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Arab–Byzantine wars

Arab–Byzantine wars
Part of the Muslim conquests

Greek fire, first used by the Byzantine Navy during the Arab–Byzantine wars.
Date629–1050s
Location
Levant (Syria), Egypt, Maghreb, Anatolia, Crete, Sicily, Southern Italy
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire[note 1]
Ghassanids[1]
Mardaites
Armenian principalities
Bulgarian Empire
Kingdom of Italy
Italian city-states
Medina Islamic Government
Rashidun Caliphate
Umayyad Caliphate
Abbasid Caliphate
Aghlabid Emirate of Abbasids
Emirate of Sicily
Emirate of Bari
Emirate of Crete
Hamdanids of Aleppo
Fatimid Caliphate
Mirdasids of Aleppo
Commanders and leaders
Heraclius
Theodore Trithyrius 
Gregory the Patrician 
Vahan 
Niketas the Persian 
Constans II
Constantine IV
Justinian II
Leontius
Heraclius
Constantine V
Leo V the Armenian
Michael Lachanodrakon
Tatzates
Irene of Athens
Nikephoros I
Theophilos
Manuel the Armenian
Niketas Ooryphas
Himerios
John Kourkouas
Bardas Phokas the Elder
Nikephoros II Phokas
Leo Phokas the Younger
John I Tzimiskes
Michael Bourtzes
Basil II
Nikephoros Ouranos
George Maniakes
Tervel of Bulgaria

Muhammad
Zayd ibn Harithah 
Ja'far ibn Abī Tālib 
Khalid ibn al-Walid
Ikrimah ibn Abi-Jahl
'Abd Allah ibn Rawahah 
Abu Bakr
Umar
Uthman
Abu Ubaidah ibn al-Jarrah
Shurahbil ibn Hasana
'Amr ibn al-'As
Yazid ibn Abu Sufyan
Abdullah ibn Saad
Abdallah ibn Qais
Muawiyah I
Yazid I
Muhammad ibn Marwan
Ubayd Allah ibn Marwan
Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik
Hassan ibn al-Nu'man
Al-Abbas ibn al-Walid
Abdallah al-Battal
Ali ibn Yahya al-Armani 
Mu'awiyah ibn Hisham
Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik
Harun al-Rashid
Abd al-Malik ibn Salih
Al-Ma'mun
Al-Abbas ibn al-Ma'mun
Al-Mu'tasim
Asad ibn al-Furat (DOW)
Abbas ibn al-Fadl
Khafaga ibn Sufyan
Ibrahim II of Ifriqiya
Leo of Tripoli 
Umar al-Aqta 

Sayf al-Dawla
Al-Aziz Billah
Manjutakin
Casualties and losses
8,000 in Bosra[2]
50,000 at Yarmouk[3]
~7,000 at Hazir[4]
10,000+ at Iron Bridge[5]
300 at Dathin[6]
130 in Bosra[2]
3,000 at Yarmouk[3]
~50,000 at Constantinople[7]
~2,500 ships at Constantinople[8]
4,000 civilian deaths at Dathin[9]

The Arab–Byzantine wars were a series of wars between a number of Muslim Arab dynasties and the Byzantine Empire from the 7th to the 11th century. Conflict started during the initial Muslim conquests, under the expansionist Rashidun and Umayyad caliphs, in the 7th century and continued by their successors until the mid-11th century.

The emergence of Muslim Arabs from Arabia in the 630s resulted in the rapid loss of Byzantium's southern provinces (Syria and Egypt) to the Arab Caliphate. Over the next fifty years, under the Umayyad caliphs, the Arabs would launch repeated raids into still-Byzantine Asia Minor, twice besiege the Byzantine capital of Constantinople, and conquer the Byzantine Exarchate of Africa. The situation did not stabilize until after the failure of the Second Arab Siege of Constantinople in 718, when the Taurus Mountains on the eastern rim of Asia Minor became established as the mutual, heavily fortified and largely depopulated frontier. Under the Abbasid Empire, relations became more normal, with embassies exchanged and even periods of truce, but conflict remained the norm, with almost annual raids and counter-raids, sponsored either by the Abbasid government or by local rulers, well into the 10th century.

During the first centuries, the Byzantines were usually on the defensive, and avoided open field battles, preferring to retreat to their fortified strongholds. Only after 740 did they begin to launch raids in an attempt to combat the Arabs and take back the lands they had lost, but the Abbasid Empire was able to retaliate with often massive and destructive invasions of Asia Minor. The Arabs also took to the sea, and from the 650s on, the entire Mediterranean Sea became a battleground, with raids and counter-raids being launched against islands and the coastal settlements. Arab raids reached a peak in the 9th and early 10th centuries, after the conquests of Crete, Malta and Sicily, with their fleets reaching the coasts of France, Dalmatia, and Constantinople.

With the decline and fragmentation of the Abbasid state after 861 and the concurrent strengthening of the Byzantine Empire under the Macedonian dynasty, the tide gradually turned. Over a period of fifty years from c. 920 to 976, the Byzantines finally broke through the Arab defences and restored their control over northern Syria and Greater Armenia. The last century of the Arab–Byzantine wars was dominated by frontier conflicts with the Fatimids in Syria, but the border remained stable until the appearance of a new people, the Seljuk Turks, after 1060.

Background

The prolonged and escalating Byzantine–Sasanian wars of the 6th and 7th centuries and the recurring outbreaks of bubonic plague (Plague of Justinian) left both empires exhausted and vulnerable in the face of the sudden emergence and expansion of the Arabs. The last of the wars between the Roman and Persian empires ended with victory for the Byzantines: Emperor Heraclius regained all lost territories, and restored the True Cross to Jerusalem in 629.[10]

Nevertheless, neither empire was given any chance to recover, as within a few years they found themselves in conflict with the Arabs (newly united by Islam), which, according to Howard-Johnston, "can only be likened to a human tsunami".[11] According to George Liska, the "unnecessarily prolonged Byzantine–Persian conflict opened the way for Islam".[12]

In the late 620s, the Islamic Prophet Muhammad had already managed to unify much of Arabia under Muslim rule via conquest as well as making alliances with neighboring tribes, and it was under his leadership that the first Muslim–Byzantine skirmishes took place. Just a few months after Emperor Heraclius and the Persian general Shahrbaraz agreed on terms for the withdrawal of Persian troops from occupied Byzantine eastern provinces in 629, Arab and Byzantine troops confronted each other at the Battle of Mu'tah in response to the murder of Muhammad's ambassador at the hands of the Ghassanids, a Byzantine vassal kingdom.[13] Muhammad died in 632 and was succeeded by Abu Bakr, the first Caliph with undisputed control of the entire Arabian Peninsula after the successful Ridda wars, which resulted in the consolidation of a powerful Muslim state throughout the peninsula.[14]

Muslim conquests, 629–718

 
Sham region was just the start of Arab expansion.
  Expansion under Muhammad, 622–632
  Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate, 632–661
  Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate, 661–750

According to Muslim biographies, Muhammed, having received intelligence that Byzantine forces were concentrating in northern Arabia with intentions of invading Arabia, led a Muslim army north to Tabuk in present-day northwestern Saudi Arabia, with the intention of pre-emptively engaging the Byzantine army, however, the Byzantine army had retreated beforehand. Though it was not a battle in the typical sense, nevertheless the event represented the first Arab encounter against the Byzantines. It did not, however, lead immediately to a military confrontation.[15]

There is no contemporary Byzantine account of the Tabuk expedition, and many of the details come from much later Muslim sources. It has been argued that there is in one Byzantine source possibly referencing the Battle of Mu´tah traditionally dated 629, but this is not certain.[16] The first engagements may have started as conflicts with the Arab client states of the Byzantine and Sassanid empires: the Ghassanids and the Lakhmids of Al-Hirah. In any case, Muslim Arabs after 634 certainly pursued a full-blown offensive against both empires, resulting in the conquest of the Levant, Egypt and Persia for Islam. The most successful Arab generals were Khalid ibn al-Walid and 'Amr ibn al-'As.

Arab conquest of Roman Syria: 634–638

In the Levant, the invading Rashidun army were engaged by a Byzantine army composed of imperial troops as well as local levies.[note 1] According to Islamic historians, Monophysites and Jews throughout Syria welcomed the Arabs as liberators, as they were discontented with the rule of the Byzantines.[note 2]

The Roman Emperor Heraclius had fallen ill and was unable to personally lead his armies to resist the Arab conquests of Syria and Roman Paelestina in 634. In a battle fought near Ajnadayn in the summer of 634, the Rashidun Caliphate army achieved a decisive victory.[18] After their victory at the Fahl, Muslim forces conquered Damascus in 634 under the command of Khalid ibn al-Walid.[19] The Byzantine response involved the collection and dispatch of the maximum number of available troops under major commanders, including Theodore Trithyrius and the Armenian general Vahan, to eject the Muslims from their newly won territories.[19]

At the Battle of Yarmouk in 636, however, the Muslims, having studied the ground in detail, lured the Byzantines into pitched battle, which the Byzantines usually avoided, and into a series of costly assaults, before turning the deep valleys and cliffs into a catastrophic death-trap.[20] Heraclius' farewell exclamation (according to the 9th-century historian Al-Baladhuri)[21] while departing Antioch for Constantinople, is expressive of his disappointment: "Peace unto thee, O Syria, and what an excellent country this is for the enemy!"[note 3] The impact of Syria's loss on the Byzantines is illustrated by Joannes Zonaras' words: "[...] since then [after the fall of Syria] the race of the Ishmaelites did not cease from invading and plundering the entire territory of the Romans".[24]

In April 637 the Arabs, after a long siege, captured Jerusalem, which was surrendered by Patriarch Sophronius.[note 4] In the summer of 637, the Muslims conquered Gaza, and, during the same period, the Byzantine authorities in Egypt and Mesopotamia purchased an expensive truce, which lasted three years for Egypt and one year for Mesopotamia. Antioch fell to the Muslim armies in late 637, and by then the Muslims occupied the whole of northern Syria, except for upper Mesopotamia, which they granted a one-year truce.[16]

At the expiration of this truce in 638–639, the Arabs overran Byzantine Mesopotamia and Byzantine Armenia, and terminated the conquest of Palestine by storming Caesarea Maritima and effecting their final capture of Ascalon. In December 639, the Muslims departed from Palestine to invade Egypt in early 640.[16]

Arab conquests of North Africa: 639–698

Conquest of Egypt and Cyrenaica

By the time Heraclius died, much of Egypt had been lost, and by 637–638 the whole of Syria was in the hands of the armies of Islam.[note 5] With 3,500–4,000 troops under his command, 'Amr ibn al-A'as first crossed into Egypt from Palestine at the end of 639 or the beginning of 640. He was progressively joined by further reinforcements, notably 12,000 soldiers by Zubayr ibn al-Awwam. 'Amr first besieged and conquered Babylon Fortress, and then attacked Alexandria. The Byzantines, divided and shocked by the sudden loss of so much territory, agreed to give up the city by September 642.[27] The fall of Alexandria extinguished Byzantine rule in Egypt, and allowed the Muslims to continue their military expansion into North Africa; between 643 and 644 'Amr completed the conquest of Cyrenaica.[28] Uthman succeeded Caliph Umar after his death.[29]

According to Arab historians, the local Christian Copts welcomed the Arabs just as the Monophysites did in Jerusalem.[30] The loss of this lucrative province deprived the Byzantines of their valuable wheat supply, thereby causing food shortages throughout the Byzantine Empire and weakening its armies in the following decades.[31]

The Byzantine navy briefly won back Alexandria in 645, but lost it again in 646 shortly after the Battle of Nikiou.[32] The Islamic forces raided Sicily in 652, while Cyprus and Crete were captured in 653.

Conquest of the Exarchate of Africa

"The people of Homs replied [to the Muslims], "We like your rule and justice far better than the state of oppression and tyranny in which we were. The army of Heraclius we shall indeed, with your 'amil's' help, repulse from the city." The Jews rose and said, "We swear by the Torah, no governor of Heraclius shall enter the city of Homs unless we are first vanquished and exhausted!" [...] The inhabitants of the other cities—Christian and Jews—that had capitulated to the Muslims, did the same [...] When by Allah's help the "unbelievers" were defeated and the Muslims won, they opened the gates of their cities, went out with the singers and music players who began to play, and paid the kharaj."
Al-Baladhuri[33] – According to the Muslim historians of the 9th century, local populations regarded Byzantine rule as oppressive, and preferred Muslim conquest instead.[a]

In 647, a Rashidun-Arab army led by Abdallah ibn al-Sa’ad invaded the Byzantine Exarchate of Africa. Tripolitania was conquered, followed by Sufetula, 150 miles (240 km) south of Carthage, and the governor and self-proclaimed Emperor of Africa Gregory was killed. Abdallah's booty-laden force returned to Egypt in 648 after Gregory's successor, Gennadius, promised them an annual tribute of some 300,000 nomismata.[34]

Following a civil war in the Arab Empire the Umayyads came to power under Muawiyah I. Under the Umayyads the conquest of the remaining Byzantine and northern Berber territories in North Africa was completed and the Arabs were able to move across large parts of the Berber world, invading Visigothic Spain through the Strait of Gibraltar,[30] under the command of the allegedly Berber general Tariq ibn-Ziyad. But this happened only after they developed a naval power of their own,[note 6] and they conquered and destroyed the Byzantine stronghold of Carthage between 695 and 698.[36] The loss of Africa meant that soon, Byzantine control of the Western Mediterranean was challenged by a new and expanding Arab fleet, operating from Tunisia.[37]

Muawiyah began consolidating the Arab territory from the Aral Sea to the western border of Egypt. He put a governor in place in Egypt at al-Fustat, and launched raids into Anatolia in 663. Then from 665 to 689 a new North African campaign was launched to protect Egypt "from flank attack by Byzantine Cyrene". An Arab army of 40,000 took Barca, defeating 30,000 Byzantines.[38]

A vanguard of 10,000 Arabs under Uqba ibn Nafi followed from Damascus. In 670, Kairouan (modern Tunisia) was established as a base for further invasions; Kairouan would become the capital of the Islamic province of Ifriqiya, and one of the main Arabo-Islamic religious centers in the Middle Ages.[39] Then ibn Nafi "plunged into the heart of the country, traversed the wilderness in which his successors erected the splendid capitals of Fes and Morocco, and at length penetrated to the verge of the Atlantic and the great desert".[40]

In his conquest of the Maghreb, Uqba Ibn Nafi took the coastal cities of Bejaia and Tangier, overwhelming what had once been the Roman province of Mauretania where he was finally halted.[41] As the historian Luis Garcia de Valdeavellano explains:[42]

In their struggle against the Byzantines and the Berbers, the Arab chieftains had greatly extended their African dominions, and as early as the year 682 Uqba had reached the shores of the Atlantic, but he was unable to occupy Tangier, for he was forced to turn back toward the Atlas Mountains by a man who became known to history and legend as Count Julian.

— Luis Garcia de Valdeavellano

Arab attacks on Anatolia and sieges of Constantinople

As the first tide of the Muslim conquests in the Near East ebbed off, and a semi-permanent border between the two powers was established, a wide zone, unclaimed by either Byzantines or Arabs and virtually deserted (known in Arabic as al-Ḍawāḥī, "the outer lands" and in Greek as τὰ ἄκρα, ta akra, "the extremities") emerged in Cilicia, along the southern approaches of the Taurus and Anti-Taurus mountain ranges, leaving Syria in Muslim and the Anatolian plateau in Byzantine hands. Both Emperor Heraclius and the Caliph 'Umar (r. 634–644) pursued a strategy of destruction within this zone, trying to transform it into an effective barrier between the two realms.[43]

Nevertheless, the Umayyads still considered the complete subjugation of Byzantium as their ultimate objective. Their thinking was dominated by Islamic teaching, which placed the infidel Byzantines in the Dār al-Ḥarb, the "House of War", which, in the words of Islamic scholar Hugh N. Kennedy, "the Muslims should attack whenever possible; rather than peace interrupted by occasional conflict, the normal pattern was seen to be conflict interrupted by occasional, temporary truce (hudna). True peace (ṣulḥ) could only come when the enemy accepted Islam or tributary status."[44]

Both as governor of Syria and later as caliph, Muawiyah I (r. 661–680) was the driving force of the Muslim effort against Byzantium, especially by his creation of a fleet, which challenged the Byzantine navy and raided the Byzantine islands and coasts. To stop the Byzantine harassment from the sea during the Arab-Byzantine Wars, in 649 Muawiyah set up a navy, manned by Monophysitise Christian, Copt and Jacobite Syrian Christian sailors and Muslim troops. This resulted in the defeat of the Byzantine navy at the Battle of the Masts in 655, opening up the Mediterranean.[45][46][47][48][49] The shocking defeat of the imperial fleet by the young Muslim navy at the Battle of the Masts in 655 was of critical importance: it opened up the Mediterranean, hitherto a "Roman lake", to Arab expansion, and began a centuries-long series of naval conflicts over the control of the Mediterranean waterways.[50][51] 500 Byzantine ships were destroyed in the battle, and Emperor Constans II was almost killed. Under the instructions of the caliph Uthman ibn Affan, Muawiyah then prepared for the siege of Constantinople.

Trade between the Muslim eastern and southern shores and the Christian northern shores almost ceased during this period, isolating Western Europe from developments in the Muslim world: "In antiquity, and again in the high Middle Ages, the voyage from Italy to Alexandria was commonplace; in early Islamic times the two countries were so remote that even the most basic information was unknown" (Kennedy).[52] Muawiyah also initiated the first large-scale raids into Anatolia from 641 on. These expeditions, aiming both at plunder and at weakening and keeping the Byzantines at bay, as well as the corresponding retaliatory Byzantine raids, eventually became established as a fixture of Byzantine–Arab warfare for the next three centuries.[53][54]

The outbreak of the Muslim Civil War in 656 bought a precious breathing pause for Byzantium, which Emperor Constans II (r. 641–668) used to shore up his defences, extend and consolidate his control over Armenia and most importantly, initiate a major army reform with lasting effect: the establishment of the themata, the large territorial commands into which Anatolia, the major contiguous territory remaining to the Empire, was divided. The remains of the old field armies were settled in each of them, and soldiers were allocated land there in payment of their service. The themata would form the backbone of the Byzantine defensive system for centuries to come.[55]

Attacks against Byzantine holdings in Africa, Sicily and the East

After his victory in the civil war, Muawiyah launched a series of attacks against Byzantine holdings in Africa, Sicily and the East.[56] By 670, the Muslim fleet had penetrated into the Sea of Marmara and stayed at Cyzicus during the winter. Four years later, a massive Muslim fleet reappeared in the Marmara and re-established a base at Cyzicus, from there they raided the Byzantine coasts almost at will. Finally in 676, Muawiyah sent an army to invest Constantinople from land as well, beginning the First Arab Siege of the city. Constantine IV (r. 661–685) however used a devastating new weapon that came to be known as "Greek fire", invented by a Christian refugee from Syria named Kallinikos of Heliopolis, to decisively defeat the attacking Umayyad navy in the Sea of Marmara, resulting in the lifting of the siege in 678. The returning Muslim fleet suffered further losses due to storms, while the army lost many men to the thematic armies who attacked them on their route back.[57]

Among those killed in the siege was Eyup, the standard bearer of Muhammed and the last of his companions; to Muslims today, his tomb is considered one of the holiest sites in Istanbul.[58] The Byzantine victory over the invading Umayyads halted the Islamic expansion into Europe for almost thirty years.[citation needed]

 
In spite of the turbulent reign of Justinian II, last emperor of the Heraclian dynasty, his coinage still bore the traditional "PAX", peace.

The setback at Constantinople was followed by further reverses across the vast Muslim empire. As Gibbon writes, "this Mahometan Alexander, who sighed for new worlds, was unable to preserve his recent conquests. By the universal defection of the Greeks and Africans he was recalled from the shores of the Atlantic." His forces were directed at putting down rebellions, and in one such battle he was surrounded by insurgents and killed. Then, the third governor of Africa, Zuheir, was overthrown by a powerful army, sent from Constantinople by Constantine IV for the relief of Carthage.[41] Meanwhile, a second Arab civil war was raging in Arabia and Syria resulting in a series of four caliphs between the death of Muawiyah in 680 and the ascension of Abd al-Malik in 685, and was ongoing until 692 with the death of the rebel leader.[59]

The Saracen Wars of Justinian II (r. 685–695 and 705–711), last emperor of the Heraclian Dynasty, "reflected the general chaos of the age".[60] After a successful campaign he made a truce with the Arabs, agreeing on joint possession of Armenia, Iberia and Cyprus; however, by removing 12,000 Christian Mardaites from their native Lebanon, he removed a major obstacle for the Arabs in Syria, and in 692, after the disastrous Battle of Sebastopolis, the Muslims invaded and conquered all of Armenia.[61] Deposed in 695, with Carthage lost in 698, Justinian returned to power from 705 to 711.[60] His second reign was marked by Arab victories in Asia Minor and civil unrest.[61] Reportedly, he ordered his guards to execute the only unit that had not deserted him after one battle, to prevent their desertion in the next.[60]

Justinian's first and second depositions were followed by internal disorder, with successive revolts and emperors lacking legitimacy or support. In this climate, the Umayyads consolidated their control of Armenia and Cilicia, and began preparing a renewed offensive against Constantinople. In Byzantium, the general Leo the Isaurian (r. 717–741) had just seized the throne in March 717, when the massive Muslim army under the famed Umayyad prince and general Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik began moving towards the imperial capital.[62] The Caliphate's army and navy, led by Maslama, numbered some 120,000 men and 1,800 ships according to the sources. Whatever the real number, it was a huge force, far larger than the imperial army. Thankfully for Leo and the Empire, the capital's sea walls had recently been repaired and strengthened. In addition, the emperor concluded an alliance with the Bulgar khan Tervel, who agreed to harass the invaders' rear.[8]

From July 717 to August 718, the city was besieged by land and sea by the Muslims, who built an extensive double line of circumvallation and contravallation on the landward side, isolating the capital. Their attempt to complete the blockade by sea however failed when the Byzantine navy employed Greek fire against them; the Arab fleet kept well off the city walls, leaving Constantinople's supply routes open. Forced to extend the siege into winter, the besieging army suffered horrendous casualties from the cold and the lack of provisions.[63]

In spring, new reinforcements were sent by the new caliph, Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz (r. 717–720), by sea from Africa and Egypt and over land through Asia Minor. The crews of the new fleets were composed mostly of Christians, who began defecting in large numbers, while the land forces were ambushed and defeated in Bithynia. As famine and an epidemic continued to plague the Arab camp, the siege was abandoned on 15 August 718. On its return, the Arab fleet suffered further casualties to storms and an eruption of the volcano of Thera.[64]

Stabilization of the frontier, 718–863

The first wave of the Muslim conquests ended with the siege of Constantinople in 718, and the border between the two empires became stabilized along the mountains of eastern Anatolia. Raids and counter-raids continued on both sides and became almost ritualized, but the prospect of outright conquest of Byzantium by the Caliphate receded. This led to far more regular, and often friendly, diplomatic contacts, as well as a reciprocal recognition of the two empires.

In response to the Muslim threat, which reached its peak in the first half of the 8th century, the Isaurian emperors adopted the policy of Iconoclasm, which was abandoned in 786 only to be readopted in the 820s and finally abandoned in 843. Under the Macedonian dynasty, exploiting the decline and fragmentation of the Abbasid Caliphate, the Byzantines gradually went on the offensive, and recovered much territory in the 10th century, which was lost however after 1071 to the Seljuk Turks.

Raids under the last Umayyads and the rise of Iconoclasm

 
Map of the Byzantine-Arab frontier zone in southeastern Asia Minor, along the Taurus-Antitaurus range

Following the failure to capture Constantinople in 717–718, the Umayyads for a time diverted their attention elsewhere, allowing the Byzantines to take to the offensive, making some gains in Armenia. From 720/721 however the Arab armies resumed their expeditions against Byzantine Anatolia, although now they were no longer aimed at conquest, but rather large-scale raids, plundering and devastating the countryside and only occasionally attacking forts or major settlements.[65][66]

Under the late Umayyad and early Abbasid caliphs, the frontier between Byzantium and the Caliphate became stabilized along the line of the Taurus-Antitaurus mountain ranges. On the Arab side, Cilicia was permanently occupied and its deserted cities, such as Adana, Mopsuestia (al-Massisa) and, most importantly, Tarsus, were refortified and resettled under the early Abbasids. Likewise, in Upper Mesopotamia, places like Germanikeia (Mar'ash), Hadath and Melitene (Malatya) became major military centers. These two regions came to form the two-halves of a new fortified frontier zone, the thughur.[54][67]

Both the Umayyads and later the Abbasids continued to regard the annual expeditions against the Caliphate's "traditional enemy" as an integral part of the continuing jihad, and they quickly became organized in a regular fashion: one to two summer expeditions (pl. ṣawā'if, sing. ṣā'ifa) sometimes accompanied by a naval attack and/or followed by winter expeditions (shawātī). The summer expeditions were usually two separate attacks, the "expedition of the left" (al-ṣā'ifa al-yusrā/al-ṣughrā) launched from the Cilician thughur and consisting mostly of Syrian troops, and the usually larger "expedition of the right" (al-ṣā'ifa al-yumnā/al-kubrā) launched from Malatya and composed of Mesopotamian troops. The raids were also largely confined to the borderlands and the central Anatolian plateau, and only rarely reached the peripheral coastlands, which the Byzantines fortified heavily.[65][68]

Under the more aggressive Caliph Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik (r. 723–743), the Arab expeditions intensified for a time, and were led by some of the Caliphate's most capable generals, including princes of the Umayyad dynasty like Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik and al-Abbas ibn al-Walid or Hisham's own sons Mu'awiyah, Maslama and Sulayman.[69] This was still a time when Byzantium was fighting for survival, and "the frontier provinces, devastated by war, were a land of ruined cities and deserted villages where a scattered population looked to rocky castles or impenetrable mountains rather than the armies of the empire to provide a minimum of security" (Kennedy).[44]

In response to the renewal of Arab invasions, and to a sequence of natural disasters such as the eruptions of the volcanic island of Thera,[70] the Emperor Leo III the Isaurian concluded that the Empire had lost divine favour. Already in 722 he had tried to force the conversion of the Empire's Jews, but soon he began to turn his attention to the veneration of icons, which some bishops had come to regard as idolatrous. In 726, Leo published an edict condemning their use and showed himself increasingly critical of the iconophiles. He formally banned depictions of religious figures in a court council in 730.[71][72]

This decision provoked major opposition both from the people and the church, especially the Bishop of Rome, which Leo did not take into account. In the words of Warren Treadgold: "He saw no need to consult the church, and he appears to have been surprised by the depth of the popular opposition he encountered".[71][72] The controversy weakened the Byzantine Empire, and was a key factor in the schism between the Patriarch of Constantinople and the Bishop of Rome.[73][74]

The Umayyad Caliphate however was increasingly distracted by conflicts elsewhere, especially its confrontation with the Khazars, with whom Leo III had concluded an alliance, marrying his son and heir, Constantine V (r. 741–775) to the Khazar princess Tzitzak. Only in the late 730s did the Muslim raids again become a threat, but the great Byzantine victory at Akroinon and the turmoil of the Abbasid Revolution led to a pause in Arab attacks against the Empire. It also opened up the way for a more aggressive stance by Constantine V (r. 741–775), who in 741 attacked the major Arab base of Melitene, and continued scoring further victories. These successes were also interpreted by Leo III and his son Constantine as evidence of God's renewed favour, and strengthened the position of Iconoclasm within the Empire.[75][76]

Early Abbasids

 
Abbasid Caliph Al-Ma'mun sends an envoy to Byzantine Emperor Theophilos

Unlike their Umayyad predecessors, the Abbasid caliphs did not pursue active expansion: in general terms, they were content with the territorial limits achieved, and whatever external campaigns they waged were retaliatory or preemptive, meant to preserve their frontier and impress Abbasid might upon their neighbours.[77] At the same time, the campaigns against Byzantium in particular remained important for domestic consumption. The annual raids, which had almost lapsed in the turmoil following the Abbasid Revolution, were undertaken with renewed vigour from ca. 780 on, and were the only expeditions where the Caliph or his sons participated in person.[78][79]

As a symbol of the Caliph's ritual role as the leader of the Muslim community, they were closely paralleled in official propaganda by the leadership by Abbasid family members of the annual pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca.[78][79] In addition, the constant warfare on the Syrian marches was useful to the Abbasids as it provided employment for the Syrian and Iraqi military elites and the various volunteers (muṭṭawi‘a) who flocked to participate in the jihad.[80][81]

"The thughūr are blocked by Hārūn, and through him
the ropes of the Muslim state are firmly plaited
His banner is forever tied with victory;
he has an army before which armies scatter.
All the kings of the Rūm give him jizya
unwillingly, perforce, out of hand in humiliation."

Poem in praise of Harun al-Rashid's 806 campaign against Byzantium[82]

Wishing to emphasize his piety and role as the leader of the Muslim community, Caliph Harun al-Rashid (r. 786–809) in particular was the most energetic of the early Abbasid rulers in his pursuit of warfare against Byzantium: he established his seat at Raqqa close to the frontier, he complemented the thughur in 786 by forming a second defensive line along northern Syria, the al-'Awasim, and was reputed to be spending alternating years leading the Hajj and leading a campaign into Anatolia, including the largest expedition assembled under the Abbasids, in 806.[83][84]

Continuing a trend started by his immediate predecessors, his reign also saw the development of far more regular contacts between the Abbasid court and Byzantium, with the exchange of embassies and letters being far more common than under the Umayyad rulers. Despite Harun's hostility, "the existence of embassies is a sign that the Abbasids accepted that the Byzantine empire was a power with which they had to deal on equal terms" (Kennedy).[85][86]

Civil war occurred in the Byzantine Empire, often with Arab support. With the support of Caliph Al-Ma'mun, Arabs under the leadership of Thomas the Slav invaded, so that within a matter of months, only two themata in Asia Minor remained loyal to Emperor Michael II.[87] When the Arabs captured Thessalonica, the Empire's second largest city, it was quickly re-captured by the Byzantines.[87] Thomas's 821 siege of Constantinople did not get past the city walls, and he was forced to retreat.[87]

 
The siege of Amorium, miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes

The Arabs did not relinquish their designs on Asia Minor and in 838 began another invasion, sacking the city of Amorion.

Sicily, Italy and Crete

While a relative equilibrium reigned in the East, the situation in the western Mediterranean was irretrievably altered when the Aghlabids began their slow conquest of Sicily in the 820s. Using Tunisia as their launching pad, the Arabs started by conquering Palermo in 831, Messina in 842, Enna in 859, culminating in the capture of Syracuse in 878.[88]

This in turn opened up southern Italy and the Adriatic Sea for raids and settlement. Byzantium further suffered an important setback with the loss of Crete to a band of Andalusian exiles, who established a piratical emirate on the island and for more than a century ravaged the coasts of the hitherto secure Aegean Sea.[citation needed]

Byzantine resurgence, 863–11th century

 
A map of the Byzantine-Arab naval competition in the Mediterranean, 7th to 11th centuries

In 863 during the reign of Michael III, the Byzantine general Petronas defeated and routed an Arab invasion force under the command of Umar al-Aqta at the Battle of Lalakaon inflicting heavy casualties and removing the Emirate of Melitene as a serious military threat.[89][90] Umar died in battle and the remnants of his army was annihilated in subsequent clashes, allowing the Byzantines to celebrate the victory as revenge for the earlier Arab sacking of Amorion, while news of the defeats sparked riots in Baghdad and Samarra.[91][90] In the following months the Byzantines successfully invaded Armenia killing the Muslim governor in Armenia Emir Ali ibn Yahya as well as the Paulician leader Karbeas.[92] These Byzantines victories marked a turning point which ushered in a century long Byzantine offensive eastward into Muslim territory.[91]

Religious peace came with the emergence of the Macedonian dynasty in 867, as well as a strong and unified Byzantine leadership;[93] while the Abbasid empire had splintered into many factions after 861. Basil I revived the Byzantine Empire into a regional power, during a period of territorial expansion, making the Empire the strongest power in Europe, with an ecclesiastical policy marked by good relations with Rome. Basil allied with the Holy Roman Emperor Louis II against the Arabs, and his fleet cleared the Adriatic Sea of their raids.[94]

With Byzantine help, Louis II captured Bari from the Arabs in 871. The city became Byzantine territory in 876. The Byzantine position on Sicily deteriorated, and Syracuse fell to the Emirate of Sicily in 878. Catania was lost in 900, and finally the fortress of Taormina in 902. Michael of Zahumlje apparently on 10 July 926 sacked Siponto (Latin: Sipontum), which was a Byzantine town in Apulia.[94] Sicily would remain under Arab control until the Norman invasion in 1071.

Although Sicily was lost, the general Nikephoros Phokas the Elder succeeded in taking Taranto and much of Calabria in 880, forming the nucleus for the later Catepanate of Italy. The successes in the Italian Peninsula opened a new period of Byzantine domination there. Above all, the Byzantines were beginning to establish a strong presence in the Mediterranean Sea, and especially the Adriatic.

Under John Kourkouas, the Byzantines conquered the emirate of Melitene, along with Theodosiopolis the strongest of the Muslim border emirates, and advanced into Armenia in the 930s; the next three decades were dominated by the struggle of the Phokas clan and their dependants against the Hamdanid emir of Aleppo, Sayf al-Dawla. Al-Dawla was finally defeated by Nikephoros II Phokas, who conquered Cilicia and northern Syria, including the sack of Aleppo, and recovered Crete. His nephew and successor, John I Tzimiskes, pushed even further south, almost reaching Jerusalem, but his death in 976 ended Byzantine expansion towards Palestine.

 
Nikephoros II and his stepson Basil II (right). Under the Macedonian dynasty, the Byzantine Empire became the strongest power in Europe, recovering territories lost in the war.

After putting an end to the internal strife, Basil II launched a counter-campaign against the Arabs in 995. The Byzantine civil wars had weakened the Empire's position in the east, and the gains of Nikephoros II Phokas and John I Tzimiskes came close to being lost, with Aleppo besieged and Antioch under threat. Basil won several battles in Syria, relieving Aleppo, taking over the Orontes valley, and raiding further south. Although he did not have the force to drive into Palestine and reclaim Jerusalem, his victories did restore much of Syria to the empire – including the larger city of Antioch which was the seat of its eponymous Patriarch.[95]

No Byzantine emperor since Heraclius had been able to hold these lands for any length of time, and the Empire would retain them for the next 110 years until 1078. Piers Paul Read writes that by 1025, Byzantine land "stretched from the Straits of Messina and the northern Adriatic in the west to the River Danube and Crimea in the north, and to the cities of Melitene and Edessa beyond the Euphrates in the east."[95]

Under Basil II, the Byzantines established a swath of new themata, stretching northeast from Aleppo (a Byzantine protectorate) to Manzikert. Under the Theme system of military and administrative government, the Byzantines could raise a force at least 200,000 strong, though in practice these were strategically placed throughout the Empire. With Basil's rule, the Byzantine Empire reached its greatest height in nearly five centuries, and indeed for the next four centuries.[96]

Conclusion

The wars drew near to a closure when the Turks and various Mongol invaders replaced the threat of either power. From the 11th and 12th centuries onwards, the Byzantine conflicts shifted into the Byzantine-Seljuk wars with the continuing Islamic invasion of Anatolia being taken over by the Seljuk Turks.

After the defeat at the Battle of Manzikert by the Turks in 1071, the Byzantine Empire, with the help of Western Crusaders, re-established its position in the Middle East as a major power. Meanwhile, the major Arab conflicts were in the Crusades, and later against Mongolian invasions, especially that of the Ilkhanate and Timur.

Effects

 
The Byzantine–Arab Wars provided the conditions that developed feudalism in Medieval Europe.

As with any war of such length, the drawn-out Byzantine–Arab Wars had long-lasting effects for both the Byzantine Empire and the Arab world. The Byzantines experienced extensive territorial loss. However, while the invading Arabs gained strong control in the Middle East and Africa, further conquests in Western Asia were halted. The focus of the Byzantine Empire shifted from the western reconquests of Justinian to a primarily defensive position, against the Islamic armies on its eastern borders. Without Byzantine interference in the emerging Christian states of western Europe, the situation gave a huge stimulus to feudalism and economic self-sufficiency.[97]

The view of modern historians is that one of the most important effects was the strain it put on the relationship between Rome and Byzantium. While fighting for survival against the Islamic armies, the Empire was no longer able to provide the protection it had once offered to the Papacy; worse still, according to Thomas Woods, the Emperors "routinely intervened in the life of the Church in areas lying clearly beyond the state's competence".[98] The Iconoclast controversy of the 8th and 9th centuries can be taken as a key factor "which drove the Latin Church into the arms of the Franks."[74] Thus it has been argued that Charlemagne was an indirect product of Muhammad:

"The Frankish Empire would probably never have existed without Islam, and Charlemagne without Mahomet would be inconceivable."[99]

The Holy Roman Empire of Charlemagne's successors would later come to the aid of the Byzantines under Louis II and during the Crusades, but relations between the two empires would be strained; based on the Salerno Chronicle, we know the Emperor Basil had sent an angry letter to his western counterpart, reprimanding him for usurping the title of emperor.[100] He argued that the Frankish rulers were simple reges, and that each nation has its own title for the ruler, whereas the imperial title suited only the ruler of the Eastern Romans, Basil himself.[citation needed]

Historiography and other sources

 
The 12th-century William of Tyre (right), an important commentator on the Crusades and the final stage of the Byzantine-Arab Wars

Walter Emil Kaegi states that extant Arabic sources have been given much scholarly attention for issues of obscurities and contradictions. However, he points out that Byzantine sources are also problematic, such as the chronicles of Theophanes and Nicephorus and those written in Syriac, which are short and terse while the important question of their sources and their use of sources remains unresolved. Kaegi concludes that scholars must also subject the Byzantine tradition to critical scrutiny, as it "contains bias and cannot serve as an objective standard against which all Muslim sources may be confidently checked".[101]

Among the few Latin sources of interest are the 7th-century history of Fredegarius, and two 8th-century Spanish chronicles, all of which draw on some Byzantine and oriental historical traditions.[102] As far as Byzantine military action against the initial Muslim invasions, Kaegi asserts that "Byzantine traditions ... attempt to deflect criticism of the Byzantine debacle from Heraclius to other persons, groups, and things".[103]

The range of non-historical Byzantine sources is vast: they range from papyri to sermons (most notable those of Sophronius and Anastasius Sinaita), poetry (especially that of Sophronius and George of Pisidia) including the Acritic songs, correspondence often of a patristic provenance, apologetical treatises, apocalypses, hagiography, military manuals (in particular the Strategikon of Maurice from the beginning of the 7th century), and other non-literary sources, such as epigraphy, archeology, and numismatics. None of these sources contains a coherent account of any of the campaigns and conquests of the Muslim armies, but some do contain invaluable details that survive nowhere else.[104]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b The Empire's levies included Christian Armenians, Arab Ghassanids, Mardaites, Slavs, and Rus'.
  2. ^ Politico-religious events (such as the outbreak of Monothelitism, which disappointed both the Monophysites and the Chalcedonians) had sharpened the differences between the Byzantines and the Syrians. Also the high taxes, the power of the landowners over the peasants and the participation in the long and exhaustive wars with the Persians were some of the reasons why the Syrians welcomed the change.[17]
  3. ^ As recorded by Al-Baladhuri. Michael the Syrian records only the phrase "Peace unto thee, O Syria".[22] George Ostrogorsky describes the impact that the loss of Syria had on Heraclius with the following words: "His life's work collapsed before his eyes. The heroic struggle against Persia seemed to be utterly wasted, for his victories here had only prepared the way for the Arab conquest [...] This cruel turn of fortune broke the aged Emperor both in spirit and in body.[23]
  4. ^ As Steven Runciman describes the event: "On a February day in the year AD 638, the Caliph Omar [Umar] entered Jerusalem along with a white camel which was ride by his slave. He was dressed in worn, filthy robes, and the army that followed him was rough and unkempt; but its discipline was perfect. At his side rode the Patriarch Sophronius as chief magistrate of the surrendered city. Omar rode straight to the site of the Temple of Solomon, whence his friend Mahomet [Muhammed] had ascended into Heaven. Watching him stand there, the Patriarch remembered the words of Christ and murmured through his tears: 'Behold the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet.'"[25]
  5. ^ Hugh N. Kennedy notes that "the Muslim conquest of Syria does not seem to have been actively opposed by the towns, but it is striking that Antioch put up so little resistance.[26]
  6. ^ The Arab leadership realized early that to extend their conquests they would need a fleet. The Byzantine navy was first decisively defeated by the Arabs at a battle in 655 off the Lycian coast, when it was still the most powerful in the Mediterranean. Theophanes the Confessor reported the loss of Rhodes while recounting the sale of the centuries-old remains of the Colossus for scrap in 655.[35]

References

Citations

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  2. ^ a b Edward Gibbon (1788). The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 5.
  3. ^ a b Akram 2004, p. 425
  4. ^ Crawford 2013, p. 149.
  5. ^ Akram 2004 Chapter 36
  6. ^ Kaegi, Walter E. Byzantium and the early Islamic conquests. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1992. pp. 90–93. ISBN 0-521-41172-6. Al-Tabari, p. 108. al-Baladhuri, pp. 167–68. Theophanes, p. 37.
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  • Vasiliev, A.A. (1923), "Chapter V. (B) The Struggle with the Saracens (867–1057)", The Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. IV: The Eastern Roman Empire (717–1453), Cambridge University Press, pp. 138–150
  • Vasiliev, A.A. (1935), Byzance et les Arabes, Tome I: La Dynastie d'Amorium (820–867) (in French), French ed.: Henri Grégoire, Marius Canard, Brussels: Éditions de l'Institut de Philologie et d'Histoire Orientales
  • Vasiliev, A.A. (1968), Byzance et les Arabes, Tome II, 1ére partie: Les relations politiques de Byzance et des Arabes à L'époque de la dynastie macédonienne (867–959) (in French), French ed.: Henri Grégoire, Marius Canard, Brussels: Éditions de l'Institut de Philologie et d'Histoire Orientales

Further reading

  • Kennedy, Hugh N. (2006). The Byzantine And Early Islamic Near East. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 0-7546-5909-7.

External links

  •   Media related to Arab–Byzantine wars at Wikimedia Commons

arab, byzantine, wars, part, muslim, conquestsgreek, fire, first, used, byzantine, navy, during, date629, 1050slocationlevant, syria, egypt, maghreb, anatolia, crete, sicily, southern, italybelligerentsbyzantine, empire, note, ghassanids, mardaitesarmenian, pr. Arab Byzantine warsPart of the Muslim conquestsGreek fire first used by the Byzantine Navy during the Arab Byzantine wars Date629 1050sLocationLevant Syria Egypt Maghreb Anatolia Crete Sicily Southern ItalyBelligerentsByzantine Empire note 1 Ghassanids 1 MardaitesArmenian principalitiesBulgarian EmpireKingdom of ItalyItalian city statesMedina Islamic GovernmentRashidun CaliphateUmayyad CaliphateAbbasid CaliphateAghlabid Emirate of AbbasidsEmirate of SicilyEmirate of BariEmirate of CreteHamdanids of Aleppo Fatimid CaliphateMirdasids of AleppoCommanders and leadersHeracliusTheodore Trithyrius Gregory the Patrician Vahan Niketas the Persian Constans IIConstantine IVJustinian IILeontiusHeracliusConstantine VLeo V the ArmenianMichael LachanodrakonTatzatesIrene of AthensNikephoros ITheophilosManuel the ArmenianNiketas OoryphasHimeriosJohn KourkouasBardas Phokas the ElderNikephoros II PhokasLeo Phokas the YoungerJohn I TzimiskesMichael BourtzesBasil IINikephoros OuranosGeorge ManiakesTervel of BulgariaMuhammadZayd ibn Harithah Ja far ibn Abi Talib Khalid ibn al WalidIkrimah ibn Abi Jahl Abd Allah ibn Rawahah Abu BakrUmarUthmanAbu Ubaidah ibn al JarrahShurahbil ibn Hasana Amr ibn al AsYazid ibn Abu SufyanAbdullah ibn SaadAbdallah ibn QaisMuawiyah I Yazid IMuhammad ibn MarwanUbayd Allah ibn MarwanMaslama ibn Abd al MalikHassan ibn al Nu manAl Abbas ibn al WalidAbdallah al BattalAli ibn Yahya al Armani Mu awiyah ibn HishamHisham ibn Abd al MalikHarun al RashidAbd al Malik ibn SalihAl Ma munAl Abbas ibn al Ma munAl Mu tasimAsad ibn al Furat DOW Abbas ibn al Fadl Khafaga ibn SufyanIbrahim II of IfriqiyaLeo of Tripoli Umar al Aqta Sayf al DawlaAl Aziz Billah ManjutakinCasualties and losses8 000 in Bosra 2 50 000 at Yarmouk 3 7 000 at Hazir 4 10 000 at Iron Bridge 5 300 at Dathin 6 130 in Bosra 2 3 000 at Yarmouk 3 50 000 at Constantinople 7 2 500 ships at Constantinople 8 4 000 civilian deaths at Dathin 9 The Arab Byzantine wars were a series of wars between a number of Muslim Arab dynasties and the Byzantine Empire from the 7th to the 11th century Conflict started during the initial Muslim conquests under the expansionist Rashidun and Umayyad caliphs in the 7th century and continued by their successors until the mid 11th century The emergence of Muslim Arabs from Arabia in the 630s resulted in the rapid loss of Byzantium s southern provinces Syria and Egypt to the Arab Caliphate Over the next fifty years under the Umayyad caliphs the Arabs would launch repeated raids into still Byzantine Asia Minor twice besiege the Byzantine capital of Constantinople and conquer the Byzantine Exarchate of Africa The situation did not stabilize until after the failure of the Second Arab Siege of Constantinople in 718 when the Taurus Mountains on the eastern rim of Asia Minor became established as the mutual heavily fortified and largely depopulated frontier Under the Abbasid Empire relations became more normal with embassies exchanged and even periods of truce but conflict remained the norm with almost annual raids and counter raids sponsored either by the Abbasid government or by local rulers well into the 10th century During the first centuries the Byzantines were usually on the defensive and avoided open field battles preferring to retreat to their fortified strongholds Only after 740 did they begin to launch raids in an attempt to combat the Arabs and take back the lands they had lost but the Abbasid Empire was able to retaliate with often massive and destructive invasions of Asia Minor The Arabs also took to the sea and from the 650s on the entire Mediterranean Sea became a battleground with raids and counter raids being launched against islands and the coastal settlements Arab raids reached a peak in the 9th and early 10th centuries after the conquests of Crete Malta and Sicily with their fleets reaching the coasts of France Dalmatia and Constantinople With the decline and fragmentation of the Abbasid state after 861 and the concurrent strengthening of the Byzantine Empire under the Macedonian dynasty the tide gradually turned Over a period of fifty years from c 920 to 976 the Byzantines finally broke through the Arab defences and restored their control over northern Syria and Greater Armenia The last century of the Arab Byzantine wars was dominated by frontier conflicts with the Fatimids in Syria but the border remained stable until the appearance of a new people the Seljuk Turks after 1060 Contents 1 Background 2 Muslim conquests 629 718 2 1 Arab conquest of Roman Syria 634 638 2 2 Arab conquests of North Africa 639 698 2 2 1 Conquest of Egypt and Cyrenaica 2 2 2 Conquest of the Exarchate of Africa 2 3 Arab attacks on Anatolia and sieges of Constantinople 2 3 1 Attacks against Byzantine holdings in Africa Sicily and the East 3 Stabilization of the frontier 718 863 3 1 Raids under the last Umayyads and the rise of Iconoclasm 3 2 Early Abbasids 3 3 Sicily Italy and Crete 4 Byzantine resurgence 863 11th century 5 Conclusion 6 Effects 7 Historiography and other sources 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackground EditSee also Roman Persian Wars Byzantine Sasanian wars Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 and Siege of Constantinople 626 The prolonged and escalating Byzantine Sasanian wars of the 6th and 7th centuries and the recurring outbreaks of bubonic plague Plague of Justinian left both empires exhausted and vulnerable in the face of the sudden emergence and expansion of the Arabs The last of the wars between the Roman and Persian empires ended with victory for the Byzantines Emperor Heraclius regained all lost territories and restored the True Cross to Jerusalem in 629 10 Nevertheless neither empire was given any chance to recover as within a few years they found themselves in conflict with the Arabs newly united by Islam which according to Howard Johnston can only be likened to a human tsunami 11 According to George Liska the unnecessarily prolonged Byzantine Persian conflict opened the way for Islam 12 In the late 620s the Islamic Prophet Muhammad had already managed to unify much of Arabia under Muslim rule via conquest as well as making alliances with neighboring tribes and it was under his leadership that the first Muslim Byzantine skirmishes took place Just a few months after Emperor Heraclius and the Persian general Shahrbaraz agreed on terms for the withdrawal of Persian troops from occupied Byzantine eastern provinces in 629 Arab and Byzantine troops confronted each other at the Battle of Mu tah in response to the murder of Muhammad s ambassador at the hands of the Ghassanids a Byzantine vassal kingdom 13 Muhammad died in 632 and was succeeded by Abu Bakr the first Caliph with undisputed control of the entire Arabian Peninsula after the successful Ridda wars which resulted in the consolidation of a powerful Muslim state throughout the peninsula 14 Muslim conquests 629 718 Edit Sham region was just the start of Arab expansion Expansion under Muhammad 622 632 Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate 632 661 Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate 661 750 According to Muslim biographies Muhammed having received intelligence that Byzantine forces were concentrating in northern Arabia with intentions of invading Arabia led a Muslim army north to Tabuk in present day northwestern Saudi Arabia with the intention of pre emptively engaging the Byzantine army however the Byzantine army had retreated beforehand Though it was not a battle in the typical sense nevertheless the event represented the first Arab encounter against the Byzantines It did not however lead immediately to a military confrontation 15 There is no contemporary Byzantine account of the Tabuk expedition and many of the details come from much later Muslim sources It has been argued that there is in one Byzantine source possibly referencing the Battle of Mu tah traditionally dated 629 but this is not certain 16 The first engagements may have started as conflicts with the Arab client states of the Byzantine and Sassanid empires the Ghassanids and the Lakhmids of Al Hirah In any case Muslim Arabs after 634 certainly pursued a full blown offensive against both empires resulting in the conquest of the Levant Egypt and Persia for Islam The most successful Arab generals were Khalid ibn al Walid and Amr ibn al As Arab conquest of Roman Syria 634 638 Edit Main article Muslim conquest of Syria In the Levant the invading Rashidun army were engaged by a Byzantine army composed of imperial troops as well as local levies note 1 According to Islamic historians Monophysites and Jews throughout Syria welcomed the Arabs as liberators as they were discontented with the rule of the Byzantines note 2 The Roman Emperor Heraclius had fallen ill and was unable to personally lead his armies to resist the Arab conquests of Syria and Roman Paelestina in 634 In a battle fought near Ajnadayn in the summer of 634 the Rashidun Caliphate army achieved a decisive victory 18 After their victory at the Fahl Muslim forces conquered Damascus in 634 under the command of Khalid ibn al Walid 19 The Byzantine response involved the collection and dispatch of the maximum number of available troops under major commanders including Theodore Trithyrius and the Armenian general Vahan to eject the Muslims from their newly won territories 19 At the Battle of Yarmouk in 636 however the Muslims having studied the ground in detail lured the Byzantines into pitched battle which the Byzantines usually avoided and into a series of costly assaults before turning the deep valleys and cliffs into a catastrophic death trap 20 Heraclius farewell exclamation according to the 9th century historian Al Baladhuri 21 while departing Antioch for Constantinople is expressive of his disappointment Peace unto thee O Syria and what an excellent country this is for the enemy note 3 The impact of Syria s loss on the Byzantines is illustrated by Joannes Zonaras words since then after the fall of Syria the race of the Ishmaelites did not cease from invading and plundering the entire territory of the Romans 24 In April 637 the Arabs after a long siege captured Jerusalem which was surrendered by Patriarch Sophronius note 4 In the summer of 637 the Muslims conquered Gaza and during the same period the Byzantine authorities in Egypt and Mesopotamia purchased an expensive truce which lasted three years for Egypt and one year for Mesopotamia Antioch fell to the Muslim armies in late 637 and by then the Muslims occupied the whole of northern Syria except for upper Mesopotamia which they granted a one year truce 16 At the expiration of this truce in 638 639 the Arabs overran Byzantine Mesopotamia and Byzantine Armenia and terminated the conquest of Palestine by storming Caesarea Maritima and effecting their final capture of Ascalon In December 639 the Muslims departed from Palestine to invade Egypt in early 640 16 Arab conquests of North Africa 639 698 Edit Conquest of Egypt and Cyrenaica Edit Main article Muslim conquest of Egypt By the time Heraclius died much of Egypt had been lost and by 637 638 the whole of Syria was in the hands of the armies of Islam note 5 With 3 500 4 000 troops under his command Amr ibn al A as first crossed into Egypt from Palestine at the end of 639 or the beginning of 640 He was progressively joined by further reinforcements notably 12 000 soldiers by Zubayr ibn al Awwam Amr first besieged and conquered Babylon Fortress and then attacked Alexandria The Byzantines divided and shocked by the sudden loss of so much territory agreed to give up the city by September 642 27 The fall of Alexandria extinguished Byzantine rule in Egypt and allowed the Muslims to continue their military expansion into North Africa between 643 and 644 Amr completed the conquest of Cyrenaica 28 Uthman succeeded Caliph Umar after his death 29 According to Arab historians the local Christian Copts welcomed the Arabs just as the Monophysites did in Jerusalem 30 The loss of this lucrative province deprived the Byzantines of their valuable wheat supply thereby causing food shortages throughout the Byzantine Empire and weakening its armies in the following decades 31 The Byzantine navy briefly won back Alexandria in 645 but lost it again in 646 shortly after the Battle of Nikiou 32 The Islamic forces raided Sicily in 652 while Cyprus and Crete were captured in 653 Conquest of the Exarchate of Africa Edit Main article Muslim conquest of the Maghreb The people of Homs replied to the Muslims We like your rule and justice far better than the state of oppression and tyranny in which we were The army of Heraclius we shall indeed with your amil s help repulse from the city The Jews rose and said We swear by the Torah no governor of Heraclius shall enter the city of Homs unless we are first vanquished and exhausted The inhabitants of the other cities Christian and Jews that had capitulated to the Muslims did the same When by Allah s help the unbelievers were defeated and the Muslims won they opened the gates of their cities went out with the singers and music players who began to play and paid the kharaj Al Baladhuri 33 According to the Muslim historians of the 9th century local populations regarded Byzantine rule as oppressive and preferred Muslim conquest instead a In 647 a Rashidun Arab army led by Abdallah ibn al Sa ad invaded the Byzantine Exarchate of Africa Tripolitania was conquered followed by Sufetula 150 miles 240 km south of Carthage and the governor and self proclaimed Emperor of Africa Gregory was killed Abdallah s booty laden force returned to Egypt in 648 after Gregory s successor Gennadius promised them an annual tribute of some 300 000 nomismata 34 Following a civil war in the Arab Empire the Umayyads came to power under Muawiyah I Under the Umayyads the conquest of the remaining Byzantine and northern Berber territories in North Africa was completed and the Arabs were able to move across large parts of the Berber world invading Visigothic Spain through the Strait of Gibraltar 30 under the command of the allegedly Berber general Tariq ibn Ziyad But this happened only after they developed a naval power of their own note 6 and they conquered and destroyed the Byzantine stronghold of Carthage between 695 and 698 36 The loss of Africa meant that soon Byzantine control of the Western Mediterranean was challenged by a new and expanding Arab fleet operating from Tunisia 37 Muawiyah began consolidating the Arab territory from the Aral Sea to the western border of Egypt He put a governor in place in Egypt at al Fustat and launched raids into Anatolia in 663 Then from 665 to 689 a new North African campaign was launched to protect Egypt from flank attack by Byzantine Cyrene An Arab army of 40 000 took Barca defeating 30 000 Byzantines 38 A vanguard of 10 000 Arabs under Uqba ibn Nafi followed from Damascus In 670 Kairouan modern Tunisia was established as a base for further invasions Kairouan would become the capital of the Islamic province of Ifriqiya and one of the main Arabo Islamic religious centers in the Middle Ages 39 Then ibn Nafi plunged into the heart of the country traversed the wilderness in which his successors erected the splendid capitals of Fes and Morocco and at length penetrated to the verge of the Atlantic and the great desert 40 In his conquest of the Maghreb Uqba Ibn Nafi took the coastal cities of Bejaia and Tangier overwhelming what had once been the Roman province of Mauretania where he was finally halted 41 As the historian Luis Garcia de Valdeavellano explains 42 In their struggle against the Byzantines and the Berbers the Arab chieftains had greatly extended their African dominions and as early as the year 682 Uqba had reached the shores of the Atlantic but he was unable to occupy Tangier for he was forced to turn back toward the Atlas Mountains by a man who became known to history and legend as Count Julian Luis Garcia de Valdeavellano Arab attacks on Anatolia and sieges of Constantinople Edit As the first tide of the Muslim conquests in the Near East ebbed off and a semi permanent border between the two powers was established a wide zone unclaimed by either Byzantines or Arabs and virtually deserted known in Arabic as al Ḍawaḥi the outer lands and in Greek as tὰ ἄkra ta akra the extremities emerged in Cilicia along the southern approaches of the Taurus and Anti Taurus mountain ranges leaving Syria in Muslim and the Anatolian plateau in Byzantine hands Both Emperor Heraclius and the Caliph Umar r 634 644 pursued a strategy of destruction within this zone trying to transform it into an effective barrier between the two realms 43 Nevertheless the Umayyads still considered the complete subjugation of Byzantium as their ultimate objective Their thinking was dominated by Islamic teaching which placed the infidel Byzantines in the Dar al Ḥarb the House of War which in the words of Islamic scholar Hugh N Kennedy the Muslims should attack whenever possible rather than peace interrupted by occasional conflict the normal pattern was seen to be conflict interrupted by occasional temporary truce hudna True peace ṣulḥ could only come when the enemy accepted Islam or tributary status 44 Both as governor of Syria and later as caliph Muawiyah I r 661 680 was the driving force of the Muslim effort against Byzantium especially by his creation of a fleet which challenged the Byzantine navy and raided the Byzantine islands and coasts To stop the Byzantine harassment from the sea during the Arab Byzantine Wars in 649 Muawiyah set up a navy manned by Monophysitise Christian Copt and Jacobite Syrian Christian sailors and Muslim troops This resulted in the defeat of the Byzantine navy at the Battle of the Masts in 655 opening up the Mediterranean 45 46 47 48 49 The shocking defeat of the imperial fleet by the young Muslim navy at the Battle of the Masts in 655 was of critical importance it opened up the Mediterranean hitherto a Roman lake to Arab expansion and began a centuries long series of naval conflicts over the control of the Mediterranean waterways 50 51 500 Byzantine ships were destroyed in the battle and Emperor Constans II was almost killed Under the instructions of the caliph Uthman ibn Affan Muawiyah then prepared for the siege of Constantinople Trade between the Muslim eastern and southern shores and the Christian northern shores almost ceased during this period isolating Western Europe from developments in the Muslim world In antiquity and again in the high Middle Ages the voyage from Italy to Alexandria was commonplace in early Islamic times the two countries were so remote that even the most basic information was unknown Kennedy 52 Muawiyah also initiated the first large scale raids into Anatolia from 641 on These expeditions aiming both at plunder and at weakening and keeping the Byzantines at bay as well as the corresponding retaliatory Byzantine raids eventually became established as a fixture of Byzantine Arab warfare for the next three centuries 53 54 Gold tremissis of Constans II The outbreak of the Muslim Civil War in 656 bought a precious breathing pause for Byzantium which Emperor Constans II r 641 668 used to shore up his defences extend and consolidate his control over Armenia and most importantly initiate a major army reform with lasting effect the establishment of the themata the large territorial commands into which Anatolia the major contiguous territory remaining to the Empire was divided The remains of the old field armies were settled in each of them and soldiers were allocated land there in payment of their service The themata would form the backbone of the Byzantine defensive system for centuries to come 55 Attacks against Byzantine holdings in Africa Sicily and the East Edit After his victory in the civil war Muawiyah launched a series of attacks against Byzantine holdings in Africa Sicily and the East 56 By 670 the Muslim fleet had penetrated into the Sea of Marmara and stayed at Cyzicus during the winter Four years later a massive Muslim fleet reappeared in the Marmara and re established a base at Cyzicus from there they raided the Byzantine coasts almost at will Finally in 676 Muawiyah sent an army to invest Constantinople from land as well beginning the First Arab Siege of the city Constantine IV r 661 685 however used a devastating new weapon that came to be known as Greek fire invented by a Christian refugee from Syria named Kallinikos of Heliopolis to decisively defeat the attacking Umayyad navy in the Sea of Marmara resulting in the lifting of the siege in 678 The returning Muslim fleet suffered further losses due to storms while the army lost many men to the thematic armies who attacked them on their route back 57 Among those killed in the siege was Eyup the standard bearer of Muhammed and the last of his companions to Muslims today his tomb is considered one of the holiest sites in Istanbul 58 The Byzantine victory over the invading Umayyads halted the Islamic expansion into Europe for almost thirty years citation needed In spite of the turbulent reign of Justinian II last emperor of the Heraclian dynasty his coinage still bore the traditional PAX peace The setback at Constantinople was followed by further reverses across the vast Muslim empire As Gibbon writes this Mahometan Alexander who sighed for new worlds was unable to preserve his recent conquests By the universal defection of the Greeks and Africans he was recalled from the shores of the Atlantic His forces were directed at putting down rebellions and in one such battle he was surrounded by insurgents and killed Then the third governor of Africa Zuheir was overthrown by a powerful army sent from Constantinople by Constantine IV for the relief of Carthage 41 Meanwhile a second Arab civil war was raging in Arabia and Syria resulting in a series of four caliphs between the death of Muawiyah in 680 and the ascension of Abd al Malik in 685 and was ongoing until 692 with the death of the rebel leader 59 The Saracen Wars of Justinian II r 685 695 and 705 711 last emperor of the Heraclian Dynasty reflected the general chaos of the age 60 After a successful campaign he made a truce with the Arabs agreeing on joint possession of Armenia Iberia and Cyprus however by removing 12 000 Christian Mardaites from their native Lebanon he removed a major obstacle for the Arabs in Syria and in 692 after the disastrous Battle of Sebastopolis the Muslims invaded and conquered all of Armenia 61 Deposed in 695 with Carthage lost in 698 Justinian returned to power from 705 to 711 60 His second reign was marked by Arab victories in Asia Minor and civil unrest 61 Reportedly he ordered his guards to execute the only unit that had not deserted him after one battle to prevent their desertion in the next 60 Justinian s first and second depositions were followed by internal disorder with successive revolts and emperors lacking legitimacy or support In this climate the Umayyads consolidated their control of Armenia and Cilicia and began preparing a renewed offensive against Constantinople In Byzantium the general Leo the Isaurian r 717 741 had just seized the throne in March 717 when the massive Muslim army under the famed Umayyad prince and general Maslama ibn Abd al Malik began moving towards the imperial capital 62 The Caliphate s army and navy led by Maslama numbered some 120 000 men and 1 800 ships according to the sources Whatever the real number it was a huge force far larger than the imperial army Thankfully for Leo and the Empire the capital s sea walls had recently been repaired and strengthened In addition the emperor concluded an alliance with the Bulgar khan Tervel who agreed to harass the invaders rear 8 The Theodosian Walls of Constantinople From July 717 to August 718 the city was besieged by land and sea by the Muslims who built an extensive double line of circumvallation and contravallation on the landward side isolating the capital Their attempt to complete the blockade by sea however failed when the Byzantine navy employed Greek fire against them the Arab fleet kept well off the city walls leaving Constantinople s supply routes open Forced to extend the siege into winter the besieging army suffered horrendous casualties from the cold and the lack of provisions 63 In spring new reinforcements were sent by the new caliph Umar ibn Abd al Aziz r 717 720 by sea from Africa and Egypt and over land through Asia Minor The crews of the new fleets were composed mostly of Christians who began defecting in large numbers while the land forces were ambushed and defeated in Bithynia As famine and an epidemic continued to plague the Arab camp the siege was abandoned on 15 August 718 On its return the Arab fleet suffered further casualties to storms and an eruption of the volcano of Thera 64 Stabilization of the frontier 718 863 EditFurther information Byzantine Arab wars 780 1180 The first wave of the Muslim conquests ended with the siege of Constantinople in 718 and the border between the two empires became stabilized along the mountains of eastern Anatolia Raids and counter raids continued on both sides and became almost ritualized but the prospect of outright conquest of Byzantium by the Caliphate receded This led to far more regular and often friendly diplomatic contacts as well as a reciprocal recognition of the two empires In response to the Muslim threat which reached its peak in the first half of the 8th century the Isaurian emperors adopted the policy of Iconoclasm which was abandoned in 786 only to be readopted in the 820s and finally abandoned in 843 Under the Macedonian dynasty exploiting the decline and fragmentation of the Abbasid Caliphate the Byzantines gradually went on the offensive and recovered much territory in the 10th century which was lost however after 1071 to the Seljuk Turks Raids under the last Umayyads and the rise of Iconoclasm Edit Map of the Byzantine Arab frontier zone in southeastern Asia Minor along the Taurus Antitaurus range Following the failure to capture Constantinople in 717 718 the Umayyads for a time diverted their attention elsewhere allowing the Byzantines to take to the offensive making some gains in Armenia From 720 721 however the Arab armies resumed their expeditions against Byzantine Anatolia although now they were no longer aimed at conquest but rather large scale raids plundering and devastating the countryside and only occasionally attacking forts or major settlements 65 66 Under the late Umayyad and early Abbasid caliphs the frontier between Byzantium and the Caliphate became stabilized along the line of the Taurus Antitaurus mountain ranges On the Arab side Cilicia was permanently occupied and its deserted cities such as Adana Mopsuestia al Massisa and most importantly Tarsus were refortified and resettled under the early Abbasids Likewise in Upper Mesopotamia places like Germanikeia Mar ash Hadath and Melitene Malatya became major military centers These two regions came to form the two halves of a new fortified frontier zone the thughur 54 67 Both the Umayyads and later the Abbasids continued to regard the annual expeditions against the Caliphate s traditional enemy as an integral part of the continuing jihad and they quickly became organized in a regular fashion one to two summer expeditions pl ṣawa if sing ṣa ifa sometimes accompanied by a naval attack and or followed by winter expeditions shawati The summer expeditions were usually two separate attacks the expedition of the left al ṣa ifa al yusra al ṣughra launched from the Cilician thughur and consisting mostly of Syrian troops and the usually larger expedition of the right al ṣa ifa al yumna al kubra launched from Malatya and composed of Mesopotamian troops The raids were also largely confined to the borderlands and the central Anatolian plateau and only rarely reached the peripheral coastlands which the Byzantines fortified heavily 65 68 Under the more aggressive Caliph Hisham ibn Abd al Malik r 723 743 the Arab expeditions intensified for a time and were led by some of the Caliphate s most capable generals including princes of the Umayyad dynasty like Maslama ibn Abd al Malik and al Abbas ibn al Walid or Hisham s own sons Mu awiyah Maslama and Sulayman 69 This was still a time when Byzantium was fighting for survival and the frontier provinces devastated by war were a land of ruined cities and deserted villages where a scattered population looked to rocky castles or impenetrable mountains rather than the armies of the empire to provide a minimum of security Kennedy 44 In response to the renewal of Arab invasions and to a sequence of natural disasters such as the eruptions of the volcanic island of Thera 70 the Emperor Leo III the Isaurian concluded that the Empire had lost divine favour Already in 722 he had tried to force the conversion of the Empire s Jews but soon he began to turn his attention to the veneration of icons which some bishops had come to regard as idolatrous In 726 Leo published an edict condemning their use and showed himself increasingly critical of the iconophiles He formally banned depictions of religious figures in a court council in 730 71 72 This decision provoked major opposition both from the people and the church especially the Bishop of Rome which Leo did not take into account In the words of Warren Treadgold He saw no need to consult the church and he appears to have been surprised by the depth of the popular opposition he encountered 71 72 The controversy weakened the Byzantine Empire and was a key factor in the schism between the Patriarch of Constantinople and the Bishop of Rome 73 74 The Umayyad Caliphate however was increasingly distracted by conflicts elsewhere especially its confrontation with the Khazars with whom Leo III had concluded an alliance marrying his son and heir Constantine V r 741 775 to the Khazar princess Tzitzak Only in the late 730s did the Muslim raids again become a threat but the great Byzantine victory at Akroinon and the turmoil of the Abbasid Revolution led to a pause in Arab attacks against the Empire It also opened up the way for a more aggressive stance by Constantine V r 741 775 who in 741 attacked the major Arab base of Melitene and continued scoring further victories These successes were also interpreted by Leo III and his son Constantine as evidence of God s renewed favour and strengthened the position of Iconoclasm within the Empire 75 76 Early Abbasids Edit Abbasid Caliph Al Ma mun sends an envoy to Byzantine Emperor Theophilos Unlike their Umayyad predecessors the Abbasid caliphs did not pursue active expansion in general terms they were content with the territorial limits achieved and whatever external campaigns they waged were retaliatory or preemptive meant to preserve their frontier and impress Abbasid might upon their neighbours 77 At the same time the campaigns against Byzantium in particular remained important for domestic consumption The annual raids which had almost lapsed in the turmoil following the Abbasid Revolution were undertaken with renewed vigour from ca 780 on and were the only expeditions where the Caliph or his sons participated in person 78 79 As a symbol of the Caliph s ritual role as the leader of the Muslim community they were closely paralleled in official propaganda by the leadership by Abbasid family members of the annual pilgrimage hajj to Mecca 78 79 In addition the constant warfare on the Syrian marches was useful to the Abbasids as it provided employment for the Syrian and Iraqi military elites and the various volunteers muṭṭawi a who flocked to participate in the jihad 80 81 The thughur are blocked by Harun and through himthe ropes of the Muslim state are firmly plaitedHis banner is forever tied with victory he has an army before which armies scatter All the kings of the Rum give him jizyaunwillingly perforce out of hand in humiliation Poem in praise of Harun al Rashid s 806 campaign against Byzantium 82 Wishing to emphasize his piety and role as the leader of the Muslim community Caliph Harun al Rashid r 786 809 in particular was the most energetic of the early Abbasid rulers in his pursuit of warfare against Byzantium he established his seat at Raqqa close to the frontier he complemented the thughur in 786 by forming a second defensive line along northern Syria the al Awasim and was reputed to be spending alternating years leading the Hajj and leading a campaign into Anatolia including the largest expedition assembled under the Abbasids in 806 83 84 Continuing a trend started by his immediate predecessors his reign also saw the development of far more regular contacts between the Abbasid court and Byzantium with the exchange of embassies and letters being far more common than under the Umayyad rulers Despite Harun s hostility the existence of embassies is a sign that the Abbasids accepted that the Byzantine empire was a power with which they had to deal on equal terms Kennedy 85 86 Civil war occurred in the Byzantine Empire often with Arab support With the support of Caliph Al Ma mun Arabs under the leadership of Thomas the Slav invaded so that within a matter of months only two themata in Asia Minor remained loyal to Emperor Michael II 87 When the Arabs captured Thessalonica the Empire s second largest city it was quickly re captured by the Byzantines 87 Thomas s 821 siege of Constantinople did not get past the city walls and he was forced to retreat 87 The siege of Amorium miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes The Arabs did not relinquish their designs on Asia Minor and in 838 began another invasion sacking the city of Amorion Sicily Italy and Crete Edit Main article History of Islam in southern Italy While a relative equilibrium reigned in the East the situation in the western Mediterranean was irretrievably altered when the Aghlabids began their slow conquest of Sicily in the 820s Using Tunisia as their launching pad the Arabs started by conquering Palermo in 831 Messina in 842 Enna in 859 culminating in the capture of Syracuse in 878 88 This in turn opened up southern Italy and the Adriatic Sea for raids and settlement Byzantium further suffered an important setback with the loss of Crete to a band of Andalusian exiles who established a piratical emirate on the island and for more than a century ravaged the coasts of the hitherto secure Aegean Sea citation needed Byzantine resurgence 863 11th century Edit A map of the Byzantine Arab naval competition in the Mediterranean 7th to 11th centuries In 863 during the reign of Michael III the Byzantine general Petronas defeated and routed an Arab invasion force under the command of Umar al Aqta at the Battle of Lalakaon inflicting heavy casualties and removing the Emirate of Melitene as a serious military threat 89 90 Umar died in battle and the remnants of his army was annihilated in subsequent clashes allowing the Byzantines to celebrate the victory as revenge for the earlier Arab sacking of Amorion while news of the defeats sparked riots in Baghdad and Samarra 91 90 In the following months the Byzantines successfully invaded Armenia killing the Muslim governor in Armenia Emir Ali ibn Yahya as well as the Paulician leader Karbeas 92 These Byzantines victories marked a turning point which ushered in a century long Byzantine offensive eastward into Muslim territory 91 Religious peace came with the emergence of the Macedonian dynasty in 867 as well as a strong and unified Byzantine leadership 93 while the Abbasid empire had splintered into many factions after 861 Basil I revived the Byzantine Empire into a regional power during a period of territorial expansion making the Empire the strongest power in Europe with an ecclesiastical policy marked by good relations with Rome Basil allied with the Holy Roman Emperor Louis II against the Arabs and his fleet cleared the Adriatic Sea of their raids 94 With Byzantine help Louis II captured Bari from the Arabs in 871 The city became Byzantine territory in 876 The Byzantine position on Sicily deteriorated and Syracuse fell to the Emirate of Sicily in 878 Catania was lost in 900 and finally the fortress of Taormina in 902 Michael of Zahumlje apparently on 10 July 926 sacked Siponto Latin Sipontum which was a Byzantine town in Apulia 94 Sicily would remain under Arab control until the Norman invasion in 1071 Although Sicily was lost the general Nikephoros Phokas the Elder succeeded in taking Taranto and much of Calabria in 880 forming the nucleus for the later Catepanate of Italy The successes in the Italian Peninsula opened a new period of Byzantine domination there Above all the Byzantines were beginning to establish a strong presence in the Mediterranean Sea and especially the Adriatic Under John Kourkouas the Byzantines conquered the emirate of Melitene along with Theodosiopolis the strongest of the Muslim border emirates and advanced into Armenia in the 930s the next three decades were dominated by the struggle of the Phokas clan and their dependants against the Hamdanid emir of Aleppo Sayf al Dawla Al Dawla was finally defeated by Nikephoros II Phokas who conquered Cilicia and northern Syria including the sack of Aleppo and recovered Crete His nephew and successor John I Tzimiskes pushed even further south almost reaching Jerusalem but his death in 976 ended Byzantine expansion towards Palestine Nikephoros II and his stepson Basil II right Under the Macedonian dynasty the Byzantine Empire became the strongest power in Europe recovering territories lost in the war After putting an end to the internal strife Basil II launched a counter campaign against the Arabs in 995 The Byzantine civil wars had weakened the Empire s position in the east and the gains of Nikephoros II Phokas and John I Tzimiskes came close to being lost with Aleppo besieged and Antioch under threat Basil won several battles in Syria relieving Aleppo taking over the Orontes valley and raiding further south Although he did not have the force to drive into Palestine and reclaim Jerusalem his victories did restore much of Syria to the empire including the larger city of Antioch which was the seat of its eponymous Patriarch 95 No Byzantine emperor since Heraclius had been able to hold these lands for any length of time and the Empire would retain them for the next 110 years until 1078 Piers Paul Read writes that by 1025 Byzantine land stretched from the Straits of Messina and the northern Adriatic in the west to the River Danube and Crimea in the north and to the cities of Melitene and Edessa beyond the Euphrates in the east 95 Under Basil II the Byzantines established a swath of new themata stretching northeast from Aleppo a Byzantine protectorate to Manzikert Under the Theme system of military and administrative government the Byzantines could raise a force at least 200 000 strong though in practice these were strategically placed throughout the Empire With Basil s rule the Byzantine Empire reached its greatest height in nearly five centuries and indeed for the next four centuries 96 Conclusion EditThe wars drew near to a closure when the Turks and various Mongol invaders replaced the threat of either power From the 11th and 12th centuries onwards the Byzantine conflicts shifted into the Byzantine Seljuk wars with the continuing Islamic invasion of Anatolia being taken over by the Seljuk Turks After the defeat at the Battle of Manzikert by the Turks in 1071 the Byzantine Empire with the help of Western Crusaders re established its position in the Middle East as a major power Meanwhile the major Arab conflicts were in the Crusades and later against Mongolian invasions especially that of the Ilkhanate and Timur Effects Edit The Byzantine Arab Wars provided the conditions that developed feudalism in Medieval Europe Further information Byzantine Papacy and East West Schism As with any war of such length the drawn out Byzantine Arab Wars had long lasting effects for both the Byzantine Empire and the Arab world The Byzantines experienced extensive territorial loss However while the invading Arabs gained strong control in the Middle East and Africa further conquests in Western Asia were halted The focus of the Byzantine Empire shifted from the western reconquests of Justinian to a primarily defensive position against the Islamic armies on its eastern borders Without Byzantine interference in the emerging Christian states of western Europe the situation gave a huge stimulus to feudalism and economic self sufficiency 97 The view of modern historians is that one of the most important effects was the strain it put on the relationship between Rome and Byzantium While fighting for survival against the Islamic armies the Empire was no longer able to provide the protection it had once offered to the Papacy worse still according to Thomas Woods the Emperors routinely intervened in the life of the Church in areas lying clearly beyond the state s competence 98 The Iconoclast controversy of the 8th and 9th centuries can be taken as a key factor which drove the Latin Church into the arms of the Franks 74 Thus it has been argued that Charlemagne was an indirect product of Muhammad The Frankish Empire would probably never have existed without Islam and Charlemagne without Mahomet would be inconceivable 99 The Holy Roman Empire of Charlemagne s successors would later come to the aid of the Byzantines under Louis II and during the Crusades but relations between the two empires would be strained based on the Salerno Chronicle we know the Emperor Basil had sent an angry letter to his western counterpart reprimanding him for usurping the title of emperor 100 He argued that the Frankish rulers were simple reges and that each nation has its own title for the ruler whereas the imperial title suited only the ruler of the Eastern Romans Basil himself citation needed Historiography and other sources Edit The 12th century William of Tyre right an important commentator on the Crusades and the final stage of the Byzantine Arab Wars Walter Emil Kaegi states that extant Arabic sources have been given much scholarly attention for issues of obscurities and contradictions However he points out that Byzantine sources are also problematic such as the chronicles of Theophanes and Nicephorus and those written in Syriac which are short and terse while the important question of their sources and their use of sources remains unresolved Kaegi concludes that scholars must also subject the Byzantine tradition to critical scrutiny as it contains bias and cannot serve as an objective standard against which all Muslim sources may be confidently checked 101 Among the few Latin sources of interest are the 7th century history of Fredegarius and two 8th century Spanish chronicles all of which draw on some Byzantine and oriental historical traditions 102 As far as Byzantine military action against the initial Muslim invasions Kaegi asserts that Byzantine traditions attempt to deflect criticism of the Byzantine debacle from Heraclius to other persons groups and things 103 The range of non historical Byzantine sources is vast they range from papyri to sermons most notable those of Sophronius and Anastasius Sinaita poetry especially that of Sophronius and George of Pisidia including the Acritic songs correspondence often of a patristic provenance apologetical treatises apocalypses hagiography military manuals in particular the Strategikon of Maurice from the beginning of the 7th century and other non literary sources such as epigraphy archeology and numismatics None of these sources contains a coherent account of any of the campaigns and conquests of the Muslim armies but some do contain invaluable details that survive nowhere else 104 See also EditAegyptus Roman province Battle of Tours Byzantine Ottoman Wars Byzantine Seljuk wars Early Muslim conquests Spread of IslamNotes Edit a b The Empire s levies included Christian Armenians Arab Ghassanids Mardaites Slavs and Rus Politico religious events such as the outbreak of Monothelitism which disappointed both the Monophysites and the Chalcedonians had sharpened the differences between the Byzantines and the Syrians Also the high taxes the power of the landowners over the peasants and the participation in the long and exhaustive wars with the Persians were some of the reasons why the Syrians welcomed the change 17 As recorded by Al Baladhuri Michael the Syrian records only the phrase Peace unto thee O Syria 22 George Ostrogorsky describes the impact that the loss of Syria had on Heraclius with the following words His life s work collapsed before his eyes The heroic struggle against Persia seemed to be utterly wasted for his victories here had only prepared the way for the Arab conquest This cruel turn of fortune broke the aged Emperor both in spirit and in body 23 As Steven Runciman describes the event On a February day in the year AD 638 the Caliph Omar Umar entered Jerusalem along with a white camel which was ride by his slave He was dressed in worn filthy robes and the army that followed him was rough and unkempt but its discipline was perfect At his side rode the Patriarch Sophronius as chief magistrate of the surrendered city Omar rode straight to the site of the Temple of Solomon whence his friend Mahomet Muhammed had ascended into Heaven Watching him stand there the Patriarch remembered the words of Christ and murmured through his tears Behold the abomination of desolation spoken of by Daniel the prophet 25 Hugh N Kennedy notes that the Muslim conquest of Syria does not seem to have been actively opposed by the towns but it is striking that Antioch put up so little resistance 26 The Arab leadership realized early that to extend their conquests they would need a fleet The Byzantine navy was first decisively defeated by the Arabs at a battle in 655 off the Lycian coast when it was still the most powerful in the Mediterranean Theophanes the Confessor reported the loss of Rhodes while recounting the sale of the centuries old remains of the Colossus for scrap in 655 35 References EditCitations Edit Ghassan Encyclopaedia Britannica 2006 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 18 October 2006 1 a b Edward Gibbon 1788 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire vol 5 a b Akram 2004 p 425 Crawford 2013 p 149 Akram 2004 Chapter 36 Kaegi Walter E Byzantium and the early Islamic conquests Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press 1992 pp 90 93 ISBN 0 521 41172 6 Al Tabari p 108 al Baladhuri pp 167 68 Theophanes p 37 Shaw Jeffrey M Demy Timothy J 2017 War and Religion An Encyclopedia of Faith and Conflict 3 volumes ABC CLIO p 201 ISBN 9781610695176 Retrieved 27 August 2019 a b Treadgold 1997 pp 346 347 A Palmer with contributions from S Brock and R G Hoyland The Seventh Century in the West Syrian Chronicles Including Two Seventh Century Syriac Apocalyptic Texts 1993 op cit pp 18 19 Also see R G Hoyland Seeing Islam As Others Saw It A Survey And Evaluation of Christian Jewish And Zoroastrian Writings on Early Islam 1997 op cit p 119 and p 120 On Friday 4 February at the ninth hour there was a battle between the Romans and the Arabs of Mụhmet Muhammad in Palestine twelve miles east of Gaza The Romans fled leaving behind the patrician Yarden whom the Arabs killed Some 4000 poor villagers of Palestine were killed there Christians Jews and Samaritans The Arabs ravaged the whole region Theophanes Chronicle 317 327 Greatrex Lieu 2002 II 217 227 Haldon 1997 46 Baynes 1912 passim Speck 1984 178 Foss 1975 746 47 Howard Johnston 2006 xv Liska 1998 170 Kaegi 1995 66 Nicolle 1994 14 Muhammad Late Antiquity Butler 2007 145 a b c Kaegi 1995 67 Read 2001 50 51 Sahas 1972 23 Nicolle 1994 47 49 a b Kaegi 1995 112 Nicolle 1994 45 Internet History Sourcebooks Project Archived from the original on 11 October 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Al Baladhuri The Battle of the Yarmuk 636 and after Archived 11 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Michael the Syrian Chronicle II 424 Sahas 1972 19 20 Quoted by Sahas 1972 20 note 1 Zonaras Annales CXXXIV 1288 Sahas 1972 20 Runciman 1953 i 3 Kennedy 2001b 611 Kennedy 2006 87 Kennedy 1998 62 Butler 2007 427 428 Davies 1996 245 252 a b Read 2001 51 Haldon 1999 167 Tathakopoulos 2004 318 Butler 2007 465 483 Al Baladhuri The Battle of the Yarmuk 636 and after Archived 11 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Sahas 1972 23 Treadgold 1997 312 Theophanes Chronicle 645 646 Haldon 1990 55 Fage Tordoff 153 154 Norwich 1990 334 Will Durant The History of Civilization Part IV The Age of Faith 1950 New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 671 01200 2 The Islamic World to 1600 Umayyad Territorial Expansion Clark Desmond J Roland Anthony Oliver J D Fage A D Roberts 1978 1975 The Cambridge History of Africa Cambridge University Press p 637 ISBN 0 521 21592 7 a b Edward Gibbon History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Chapter 51 Archived 21 July 2005 at the Wayback Machine Luis Garcia de Valdeavellano Historia de Espana 1968 Madrid Alianza Quotes translated from the Spanish by Helen R Lane in Count Julian by Juan Goytisolo 1974 New York The Viking Press Inc ISBN 0 670 24407 4 Kaegi 1995 pp 236 244 a b Kennedy 2004 p 120 European Naval and Maritime History 300 1500 By Archibald Ross Lewis Timothy J Runyan Page 24 2 Kroll Leonard Michael 16 March 2005 History of the Jihad Islam Versus Civilization AuthorHouse ISBN 9781463457303 via Google Books Gregory Timothy E 26 August 2011 A History of Byzantium John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781444359978 via Google Books Prophets and Princes Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present By Mark Weston Page 61 3 Bradbury Jim 12 October 1992 The Medieval Siege Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 9780851153575 via Google Books Pryor amp Jeffreys 2006 p 25 Treadgold 1997 pp 313 314 Kennedy 2004 pp 120 122 Kaegi 1995 pp 246 247 a b El Cheikh 2004 pp 83 84 Treadgold 1997 pp 314 318 Treadgold 1997 pp 318 324 Treadgold 1997 pp 325 327 The Walls of Constantinople AD 324 1453 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 759 X Karen Armstrong Islam A Short History New York NY USA The Modern Library 2002 2004 ISBN 0 8129 6618 X a b c Davies 1996 245 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Justinian II Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 602 Treadgold 1997 pp 337 345 Treadgold 1997 p 347 Treadgold 1997 pp 347 349 a b Blankinship 1994 pp 117 119 Treadgold 1997 pp 349ff Kennedy 2004 pp 143 275 El Cheikh 2004 p 83 Blankinship 1994 pp 119 121 162 163 Geology of Santorini volcanism www decadevolcano net a b Treadgold 1997 pp 350 353 a b Whittow 1996 pp 139 142 Europe A History p 273 Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 820171 0 a b Europe A History p246 Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 820171 0 Blankinship 1994 pp 20 168 169 200 Treadgold 1997 pp 354 355 El Hibri 2011 p 302 a b El Hibri 2011 pp 278 279 a b Kennedy 2001 pp 105 106 El Hibri 2011 p 279 Kennedy 2001 p 106 El Cheikh 2004 p 90 El Cheikh 2004 pp 89 90 Kennedy 2004 pp 143 144 cf El Cheikh 2004 pp 90ff Kennedy 2004 p 146 a b c John Julius Norwich 1998 A Short History of Byzantium Penguin ISBN 0 14 025960 0 Kettani Houssain 8 November 2019 The World Muslim Population Spatial and Temporal Analyses CRC Press ISBN 978 0 429 74925 4 DK 16 April 2012 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Warfare From Ancient Egypt to Iraq DK Publishing p 375 ISBN 978 1 4654 0373 5 a b Georgios Theotokis Dimitrios Sidiropoulos 26 April 2021 Byzantine Military Rhetoric in the Ninth Century A Translation of the Anonymi Byzantini Rhetorica Militaris Taylor amp Francis p 13 ISBN 978 1 00 038999 9 a b Mark Whittow 1996 The Making of Byzantium 600 1025 University of California Press p 311 ISBN 978 0 520 20496 6 Warren T Treadgold October 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford University Press p 452 ISBN 978 0 8047 2630 6 Europe A History Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 820171 0 a b Racki Odlomci iz drzavnoga prava hrvatskoga za narodne dynastie p 15 a b Read 2001 65 66 See map depicting Byzantine territories from the 11th century on Europe A History p 1237 Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 820171 0 Europe A History p 257 Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 820171 0 Thomas Woods How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization Washington DC Regenery 2005 ISBN 0 89526 038 7 Pirenne Henri Mediaeval Cities Their Origins and the Revival of Trade Princeton NJ 1925 ISBN 0 691 00760 8 See also Mohammed and Charlemagne London 1939 Dover Publications 2001 ISBN 0 486 42011 6 Dolger F Regesten der Kaiserurkunden des ostromischen Reiches I p 59 No 487 Berlin 1924 Kaegi 1995 2 3 Kaegi 1995 2 Kaegi 1995 4 5 Kaegi 1995 5 6 Sources Edit Primary sourcesAhmad ibn Yahya al Baladhuri Futuh al Buldan See a translated excerpt The Battle of Yarmouk and after in Medieval Sources Michael the Syrian 1899 Chronique de Michel le Syrien Patriarche Jacobite d Antioche in French and Syriac Translated by J B Chabot Paris Theophanes the Confessor Chronicle See original text in Documenta Catholica Omnia PDF Zonaras Joannes Annales See the original text in Patrologia Graeca Secondary sourcesBaynes Norman H 1912 The restoration of the Cross at Jerusalem The English Historical Review 27 106 287 299 doi 10 1093 ehr XXVII CVI 287 Akram A I 2004 The Sword of Allah Khalid bin al Waleed His Life and Campaigns third edition ISBN 0 19 597714 9 Blankinship Khalid Yahya 1994 The End of the Jihad State The Reign of Hisham ibn ʻAbd al Malik and the Collapse of the Umayyads Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 1827 7 Brooks E W 1923 Chapter V A The Struggle with the Saracens 717 867 The Cambridge Medieval History Vol IV The Eastern Roman Empire 717 1453 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 119 138 Butler Alfred J 2007 The Arab Conquest of Egypt And the Last Thirty Years of the Roman Read Books ISBN 978 1 4067 5238 0 Crawford Peter 2013 The War of the Three Gods Romans Persians and the Rise of Islam Pen and Sword Davies Norman 1996 The Birth of Europe Europe Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820171 0 El Cheikh Nadia Maria 2004 Byzantium viewed by the Arabs Harvard Center of Middle Eastern Studies ISBN 978 0 932885 30 2 El Hibri Tayeb 2010 The empire in Iraq 763 861 In Robinson Chase F ed The New Cambridge History of Islam Volume 1 The Formation of the Islamic World Sixth to Eleventh Centuries Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 269 304 ISBN 978 0 521 83823 8 Foss Clive 1975 The Persians in Asia Minor and the End of Antiquity The English Historical Review 90 721 47 doi 10 1093 ehr XC CCCLVII 721 Greatrex Geoffrey Lieu Samuel N C 2002 The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars Part II 363 630 AD Routledge ISBN 0 415 14687 9 Haldon John 1997 The East Roman World the Politics of Survival Byzantium in the Seventh Century the Transformation of a Culture Cambridge ISBN 0 521 31917 X Haldon John 1999 The Army at Wars Campaigns Warfare State and Society in the Byzantine World 565 1204 London UCL Press ISBN 1 85728 495 X Howard Johnston James 2006 East Rome Sasanian Persia And the End of Antiquity Historiographical And Historical Studies Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0 86078 992 6 Kaegi Walter Emil 1995 Byzantium and the early Islamic conquests Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 48455 3 Kennedy Hugh 1998 Egypt as a Province in the Islamic Caliphate 641 868 In Daly M W Petry Calf F eds The Cambridge History of Egypt Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 47137 0 Kennedy Hugh 2001 The Armies of the Caliphs Military and Society in the Early Islamic State London and New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 25093 5 Kennedy Hugh 2000 Syria Palestine and Mesopotamia In Cameron Averil Ward Perkins Bryan Whitby Michael eds The Cambridge Ancient History Volume XIV Late Antiquity Empire and Successors A D 425 600 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521325912 Kennedy Hugh 2023 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century 2nd ed Abingdon Oxon and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 367 36690 2 Kennedy Hugh 2006 Antioch from Byzantium to Islam The Byzantine and Early Islamic Near East Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7546 5909 7 Liska George 1998 Projection contra Prediction Alternative Futures and Options Expanding Realism The Historical Dimension of World Politics Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8680 9 Warren Bowersock Glen Brown Peter Robert Lamont Brown Peter Grabar Oleg eds 1999 Muhammad Late Antiquity A Guide to the Postclassical World Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 51173 5 Nicolle David 1994 Yarmuk AD 636 Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 85532 414 8 Norwich John Julius 1990 Byzantium The Early Centuries Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 011447 8 Omrcanin Ivo 1984 Military history of Croatia Dorrance ISBN 978 0 8059 2893 8 Pryor John H Jeffreys Elizabeth M 2006 The Age of the DROMWN The Byzantine Navy ca 500 1204 Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 15197 0 Racki Franjo 1861 Odlomci iz drzavnoga prava hrvatskoga za narodne dynastie in Croatian F Klemma Read Piers Paul 1999 The Templars Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Orion Publishing Group ISBN 0 297 84267 6 Runciman Steven 1987 A History of the Crusades Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 34770 X Sahas Daniel J 1972 Historical Considerations John of Damascus on Islam BRILL ISBN 90 04 03495 1 Speck Paul 1984 Ikonoklasmus und die Anfange der Makedonischen Renaissance Varia 1 Poikila Byzantina 4 Rudolf Halbelt pp 175 210 Stathakopoulos Dionysios 2004 Famine and Pestilence in the Late Roman and Early Byzantine Empire Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0 7546 3021 8 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Vasiliev A A 1923 Chapter V B The Struggle with the Saracens 867 1057 The Cambridge Medieval History Vol IV The Eastern Roman Empire 717 1453 Cambridge University Press pp 138 150 Vasiliev A A 1935 Byzance et les Arabes Tome I La Dynastie d Amorium 820 867 in French French ed Henri Gregoire Marius Canard Brussels Editions de l Institut de Philologie et d Histoire Orientales Vasiliev A A 1968 Byzance et les Arabes Tome II 1ere partie Les relations politiques de Byzance et des Arabes a L epoque de la dynastie macedonienne 867 959 in French French ed Henri Gregoire Marius Canard Brussels Editions de l Institut de Philologie et d Histoire OrientalesFurther reading EditKennedy Hugh N 2006 The Byzantine And Early Islamic Near East Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0 7546 5909 7 External links Edit Media related to Arab Byzantine wars at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arab Byzantine wars amp oldid 1154152535, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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