In order to refamiliarize ourselves with the Byzantines after exploring the Kievan Rus, we will take stock of the Empire in 1025.
At Basil II’s death, Byzantium stood at its medieval zenith. Its borders stretched from Amalfi to the Zagros. The Byzantine heartland was peaceful and prosperous. The Arab world was fractured, Bulgarians defeated, and Rus converted.
200,000 pounds of gold sat in the treasury and over 130,000 soldiers were under arms across the Empire. Basil’s rule was light and local elites maintained a great deal of autonomy in the Armenian Mountains and Bulgaria.
Basil also oversaw a flowering of Byzantine culture later named the Macedonian Renaissance for the Dynasty that ruled during that time. Classical art and literature were incorporated into Christian tradition, a forerunner to the Italian Renaissance.
Although Basil’s rule was prosperous, cracks were appearing in the Empire. The lack of Arab raids allowed for a softening of Anatolia. Lax frontier recruitment rules, magnate weakness after Basil’s purges, and a reliance on the Tagma and mercenaries encouraged Seljuk raiders.
Basil’s brother Constantine proved to be a reckless ruler, the first of many incapable men to become Basileus. Basil had built an imperial system around his personal ethos and leadership style; without it or a true heir, the system collapsed.
Without emperors like Basil, Tzimiskes, and Nikephoros and a weakened Anatolian military elite, the Varangian Guard & other mercenary units will gain influence not only in the army, but imperial politics. This is most apparent in the story of Harald Hardrada, who we will cover.
The Byzantine Army remained on the Theme/Tagma model in which each theme would be responsible for organizing and paying for a certain number of troops, usually cavalry. Infantry were called up on a more “militia” basis.
By 1025 the Imperial government accepted cash instead of soldiers, weakening the martial tradition of the peaceful interior and creating an over-reliance on mercenaries.
However, this money put less strain on the economy and paid for the large tagmatic formations and mercenaries that conquered Bulgaria and Armenia during Basil’s reign.
The Byzantines found themselves in a military conundrum. The current system could pay for offensive armies now, but the overstretched empire desperately needed a system that would allow for flexible and responsive defense. The failure to resolve this will cause serious problems.
Byzantine infantry were generally equipped with a large spear and shield. Sometimes soldiers had axes, swords, or plumbata (lead darts) as well. A quilted or leather jacket and crude helmet were standard, although some wealthier soldiers wore lamellar or chain mail.
The backbone of the Byzantine Army, the lightly armored infantry, relied on their organization, discipline, and superb training to overcome their opponents. These spearmen were supported by archers and other skirmishing troops.
Byzantine cavalry were the cream of the military. Cataphracts encased in armor, bearing lance, sword, and mace astride a massive war horse, were used to smash enemy formations and send them flying. Such soldiers were incredibly expensive to train and equip.
Cataphracts never became a large part of the army and were used sparingly to increase the effect of their devastating charge. The Byzantines supplemented their native heavy cavalry with lighter armed horsemen from Armenia and Georgia, steppe horse archers, and Bedouins.
Foreign mercenaries didn’t just serve in the cavalry; many Armenians, Franks, Slavs, and others fought on foot alongside the Byzantines. Contemporary sources comment on the multiethnic character of the army.
One of the largest, and by far the most impactful foreign contingent, was the Varangians. Basil’s original 6,000 had all gone by 1025, but the formation was integrated into the army structure.
The Varangians were divided into three main groups; Naval, Tagma, and the Imperial Bodyguard. We will go into depth on the organization of the Varangians in another thread.
We know so much about the Byzantine army thanks to military manuals that have survived to present day. Nikephoros’ Praecepta Militaria and Basil’s Tactika are excellent resources to examine Byzantine military life according to those who lived it.
In the coming decades the Byzantine Empire will face new threats; Pechenegs, Normans, and the Seljuks. These new enemies will present new challenges for the Byzantine military and force significant adaptation under the Komnenian Dynasty.
Before we can touch on the resurgence of the Empire under the Komnenians and the Crusades, we must cover the half-century of decline and chaos that culminated at the disaster of Manzikert.
Despite such troubles, great men will continue to enter the story. Men like the giant Georgios Maniakis and Harald Hardrada will continue the Byzantine fighting spirit and invigorate a military response to enemies that smelled blood in the water as the Empire stumbled.
To understand how the Empire struggled forward as internal strife & unadvised policy weakened it we need to go to the source of the issues. The palace politics of the Paphlagonian Dynasty will be the subject of our next thread & we will cover the imperial mess Basil left.
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Saint-Emperor Nikephoros Phokas dedicated his life to defeating the Muslim Emirates that for centuries had attacked Byzantium.
His success was so complete that the military manual he penned with his brother Leo, the Praecepta Militaria, begins with an apology:
“[The treatise might not offer] much application in the eastern regions at the present time. For Christ, our true God, has greatly cut back the power and strength of the offspring of Ishmael and has repelled their onslaughts…
Nonetheless, in order that time, which leads us to forget what we once knew, might not completely blot out this useful knowledge, we think we ought to commit it to writing…
Today, 570 years ago, Ottoman Janissaries poured over the Theodosian Walls.
The Genoese fled when their leader, Giovanni Giustiniani, was injured. The Emperor threw himself into the hopeless struggle & died with his men.
After over 2,000 years, the Roman Empire was no more.
The final siege of Constantinople is the last chapter in the swan song of the Late Byzantine Empire & a dramatic tale of betrayal, duty, determination, honor, and horror.
In 1449, Emperor John VIII died & his brother Constantine XI took the throne. Crowned in a small ceremony in Mystras, Constantine was never coronated by the Patriarch in Constantinople thanks to his support for a Union with the Papacy, an unpopular movement in Byzantium.
The fact that the Byzantines basically forgot they ruled Sardinia will always be funny to me.
After the Muslim conquest of Sicily, Sardinia was isolated from the rest of the empire. The Byzantines had more pressing matters & through negligence, Sardinia slowly gained a measure of de facto independence.
The Sardinians repelled frequent raids from Sicily & Africa by Muslim pirates. Such attacks forced them to abandon many of the old ports and cities of the coast, further isolating them from the rest of the Byzantines by making the life-line of communication by sailing weaker.
During the reign of Constantine VII, a raiding party from Tarsus attacked the sleepy village of Herakleos.
The villagers were celebrating Divine Liturgy when they received the grave news.
The village priest, Themel, decided to act. That decision would change his life forever.
As Themel prepared the Holy Mystery a messager burst into the church to announce that Muslim raiders had been spotted marching toward the village.
Themel stopped the liturgy and stormed out of the church at the head of his flock, wearing his priestly vestments and armed with a semantron, a big wooden or iron board to hit as a sort of bell.
If you’ve read Ibrahim you’ll know he isn’t a historian; he’s a polemicist. He uses primary sources to weave a narrative of constant, civilizational conflict between Islam & Christianity.
There is no scrutiny of sources or historiography, these are broad strokes to get the scene set for another chapter in a 1,400 year cage match.
If you are looking for Treadgold or Kaldellis here you won’t find him. Ibrahim understands that the Byzantines after Basil II struggled to adapt to new threats, yet is uninterested in the complex political, social, and material causes.
The Byzantine army was the most multi-ethic force in the pre-modern world.
Mongols, Turks, Africans (Zanj), Saxons, Norse, Rus, Normans, Huns, Alans, Cumans, Pechenegs, Germans, Italians, Georgians, Armenians, Iranians, Albanians, Catalans, and more.
How did they manage it?
Many came as mercenary warrior bands looking for employment. These were enrolled within the military and given regular pay & orders under the watchful eye of Byzantine officers.
This prevented mercenaries from becoming a nuisance & the Byzantines to use them expertly in battle.
Some of these mercenaries settled down with local women, eventually fading into the general population except for the preservation of their surnames and connections to their regiments.