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Jun 29 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
The Mongol conqueror Hulegu wanted the Romans, the “Empire of Nicaea,” to submit to them.

In 1257 Hulegu sent the Romans an embassy requesting they bow to their rightful Mongol masters!

The Romans had to play it smart!!

(A thread) 🧵Image
Roman diplomatic genius was put straight to work! In the words of Nicholas Morton: “Emperor Theodore II (Laskaris) responded to this deputation’s arrival with a shrewd piece of statecraft.”

They needed to make themselves look bigger and stronger than they were. Image
“When Hulegu’s representatives reached the border, rather than taking them straight to his court, Theodore ordered that they be brought to him by a long and meandering route in order to give a false impression of the size of the Empire of Nicaea.” Image
Theodore “also arranged for well-armed squadrons of soldiers to be stationed along the road to give the impression that his empire could deploy huge numbers of troops.”

Brilliant, I must say. Image
The Emperor thus found an amicable solution to the Mongol issue, they were basically a nominal Mongol client-state, though the Romans probably presented this more as an alliance of equals in their telling…

In 1260, under Michael VIII Palaiologos, a treaty was finally ratified! Image
They were treated better than some other than some other client states.

Theodore Laskaris, followed by Michael Palaiologos, was able to secure from this alliance the restoration of an Orthodox Patriarch in Antioch. Already the Crusader-state had submitted to Mongol overlordship Image
That demonstrated that the Mongols valued and respected their Roman allies more than Antioch - imposing Roman demands on them. The Romans were using this alliance and nominal submission to great effect, and keeping their dignity in the affair. Image
Securing some concessions like that likely allowed them to feel like it was more of an alliance than submission, regardless of how the Mongols may have interpreted it.

Both sides could take what they needed from it and present it favorably to their people. Image
The Empire of Nicaea had truly impressive leadership and statecraft - I can only imagine what those Emperors could have done in earlier eras with a greater Empire to work with! They punched above their weight. Image
Source: The Mongol Storm: Making and Breaking in the Medieval Near East by @NicholasMorto11

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More from @RomeInTheEast

Jun 24
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The city “panicked in fear, as no preparations had been made to meet this unexpected foreign invasion.”

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The Rus had launched several raids against Constantinople, the greatest being in 860 and 941. These were dangerous Viking style raids.

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A Roman army stole from churches and houses in their own capital! 🧵🧵Image
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Jun 19
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An exploration of their contribution to and engagement with ancient wisdom

🧵 Image
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This is essential what those who study Classical studies do today. This copying and studying was crucial for the survival of texts! Image
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This is what is known as the “University of Constantinople” - but was it truly a university and was it really a continuous institution? Image
They needed these institutions.

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Jun 13
“The Carthaginians had complied in 149BC with Rome's demand to surrender their 200,000 weapons and 2000 catapults. They did not know the Senate had already secretly decided 'to destroy Carthage for good, once the war was ended'”

The Fall of Carthage [A thread]Image
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Carthage was doomed Image
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“They shredded her clothes and her body with pottery fragments, tore out her eyes, dragged her corpse through the streets of Alexandria, and then burned her remains.”

This was the terrifying fate of a philosopher named Hypatia of Alexandria.

How and why did this happen?! 🧵🧵Image
In my view Hypatia didn’t really do anything to deserve what happened to her.

However, she was to become a victim of a power struggle between Cyril, the Patriarch of Alexandria, and the Roman governor Orestes. Image
“As the conflict with Orestes heated up, Cyril and his associates began to blame their problems on the regular audiences that Orestes had with a female philosopher named Hypatia. The daughter of a prominent Alexandrian mathematician, Hypatia had been Alexandria’s leading thinker” Image
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