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Battle of Andrassos

Battle of Andrassos
Part of the Arab–Byzantine wars

Depiction of the flight of Sayf al-Dawla from the Madrid Skylitzes
Date8 November 960
Location
Near Andrassos or Adrassos, in the pass of Kylindros (unidentified[a])
Result Byzantine victory
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire Hamdanid Emirate of Aleppo
Commanders and leaders
Leo Phokas the Younger
Constantine Maleinos
Sayf al-Dawla
Strength
Unknown, but considerably fewer variously from 3,000 to 30,000
Casualties and losses
Light Very heavy; reportedly only 300 cavalrymen escaped

The Battle of Andrassos or Adrassos was fought on 8 November 960 between the Byzantines, led by Leo Phokas the Younger, and the forces of the Hamdanid Emirate of Aleppo under the emir Sayf al-Dawla. It was fought in an unidentified mountain pass in the Taurus Mountains.

Sayf al-Dawla had established an emirate based in Aleppo in 945, and quickly emerged as the main Muslim antagonist of the Byzantine Empire on its eastern frontier. Both sides launched raids and counter-raids with alternating success: the Hamdanids invading the Byzantine provinces of Asia Minor, and the Byzantines raiding Hamdanid possessions in Upper Mesopotamia and northern Syria.

In mid-960, taking advantage of the absence of much of the Byzantine army on campaign against the Emirate of Crete, the Hamdanid prince launched another invasion of Asia Minor, and raided deeply and widely into the region of Cappadocia. On his return, however, his army was ambushed by Leo Phokas at the pass of Andrassos. Sayf al-Dawla himself barely escaped, but his army was annihilated.

Following a series of Byzantine successes in the previous years, the battle of Andrassos is considered by many scholars to have finally broken the power of the Hamdanid emirate. Having lost much of his strength, and increasingly beset by illness, Sayf al-Dawla would never again be able to raid as deeply into Byzantine territories. Led by Leo's brother Nikephoros Phokas, the Byzantines now launched a sustained offensive that by 969 had conquered Cilicia and northern Syria around Antioch, and resulted in the vassalization of Aleppo itself.

Background edit

In the middle of the 10th century, after a period of expansion on its eastern frontier, led by John Kourkouas, at the expense of the Muslim border emirates,[1] the Byzantine Empire was confronted by the Hamdanid prince Sayf al-Dawla. In 945, Sayf al-Dawla made Aleppo his capital, and soon established his authority across northern Syria, much of the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia), and what remained of the Abbasid Caliphate's frontier districts (thughūr) with Byzantium.[2] Committed to the spirit of jihad, during the following two decades the Hamdanid ruler emerged as the main enemy of the Byzantines. By the time of his death in 967, Sayf al-Dawla was said to have fought against the Byzantines in over forty battles.[3][4]

After his establishment in Aleppo, in winter 945–946 Sayf al-Dawla launched his first raid into Byzantine territory, but a truce was arranged and regular warfare between Sayf al-Dawla and the Byzantines began only in 948.[5][6] Initially, the Byzantines were led by the Domestic of the Schools (commander-in-chief) Bardas Phokas the Elder, but although he was capable enough as a subordinate commander, his tenure as commander-in-chief proved largely a failure.[7] In 948–950 the Byzantines scored a few successes, sacking the border fortresses of Hadath and Marash, and taking Theodosiopolis, putting an end to the Muslim border emirate there.[5][6][8] Bardas's second son, Leo, distinguished himself in these years, leading the capture of Hadath and a raid that reached the outskirts of Antioch and defeated a Hamdanid army.[9] In November 950 Leo scored a major success against Sayf al-Dawla, who had previously advanced deep into Byzantine Asia Minor from Cilicia and defeated Bardas in battle. Leo ambushed the Hamdanid army during its return journey in a mountain pass; Sayf al-Dawla lost 8,000 men and barely escaped himself.[6][9][10]

Sayf al-Dawla nevertheless rejected offers of peace from the Byzantines, and continued his raids. More importantly, he set about restoring the frontier fortresses of Cilicia and northern Syria, including at Marash and Hadath. Bardas Phokas repeatedly tried to hinder him, but was defeated each time, even losing his youngest son, Constantine, to Hamdanid captivity. In 955, Bardas's failures led to his replacement by his eldest son, Nikephoros Phokas.[6][11][12] Under the capable leadership of Nikephoros, Leo, and their nephew John Tzimiskes, the tide began to turn against the Hamdanid emir. In 956, Tzimiskes ambushed Sayf al-Dawla but the Hamdanid army, fighting amidst torrential rain, managed to drive the Byzantines back; at the same time, however, Leo Phokas defeated and captured Abu'l-Asha'ir, a cousin of Sayf al-Dawla, near Duluk. The city of Hadath was sacked again in 957, and Samosata in 958, after which Tzimiskes scored a major victory over Sayf al-Dawla himself. In 959, Leo Phokas raided through Cilicia to Diyar Bakr and back to Syria, leaving a trail of destruction behind him.[6][13][14]

Sayf al-Dawla's invasion of Cappadocia edit

 
Map of the Arab–Byzantine frontier zone in south-eastern Asia Minor, with the major fortresses.

In early summer 960, Sayf al-Dawla saw an opportunity to reverse his recent setbacks and re-establish his position: the best troops of the Byzantine army, and Nikephoros Phokas himself, departed the eastern front for an expedition against the Emirate of Crete.[15] With the Tarsiot troops he launched an invasion of Byzantine territory from Cilicia, while his lieutenant Naja launched a parallel raid from Mayyafariqin in the western Jazira.[16]

The task of confronting the Hamdanid emir fell on Leo Phokas, who according to the Byzantine chroniclers had been appointed as Domestic of the Schools of the West (i.e., of the European armies) following the accession of Romanos II in November 959 (with Nikephoros being named Domestic of the Schools of the East) and had just defeated a Magyar raid into Thrace in a daring night attack on their camp.[17][18][19] The 11th-century Christian Arab chronicler Yahya of Antioch, however, reports that Leo had been appointed Domestic of the East, and that he had remained on the eastern front throughout 959–960, leading raids into the Hamdanid domains up until the invasion of Sayf al-Dawla.[19] The forces at Phokas' disposal are unknown, but were clearly considerably inferior in numbers to the army of the Hamdanid ruler.[16]

At the head of a strong cavalry force—the numbers reported in the sources vary from 3,000 to as many as 30,000[20][21]—Sayf al-Dawla invaded Byzantine territory, and advanced unopposed as far as the fortress of Charsianon, capital of the theme of the same name. There he and his army sacked the fortress and massacred the garrison; they pillaged and torched the surrounding region and its settlements and took many prisoners.[22] Other than Charsianon, the invasion appears to have avoided fortified centres and cities. According to the historian William Garrood, this fact, along with the great depth of penetration, and the long duration of the raid, points to it being "a grand campaign of destabilisation of the border" rather than an expedition with specific targets in mind. Indeed, Garrood opines that after Charsianon, Sayf al-Dawla appears to have turned to the west in order to maximize the area devastated during the raid.[16]

Towards the end of autumn, Sayf al-Dawla finally began the journey home, taking his booty and prisoners with him. The contemporary Byzantine historian Leo the Deacon gives a vivid portrait of the Hamdanid prince, who, elated at the success of his raid and full of self-confidence, sped back and forth alongside his troops on his horse, a mare "of extraordinary size and speed", throwing his spear in the air and catching it again with remarkable dexterity.[23][24]

Ambush at Andrassos edit

In the meantime Leo Phokas, heavily outnumbered by the Arab army, decided to rely once more on his proven ambuscade tactics, and occupied a position in the Arabs' rear, awaiting their return.[25][26] Leo had been joined by the remaining forces of the adjoining provinces, including the theme of Cappadocia under its strategos, Constantine Maleinos, and occupied the narrow pass of Kylindros[a] on the south-western Taurus Mountains between Cilicia and Cappadocia. The Byzantine troops occupied the local fort, and hid themselves along the steep sides of the pass.[29][33][34] According to the Arab chronicler Abu'l-Fida, this was the same pass that Sayf al-Dawla had crossed to begin his expedition, and many of his commanders advised against using it for the return as well; the Tarsiots even recommended that he should follow them on their own, different return route. Nevertheless, the Hamdanid prince, confident of his ability and judgment, had grown haughty, and refused to heed any advice, seeking to reap the glory for this expedition alone.[31][35] The Tarsiots withdrew, and thus were preserved from the subsequent disaster.[36]

On 8 November 960, the Hamdanid army entered the pass, where, according to Leo the Deacon, they "had to crowd together in the very narrow and rough places, breaking their formations, and had to cross the steep section each one as best he could". Once the entire Arab force, including their train and their captives, was in the pass, with the vanguard already nearing the southern exit, Leo Phokas gave the signal for the attack. With the trumpets blaring, the Byzantine soldiers raised cries and charged the Arab columns, or threw rocks and tree trunks down the slopes on them. The ensuing battle was a complete rout. Many Arabs were killed—Leo the Deacon claims that their bones were still visible at the site years later—and even more were taken captive—John Skylitzes writes that so many prisoners were taken that the cities and farmsteads were filled with slaves. All the Christian captives were liberated and the booty recovered, while the treasure and baggage of Sayf al-Dawla himself were captured.[35][37][38] The Hamdanid prince himself barely managed to escape; Theophanes Continuatus claims that he was saved when a Byzantine renegade named John gave him his own horse to escape,[39] while Leo the Deacon reports that he threw gold and silver coins behind him to slow his pursuers.[40]

According to the 13th-century Syriac chronicler Bar Hebraeus, of the great expedition he had mustered, Sayf al-Dawla returned to Aleppo with only 300 horsemen.[41][42] Several of the most distinguished Hamdanid leaders fell or were captured at this battle. Some Arab sources mention the capture of Sayf al-Dawla's cousins Abu'l-Asha'ir and Abu Firas al-Hamdani, but most chroniclers and modern scholars place these events on different occasions (in 956 for Abu'l-Asha'ir, and 962 for Abu Firas).[43][44] His nephew Muhammad, son of Nasir al-Dawla, was captured,[16] while the qadi of Aleppo, Abu'l-Husayn al-Raqqi, was taken prisoner or fell in battle according to different accounts. Bar Hebraeus also records the deaths of the commanders "Hamid ibn Namus" and "Musa-Saya Khan".[42][45]

Leo Phokas released the Byzantine prisoners after providing them with provisions, and took the booty and Arab prisoners back to Constantinople, where he celebrated a triumph at the Hippodrome.[46][47] Indeed, the battle of Andrassos made a deep impression among contemporaries, provoking outbursts of celebration in the Empire, and grief and lamentation in the Syrian cities; it is mentioned by all historical sources of the time, and upheld in the contemporary Byzantine treatise De velitatione bellica ("On Skirmishing Warfare") as one of the chief examples of a successful ambush.[48]

Aftermath edit

Both contemporary Arab and modern historians, such as Marius Canard and J. B. Bikhazi, have commonly considered the defeat at Andrassos as a decisive engagement that destroyed Hamdanid offensive abilities for good, and opened the path for Nikephoros Phokas' subsequent exploits. The disasters inflicted on Sayf al-Dawla by the Byzantines over the following years are regarded as an inevitable consequence of this battle.[49][50][51] Garrood on the other hand argues that the Hamdanid ruler had been able to recover from similar failures on previous occasions, and that the forces of Naja and his Tarsiot allies remained intact; furthermore, unlike the disasters that followed, his personal authority does not appear to have been challenged in the aftermath of the battle.[52]

 
The capture of Aleppo by the Byzantines in late 962, from the Madrid Skylitzes

Nevertheless, Sayf al-Dawla's 960 raid was the last of this scale and ambition,[52] and the Byzantines did not allow him to recover his strength: as soon as Nikephoros Phokas returned victorious from Crete in mid-961, he resumed the offensive in the east. The Byzantines captured Anazarbus in Cilicia, and followed a deliberate policy of devastation and massacre to drive the Muslim population away. Sayf al-Dawla's attempts to halt the Byzantine advance in Cilicia failed, and Nikephoros Phokas, with an army reportedly 70,000 strong, took Marash, Sisium, Duluk and Manbij, securing the western passes over the Anti-Taurus Mountains. Sayf al-Dawla sent his army north under Nadja to meet the Byzantines, but Nikephoros ignored them. Instead, the Byzantine general led his troops south and in mid-December they suddenly appeared before Aleppo. There they defeated an improvised army before the city walls. The Byzantines stormed the city and plundered it, except for the citadel, which continued to hold out. The Byzantines departed in early 963, taking much of the populace with them as captives.[53][54][55] In 963, following the death of Emperor Romanos II, Nikephoros turned his attention to the power struggle that saw him ascend the imperial throne.[56]

The defeats of the previous years, and particularly the sack of Aleppo, had dealt an irreversible blow on Sayf al-Dawla's power and authority. From then on, until his death, Sayf al-Dawla's rule would be plagued by revolts and disputes between his subordinates.[57] At the same time, the Hamdanid prince also suffered from physical decline, with the onset of hemiplegia, as well as worsening intestinal and urinary disorders, that confined him to a litter. The disease limited Sayf al-Dawla's ability to intervene personally in the affairs of his state; he soon abandoned Aleppo to the charge of his chamberlain, Qarquya, and spent most of his final years in Mayyafariqin, leaving his senior lieutenants to carry the burden of warfare against the Byzantines and the various rebellions that increasingly occurred in his domains.[54][58]

In autumn 964, Nikephoros, now emperor, campaigned in the east. Mopsuestia was besieged but held out. Nikephoros returned in the next year, stormed the city and deported its inhabitants. On 16 August 965, Tarsus was surrendered by its inhabitants. Cilicia became a Byzantine province, and Nikephoros re-Christianized it.[53][59][60] Amidst rebellions and Byzantine raids as far as the Jazira, Sayf al-Dawla died at Aleppo in February 967.[61][62][63]

His son and successor, Sa'd al-Dawla, faced constant internal turmoil, and he did not secure control of his own capital until 977.[64] On 28 October 969, Antioch fell to the Byzantines.[65][66] The fall of the great metropolis of northern Syria was soon followed by a treaty between the Byzantines and Qarquya, the ruler of Aleppo, which made the city a tributary vassal. Byzantine rule was extended over the entirety of the former thughūr, as well as the coastal strip of Syria between the Mediterranean Sea and the Orontes River until the environs of Tripoli, Arqa, and Shayzar.[67][68] The rump Emirate of Aleppo was left almost powerless and became a bone of contention between the Byzantines and the new power of the Middle East, the Fatimid Caliphate of Egypt.[69]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b The Arab sources call the pass Darb maghārat al-kuḥl or al-kudjuk; the Byzantine sources either name it "Andrassos" (Ἀνδρασσός) after a nearby fortress or refer to it as the "defile called Kylindros" (Κύλινδρος).[27][28] The location has been long disputed: Schlumberger placed it in the eastern Taurus range;[29] William Mitchell Ramsay suggested identifying Andrassos with Adrasus in Isauria (modern Balabolu on Mount Adras Dağı[30]) and Kylindros with Kelenderis in Cilicia, but this was rejected by Ernst Honigmann [de] and Marius Canard as it would have placed Sayf al-Dawla's flight route by the Byzantine stronghold of Seleucia, as well as having to pass by Tarsus, whereas it is clearly stated that he fled to Syria by way of al-Massissa (Mopsuestia), further east of Tarsus;[31] Honigmann suggested identifying Andrassos with the pass still known in the early 20th century as al-Kussuk, near Çayhan,[31] but later rejected his own hypothesis, as well as that of Canard identifying it with Ince Mağara on the left bank of the Saros River.[32] The issue remains unresolved, and the modern editors of the Tabula Imperii Byzantini [de] volume for Cappadocia consider Kylindros as unidentified location that "must be sought on a route from Ariaratheia via Kukusos to Mopsuestia".[33]

References edit

  1. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 479–484.
  2. ^ Bianquis 1997, p. 105.
  3. ^ Bianquis 1997, pp. 106–107.
  4. ^ Schlumberger 1890, pp. 119–121.
  5. ^ a b Schlumberger 1890, p. 132.
  6. ^ a b c d e Bianquis 1997, p. 107.
  7. ^ Whittow 1996, pp. 322–323.
  8. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 487, 489.
  9. ^ a b Treadgold 1997, p. 489.
  10. ^ Schlumberger 1890, pp. 132–133.
  11. ^ Schlumberger 1890, pp. 133–134.
  12. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 492.
  13. ^ Schlumberger 1890, pp. 134–136.
  14. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 492–493.
  15. ^ Schlumberger 1890, p. 136.
  16. ^ a b c d Garrood 2008, p. 131.
  17. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 494–495.
  18. ^ Talbot & Sullivan 2005, pp. 70–72.
  19. ^ a b Prosopographie der mittelbyz. Zeit, Leon Phokas (#24423).
  20. ^ Schlumberger 1890, p. 139.
  21. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 495.
  22. ^ Schlumberger 1890, pp. 139–140.
  23. ^ Talbot & Sullivan 2005, p. 74.
  24. ^ Schlumberger 1890, p. 140.
  25. ^ Talbot & Sullivan 2005, pp. 72–74.
  26. ^ Stouraitis 2003, Chapter 2, esp. note 2.
  27. ^ Honigmann 1935, pp. 85–86.
  28. ^ Hild & Restle 1981, p. 218.
  29. ^ a b Schlumberger 1890, p. 142.
  30. ^ Hild & Hellenkemper 1990, p. 159.
  31. ^ a b c Honigmann 1935, p. 86.
  32. ^ Markopoulos 1979, p. 112.
  33. ^ a b Hild & Restle 1981, pp. 90, 218–219.
  34. ^ Stouraitis 2003, Chapter 2.
  35. ^ a b Schlumberger 1890, pp. 142–143.
  36. ^ Garrood 2008, pp. 131–132.
  37. ^ Talbot & Sullivan 2005, pp. 74–75.
  38. ^ Wortley 2010, p. 241.
  39. ^ Prosopographie der mittelbyz. Zeit, Ioannes (#23093).
  40. ^ Talbot & Sullivan 2005, p. 75.
  41. ^ Schlumberger 1890, p. 143.
  42. ^ a b Wallis Budge 1932, p. 184.
  43. ^ Schlumberger 1890, pp. 143–144.
  44. ^ Prosopographie der mittelbyz. Zeit, Abū Firās al-Ḥāriṯ b. Saʻīd b. Ḥamdān (#20051); Abū l-‘Ašā’ir (#20040).
  45. ^ Schlumberger 1890, p. 144.
  46. ^ Talbot & Sullivan 2005, pp. 75–76.
  47. ^ Schlumberger 1890, p. 146.
  48. ^ Schlumberger 1890, pp. 144–145.
  49. ^ Garrood 2008, pp. 132, 134.
  50. ^ Stouraitis 2003, Chapter 3.
  51. ^ Hild & Restle 1981, p. 90.
  52. ^ a b Garrood 2008, p. 132.
  53. ^ a b Bianquis 1997, p. 108.
  54. ^ a b Treadgold 1997, pp. 495–497.
  55. ^ Garrood 2008, pp. 132–134.
  56. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 498–499.
  57. ^ Garrood 2008, pp. 134–135.
  58. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 279.
  59. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 499–501.
  60. ^ Garrood 2008, pp. 135–138.
  61. ^ Bianquis 1997, pp. 108–109.
  62. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 501–502.
  63. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 279–280.
  64. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 280.
  65. ^ Honigmann 1935, p. 94.
  66. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 504–505.
  67. ^ Honigmann 1935, pp. 94–97.
  68. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 507.
  69. ^ Kennedy 2004, pp. 280–282.

Sources edit

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  • Garrood, William (2008). "The Byzantine Conquest of Cilicia and the Hamdanids of Aleppo, 959–965". Anatolian Studies. 58: 127–140. doi:10.1017/s006615460000870x. ISSN 0066-1546. JSTOR 20455416. S2CID 162596738.
  • Hild, Friedrich; Restle, Marcell (1981). Tabula Imperii Byzantini, Band 2: Kappadokien (Kappadokia, Charsianon, Sebasteia und Lykandos) (in German). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. ISBN 978-3-7001-0401-8.
  • Hild, Friedrich; Hellenkemper, Hansgerd (1990). Tabula Imperii Byzantini, Band 5: Kilikien und Isaurien (in German). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. ISBN 978-3-7001-1811-4.
  • Honigmann, E. (1935). Byzance et les Arabes, Tome III: Die Ostgrenze des Byzantinischen Reiches von 363 bis 1071 nach griechischen, arabischen, syrischen und armenischen Quellen (in German). Brussels: Éditions de l'Institut de Philologie et d'Histoire Orientales.
  • Kennedy, Hugh (2004). The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century (Second ed.). Harlow: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-40525-7.
  • Lilie, Ralph-Johannes; Ludwig, Claudia; Pratsch, Thomas; Zielke, Beate (2013). Prosopographie der mittelbyzantinischen Zeit Online. Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Nach Vorarbeiten F. Winkelmanns erstellt (in German). Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter.
  • Markopoulos, A. (1979). "Le témoignage du Vaticanus gr. 163 pour la période entre 945–963". Byzantina Symmeikta (in French). 3: 83–119. doi:10.12681/byzsym.663. ISSN 1105-1639.
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battle, andrassos, part, arab, byzantine, warsdepiction, flight, sayf, dawla, from, madrid, skylitzesdate8, november, 960locationnear, andrassos, adrassos, pass, kylindros, unidentified, resultbyzantine, victorybelligerentsbyzantine, empirehamdanid, emirate, a. Battle of AndrassosPart of the Arab Byzantine warsDepiction of the flight of Sayf al Dawla from the Madrid SkylitzesDate8 November 960LocationNear Andrassos or Adrassos in the pass of Kylindros unidentified a ResultByzantine victoryBelligerentsByzantine EmpireHamdanid Emirate of AleppoCommanders and leadersLeo Phokas the YoungerConstantine MaleinosSayf al DawlaStrengthUnknown but considerably fewervariously from 3 000 to 30 000Casualties and lossesLightVery heavy reportedly only 300 cavalrymen escaped The Battle of Andrassos or Adrassos was fought on 8 November 960 between the Byzantines led by Leo Phokas the Younger and the forces of the Hamdanid Emirate of Aleppo under the emir Sayf al Dawla It was fought in an unidentified mountain pass in the Taurus Mountains Sayf al Dawla had established an emirate based in Aleppo in 945 and quickly emerged as the main Muslim antagonist of the Byzantine Empire on its eastern frontier Both sides launched raids and counter raids with alternating success the Hamdanids invading the Byzantine provinces of Asia Minor and the Byzantines raiding Hamdanid possessions in Upper Mesopotamia and northern Syria In mid 960 taking advantage of the absence of much of the Byzantine army on campaign against the Emirate of Crete the Hamdanid prince launched another invasion of Asia Minor and raided deeply and widely into the region of Cappadocia On his return however his army was ambushed by Leo Phokas at the pass of Andrassos Sayf al Dawla himself barely escaped but his army was annihilated Following a series of Byzantine successes in the previous years the battle of Andrassos is considered by many scholars to have finally broken the power of the Hamdanid emirate Having lost much of his strength and increasingly beset by illness Sayf al Dawla would never again be able to raid as deeply into Byzantine territories Led by Leo s brother Nikephoros Phokas the Byzantines now launched a sustained offensive that by 969 had conquered Cilicia and northern Syria around Antioch and resulted in the vassalization of Aleppo itself Contents 1 Background 2 Sayf al Dawla s invasion of Cappadocia 3 Ambush at Andrassos 4 Aftermath 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 SourcesBackground editIn the middle of the 10th century after a period of expansion on its eastern frontier led by John Kourkouas at the expense of the Muslim border emirates 1 the Byzantine Empire was confronted by the Hamdanid prince Sayf al Dawla In 945 Sayf al Dawla made Aleppo his capital and soon established his authority across northern Syria much of the Jazira Upper Mesopotamia and what remained of the Abbasid Caliphate s frontier districts thughur with Byzantium 2 Committed to the spirit of jihad during the following two decades the Hamdanid ruler emerged as the main enemy of the Byzantines By the time of his death in 967 Sayf al Dawla was said to have fought against the Byzantines in over forty battles 3 4 After his establishment in Aleppo in winter 945 946 Sayf al Dawla launched his first raid into Byzantine territory but a truce was arranged and regular warfare between Sayf al Dawla and the Byzantines began only in 948 5 6 Initially the Byzantines were led by the Domestic of the Schools commander in chief Bardas Phokas the Elder but although he was capable enough as a subordinate commander his tenure as commander in chief proved largely a failure 7 In 948 950 the Byzantines scored a few successes sacking the border fortresses of Hadath and Marash and taking Theodosiopolis putting an end to the Muslim border emirate there 5 6 8 Bardas s second son Leo distinguished himself in these years leading the capture of Hadath and a raid that reached the outskirts of Antioch and defeated a Hamdanid army 9 In November 950 Leo scored a major success against Sayf al Dawla who had previously advanced deep into Byzantine Asia Minor from Cilicia and defeated Bardas in battle Leo ambushed the Hamdanid army during its return journey in a mountain pass Sayf al Dawla lost 8 000 men and barely escaped himself 6 9 10 Sayf al Dawla nevertheless rejected offers of peace from the Byzantines and continued his raids More importantly he set about restoring the frontier fortresses of Cilicia and northern Syria including at Marash and Hadath Bardas Phokas repeatedly tried to hinder him but was defeated each time even losing his youngest son Constantine to Hamdanid captivity In 955 Bardas s failures led to his replacement by his eldest son Nikephoros Phokas 6 11 12 Under the capable leadership of Nikephoros Leo and their nephew John Tzimiskes the tide began to turn against the Hamdanid emir In 956 Tzimiskes ambushed Sayf al Dawla but the Hamdanid army fighting amidst torrential rain managed to drive the Byzantines back at the same time however Leo Phokas defeated and captured Abu l Asha ir a cousin of Sayf al Dawla near Duluk The city of Hadath was sacked again in 957 and Samosata in 958 after which Tzimiskes scored a major victory over Sayf al Dawla himself In 959 Leo Phokas raided through Cilicia to Diyar Bakr and back to Syria leaving a trail of destruction behind him 6 13 14 Sayf al Dawla s invasion of Cappadocia edit nbsp Map of the Arab Byzantine frontier zone in south eastern Asia Minor with the major fortresses In early summer 960 Sayf al Dawla saw an opportunity to reverse his recent setbacks and re establish his position the best troops of the Byzantine army and Nikephoros Phokas himself departed the eastern front for an expedition against the Emirate of Crete 15 With the Tarsiot troops he launched an invasion of Byzantine territory from Cilicia while his lieutenant Naja launched a parallel raid from Mayyafariqin in the western Jazira 16 The task of confronting the Hamdanid emir fell on Leo Phokas who according to the Byzantine chroniclers had been appointed as Domestic of the Schools of the West i e of the European armies following the accession of Romanos II in November 959 with Nikephoros being named Domestic of the Schools of the East and had just defeated a Magyar raid into Thrace in a daring night attack on their camp 17 18 19 The 11th century Christian Arab chronicler Yahya of Antioch however reports that Leo had been appointed Domestic of the East and that he had remained on the eastern front throughout 959 960 leading raids into the Hamdanid domains up until the invasion of Sayf al Dawla 19 The forces at Phokas disposal are unknown but were clearly considerably inferior in numbers to the army of the Hamdanid ruler 16 At the head of a strong cavalry force the numbers reported in the sources vary from 3 000 to as many as 30 000 20 21 Sayf al Dawla invaded Byzantine territory and advanced unopposed as far as the fortress of Charsianon capital of the theme of the same name There he and his army sacked the fortress and massacred the garrison they pillaged and torched the surrounding region and its settlements and took many prisoners 22 Other than Charsianon the invasion appears to have avoided fortified centres and cities According to the historian William Garrood this fact along with the great depth of penetration and the long duration of the raid points to it being a grand campaign of destabilisation of the border rather than an expedition with specific targets in mind Indeed Garrood opines that after Charsianon Sayf al Dawla appears to have turned to the west in order to maximize the area devastated during the raid 16 Towards the end of autumn Sayf al Dawla finally began the journey home taking his booty and prisoners with him The contemporary Byzantine historian Leo the Deacon gives a vivid portrait of the Hamdanid prince who elated at the success of his raid and full of self confidence sped back and forth alongside his troops on his horse a mare of extraordinary size and speed throwing his spear in the air and catching it again with remarkable dexterity 23 24 Ambush at Andrassos editIn the meantime Leo Phokas heavily outnumbered by the Arab army decided to rely once more on his proven ambuscade tactics and occupied a position in the Arabs rear awaiting their return 25 26 Leo had been joined by the remaining forces of the adjoining provinces including the theme of Cappadocia under its strategos Constantine Maleinos and occupied the narrow pass of Kylindros a on the south western Taurus Mountains between Cilicia and Cappadocia The Byzantine troops occupied the local fort and hid themselves along the steep sides of the pass 29 33 34 According to the Arab chronicler Abu l Fida this was the same pass that Sayf al Dawla had crossed to begin his expedition and many of his commanders advised against using it for the return as well the Tarsiots even recommended that he should follow them on their own different return route Nevertheless the Hamdanid prince confident of his ability and judgment had grown haughty and refused to heed any advice seeking to reap the glory for this expedition alone 31 35 The Tarsiots withdrew and thus were preserved from the subsequent disaster 36 On 8 November 960 the Hamdanid army entered the pass where according to Leo the Deacon they had to crowd together in the very narrow and rough places breaking their formations and had to cross the steep section each one as best he could Once the entire Arab force including their train and their captives was in the pass with the vanguard already nearing the southern exit Leo Phokas gave the signal for the attack With the trumpets blaring the Byzantine soldiers raised cries and charged the Arab columns or threw rocks and tree trunks down the slopes on them The ensuing battle was a complete rout Many Arabs were killed Leo the Deacon claims that their bones were still visible at the site years later and even more were taken captive John Skylitzes writes that so many prisoners were taken that the cities and farmsteads were filled with slaves All the Christian captives were liberated and the booty recovered while the treasure and baggage of Sayf al Dawla himself were captured 35 37 38 The Hamdanid prince himself barely managed to escape Theophanes Continuatus claims that he was saved when a Byzantine renegade named John gave him his own horse to escape 39 while Leo the Deacon reports that he threw gold and silver coins behind him to slow his pursuers 40 According to the 13th century Syriac chronicler Bar Hebraeus of the great expedition he had mustered Sayf al Dawla returned to Aleppo with only 300 horsemen 41 42 Several of the most distinguished Hamdanid leaders fell or were captured at this battle Some Arab sources mention the capture of Sayf al Dawla s cousins Abu l Asha ir and Abu Firas al Hamdani but most chroniclers and modern scholars place these events on different occasions in 956 for Abu l Asha ir and 962 for Abu Firas 43 44 His nephew Muhammad son of Nasir al Dawla was captured 16 while the qadi of Aleppo Abu l Husayn al Raqqi was taken prisoner or fell in battle according to different accounts Bar Hebraeus also records the deaths of the commanders Hamid ibn Namus and Musa Saya Khan 42 45 Leo Phokas released the Byzantine prisoners after providing them with provisions and took the booty and Arab prisoners back to Constantinople where he celebrated a triumph at the Hippodrome 46 47 Indeed the battle of Andrassos made a deep impression among contemporaries provoking outbursts of celebration in the Empire and grief and lamentation in the Syrian cities it is mentioned by all historical sources of the time and upheld in the contemporary Byzantine treatise De velitatione bellica On Skirmishing Warfare as one of the chief examples of a successful ambush 48 Aftermath editBoth contemporary Arab and modern historians such as Marius Canard and J B Bikhazi have commonly considered the defeat at Andrassos as a decisive engagement that destroyed Hamdanid offensive abilities for good and opened the path for Nikephoros Phokas subsequent exploits The disasters inflicted on Sayf al Dawla by the Byzantines over the following years are regarded as an inevitable consequence of this battle 49 50 51 Garrood on the other hand argues that the Hamdanid ruler had been able to recover from similar failures on previous occasions and that the forces of Naja and his Tarsiot allies remained intact furthermore unlike the disasters that followed his personal authority does not appear to have been challenged in the aftermath of the battle 52 nbsp The capture of Aleppo by the Byzantines in late 962 from the Madrid Skylitzes Nevertheless Sayf al Dawla s 960 raid was the last of this scale and ambition 52 and the Byzantines did not allow him to recover his strength as soon as Nikephoros Phokas returned victorious from Crete in mid 961 he resumed the offensive in the east The Byzantines captured Anazarbus in Cilicia and followed a deliberate policy of devastation and massacre to drive the Muslim population away Sayf al Dawla s attempts to halt the Byzantine advance in Cilicia failed and Nikephoros Phokas with an army reportedly 70 000 strong took Marash Sisium Duluk and Manbij securing the western passes over the Anti Taurus Mountains Sayf al Dawla sent his army north under Nadja to meet the Byzantines but Nikephoros ignored them Instead the Byzantine general led his troops south and in mid December they suddenly appeared before Aleppo There they defeated an improvised army before the city walls The Byzantines stormed the city and plundered it except for the citadel which continued to hold out The Byzantines departed in early 963 taking much of the populace with them as captives 53 54 55 In 963 following the death of Emperor Romanos II Nikephoros turned his attention to the power struggle that saw him ascend the imperial throne 56 The defeats of the previous years and particularly the sack of Aleppo had dealt an irreversible blow on Sayf al Dawla s power and authority From then on until his death Sayf al Dawla s rule would be plagued by revolts and disputes between his subordinates 57 At the same time the Hamdanid prince also suffered from physical decline with the onset of hemiplegia as well as worsening intestinal and urinary disorders that confined him to a litter The disease limited Sayf al Dawla s ability to intervene personally in the affairs of his state he soon abandoned Aleppo to the charge of his chamberlain Qarquya and spent most of his final years in Mayyafariqin leaving his senior lieutenants to carry the burden of warfare against the Byzantines and the various rebellions that increasingly occurred in his domains 54 58 In autumn 964 Nikephoros now emperor campaigned in the east Mopsuestia was besieged but held out Nikephoros returned in the next year stormed the city and deported its inhabitants On 16 August 965 Tarsus was surrendered by its inhabitants Cilicia became a Byzantine province and Nikephoros re Christianized it 53 59 60 Amidst rebellions and Byzantine raids as far as the Jazira Sayf al Dawla died at Aleppo in February 967 61 62 63 His son and successor Sa d al Dawla faced constant internal turmoil and he did not secure control of his own capital until 977 64 On 28 October 969 Antioch fell to the Byzantines 65 66 The fall of the great metropolis of northern Syria was soon followed by a treaty between the Byzantines and Qarquya the ruler of Aleppo which made the city a tributary vassal Byzantine rule was extended over the entirety of the former thughur as well as the coastal strip of Syria between the Mediterranean Sea and the Orontes River until the environs of Tripoli Arqa and Shayzar 67 68 The rump Emirate of Aleppo was left almost powerless and became a bone of contention between the Byzantines and the new power of the Middle East the Fatimid Caliphate of Egypt 69 Footnotes edit a b The Arab sources call the pass Darb magharat al kuḥl or al kudjuk the Byzantine sources either name it Andrassos Ἀndrassos after a nearby fortress or refer to it as the defile called Kylindros Kylindros 27 28 The location has been long disputed Schlumberger placed it in the eastern Taurus range 29 William Mitchell Ramsay suggested identifying Andrassos with Adrasus in Isauria modern Balabolu on Mount Adras Dagi 30 and Kylindros with Kelenderis in Cilicia but this was rejected by Ernst Honigmann de and Marius Canard as it would have placed Sayf al Dawla s flight route by the Byzantine stronghold of Seleucia as well as having to pass by Tarsus whereas it is clearly stated that he fled to Syria by way of al Massissa Mopsuestia further east of Tarsus 31 Honigmann suggested identifying Andrassos with the pass still known in the early 20th century as al Kussuk near Cayhan 31 but later rejected his own hypothesis as well as that of Canard identifying it with Ince Magara on the left bank of the Saros River 32 The issue remains unresolved and the modern editors of the Tabula Imperii Byzantini de volume for Cappadocia consider Kylindros as unidentified location that must be sought on a route from Ariaratheia via Kukusos to Mopsuestia 33 References edit Treadgold 1997 pp 479 484 Bianquis 1997 p 105 Bianquis 1997 pp 106 107 Schlumberger 1890 pp 119 121 a b Schlumberger 1890 p 132 a b c d e Bianquis 1997 p 107 Whittow 1996 pp 322 323 Treadgold 1997 pp 487 489 a b Treadgold 1997 p 489 Schlumberger 1890 pp 132 133 Schlumberger 1890 pp 133 134 Treadgold 1997 p 492 Schlumberger 1890 pp 134 136 Treadgold 1997 pp 492 493 Schlumberger 1890 p 136 a b c d Garrood 2008 p 131 Treadgold 1997 pp 494 495 Talbot amp Sullivan 2005 pp 70 72 a b Prosopographie der mittelbyz Zeit Leon Phokas 24423 Schlumberger 1890 p 139 Treadgold 1997 p 495 Schlumberger 1890 pp 139 140 Talbot amp Sullivan 2005 p 74 Schlumberger 1890 p 140 Talbot amp Sullivan 2005 pp 72 74 Stouraitis 2003 Chapter 2 esp note 2 Honigmann 1935 pp 85 86 Hild amp Restle 1981 p 218 a b Schlumberger 1890 p 142 Hild amp Hellenkemper 1990 p 159 a b c Honigmann 1935 p 86 Markopoulos 1979 p 112 a b Hild amp Restle 1981 pp 90 218 219 Stouraitis 2003 Chapter 2 a b Schlumberger 1890 pp 142 143 Garrood 2008 pp 131 132 Talbot amp Sullivan 2005 pp 74 75 Wortley 2010 p 241 Prosopographie der mittelbyz Zeit Ioannes 23093 Talbot amp Sullivan 2005 p 75 Schlumberger 1890 p 143 a b Wallis Budge 1932 p 184 Schlumberger 1890 pp 143 144 Prosopographie der mittelbyz Zeit Abu Firas al Ḥariṯ b Saʻid b Ḥamdan 20051 Abu l Asa ir 20040 Schlumberger 1890 p 144 Talbot amp Sullivan 2005 pp 75 76 Schlumberger 1890 p 146 Schlumberger 1890 pp 144 145 Garrood 2008 pp 132 134 Stouraitis 2003 Chapter 3 Hild amp Restle 1981 p 90 a b Garrood 2008 p 132 a b Bianquis 1997 p 108 a b Treadgold 1997 pp 495 497 Garrood 2008 pp 132 134 Treadgold 1997 pp 498 499 Garrood 2008 pp 134 135 Kennedy 2004 p 279 Treadgold 1997 pp 499 501 Garrood 2008 pp 135 138 Bianquis 1997 pp 108 109 Treadgold 1997 pp 501 502 Kennedy 2004 pp 279 280 Kennedy 2004 p 280 Honigmann 1935 p 94 Treadgold 1997 pp 504 505 Honigmann 1935 pp 94 97 Treadgold 1997 p 507 Kennedy 2004 pp 280 282 Sources editBianquis Thierry 1997 Sayf al Dawla In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Lecomte G eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume IX San Sze Leiden E J Brill pp 103 110 ISBN 978 90 04 10422 8 Garrood William 2008 The Byzantine Conquest of Cilicia and the Hamdanids of Aleppo 959 965 Anatolian Studies 58 127 140 doi 10 1017 s006615460000870x ISSN 0066 1546 JSTOR 20455416 S2CID 162596738 Hild Friedrich Restle Marcell 1981 Tabula Imperii Byzantini Band 2 Kappadokien Kappadokia Charsianon Sebasteia und Lykandos in German Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften ISBN 978 3 7001 0401 8 Hild Friedrich Hellenkemper Hansgerd 1990 Tabula Imperii Byzantini Band 5 Kilikien und Isaurien in German Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften ISBN 978 3 7001 1811 4 Honigmann E 1935 Byzance et les Arabes Tome III Die Ostgrenze des Byzantinischen Reiches von 363 bis 1071 nach griechischen arabischen syrischen und armenischen Quellen in German Brussels Editions de l Institut de Philologie et d Histoire Orientales Kennedy Hugh 2004 The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century Second ed Harlow Longman ISBN 978 0 582 40525 7 Lilie Ralph Johannes Ludwig Claudia Pratsch Thomas Zielke Beate 2013 Prosopographie der mittelbyzantinischen Zeit Online Berlin Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften Nach Vorarbeiten F Winkelmanns erstellt in German Berlin and Boston De Gruyter Markopoulos A 1979 Le temoignage du Vaticanus gr 163 pour la periode entre 945 963 Byzantina Symmeikta in French 3 83 119 doi 10 12681 byzsym 663 ISSN 1105 1639 Schlumberger Gustave 1890 Un empereur byzantin au dixieme siecle Nicephore Phocas in French Paris Librairie de Firmin Didot et Cie Stouraitis Ioannis 2003 Battle at the Straights of Andrasus 960 Encyclopedia of the Hellenic World Foundation of the Hellenic World Archived from the original on 19 January 2019 Retrieved 15 November 2016 Talbot Alice Mary Sullivan Dennis F eds 2005 The History of Leo the Deacon Byzantine Military Expansion in the Tenth Century Washington DC Dumbarton Oaks ISBN 978 0 88402 324 1 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Wallis Budge Ernest A ed 1932 Bar Hebraeus Chronography Translated from Syriac London Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 22 June 2012 Whittow Mark 1996 The Making of Byzantium 600 1025 Berkeley and Los Angeles California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20496 6 Wortley John ed 2010 John Skylitzes A Synopsis of Byzantine History 811 1057 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76705 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Andrassos amp oldid 1141374903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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