The 𝐁𝐚𝐭𝐭π₯𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐌𝐚𝐧𝐳𝐒𝐀𝐞𝐫𝐭 was a defeat which plunged the Roman Empire into a civil war that brought the Empire down to depths of despair never known before!

A tale of disaster and betrayal…

[Thread]🧡 Image
At the beginning of the 11th Century, the Roman Empire was at the height of its medieval power thanks to the indomitable spirit and military capability of Basil II BoulgaroktΓ³nos who extended the empire’s borders on all fronts. Image
However, the empire began to face new threats in Italy and on its Balkan borders around the middle of the century under Emperor Constantine IX which coincided with the coming of the Seljuk Turks who broke into the empire under Alp Arslan when they invaded Iberia in the 1060s! Image
π„π§π­πžπ« π‘π¨π¦πšπ§π¨π¬

Romanos Diogenes, a renowned general, took power in 1068 after the death of Constantine X who ruled that his own son should succeed him. Romanos’ succession enraged the Doukas family whose anger would have dire consequences for the new emperor. Image
By 1068 much of Cappadocia had been overrun by the Turks, culminating in the sack of Ceasarea, but Romanos had resolved to turn them back and restore order to the empire.

He led a successful campaign in 1068 and 1069 chasing the Turks from one place to another over Anatolia. Image
Affairs elsewhere, including Norman advances in Italy and their imminent capture of Bari, took his attention from the Turks in 1070 but in 1071 he was ready to set out against them once again. Image
The Roman Army was in a sorry state by the time Romanos became emperor and had a serious discipline problem. It took considerable effort to deal with mutineering mercenaries. His own actions, including bringing a large baggage train on campaign also did not endear him to the men Image
Romanos thought Alp Arslan was much farther away then he was and assumed he could quickly capture Manzikert. However, Alp Arslan was close by and knew exactly where the Romans were.

Romanos made the fatal decision to split his forces and send half to retake the fort at Khliat Image
What happened to those men is not known for sure. However it is thought that either Alp Arslan swept down and destroyed them or that their commander Tarchaneiotes led them away at the sight of the mighty army mustered by Alp Arslan. Image
The men he sent were routed and Romanos drew up his army and sent his left wing forward which was surrounded and forced to retreat. The Turks then hid in the hills that night, making another attack impossible. The next day his Turkic mercenaries defected Image
Peace envoys were sent to Romanos with terms that he rejected in favour of settling the problem of the Turkic presence in the Empire for good.

He sent out scouts to recall Tarchaneiotes and the rest of his army. No word came back, and Romanos advanced again without them. Image
He made the grave error of leaving the rear of his army under the command of Andronikos Doukas, a member of the Doukas family, who still resented his succession as emperor. Image
The Turkic horse archers advanced in a crescent formation with the centre drawing back farther to draw in the Romans whose flanked were now susceptible to arrow fire while the Turks simply disengaged whenever the Romans attempted to force them to stand and fight Image
When Romanos ordered his forces to withdraw, Andronikos Doukas betrayed his emperor and refused to cover the withdrawal and instead marched the rear of the army back to the camp near Manzikert.

The Turks exploited the confusion and stormed the Roman lines, routing the right wing Image
The left wing of the army under Nikephoros Bryennios held out for longer but was eventually routed.

All that remained was the emperor commanding the centre of the army, including the famously steadfast Varangian guard. Image
In his last stand, Romanos is recorded to have β€˜launched himself into the thick of the battle. He knocked down several very valiant fighters and caused disarray in their ranks’ Image
They fought valiantly, refusing to retreat until they were eventually surrounded. Romanos was wounded and taken prisoner and the professional core of the army was destroyed.

The battle was over, but the disaster was just beginning to unfold.

When Romanos was brought before Alp Arslan it is said that he refused to believe a man in such a state could be the emperor.

He placed his boot on his neck and forced him to kiss the ground. Then he offered the previously rejected peace terms and released the forlorn emperor.Image
The Doukas family seized upon the defeat of Romanos. Andronikos had marched from Manzikert to Constantinople to launch a coup in favour of his cousin, now hailed as Emperor Michael VII.

The true disaster of Manzikert was not the defeat itself but the war with resulted from it. Image
Romanos raised an army to defend his throne but was defeated by Andronikos Doukas and retreated to the fortress of Adana. From there, knowing his cause was lost, he sent a large shipment of gold to Alp Arslan in attempt to save the peace he had agreed and prevent further war. Image
He surrendered after Doukas promised him that he could resign to a monastery unharmed.

But, again, Andronikos Doukas betrayed him. He was seized and blinded. Image
Attaleiates wrote β€˜when he arose, his eyes were drenched with blood, a pathetic and pitiable sight that made everyone who saw it cry uncontrollably’. He was sent into exile without much needed medical attention.

Before dying from an infection caused by the poorly carried out blinding, Romanos received one last insult.

A letter arrived from Michael Psellos, a courtier and supporter of the Doukas faction.

In the letter he congratulated Romanos on the loss of his eyes.Image
The fallout from the betrayal of Romanos Diogenes and the ensuing war gave the Turks free reign in Anatolia which they utilised to conquer it entirely.

The heartland of the empire was gone.

For the time being the empire was reduced to a mere Balkan state. Image

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More from @nonregemesse

Aug 2
Today in 216 BC,

The forces of the Roman Republic were annihilated by Hannibal and the Carthaginians at the 𝐁𝐚𝐭𝐭π₯𝐞 𝐨𝐟 π‚πšπ§π§πšπž!

One of the most infamous and crushing defeats of all time, here is what happened.

[Thread]🧡 Image
With a desire to reverse the balance of power after the First Punic War, Hannibal sacked an allied Roman city in Iberia and then crossed the alps to invade Italy. Image
After being soundly defeated at Trebia and Trasimene, the Romans appointed Fabius Maximus to defend Rome against Hannibal and he pursued a guerilla war strategy, following Hannibal wherever he went, harassing his forces, but never giving battle. This proved effect but unpopular, and Fabius Maximus was sidelined.

The Roman consuls for 216 BC had gathered enough men to face Hannibal again, this time at Cannae with a force reported to be around 65,000 strong!Image
Read 16 tweets
Jul 31
In the 3rd century BC, Rome and its great rival Carthage stared each other down across the Mediterranean.

β€˜...𝐰𝐚𝐫 𝐦𝐚𝐲 𝐭𝐑𝐞𝐲 𝐑𝐚𝐯𝐞, 𝐭𝐑𝐞𝐦 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐭𝐑𝐞𝐒𝐫 𝐜𝐑𝐒π₯𝐝𝐫𝐞𝐧'𝐬 𝐜𝐑𝐒π₯𝐝𝐫𝐞𝐧!’

This is a thread on the Punic Wars!

[Thread]🧡 Image
After Rome emerged victorious from the Samnite Wars and the invasion of Pyrrhus, the Roman Republic turned its attention to Sicily, then party controlled by Carthage.

In the mid-3rd century, Carthage was the most powerful state in the western Mediterranean, with colonies as far away as Iberia.Image
β€’ The First Punic War β€’

In 264 BC the Romans conquered the independent Sicilian city of Messina after becoming embroiled in Sicilian politics, and because Messina would have made an excellent base from which the Carthaginians could one day have invaded Italy.

Then they moved on Syracuse which quickly allied with them. The Carthaginian-held Sicilian territories were next.

The Romans besieged Arkagas in 262 BC and inflicted a heavy defeat on the Carthaginian army sent to relieve it.Image
Read 15 tweets
Jul 29
In Late Antiquity the Roman Empire sought mercenaries far and wide.

Centuries before English exiles joined the famed Varangian Guard, there were surprising links between the Anglo-Saxons and the Roman Empire.

[Thread]🧡 Image
In the 6th century, the emperor Justinian had attempted to avoid war with the Persians in order to focus on his western campaigns of reconquest.

However, after his death, his nephew Justin ended the armistice with the Persians by cancelling the agreed payments.

At this point, the empire was not well situated to fight another war with the Persians as plague had severely affected its manpower and Italy and the Balkans had faced new Barbarian invasions.

The empire was in need of mercenaries.Image
β€’ Britain and the Empire β€’

The traditional, yet flawed, view of British history is that the Romans left Britain in 410 whereupon it descended into the dark ages and that was that.

However, only the Roman army left with a usurper as he campaigned on the continent. The Roman civilians in Britain did not leave at this time.

As they were pushed west by the Angles and Saxons they maintained links with the empire, even after the dissolution of the western court of the empire.Image
Read 10 tweets
Jul 28
The greatest and rarest military honour in Ancient Rome, even rarer than a triumph, was the Spolia Opima, the arms and armour of an enemy leader taken after victorious single combat!

Only three men ever achieved it!

[Thread]🧡Image
β€’ Romulus β€’ 752 BC β€’

The first example of a Roman winning the Spolia Opima was during Rome’s semi-mythical past.

After the infamous kidnap of the Sabine women, the men of the Sabines were naturally furious and resolved to war.

Livy wrote that the Sabines cities most affected hastily marched on the Romans:

β€˜Whilst they were scattered far and wide, pillaging and destroying, Romulus came upon them with an army, and after a brief encounter taught them that anger is futile without strength. He put them to a hasty flight, and following them up, killed their king and despoiled his body; then after slaying their leader took their city at the first assault.’Image
After this Romulus displayed the arms of the vanquished dead on a tree:

β€˜which the shepherds looked upon as a sacred tree, and at the same time marked out the site for the temple of Jupiter, and addressing the god by a new title, uttered the following invocation: β€˜Jupiter Feretrius! these arms taken from a king, I, Romulus a king and conqueror, bring to thee, and on this domain, whose bounds I have in will and purpose traced, I dedicate a temple to receive the spolia opima which posterity following my example shall bear hither, taken from the kings and generals of our foes slain in battle.’

However unlikely this story may be. It provides at least a legendary origin for the very real honour that existed: the defeat of an enemy commander by a Roman commander, the stripping of his arms, and subsequent dedicated in Rome.Image
Read 9 tweets
Jul 26
When Saladin captured Jerusalem
Richard the Lionheart immediately took the cross and vowed to journey the Holy Land!

This is the story of his epic battles in…

β€’ 𝐓𝐇𝐄 π“π‡πˆπ‘πƒ 𝐂𝐑𝐔𝐒𝐀𝐃𝐄 β€’

[Thread]🧡 Image
In 1187 the army of the Kingdom of Jerusalem had been severely defeated at Hattin and when the news came, Richard took the cross and vowed to travel to the Holy Land. Then news came that Saladin, Sultan of Egypt & Syria, had captured Jerusalem.

In 1189 Richard became king upon the death of his father. As King of England, Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Normandy, and Count of Anjou, Richard resolved to deliver the Holy Land from the grasp of Saladin.

Richard did all he could to raise funds and appointed regents to govern his lands while he was away.Image
β€’ Acre β€’

Richard had arrived in the Holy Land during the in 1191 after conquering Cyprus.

Philip Augustus, his fellow crusade leader, had already joined the siege of Acre which was started by the Christian forces of Outremer.

When Richard was in Cyprus, Philip even dispatched a messenger to hurry him along. Philip had arrived on the 20th of April and in Richard’s absence, built siege engines.

Richard’s arrived on the 8th of June ready to fight, but fell ill.Image
Read 18 tweets
Jul 25
The dynasty of the mighty emperor Heraclius is known for fighting against the onslaught of Islamic jihad in the chaotic 7th century.

But they were also a dynasty plagued with personal tragedy and early, often violent, deaths.

[Thread]🧡 Image
β€’ Heraclius β€’

Heraclius became emperor in 610 after the unpopular reign of the emperor Phocas.

His reign was occupied with fighting the Persian war which began upon Phocas’ own usurpation in 602. Heraclius eventually defeated the Persians on the 620s only to then face down Muslim invasion in the 630s.

The wars of his reign are well known, but less known are the details of his family.Image
Heraclius married Fabia in 610 and they had two children:

β€’ Heraclius Novus Constantine (Heraclius the New Constantine)

β€’ Eudoxia Epiphania

Fabia died just a few months after Eudoxia was born in 612.

In October of 612 the infant Eudoxia Epiphania was crowned Augusta in her mother’s stead. Later on she was betrothed in a marriage alliance with the Gokturks to win their support in the Persian war, but this marriage never materialised due to internal Turkic strife.

Little else is known about her and she is not mentioned after 639.Image
Read 13 tweets

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