-1453
Justinian 1
Justinian I
Tiberius I Constantine
Maurice
Phokas
Heraclius
Constantine III and Heraclonas
Constans 11
Constantine IV
Justinian 11
Leontios
Tiberios I
Justinian Tl (restored)
Philippikos Bardanes
Anastasios Il
‘Theodosios III
Leo IIL
Constantine V
Artabasdos
Leo IV
Constantine VI
Firene
Nikephoros 1
Staurakios
Michael I
Leo V
Michael I
‘Theophilos
Michael 111
Basil 1
Leo VI
Alexander
Constantine VIl
Romanos Il
Nikephoros II Phokas
John I Tzimiskes
Basil IL
Constantine VIII
Romanos Il Argyros
Michael IV the Paphlagonian
Michael V Kalaphates
Zoe and Theodora
Constantine IX Monomachos
578-82
582-602
602-10
610-41
641
641-68
668-85
98
705
780-97
797-802
802-11
B11
811-13
813-20
820-29
829-42
842-67
867-86
886-912
912-13
913-59
959-63
963-69
969-76
976-1025
1025-28
1028-34
1034-41
1041-42,
1042
1042-55,
Theodora (again) 1055-56
Michael VI Stratiotikos 1056-57
Isaac I Komnenos 1057-59
Constantine X Doukas 1059-67
Eudokia 1067
Romanos IV Diogenes 1068-71
Eudokia (again) 1071
Michael Vil Doukas 1071-78
Nikephoros II Rotaneiates 1078-81
Alexios I Komnenos 1081-1118
John TI Komnenos 1118-43,
Manuel I Komnenos 1143-80
Alexios II Komnenos 1180-83
Andronikos I Komnenos 1183-85
Isaac II Angelos 1185-95
Alexios III Angelos 1195-1203
Isaac TI (restored) and
Alexios IV Angelos 1203-1204
Alexios V Mourtzouphlos 1204
Constantine (X1) Laskaris 1204 (Nicaea)
‘Theodore I Laskaris 1204-22
(Nicaea)
John Il Doukas Vatatzes 1222-54
(Nicaea)
Theodore Il Laskaris 1254-58,
(Nicaea)
John 1V Laskaris 1258-61
(Nicaea)
Michael VIII Palaiologos 1259-82
Andronikos Il Palaiologos 1282-28
Michael IX Palaiologos 1294-1320
Andronikos IIl Palaiologos 1328-41
John V Palaiologos 1341-91
John VI Kantakouzenos 1341-54
Andronikos IV Palaiologos 1376-79
John VII Palaiologos 1390
Manuel II Palaiologos 1391-1425
John VIII Palaiologos 1425-48
Constantine XI (XII) Palaiologos 1448-5
The Grand Komnenoi of Trebizond (1203-1461)
Or the semi-autonomous rulers of the Despotate of
Eplros (1205-1318) are not included94 Essential Histories + Byzantium at War
ee ee ee ee
Index
Figures in bold refer to illustrations
Abbasid Caliphate 33
Acrocorinth 40, 44
agriculture 73, 75, 77, 78, 79
Alexios Byzantine emperor 17, 27, 33, 46, 63, 64, 80
‘Alexios Il, Byzantine emperor 86
Alexios IV’ Angelos, Byzantine emperor 86
Alexios V, Byzantine emperor 86, 87,
Alp Aslan, Seljuk sultan 33
Andronikos I, Byzantine emperor 88
‘Ankara, battle of (1402) 89
Anna Comnena, Byzantine princess 80
‘Arab Islamic armies
campaigns against 14, 15, 3941
conquests. 24, 30, 33,
Aragon, kingdom of 88
aristocracy see elite
Armenians 80
armies, Byzantine
battle order $9, 60
campaign life 65-71
casualties, treatment of 69-71
cavalry 47-8, 49, 51-2
discipline 63-4, 90
history 14-16
Infantry 48, 49
leave 62
logistics. $5-9, 76-7, 82-5, 90
marches and marching order, $2, $3, 67-8
marching camps. 36, 37, 66-7
officers and commanders $1, 58, 63, 64, 90-1
organisation and distribution 39-40, 47-55
rations 67
recruitment 61, 78, 81
retirement. 62-3
soldier-civilian relations 80-1, 83-4
soldiers 61-3
strategy 369, 45, 53-5,
tacties 47-8, 49, 51-3
taining 64!
weapons 16, 49, 57
Asia Minor
‘campaigns in 39-41, 76
characteristics 8-9
history 13-16, 24, 34, 45-6, 88
Avars 13,29
Baldwin L of Flanders, Latin emperor 87
Balkans 31
campaigns in 65-71
characteristics 9-11, 31
history 13, 14, 16, 29, 31-2, 43-4, 88, 89
banda 4%
Bardas Skleros 65, 66, 68
Basil I, Byzantine emperor 15, 29, 31, 34, 38,44, 64
Bayezid, Ottoman sultan 89
Beneventum 70-1
Bulgars and Bulgaria 14, 15, 29, 38, 41, 41-5, 65, 87
Byzantine empire
chronology 19.22
extent 7-8, 10, 35, 42, 43, 54, 87
geography 8-12
government 23-8, 40, 48
history 12:17, 86.9
Charlemagne 30
Charpete 23
chazars 32, 42-3
Christianity
‘Church politics and influence 23-4, 30, 31, 61
‘east-west conflict 30, 86-7, 89
Papacy 29, 30, 88
spread 29, 72-3
and warfare. 38-9, 46, 72-5, 77-8
Clovis 12-13
coins 7, 24, 27, 35, 38, 46, 62, 63, 70, 85
Constantine I, Roman emperor 73
Constantine V, Byzantine emperor 7, 14, 29, 40, 64,
72,75
Constantine VIII, Byzantine emperor 35
Constantine XI, Byzantine emperor 89
Constantine, son of Theophilos 27
Constantine Laskaris, Nicaean emperor 87
Constantinople 24, 37, 66, 83
capture by Ottomans (1453) 89
‘capture in fourth crusade (1204) 16, 30, 86, 88
walls 15, 17, 27, 28, 74
‘crusades, fourth 16, 30, 33, 86
Cumans 32
Daphni monastery 28, 32, 33, 82
Demetrios, St 45, 65
diplomacy 8, 36
drouggot 38,
economy 238
Egypt 24
lite 24, 25-6, 27-8, 63
emperors
campaign baggage 58
listof 93
power 268
Worship of 72-8
pias, Despotate of 87, 87-8
0
fiscal system 24-5, 25-6, 55-8, 61, 76-7, 82.5,
Florence, council of (1439) 89
Franks 29, 30, 32, 88
Frederick I, German emperor 88
Galata 89)
jenoa 8, 32, 86, 88, 89
eorge, St 45, 65
George of Psidia 79
German empire 32
government 23-8, 40, 48
see also fiscal system.
Greece $7, 87, 88, 89
Gymnopelagesion 80
Harput see CharpeteIndex 95
Heraclius, Byzantine emperor 13, 79
History of John Skylitzes 26, 46, 47, 48, 50-1, 54-5,
58-9, 66, 68-9, 70-1
Hosios Loukas monastery 30
Hungary 32
Ideology, and warfare 38-9, 46, 72-5,
inheritance law 61
Isaac [ Komnenos, Byzantine emperor 46
Isaac Il, Byzantine emperor 85, 86
Islam
Byzantine view of Muslims 38
origins and history 13-14
see also Abbasid Caliphate; Arab Islamic armies;
Turks
Istanbul see Constantinople
aly 13, 29-30, 32
John | Teimiskes, Byzantine emperor 44, 64, 65, 69
John Il, Byzantine emperor 17,43
John Vi Kantakouzenos, Byzantine emperor 88
John VIL Byzantine emperor 89
Justinian, Byzantine emperor 13, 16, 29
Kalojan, Bulgarian tsar 87
kataphraktor 49
Kleisourarchies 41
Mlibanophoroi 49
Koloneia 12
Komnenos dynasty 26-8, 30, 87
Krum, Bulgar Khan 29
land ownership 24, 25-6, 27-8, 62
Latin empire 86-8
‘eo IM, Byzantine emperor 7, 14, 72
Leo IV, Byzantine emperor 7”
Leo V, Byzantine emperor 26, 46
Leo Vi, Byzantine emperor 53, 75, 91
Limnos 78
literature 76, 79
Liutprand of Cremona 8, 36
Lombards 13, 29
Magyars 32
Manied, king of Sicily 88
manpower 36
Mantzikert, battle of (1071) 34, 41, 45-6
Manuel |, Byzantine emperor 17, 30, 32, 43, 70
Maurice, Byzantine emperor 13
medicine, battlefield 69-71
Mehmet Il, Ottoman sultan 16, 89
mercenaties 16, 31, 40, 45, 51, 55, 62, 63
Mercenary Catalan Grand Company 88
Michael Il, Byzantine emperor 27, 48
Michael Vil Byzantine emperor 88
Michael Attaleiates 51
Michael Autoreianos 87
Mohammed, founder of Islam 13-14
‘monasteries 62-3
Mongols 88, 89
Mopsouestia’ 58-9
Nicaea, empire of 87, 88
Nicopolis, battle of (1396) 89
Nikephoros 1, Byzantine emperor 15, 29, 41
Nikephoros il Phokas, Byzantine emperor 42, 44, 64,
74,79
Nommans 32-3, 43, $1-2
‘occupations 85
Origen 72
Ottomans see Turks, Ottoman
pacifism 72.3
Papacy 29, 30, 88
Pechenegs 32, 43, 44, 65, 68, 69
Persians” 13,
Philippoupolis 44, 65
Phokas, Byzantine emperor 13,
Plovdiv see Philippoupolis
postal system 76
Ravenna 29
religion
emperor cult. 72-3
see also Christianity; Islam
roads and routes 9, 11, 18, 31
Roman empire, eastern see Byzantine empire
Roman empire, western 29-30
Romanos IV, Byzantine emperor 16, 27, 45,
rural life 81-5
‘ruralisation’ 24
Rus! 31, 41-4, 65, 68-9
Samuel, Bulgar tsar 29, 44
Sebinkarahisar see Koloneia
Seljuks see Turks,
Serbs 29, 88
icly 15, 30, 32-3, 55
Sigismund, king of Hungary 89
Stefan Urosit IV Dushan, Serbian ruler 88
Svyatoslay, Rus’ prince 43, 44, 65
Symeon, Bulgar tsar 29
uk
tagmata 40, 41, 45, 61
‘Tamburlane 89
taxation see fiscal system
themata
ccharactetistics and establishment 39, 40, 42, 48,
61, 62, 64
neglect and decline 45, 51, 55
Theoderic 12
Theodore I, Nicaean emperor 87
Theodore, St_45, 65
‘Theodosius the Deacon 79
Theophylact, archbishop of Ohrid 80-1
Thomas the Slav 47, 48, 50.
‘Thrace 39, 42, 44, 88
Timur Lenk 89
tournai 48
trade 81-2
transport 11
‘Trebizond, empire of 87, 89
trebuchets $8.9
trumpets 55
Turks
Ottoman 16, 17, 34, 88, 89
Seljuk 16, 33-4, 41, 43, 45, 88
Valens, Aqueduct of 8-9
Varangian guard 31, 51
Varna, battle of (1444) 89
Venice 8, 29, 30, 32, 33, 86, 87, 88
vexillationes. 47
warfare
defensive 39-41
effects on society 76
offensive 41-6
pre-emptive strikes 41
propaganda 79
reasons and justifications. 36-9, 72-5Sy ena Roi ooh tes
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history of this legendary empire
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strategic, tactical, cultural and individual perspectives
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