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Avar–Byzantine wars

Avar–Byzantine wars

Miniature from the Manasses Chronicle showing Emperor Heraclius attacking a Persian fort, while the Persians and Avars besiege Constantinople in 626.
Date568–626
Location
Balkans, Greece
Result Byzantine victory, The Avars never again make a threat to Constantinople, the start of the Avars decline
Territorial
changes
Much of the Balkans disputed between the Avars and the Byzantine Empire; collapse of Byzantine authority in the interior of the peninsula, leading to large-scale Slavic occupation and settlement across the region
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire
Antes
Avar Khaganate
Sabirs
Kutrigurs
Slavs
Sclaveni
Bulgars
Sassanids
Commanders and leaders
Maurice
Phocas
Heraclius
Priscus
Peter
Comentiolus
Philippicus (comes excubitorum)
Sergius
Bonus
Theodore
Bayan I
Bayan II
Khosrow II
Shahrbaraz
Shahin Vahmanzadegan

The Avar–Byzantine wars were a series of conflicts between the Byzantine Empire and the Avar Khaganate. The conflicts were initiated in 568, after the Avars arrived in Pannonia, and claimed all the former land of the Gepids and Lombards as their own. This led to an unsuccessful attempt to seize the city of Sirmium from Byzantium, which had previously retaken it from the Gepids. Most subsequent conflicts came as a result of raids by the Avars, or their subject Slavs, into the Balkan provinces of the Byzantine Empire.

The Avars usually raided the Balkans when the Byzantine Empire was distracted elsewhere, typically in its frequent wars with the Sassanid Empire in the East. As a result, they often raided without resistance for long periods of time, before Byzantine troops could be freed from other fronts to be sent on punitive expeditions. This happened during the 580s and 590s, where Byzantium was initially distracted in the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 572–591, but then followed up by a series of successful campaigns that pushed the Avars back.

Background

The Avars arrived in the Carpathian Basin in 568, fleeing from the First Turkic Khaganate. They quickly entered into an alliance with the Lombards to seize the land of the Gepids. However, during this process, the Lombards retreated to Italy, allowing the Avars to take both the lands of the Gepids and the former lands of the Lombards for themselves, creating the Avar Khaganate. The Avars then claimed all former territory of both as their own territory. This included Sirmium, which had been recently reconquered by the Byzantines from the Gepids, and would serve as the first cause of conflict between the Avars and the Byzantines.[1]

The Avars were heavily dependent upon the skills and labor of their subject peoples for both siege warfare and logistics. Subject peoples, such as the early Slavs and the Huns, had long traditions of engineering and craftsmanship, such as the building of boats and bridges, and the use of rams, tortoise formations, and artillery in sieges. In every documented use of siege engines by the Avars, the Avars depended upon subject peoples who had knowledge of them, usually the Sabirs, Kutrigurs, or Slavs. Avar military tactics also relied upon speed and shock.[2]

Avar attacks on Sirmium (568–582)

The Avars almost immediately launched an attack on Sirmium in 568, but were repulsed. The Avars withdrew their troops back to their own territory, but allegedly sent 10,000 Kotrigur Huns,[1] a people who like the Avars had been forced into the Carpathians by the Turkic Khaganate,[3] to invade the Byzantine province of Dalmatia. They then began a period of consolidation, during which the Byzantines paid them 80,000 gold solidi a year.[4] Except for a raid on Sirmium in 574,[1] they did not threaten Byzantine territory until 579, after Tiberius II stopped the payments.[4] The Avars retaliated with another siege of Sirmium.[5] The city fell in c. 581, or possibly 582. After the capture of Sirmium, the Avars demanded 100,000 solidi a year.[6] Refused, they began pillaging the northern and eastern Balkans, which only ended after the Avars were pushed back by the Byzantines from 597 to 602.[7]

Avar offensive in the Balkans (582–591)

 
A map of the Northern Balkans in the 6th century.

After capturing Sirmium, the Avars began to rapidly encroach into the Balkans.[8] Their rapid spread was facilitated by the ongoing Byzantine–Sasanian War of 572–591, which left the Byzantine garrisons on the Danube frontier under-manned and underpaid. Because of this, the Avars and Slavs were able to raid without resistance, with the Byzantines only being able to harass raiding columns and set small ambushes, rather than forcing a decisive victory or launching a counteroffensive.[9] The Avars took the cities of Augustae, Singidunum, and Viminacium in 583, and a further eight cities by siege in 586. Many of these sieges relied upon the Avars utilizing both surprise and speed, advantages which they lost after they moved further inland in 587. Nevertheless, they destroyed many cities in Moesia in 587 including Marcianopolis and Kabile though they failed in the sieges of Diocletianopolis, Philippopolis, and Beroe. In 588, they abandoned the siege of Singidunum after only seven days, in exchange for a meagre ransom. After this they succeeded at the siege of Anchialos, with the support of a fleet manned by Slavic auxiliaries, they then started and quickly abandoned the sieges of Drizipera and Tzurullon.[8] The Avars and Slavs continued to raid with little resistance until 591, when Emperor Maurice made a ceasefire treaty with the Sassanids in a fairly favorable terms, and shifted his focus to the Balkans.[9]

Roman counteroffensive (591–595)

After the peace treaty with the Persians and subsequent Roman refocusing on the Balkans as mentioned above, Maurice deployed veteran troops to the Balkans, allowing the Byzantines to shift from a reactive strategy to a pre-emptive one.[9] The general Priscus was tasked with stopping the Slavs from crossing the Danube in spring 593. He routed several raiding parties, before he crossed the Danube and fought the Slavs in what is now Wallachia until autumn. Maurice ordered him to make camp on the northern bank of the Danube, however Priscus instead retired to Odessos. Priscus' retreat allowed for a new Slav incursion in late 593/594 in Moesia and Macedonia, with the towns of Aquis, Scupi and Zaldapa being destroyed.[10]

In 594 Maurice replaced Priscus with his own brother, Peter. Due to his inexperience, Peter suffered initial failures, but eventually managed to repulse the tide of Slav and Avar incursions. He set up base at Marcianopolis, and patrolled the Danube between Novae and the Black Sea. In late August of 594, he crossed the Danube near Securisca and fought his way to the Helibacia river, preventing the Slavs and Avars from preparing new pillaging campaigns.[11] Priscus, who had been given command of another army, prevented the Avars from besieging Singidunum in 595, in combination with the Byzantine Danube fleet. After this, the Avars shifted their focus to Dalmatia, where they sacked several fortresses, and avoided confronting Priscus directly. Priscus was not particularly concerned about the Avar incursion, as Dalmatia was a remote and poor province; he sent only a small force to check their invasion, keeping the main body of his forces near the Danube. The small force was able to hamper the Avar advance, and even recovered a part of the loot taken by the Avars, better than expected.[12]

First interlude (595–597)

After their invasion of Dalmatia had been blocked, the Avars were discouraged by their lack of success against the Byzantines, and thus began to make their raids against the Franks, who they saw as being easier to attack, launching major raids against them in 596. Due to the shift in focus, there was little activity in the Balkans from 595 to 597.[13]

Avar invasion (597–602)

Emboldened by the plunder from the Franks, the Avars resumed their raids across the Danube in autumn of 597, catching the Byzantines by surprise. The Avars even caught Priscus' army while it was still in its camp in Tomis, and laid siege to it. However, they lifted the siege on 30 March 598, at the approach of a Byzantine army led by Comentiolus, which had just crossed Mount Haemus and was marching along the Danube up to Zikidiba, only 30 kilometres (19 mi) from Tomis.[14] For unknown reasons, Priscus did not join Comentiolus when he pursued the Avars. Comentiolus made camp at Iatrus, however he was routed by the Avars, and his troops had to fight their way back over the Haemus. The Avars took advantage of this victory and advanced to Drizipera, near Constantinople. At Drizipera the Avar forces were struck by a plague, leading to the death of a large portion of their army, and seven sons of Bayan, the Avar Khagan.[15]

Due to the threat posed by the Avar forces at Drizipera, Comentiolus was replaced with Philippicus, and recalled to Constantinople.[16] Maurice assembled a force made up of the Circus Factions and his bodyguards to defend the Anastasian Wall.[17] Maurice then paid off the Avars for a temporary truce,[14] spending the rest of 598 in reorganizing his forces and analyzing how to improve the Byzantines' strategy.[17] In the same year, the Byzantines concluded a peace treaty with the Avars, which allowed the Byzantines to send expeditions into Wallachia.[18]

Ignoring the peace treaty, the Byzantines made preparations to invade the Avars' land. Priscus set up expeditionary camp near Singidunum and wintered there in 598/599. In 599 Priscus and Comentiolus led their troops downstream to Viminacium, and crossed the Danube. Once on the north bank, they defeated the Avars in the Battles of Viminacium. This battle was significant, as it was the first time the Avars suffered a major defeat in their home territory, and also led to the deaths of several more of Bayan's sons. After the battle, Priscus led his forces north into the Pannonian plain, engaging and defeating the Avars deep within their heartland. Comentiolus meanwhile remained near the Danube, to guard it.[19] Priscus devastated the lands east of the Tisza, inflicting heavy casualties on the Avars and Gepids,[20][21] and defeating them in two further battles on the banks of the Tisza.[22] In autumn 599, Comentiolus reopened the Gates of Trajan, which had not been used by the Byzantines for decades. In 601 Peter led troops to the banks of the Tisza, to defend the Danube cataracts, which were vital to the Byzantine Danube fleet's access to the cities of Sirmium and Singidunum.[21] The next year, in 602, the Antes began to invade the Avars' land, who were already on the brink of collapse due to the uprisings of several Avar tribes,[23] one of whom even defected to the Byzantines.[22]

Second interlude (602–612)

After being beaten back by the Byzantines under Maurice, the Avars shifted their focus to Italy, establishing diplomatic contact in 603, and attempting an invasion of North Italy in 610.[7] The Balkan frontier was largely pacified, for the first time since the reign of Anastasius I (r. 491–518). Maurice planned to repopulate the devastated lands which the Byzantines had recovered by settling Armenian peasants, whose homeland was the eastern part opposite to the Western Balkan part in the Empire -It was a deliberately enforced imperial strategy in order to prevent ethnic/tribal consolidation as the independent rebellious forces-, as well as Romanizing the Slavic settlers already in the area. Maurice also planned to lead further campaigns against the Avar Khaganate, so as to either destroy them or force them into submission. However, Maurice was overthrown in 602 by Phocas, as his army rebelled against the endless Balkan campaigning.[24] Phocas promptly scrapped those plans.[25]

Phocas maintained the security of the Balkans during his reign from 602 to 610, although he did withdraw some forces from the Balkans in 605, in order to use them in the ongoing Byzantine-Sassanid War of 602–628. There is no archaeological evidence of Slavic or Avar incursions during this time.[26][27] While the lack of Byzantine action or presence may have encouraged the Avars,[26] they did not attack Byzantine territory until c. 615, when Emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641) withdrew his troops stationed in the Balkans in order to fend off the Persian advance in the East.[7]

Renewed Avar attacks (612–626)

The Avars, who were likely encouraged by their successful campaigns against the Lombards in 610 and the Franks in 611, resumed their incursions some time after 612. By 614, with the Persian capture of Jerusalem, it became clear to the Avars and their Slav subjects that retaliation from the Byzantines was extremely unlikely. Chronicles of the 610s record wholesale pillaging, with cities such as Justiniana Prima and Salona fallen.[26] The cities of Naissus and Serdica were captured in 615, and the cities of Novae and Justiniana Prima were destroyed in 613 and 615, respectively. The Slavs also raided in the Aegean, as far as Crete, in 623. During this time period, there were three separate sieges of Thessalonica: in 604, 615, and 617.[28] In 623 the Byzantine emperor Heraclius journeyed into Thrace in an attempt to agree peace with the Avar Khagan face to face. Instead the Byzantines were ambushed, with Heraclius narrowly escaping and most of his bodyguard and retainers being killed or captured.[29] The Avar raids continued, culminating in the Siege of Constantinople in 626, where the Avars were finally defeated.[27][28]

Siege of Constantinople (626)

 
The Siege of Constantinople in 626 depicted on the murals of the Moldovița Monastery, Romania.

The Persian king Khosrau II, after suffering reverses through Heraclius' campaigns in the Persian rear, resolved to launch a decisive strike.[30] While general Shahin Vahmanzadegan was sent to stop Heraclius with 50,000 men, Shahrbaraz was given command of a smaller army and ordered to slip by Heraclius' flank, and march for Chalcedon, a Persian base across the Bosporus from Constantinople. Khosrau II also made contact with the Khagan of the Avars to allow for a coordinated attack on Constantinople, the Persians on the Asiatic side, and the Avars from the European side.[31]

The Avar army approached Constantinople from Thrace and destroyed the Aqueduct of Valens.[32] Because the Byzantine navy controlled the Bosporus strait, the Persians could not send troops to the European side to aid the Avars,[33] which cut off the Persian access to the Avars with the Persian expertise in siege warfare.[34] Byzantine naval superiority also made communication between the two forces difficult.[31][35] Constantinople's defenders were under the command of Patriarch Sergius and the patrician Bonus.[36]

 
A map of the environs of the siege.

On 29 June 626, the Avars and Persians began a coordinated assault upon the walls. The Byzantine defenders had 12,000 well-trained cavalry troops, who were likely dismounted, facing roughly 80,000 Avars and Sclaveni (Slavs whose land was controlled by the Avars).[30] Because the Persian base in Chalcedon had been established for many years, it was not immediately obvious that a siege would take place. It only became obvious to the Byzantines after the Avars began to move heavy siege equipment towards the Theodosian Walls. Although the walls had been continuously bombarded for a month, high morale had been maintained in the city; Patriarch Sergius bolstered morale by leading processions along the tops of the walls, carrying the Blachernitissa icon of the Virgin Mary.[37][38] The peasantry around Constantinople were rallied by this religious zeal, especially because both forces attacking Constantinople were non-Christians.[37]

On August 7, a fleet of Persian rafts ferrying troops across the Bosporus to the European side were surrounded and destroyed by the Byzantine fleet. The Sclaveni then attempted to attack the Sea Walls from across the Golden Horn, while the Avars attacked the land walls. However, the Sclaveni boats were rammed and destroyed by the galleys of Bonus, and the Avar land assaults on August 6 and 7 were repelled.[39] At around this point, the news that the Emperor's brother Theodore had decisively defeated Shahin arrived, leading the Avars to retreat to the Balkan hinterland within two days. They would never seriously threaten Constantinople again. Even though the Persian army of Shahrbaraz still remained at Chalcedon, the threat to Constantinople was over, as the Persians could not use artillery from their side of the Bosporus.[36][37] In thanks for the lifting of the siege and the supposed divine protection granted by the Virgin Mary, the celebrated Akathist Hymn was written by an unknown author, possibly Patriarch Sergius or George of Pisidia.[40][41]

Avar decline (626–822)

 
Reduction of Avar lands by Bulgars

After failing to capture Constantinople, the Avars rapidly began to decline before disintegrating entirely,[42] due to both internal power struggles, and conflicts with the Bulgars and Sclaveni.[43] After their hegemony over various tribal peoples collapsed, their land was further reduced by the Bulgars around 680, leaving behind a rump state which remained until their conquest by Charlemagne, starting in 790 and ending in 803.[7]

References

Primary sources

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Petersen 2013, p. 378.
  2. ^ Petersen 2013, pp. 379–382.
  3. ^ Golden 2011, p. 140.
  4. ^ a b Mitchell 2007, p. 405.
  5. ^ Petersen 2013, pp. 378–379.
  6. ^ Mitchell 2007, p. 406.
  7. ^ a b c d e Petersen 2013, p. 379.
  8. ^ a b Petersen 2013, p. 381.
  9. ^ a b c Crawford 2013, p. 25.
  10. ^ Whitby 1998, p. 159f.
  11. ^ Whitby 1998, p. 160f.
  12. ^ Whitby 1998, p. 161.
  13. ^ Whitby 1998, pp. 161–162.
  14. ^ a b Whitby 1998, p. 162.
  15. ^ Whitby 1998, pp. 162–163.
  16. ^ Pohl 2002, p. 153.
  17. ^ a b Whitby 1998, p. 163.
  18. ^ Pohl 2002, p. 154.
  19. ^ Pohl 2002, p. 156.
  20. ^ Pohl 2002, p. 157.
  21. ^ a b Whitby 1998, p. 164.
  22. ^ a b Pohl 2002, p. 158.
  23. ^ Whitby 1998, p. 165.
  24. ^ Mitchell 2007, p. 408.
  25. ^ Whitby 1998, p. 184f.
  26. ^ a b c Whitby 1998, p. 187.
  27. ^ a b Curta 2001, p. 189.
  28. ^ a b Maier 1973, p. 81.
  29. ^ Mitchell 2007, p. 413.
  30. ^ a b Norwich 1997, p. 92.
  31. ^ a b Oman 1893, p. 210.
  32. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 297.
  33. ^ Kaegi 2003, pp. 133, 140.
  34. ^ Dodgeon, Greatrex & Lieu 2002, pp. 179–181.
  35. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 134.
  36. ^ a b Oman 1893, p. 211.
  37. ^ a b c Norwich 1997, p. 93.
  38. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 136.
  39. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 137.
  40. ^ Ekonomou 2008, p. 285.
  41. ^ Gambero 1999, p. 338.
  42. ^ Hupchick 2017, p. 48.
  43. ^ Chaliand 2014, p. 81.
  44. ^ a b Petersen 2013, p. 380.
  45. ^ Petersen 2013, p. 383.

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  • Curta, Florin (2001). The Making of the Slavs: History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region, c.500–700. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139428880.
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avar, byzantine, wars, miniature, from, manasses, chronicle, showing, emperor, heraclius, attacking, persian, fort, while, persians, avars, besiege, constantinople, date568, 626locationbalkans, greeceresultbyzantine, victory, avars, never, again, make, threat,. Avar Byzantine warsMiniature from the Manasses Chronicle showing Emperor Heraclius attacking a Persian fort while the Persians and Avars besiege Constantinople in 626 Date568 626LocationBalkans GreeceResultByzantine victory The Avars never again make a threat to Constantinople the start of the Avars declineTerritorialchangesMuch of the Balkans disputed between the Avars and the Byzantine Empire collapse of Byzantine authority in the interior of the peninsula leading to large scale Slavic occupation and settlement across the regionBelligerentsByzantine EmpireAntesAvar KhaganateSabirsKutrigursSlavsSclaveniBulgarsSassanidsCommanders and leadersMauricePhocasHeracliusPriscusPeterComentiolusPhilippicus comes excubitorum SergiusBonusTheodoreBayan IBayan IIKhosrow IIShahrbarazShahin Vahmanzadegan The Avar Byzantine wars were a series of conflicts between the Byzantine Empire and the Avar Khaganate The conflicts were initiated in 568 after the Avars arrived in Pannonia and claimed all the former land of the Gepids and Lombards as their own This led to an unsuccessful attempt to seize the city of Sirmium from Byzantium which had previously retaken it from the Gepids Most subsequent conflicts came as a result of raids by the Avars or their subject Slavs into the Balkan provinces of the Byzantine Empire The Avars usually raided the Balkans when the Byzantine Empire was distracted elsewhere typically in its frequent wars with the Sassanid Empire in the East As a result they often raided without resistance for long periods of time before Byzantine troops could be freed from other fronts to be sent on punitive expeditions This happened during the 580s and 590s where Byzantium was initially distracted in the Byzantine Sasanian War of 572 591 but then followed up by a series of successful campaigns that pushed the Avars back Contents 1 Background 2 Avar attacks on Sirmium 568 582 3 Avar offensive in the Balkans 582 591 4 Roman counteroffensive 591 595 5 First interlude 595 597 6 Avar invasion 597 602 7 Second interlude 602 612 8 Renewed Avar attacks 612 626 9 Siege of Constantinople 626 10 Avar decline 626 822 11 References 11 1 Primary sources 11 2 Citations 11 3 BibliographyBackground EditMain articles Pannonian Avars and Avar Khaganate The Avars arrived in the Carpathian Basin in 568 fleeing from the First Turkic Khaganate They quickly entered into an alliance with the Lombards to seize the land of the Gepids However during this process the Lombards retreated to Italy allowing the Avars to take both the lands of the Gepids and the former lands of the Lombards for themselves creating the Avar Khaganate The Avars then claimed all former territory of both as their own territory This included Sirmium which had been recently reconquered by the Byzantines from the Gepids and would serve as the first cause of conflict between the Avars and the Byzantines 1 The Avars were heavily dependent upon the skills and labor of their subject peoples for both siege warfare and logistics Subject peoples such as the early Slavs and the Huns had long traditions of engineering and craftsmanship such as the building of boats and bridges and the use of rams tortoise formations and artillery in sieges In every documented use of siege engines by the Avars the Avars depended upon subject peoples who had knowledge of them usually the Sabirs Kutrigurs or Slavs Avar military tactics also relied upon speed and shock 2 Avar attacks on Sirmium 568 582 EditThe Avars almost immediately launched an attack on Sirmium in 568 but were repulsed The Avars withdrew their troops back to their own territory but allegedly sent 10 000 Kotrigur Huns 1 a people who like the Avars had been forced into the Carpathians by the Turkic Khaganate 3 to invade the Byzantine province of Dalmatia They then began a period of consolidation during which the Byzantines paid them 80 000 gold solidi a year 4 Except for a raid on Sirmium in 574 1 they did not threaten Byzantine territory until 579 after Tiberius II stopped the payments 4 The Avars retaliated with another siege of Sirmium 5 The city fell in c 581 or possibly 582 After the capture of Sirmium the Avars demanded 100 000 solidi a year 6 Refused they began pillaging the northern and eastern Balkans which only ended after the Avars were pushed back by the Byzantines from 597 to 602 7 Avar offensive in the Balkans 582 591 Edit A map of the Northern Balkans in the 6th century After capturing Sirmium the Avars began to rapidly encroach into the Balkans 8 Their rapid spread was facilitated by the ongoing Byzantine Sasanian War of 572 591 which left the Byzantine garrisons on the Danube frontier under manned and underpaid Because of this the Avars and Slavs were able to raid without resistance with the Byzantines only being able to harass raiding columns and set small ambushes rather than forcing a decisive victory or launching a counteroffensive 9 The Avars took the cities of Augustae Singidunum and Viminacium in 583 and a further eight cities by siege in 586 Many of these sieges relied upon the Avars utilizing both surprise and speed advantages which they lost after they moved further inland in 587 Nevertheless they destroyed many cities in Moesia in 587 including Marcianopolis and Kabile though they failed in the sieges of Diocletianopolis Philippopolis and Beroe In 588 they abandoned the siege of Singidunum after only seven days in exchange for a meagre ransom After this they succeeded at the siege of Anchialos with the support of a fleet manned by Slavic auxiliaries they then started and quickly abandoned the sieges of Drizipera and Tzurullon 8 The Avars and Slavs continued to raid with little resistance until 591 when Emperor Maurice made a ceasefire treaty with the Sassanids in a fairly favorable terms and shifted his focus to the Balkans 9 Roman counteroffensive 591 595 EditMain article Maurice s Balkan campaigns After the peace treaty with the Persians and subsequent Roman refocusing on the Balkans as mentioned above Maurice deployed veteran troops to the Balkans allowing the Byzantines to shift from a reactive strategy to a pre emptive one 9 The general Priscus was tasked with stopping the Slavs from crossing the Danube in spring 593 He routed several raiding parties before he crossed the Danube and fought the Slavs in what is now Wallachia until autumn Maurice ordered him to make camp on the northern bank of the Danube however Priscus instead retired to Odessos Priscus retreat allowed for a new Slav incursion in late 593 594 in Moesia and Macedonia with the towns of Aquis Scupi and Zaldapa being destroyed 10 In 594 Maurice replaced Priscus with his own brother Peter Due to his inexperience Peter suffered initial failures but eventually managed to repulse the tide of Slav and Avar incursions He set up base at Marcianopolis and patrolled the Danube between Novae and the Black Sea In late August of 594 he crossed the Danube near Securisca and fought his way to the Helibacia river preventing the Slavs and Avars from preparing new pillaging campaigns 11 Priscus who had been given command of another army prevented the Avars from besieging Singidunum in 595 in combination with the Byzantine Danube fleet After this the Avars shifted their focus to Dalmatia where they sacked several fortresses and avoided confronting Priscus directly Priscus was not particularly concerned about the Avar incursion as Dalmatia was a remote and poor province he sent only a small force to check their invasion keeping the main body of his forces near the Danube The small force was able to hamper the Avar advance and even recovered a part of the loot taken by the Avars better than expected 12 First interlude 595 597 EditAfter their invasion of Dalmatia had been blocked the Avars were discouraged by their lack of success against the Byzantines and thus began to make their raids against the Franks who they saw as being easier to attack launching major raids against them in 596 Due to the shift in focus there was little activity in the Balkans from 595 to 597 13 Avar invasion 597 602 EditEmboldened by the plunder from the Franks the Avars resumed their raids across the Danube in autumn of 597 catching the Byzantines by surprise The Avars even caught Priscus army while it was still in its camp in Tomis and laid siege to it However they lifted the siege on 30 March 598 at the approach of a Byzantine army led by Comentiolus which had just crossed Mount Haemus and was marching along the Danube up to Zikidiba only 30 kilometres 19 mi from Tomis 14 For unknown reasons Priscus did not join Comentiolus when he pursued the Avars Comentiolus made camp at Iatrus however he was routed by the Avars and his troops had to fight their way back over the Haemus The Avars took advantage of this victory and advanced to Drizipera near Constantinople At Drizipera the Avar forces were struck by a plague leading to the death of a large portion of their army and seven sons of Bayan the Avar Khagan 15 Due to the threat posed by the Avar forces at Drizipera Comentiolus was replaced with Philippicus and recalled to Constantinople 16 Maurice assembled a force made up of the Circus Factions and his bodyguards to defend the Anastasian Wall 17 Maurice then paid off the Avars for a temporary truce 14 spending the rest of 598 in reorganizing his forces and analyzing how to improve the Byzantines strategy 17 In the same year the Byzantines concluded a peace treaty with the Avars which allowed the Byzantines to send expeditions into Wallachia 18 Ignoring the peace treaty the Byzantines made preparations to invade the Avars land Priscus set up expeditionary camp near Singidunum and wintered there in 598 599 In 599 Priscus and Comentiolus led their troops downstream to Viminacium and crossed the Danube Once on the north bank they defeated the Avars in the Battles of Viminacium This battle was significant as it was the first time the Avars suffered a major defeat in their home territory and also led to the deaths of several more of Bayan s sons After the battle Priscus led his forces north into the Pannonian plain engaging and defeating the Avars deep within their heartland Comentiolus meanwhile remained near the Danube to guard it 19 Priscus devastated the lands east of the Tisza inflicting heavy casualties on the Avars and Gepids 20 21 and defeating them in two further battles on the banks of the Tisza 22 In autumn 599 Comentiolus reopened the Gates of Trajan which had not been used by the Byzantines for decades In 601 Peter led troops to the banks of the Tisza to defend the Danube cataracts which were vital to the Byzantine Danube fleet s access to the cities of Sirmium and Singidunum 21 The next year in 602 the Antes began to invade the Avars land who were already on the brink of collapse due to the uprisings of several Avar tribes 23 one of whom even defected to the Byzantines 22 Second interlude 602 612 EditAfter being beaten back by the Byzantines under Maurice the Avars shifted their focus to Italy establishing diplomatic contact in 603 and attempting an invasion of North Italy in 610 7 The Balkan frontier was largely pacified for the first time since the reign of Anastasius I r 491 518 Maurice planned to repopulate the devastated lands which the Byzantines had recovered by settling Armenian peasants whose homeland was the eastern part opposite to the Western Balkan part in the Empire It was a deliberately enforced imperial strategy in order to prevent ethnic tribal consolidation as the independent rebellious forces as well as Romanizing the Slavic settlers already in the area Maurice also planned to lead further campaigns against the Avar Khaganate so as to either destroy them or force them into submission However Maurice was overthrown in 602 by Phocas as his army rebelled against the endless Balkan campaigning 24 Phocas promptly scrapped those plans 25 Phocas maintained the security of the Balkans during his reign from 602 to 610 although he did withdraw some forces from the Balkans in 605 in order to use them in the ongoing Byzantine Sassanid War of 602 628 There is no archaeological evidence of Slavic or Avar incursions during this time 26 27 While the lack of Byzantine action or presence may have encouraged the Avars 26 they did not attack Byzantine territory until c 615 when Emperor Heraclius r 610 641 withdrew his troops stationed in the Balkans in order to fend off the Persian advance in the East 7 Renewed Avar attacks 612 626 EditThe Avars who were likely encouraged by their successful campaigns against the Lombards in 610 and the Franks in 611 resumed their incursions some time after 612 By 614 with the Persian capture of Jerusalem it became clear to the Avars and their Slav subjects that retaliation from the Byzantines was extremely unlikely Chronicles of the 610s record wholesale pillaging with cities such as Justiniana Prima and Salona fallen 26 The cities of Naissus and Serdica were captured in 615 and the cities of Novae and Justiniana Prima were destroyed in 613 and 615 respectively The Slavs also raided in the Aegean as far as Crete in 623 During this time period there were three separate sieges of Thessalonica in 604 615 and 617 28 In 623 the Byzantine emperor Heraclius journeyed into Thrace in an attempt to agree peace with the Avar Khagan face to face Instead the Byzantines were ambushed with Heraclius narrowly escaping and most of his bodyguard and retainers being killed or captured 29 The Avar raids continued culminating in the Siege of Constantinople in 626 where the Avars were finally defeated 27 28 Siege of Constantinople 626 EditMain article Siege of Constantinople 626 The Siege of Constantinople in 626 depicted on the murals of the Moldovița Monastery Romania The Persian king Khosrau II after suffering reverses through Heraclius campaigns in the Persian rear resolved to launch a decisive strike 30 While general Shahin Vahmanzadegan was sent to stop Heraclius with 50 000 men Shahrbaraz was given command of a smaller army and ordered to slip by Heraclius flank and march for Chalcedon a Persian base across the Bosporus from Constantinople Khosrau II also made contact with the Khagan of the Avars to allow for a coordinated attack on Constantinople the Persians on the Asiatic side and the Avars from the European side 31 The Avar army approached Constantinople from Thrace and destroyed the Aqueduct of Valens 32 Because the Byzantine navy controlled the Bosporus strait the Persians could not send troops to the European side to aid the Avars 33 which cut off the Persian access to the Avars with the Persian expertise in siege warfare 34 Byzantine naval superiority also made communication between the two forces difficult 31 35 Constantinople s defenders were under the command of Patriarch Sergius and the patrician Bonus 36 A map of the environs of the siege On 29 June 626 the Avars and Persians began a coordinated assault upon the walls The Byzantine defenders had 12 000 well trained cavalry troops who were likely dismounted facing roughly 80 000 Avars and Sclaveni Slavs whose land was controlled by the Avars 30 Because the Persian base in Chalcedon had been established for many years it was not immediately obvious that a siege would take place It only became obvious to the Byzantines after the Avars began to move heavy siege equipment towards the Theodosian Walls Although the walls had been continuously bombarded for a month high morale had been maintained in the city Patriarch Sergius bolstered morale by leading processions along the tops of the walls carrying the Blachernitissa icon of the Virgin Mary 37 38 The peasantry around Constantinople were rallied by this religious zeal especially because both forces attacking Constantinople were non Christians 37 On August 7 a fleet of Persian rafts ferrying troops across the Bosporus to the European side were surrounded and destroyed by the Byzantine fleet The Sclaveni then attempted to attack the Sea Walls from across the Golden Horn while the Avars attacked the land walls However the Sclaveni boats were rammed and destroyed by the galleys of Bonus and the Avar land assaults on August 6 and 7 were repelled 39 At around this point the news that the Emperor s brother Theodore had decisively defeated Shahin arrived leading the Avars to retreat to the Balkan hinterland within two days They would never seriously threaten Constantinople again Even though the Persian army of Shahrbaraz still remained at Chalcedon the threat to Constantinople was over as the Persians could not use artillery from their side of the Bosporus 36 37 In thanks for the lifting of the siege and the supposed divine protection granted by the Virgin Mary the celebrated Akathist Hymn was written by an unknown author possibly Patriarch Sergius or George of Pisidia 40 41 Avar decline 626 822 Edit Reduction of Avar lands by Bulgars After failing to capture Constantinople the Avars rapidly began to decline before disintegrating entirely 42 due to both internal power struggles and conflicts with the Bulgars and Sclaveni 43 After their hegemony over various tribal peoples collapsed their land was further reduced by the Bulgars around 680 leaving behind a rump state which remained until their conquest by Charlemagne starting in 790 and ending in 803 7 References EditPrimary sources Edit De Administrando Imperio by the 10th century emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos 44 Strategikon attributed to Emperor Maurice 44 Miracula Sancti Demetrii by John Archbishop of Thessalonica 45 Surviving fragments of Menander Protector 7 Citations Edit a b c Petersen 2013 p 378 Petersen 2013 pp 379 382 Golden 2011 p 140 a b Mitchell 2007 p 405 Petersen 2013 pp 378 379 Mitchell 2007 p 406 a b c d e Petersen 2013 p 379 a b Petersen 2013 p 381 a b c Crawford 2013 p 25 Whitby 1998 p 159f Whitby 1998 p 160f Whitby 1998 p 161 Whitby 1998 pp 161 162 a b Whitby 1998 p 162 Whitby 1998 pp 162 163 Pohl 2002 p 153 a b Whitby 1998 p 163 Pohl 2002 p 154 Pohl 2002 p 156 Pohl 2002 p 157 a b Whitby 1998 p 164 a b Pohl 2002 p 158 Whitby 1998 p 165 Mitchell 2007 p 408 Whitby 1998 p 184f a b c Whitby 1998 p 187 a b Curta 2001 p 189 a b Maier 1973 p 81 Mitchell 2007 p 413 a b Norwich 1997 p 92 a b Oman 1893 p 210 Treadgold 1997 p 297 Kaegi 2003 pp 133 140 Dodgeon Greatrex amp Lieu 2002 pp 179 181 Kaegi 2003 p 134 a b Oman 1893 p 211 a b c Norwich 1997 p 93 Kaegi 2003 p 136 Kaegi 2003 p 137 Ekonomou 2008 p 285 Gambero 1999 p 338 Hupchick 2017 p 48 Chaliand 2014 p 81 a b Petersen 2013 p 380 Petersen 2013 p 383 Bibliography Edit Chaliand Gerard 2014 A Global History of War From Assyria to the Twenty First Century University of California Press ISBN 9780520959439 Crawford Peter 2013 The War of the Three Gods Romans Persians and the Rise of Islam Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 9781848846128 Curta Florin 2001 The Making of the Slavs History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region c 500 700 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139428880 Dodgeon Michael H Greatrex Geoffrey Lieu Samuel N C 2002 The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars AD 363 630 a Narrative Sourcebook Routledge ISBN 978 0415146876 Ekonomou Andrew J 2008 Byzantine Rome and the Greek Popes Eastern Influences on Rome and the Papacy from Gregory the Great to Zacharias AD 590 752 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0739119778 Gambero Luigi 1999 Mary and the Fathers of the Church The Blessed Virgin Mary in Patristic Thought Translated by Thomas Buffer Ignatius ISBN 978 0898706864 Golden Peter B 2011 Studies on the Peoples and Cultures of the Eurasian Steppes Editura Academiei Romane Editura Istros a Muzeului Brăilei ISBN 9789732721520 Hupchick Dennis P 2017 The Bulgarian Byzantine Wars for Early Medieval Balkan Hegemony Silver Lined Skulls and Blinded Armies Springer ISBN 9783319562063 Kaegi Walter Emil 2003 Heraclius Emperor of Byzantium CUP ISBN 978 0521814591 Maier Franz Georg 1973 Fischer World Histories Volume 13 Byzantium in German Fischer TB ASIN B007E1L89K Mitchell Stephen 2007 A History of the Later Roman Empire Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 0856 0 Norwich John Julius 1997 A Short History of Byzantium Knopf ISBN 978 0679450887 Oman Charles 1893 2012 XII Heraclius and Mohammed 610 641 In Arthur Hassall ed Europe 476 918 Periods of European History Vol Period I Macmillan ISBN 978 1272944186 Petersen Leif Inge Ree 2013 Siege Warfare and Military Organization in the Successor States 400 800 AD Byzantium the West and Islam BRILL ISBN 9789004254466 Pohl Walter 2002 The Avars a Steppe People in Central Europe 567 822 AD in German Beck ISBN 9783406489693 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Whitby Michael 1998 The Emperor Maurice and his Historian Theophylact Simocatta on Persian and Balkan Warfare Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 822945 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Avar Byzantine wars amp oldid 1119678150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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