Byzantine Emporia Profile picture
Jan 16, 2022 24 tweets 10 min read Read on X
One of the best ways to develop a good memory for history—the framework to hang facts and dates on—is to pay close attention to geography. The same patterns occur over and over in vastly different ages.
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Obviously, there are a lot of universals—seas and rivers like the Mediterranean & Caribbean, the Yellow & Ganges, create a common culture along their shores, natural units that can be looked at as a whole. But the particulars get even more interesting.
One of my favorite examples is the Anatolian plateau. Arid steppeland, ringed by imposing mountain ranges, made it highly defensible for any power that could control the passes. This shaped the course of history in huge ways.
Going back to the Bronze Age, many civilizations have controlled the entire plateau even in the face of strong external adversaries.

1.) Beginning with the Hittites, the first to rule a unified plateau, despite powerful Egyptian and Assyrian neighbors.
2.) The Achaemenids, who even maintained control over the Ionian Greek cities after their twin defeats in the invasions of mainland Greece.
3.) The Byzantines, who maintained the line of the Taurus pretty consistently over three hundred years of warfare with the Arabs.
4.) The Seljuk Sultanate of Rum, which dominated the plateau in the wake of Manzikert.
5.) After the Ottomans gained full control of Anatolia in the 15th century, they held it continuously until the dissolution of their empire, when it became the core of the modern Turkish state.
When the region wasn’t controlled by a single, strong power, it tended to be a mosaic of smaller states: witness the post-Hittite Iron Age or the Turkish beyliks of the 13th century.
Far more unusual was the unstable situation that persisted throughout the Hellenistic era, when powerful kingdoms whose main territories were outside Anatolia controlled slivers of the plateau for some time.
The geography to the southeast of Anatolia created a very different dynamic. The broad plains of northern Mesopotamia received just enough rainfall that they could feed passing armies, which easily traversed the open terrain.
But the lack of natural boundaries made it hard to control, either in whole or part, and it was a frequent battleground for outside powers.

Witness the titanic Roman-Persian wars…
…or the wars that Saladin fought after the breakdown of Zengid power.
In stark contrast, some regions were almost destined to be coherent countries. The stable and fertile Nile valley, protected to east and west by vast deserts, meant that Egypt has been a centralized state nearly uninterrupted since its unification by King Scorpion 5000 years ago.
The existence of natural power centers like Egypt and Anatolia meant that some frontier territories were often fought over by superpowers. In one case, this created two identical military situations 3373 years apart using vastly different technology.
Since Egypt’s most powerful neighbors lay to the northeast, geography also dictated invasion routes: almost invariably to the northeast corner of the Nile Delta, where they could be supplied by boat as the main army marched along the Sinai coast.
The logistical difficulties of a several days’ march across an extremely harsh desert faced invaders from the Sea People to Alexander and on through the Crusaders and Ottomans. And they all handled it in very similar ways.
Far rarer are cases like the Arab conquests, which benefitted from both centralized direction and desert nomad fighting techniques, and hence could come across the desert. Also rare were invasions from organized states farther up the Nile valley.
(This also explains the location of Alexandria: positioned to benefit from both the Nile and Mediterranean trade, but far from the most likely avenues of invasion)
Egypt was also fairly well protected by attack from sea, while always being an important trade emporium for the eastern Mediterranean…
…that connected the Med to the Indian Ocean, where the monsoon trade system connected all the states along the coast.
byzantinemporia.com/monsoon-trade-…
…even if the full exploitation of that system awaited a few crucial discoveries.
Which was lucky. Other seemingly good candidates for cosmopolitan trade regions remained very undeveloped up to the modern era.
Modern means of transport, food production, and water sourcing change many of these ancient universals. But even a modern wonder like the Suez Canal exploits existing features, returning us to an age when the route between east & west passed through Egypt.

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More from @byzantinemporia

Aug 18, 2024
Ottoman borders in the 15th century looked a lot like Byzantium during its ascent: for similar geographic reasons they faced an ongoing state of war along their eastern frontier. But once they turned their full attention to the problem, they solved it much more dramatically.🧵
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Anatolia was the Ottomans’ base of power, where they welded together the Turkic beyliks that formed in the wake of Byzantine retreat. This was a gradual process, and by the 15th c. several retained varying degrees of independence.

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One of these was the Karamanids in southern Anatolia, who often tried to expand this during periods of Ottoman weakness or disunity. One of these attempts came in 1444, when the so-called Crusade of Varna was attacking their Balkan possessions. Image
Read 21 tweets
Jul 8, 2024
Quotes are from a superb pair of essays by @Scholars_Stage, Luttwak's book on Byzantium gives a similar misreading of their strategic culture (but cast in a positive light). In truth, the Byzantines were very eager to fight, diplomacy and bribes were only used as stop-gaps when occupied on another front, and the caution advised by their military manuals was tactical and operational—not strategic.
@Scholars_Stage On the first point, it was a matter of simple geography. They campaigned aggressively whenever threatened, but their two primary theaters were separated by an enormous distance.
The caution urged on frontier commanders by the manuals (e.g. On Skirmishing) has to be interpreted in light of the larger strategic picture. Prematurely forcing a battle risked leaving all of Anatolia exposed before the imperial army could mobilize.
Read 4 tweets
Apr 4, 2024
When the Seljuks arrived in the Middle East, they played a very similar role to the Franks in Dark Age Europe: protectors of an enfeebled religious authority and the enforcers of orthodoxy.🧵 Image
The Franks who expanded into Gaul in the 6th century were unique among the barbarian kingdoms of Western Europe. Their king Clovis converted to Nicene Christianity, aligning himself with the surviving elite of the post-Roman West. Image
This stood in contrast to the Visigoths of Spain, Burgundians of southeast Gaul, Ostrogoths of Italy, and Vandals of North Africa, all of whom practiced Arianism and remained aloof of their subject populations. Image
Read 12 tweets
Feb 10, 2024
It took a decade for a 17th-century financial crisis to travel from Spain to China.

The Spanish Crown suffered a pair of fiscal disasters in 1627-28 which eventually forced it to cut silver exports to the Far East, hammering a Ming China already teetering on the precipice. Image
The flood of New World silver into Asian markets in the 1500s crushed the value of metal currency, but also supercharged trade as new markets were opened for exports. The effect was the same from Syria to China.
By the second half of the century, the Far East was receiving about a third of the Spanish Crown’s silver (already 80% of the world’s supply).

Adding to this, new mines in Japan began producing large quantities in the middle of the century. Image
Read 9 tweets
Jan 3, 2024
The Spartans drilled.

This is a ridiculous reading of the sources mentioned, and it neglects a few other important ones.

Thread.
To start with, one thing he gets right is that the classical Greeks deprecated the value of individual skill at arms—if anything, that would detract from their willingness to hold the line. Here’s a wonderful passage from the Spartan poet Tyrtaeus, who is mentioned: Image
Maintaining formation—παρ᾿ ἀλλήλοισι μένοντες—is seen as the chief martial virtue. So how did they learn to do it?

Let’s look at the quote from Laches. Nicias suggests that young men should prepare for war by training at arms.Image
Read 21 tweets
Oct 19, 2023
Easy to underestimate how thorough the breakdown of a centralized system can be. To put it in modern perspective, here's what it takes just to get the right 𝘸𝘢𝘷𝘦𝘭𝘦𝘯𝘨𝘵𝘩 for the lasers in lithography machines used to etch the most advanced microchips (from "Chip War")...


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That's a staggering amount of material, intellectual, and economic infrastructure required just to sustain one part of a very complicated process. Sustaining that infrastructure depends in turn on maintaining the process. If any one of several highly-centralized nodes is disrupted for any length of time, it becomes disproportionately more expensive and difficult to get it back online.
Systems are resilient and can recover from freak catastrophes. But anything that is likely to majorly disrupt one node is bound to introduce many other complications. Just as a hypothetical: a war over Taiwan that takes out TSMC, which manufactures 90% of advanced chips...
Read 10 tweets

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