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Battle of Antioch on the Meander

Battle of Antioch on the Meander
Part of the Byzantine-Seljuk Wars

Map of southeastern Europe and Asia Minor, showing the Nicaean Empire and Seljuk Sultanate ca. 1210.
DateProbably 17 June 1211[1]
Location
Result Nicaean victory
Belligerents
Empire of Nicaea Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm
Commanders and leaders
Theodore I Laskaris Kaykhusraw I 
Alexios III Angelos (POW)
Strength

2,000 cavalry[2]

  • 800 Latin cavalry[3]
5,000–11,000[4]
Casualties and losses
Most of the Latins died[3] Heavy

The Battle of Antioch on the Meander (also known as the Battle of Alaşehir[5]) was a military engagement near Antioch-on-the-Meander between the forces of the Empire of Nicaea and the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm. The Turkish defeat ensured continued Nicaean hegemony of the Aegean coast of Asia Minor. The Seljuk sultan, Kaykhusraw I, was killed on the field of battle. The battle took place near the modern town of Yamalak in Kuyucak district in Aydın Province.

Background edit

Following the capture of Constantinople by the forces of the Fourth Crusade (1204) and the partition of the Byzantine Empire, Theodore Laskaris (r. 1205–1222), crowned emperor in 1208, built up a power base in the former Byzantine territory of western Anatolia. This new polity was to become known as the Empire of Nicaea.[6] Nicaea was one of the main Greek successor states that claimed the heritage of the Byzantine Empire, the other successor states were Epirus and later the Empire of Thessalonica in western Greece. Nicaea was threatened from the north by the new Latin Empire established by the Crusaders, and from the east by the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum.

The peace with the Seljuks was disturbed through the arrival, in early 1211, of the former Byzantine Emperor Alexios III (r. 1195–1203), at the port of Attaleia. The subsequent events are described in some detail by a number of near-contemporary sources, chiefly the chroniclers Ibn al-Athir and Ibn Bibi on the Seljuk side and the histories of George Akropolites and Nikephoros Gregoras on the Byzantine side, as well as references in other chronicles and the orations in honour of Theodore Laskaris by Niketas Choniates.[7]

Alexios had fled Constantinople on the approach of the Crusaders in 1203, but had not given up on his rights to the throne, and was determined to reclaim it. In 1203–1205, he had wandered across Greece, seeking the support of powerful local grandees, before being captured by Boniface of Montferrat and held captive until ransomed by his first cousin, Michael of Epirus, in 1210.[8] Although Theodore Laskaris was Alexios's son-in-law, having married his daughter Anna, Alexios resolved to seek the aid of the Seljuk sultan, Kaykhusraw I (r. 1192–1196 and 1205–1211), with whom he had close relations: Alexios had sheltered him in Constantinople during the latter's exile, and George Akropolites claims that the two fled from Constantinople together in 1203.[9][10]

The sultan welcomed Alexios warmly, and the deposed emperor, after reminding the sultan of the succour he had given him, promised him rich rewards if he would help restore him to his throne. Kaykhusraw, having found in supporting Alexios's cause a perfect pretext for attacking Nicaean territory, sent an emissary to Theodore at Nicaea, calling upon him to relinquish his domains to the legitimate emperor. Theodore refused to reply to the sultan's demands, and the sultan assembled his army and invaded Laskaris' domains.[11][12]

Battle edit

 
Theodore I Laskaris (r. 1205–1222), 15th-century manuscript.

Kaykhusraw's army, with Alexios III in tow, laid siege to Antioch on the Maeander, which he hoped to use as a base to subdue the rest of the Meander Valley. The size of the Seljuk force is unknown. The hagiographer George of Pelagonia in his hagiography estimates it at 60,000, clearly an impossible figure, and even Gregoras's 20,000 seems to be exaggerated. Nevertheless, it was clearly a considerably larger force than the army Theodore managed to scrape together: both Gregoras and Akropolites put it at 2,000 men (3,000 according to George of Pelagonia), of whom 800 were Latin[n 1] and the rest Byzantine Greeks.[13][14] Laskaris marched his army from Nicaea over the Mysian Olympus and reached Philadelphia in eleven days (indeed, the Seljuk chroniclers name Philadelphia rather than Antioch as the site of the battle.[15]) There he learned that Antioch was about to fall, and led his army in a forced march towards the town, discarding all baggage except for a few days' rations.[13][16]

According to Gregoras, Laskaris intended to catch the Turks off guard by his rapid approach, but Akropolites relates that the Nicaean ruler sent Kaykhusraw's ambassador, whom he had taken along, to inform his master of his arrival. The sultan at first appeared incredulous, but eventually abandoned the siege and drew up his forces for battle.[16][17] The Turks were constrained by the narrowness of the valley and could not deploy their full force, especially their cavalry. Hence, the sultan decided to await the Nicaean attack instead. As the Nicaean army drew close to the Turks, Laskaris's Latin mercenary cavalry launched an impetuous charge on the Turkish centre; their attack inflicted many casualties on the Turks, in particular the lightly armed archers and slingers, as the knights drove through their formation and then wheeled back and charged it again from the rear. Kaykhusraw, however, soon managed to restore discipline among his troops, shaken by the sudden Latin onslaught, and used his superior numbers to surround and annihilate the Latins. The Turks then turned on the rest of the Nicaean army, which, after suffering casualties, began to retreat and break up.[18][19]

As the sources narrate, at this moment of victory, the Seljuk sultan sought out Laskaris, who was hard pressed by the attacking Turkish troops. Kaykhusraw charged his enemy and gave him a heavy blow on the head with a mace, so that the Nicaean emperor, dizzied, fell from his horse. Kaykhusraw was already giving orders to his retinue to carry Laskaris away, when the latter regained his composure and brought Kaykhusraw down by hacking at his mount's rear legs. The sultan too fell on the ground and was beheaded. His head was impaled on a lance and hoisted aloft for his army to see, causing the Turks to panic and retreat. It is unclear who delivered the fatal blow to the sultan: Choniates and Gregoras attribute this deed to Laskaris himself, Ibn Bibi to an unknown Frankish mercenary; Akropolites says that neither the emperor nor his attendants saw who did this, while George of Pelagonia claims that Kaykhusraw and not Laskaris was unhorsed first, and that one of the emperor's attendants cut off his head. Though the Turks retreated, allegedly at speed, the Nicaean army was so depleted in numbers that it could not mount a pursuit.[18][20]

Aftermath edit

In this way Laskaris snatched victory from the jaws of defeat, although his own army was well-nigh destroyed in the process. The battle ended the Seljuk threat: Kaykhusraw's son and successor, Kaykaus I, concluded a truce with Nicaea on 14 June 1211, and the border between the two states would remain virtually unchallenged until the 1260s.[18][21] The former emperor Alexios, Laskaris's father-in-law, was also captured during the battle. Laskaris treated him well but stripped him of his imperial insignia and consigned him to the monastery of Hyakinthos in Nicaea, where he ended his days.[18]

Following the battle, the Turks carried the body of their sultan back to Konya, where he was buried in the dynastic mausoleum.[22] Ibn Bibi relates that Theodore Laskaris gave 20,000 dirhams to be distributed at the sultan's funeral as alms.[23]

The battle freed Nicaea from Seljuk pressure, but Laskaris's army had suffered heavy casualties. In particular, his very effective, though headstrong, Latin mercenary cavalry had been almost destroyed. As a result, Laskaris could not adequately defend his territory from an attack by the Latin Empire of Constantinople; defeated at the Battle of the Rhyndacus, he had to cede some territory bordering the Sea of Marmara. The Nicaeans were compensated for this territorial loss when, in 1212, the death of David Komnenos allowed their annexation of his lands in Paphlagonia.[24]

The victory at Antioch on the Meander gave Laskaris considerable prestige, and the capture of Alexios ended internal opposition to his rule. The battle was the last major encounter between the Seljuks and the Byzantines. Ultimately, the Seljuks had failed to take all of Asia Minor. However, even though the Nicaean Empire would strengthen (at the cost of the Latins) and the Seljuks would weaken, the Turks, under Ottoman leadership, would ultimately conquer Byzantine Asia Minor a little over 100 years later.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Latin" is the term used for people, of mixed national origins, from western Europe who followed the "Latin Rite" (Roman Catholic) rather than the "Greek Rite" (Greek Orthodoxy). Latins, sometimes alternatively called "Franks", were prominent in many of the eastern Mediterranean lands in this period.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Korobeinikov, Dimitri (2014). Byzantium and the Turks in the Thirteenth Century. Oxford University Press. p. 149. ISBN 978-0191017940. Theodore I had no choice but to fight. In the battle at Antioch at the Maeander the Nicaean army was almost defeated, but Laskaris met the sultan in person and after a short duel killed him. The battle took place after 15 June 1211, probably on 17 June.
  2. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 717.
  3. ^ a b Bartusis, Mark C. (1997). The Late Byzantine Army: Arms and Society, 1204-1453. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 28. ISBN 9780812216202.
  4. ^ Battle of Antioch on the Meander (1211), Adam Ali, Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia, Vol. 1, ed. Alexander Mikaberidze, (ABC-CLIO, 2011), 118-119.
  5. ^ Redford 1991, p. 70.
  6. ^ Finlay & Tozer 1877, pp. 365–366.
  7. ^ Savvides 1991, pp. 93–94.
  8. ^ Macrides 2007, pp. 79–80, 123–127.
  9. ^ Macrides 2007, pp. 124, 127–129.
  10. ^ Savvides 1991, p. 98 (Note 12).
  11. ^ Macrides 2007, p. 129.
  12. ^ Savvides 1991, pp. 97–98.
  13. ^ a b Macrides 2007, pp. 129–130.
  14. ^ Savvides 1991, pp. 96 (Note 7), 98–99.
  15. ^ Savvides 1991, p. 93.
  16. ^ a b Savvides 1991, p. 99.
  17. ^ Macrides 2007, p. 131.
  18. ^ a b c d Macrides 2007, pp. 131–132.
  19. ^ Savvides 1991, pp. 99–100.
  20. ^ Savvides 1991, pp. 97 (Note 11), 100–101.
  21. ^ Savvides 1991, p. 101 (Note 19).
  22. ^ Redford 1991, p. 70: "The importance to the Seljuks of burial in the tomb tower in Konya is well known, and is graphically illustrated by the care taken to reinter the body of Giyaseddin Keyhusrev in Konya after he was killed by the troops of Theodore Lascaris after the battle of Alaşehir."
  23. ^ Macrides 2007, p. 132 (Note 6).
  24. ^ Angold 1999, p. 547.

Sources edit

  • Angold, Michael (1999). "Byzantium in exile". In Abulafia, David (ed.). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume 5, c.1198–c.1300. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 543–568. ISBN 978-1-13905573-4.
  • Finlay, George; Tozer, Henry Fanshawe (1877). A History of Greece from its Conquest by the Romans to the Present Time B.C. 146 to A.D. 1864: The Byzantine and Greek Empires. Part 2, A.D. 1057-1453. Vol. III. Oxford, United Kingdom: Clarendon Press.
  • Macrides, Ruth (2007). George Akropolites: The History – Introduction, Translation and Commentary. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-921067-1.
  • Redford, Scott (1991). "The Alâeddin Mosque in Konya Reconsidered". Artibus Asiae. Zürich: Artibus Asiae Publishers. 51 (1–2): 54–74. doi:10.2307/3249676. ISSN 0004-3648. JSTOR 3249676.
  • Savvides, Alexis G.C. (1991). "Acropolites and Gregoras on the Byzantine-Seljuk confrontation at Antioch-on-the Maeander (A. D. 1211). English translation and commentary" (PDF). Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Tarih Bölümü Tarih Araştırmaları Dergisi. 15 (26): 93–101.
  • Treadgold, Warren (1997). A History of the Byzantine State and Society. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-2630-2.

37°52′24″N 28°34′27″E / 37.873435°N 28.574239°E / 37.873435; 28.574239

battle, antioch, meander, part, byzantine, seljuk, warsmap, southeastern, europe, asia, minor, showing, nicaean, empire, seljuk, sultanate, 1210, dateprobably, june, 1211, locationasia, minorresultnicaean, victorybelligerentsempire, nicaeaseljuk, sultanate, rû. Battle of Antioch on the MeanderPart of the Byzantine Seljuk WarsMap of southeastern Europe and Asia Minor showing the Nicaean Empire and Seljuk Sultanate ca 1210 DateProbably 17 June 1211 1 LocationAsia MinorResultNicaean victoryBelligerentsEmpire of NicaeaSeljuk Sultanate of RumCommanders and leadersTheodore I LaskarisKaykhusraw I Alexios III Angelos POW Strength2 000 cavalry 2 800 Latin cavalry 3 5 000 11 000 4 Casualties and lossesMost of the Latins died 3 Heavy The Battle of Antioch on the Meander also known as the Battle of Alasehir 5 was a military engagement near Antioch on the Meander between the forces of the Empire of Nicaea and the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum The Turkish defeat ensured continued Nicaean hegemony of the Aegean coast of Asia Minor The Seljuk sultan Kaykhusraw I was killed on the field of battle The battle took place near the modern town of Yamalak in Kuyucak district in Aydin Province Contents 1 Background 2 Battle 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 SourcesBackground editFollowing the capture of Constantinople by the forces of the Fourth Crusade 1204 and the partition of the Byzantine Empire Theodore Laskaris r 1205 1222 crowned emperor in 1208 built up a power base in the former Byzantine territory of western Anatolia This new polity was to become known as the Empire of Nicaea 6 Nicaea was one of the main Greek successor states that claimed the heritage of the Byzantine Empire the other successor states were Epirus and later the Empire of Thessalonica in western Greece Nicaea was threatened from the north by the new Latin Empire established by the Crusaders and from the east by the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum The peace with the Seljuks was disturbed through the arrival in early 1211 of the former Byzantine Emperor Alexios III r 1195 1203 at the port of Attaleia The subsequent events are described in some detail by a number of near contemporary sources chiefly the chroniclers Ibn al Athir and Ibn Bibi on the Seljuk side and the histories of George Akropolites and Nikephoros Gregoras on the Byzantine side as well as references in other chronicles and the orations in honour of Theodore Laskaris by Niketas Choniates 7 Alexios had fled Constantinople on the approach of the Crusaders in 1203 but had not given up on his rights to the throne and was determined to reclaim it In 1203 1205 he had wandered across Greece seeking the support of powerful local grandees before being captured by Boniface of Montferrat and held captive until ransomed by his first cousin Michael of Epirus in 1210 8 Although Theodore Laskaris was Alexios s son in law having married his daughter Anna Alexios resolved to seek the aid of the Seljuk sultan Kaykhusraw I r 1192 1196 and 1205 1211 with whom he had close relations Alexios had sheltered him in Constantinople during the latter s exile and George Akropolites claims that the two fled from Constantinople together in 1203 9 10 The sultan welcomed Alexios warmly and the deposed emperor after reminding the sultan of the succour he had given him promised him rich rewards if he would help restore him to his throne Kaykhusraw having found in supporting Alexios s cause a perfect pretext for attacking Nicaean territory sent an emissary to Theodore at Nicaea calling upon him to relinquish his domains to the legitimate emperor Theodore refused to reply to the sultan s demands and the sultan assembled his army and invaded Laskaris domains 11 12 Battle edit nbsp Theodore I Laskaris r 1205 1222 15th century manuscript Kaykhusraw s army with Alexios III in tow laid siege to Antioch on the Maeander which he hoped to use as a base to subdue the rest of the Meander Valley The size of the Seljuk force is unknown The hagiographer George of Pelagonia in his hagiography estimates it at 60 000 clearly an impossible figure and even Gregoras s 20 000 seems to be exaggerated Nevertheless it was clearly a considerably larger force than the army Theodore managed to scrape together both Gregoras and Akropolites put it at 2 000 men 3 000 according to George of Pelagonia of whom 800 were Latin n 1 and the rest Byzantine Greeks 13 14 Laskaris marched his army from Nicaea over the Mysian Olympus and reached Philadelphia in eleven days indeed the Seljuk chroniclers name Philadelphia rather than Antioch as the site of the battle 15 There he learned that Antioch was about to fall and led his army in a forced march towards the town discarding all baggage except for a few days rations 13 16 According to Gregoras Laskaris intended to catch the Turks off guard by his rapid approach but Akropolites relates that the Nicaean ruler sent Kaykhusraw s ambassador whom he had taken along to inform his master of his arrival The sultan at first appeared incredulous but eventually abandoned the siege and drew up his forces for battle 16 17 The Turks were constrained by the narrowness of the valley and could not deploy their full force especially their cavalry Hence the sultan decided to await the Nicaean attack instead As the Nicaean army drew close to the Turks Laskaris s Latin mercenary cavalry launched an impetuous charge on the Turkish centre their attack inflicted many casualties on the Turks in particular the lightly armed archers and slingers as the knights drove through their formation and then wheeled back and charged it again from the rear Kaykhusraw however soon managed to restore discipline among his troops shaken by the sudden Latin onslaught and used his superior numbers to surround and annihilate the Latins The Turks then turned on the rest of the Nicaean army which after suffering casualties began to retreat and break up 18 19 As the sources narrate at this moment of victory the Seljuk sultan sought out Laskaris who was hard pressed by the attacking Turkish troops Kaykhusraw charged his enemy and gave him a heavy blow on the head with a mace so that the Nicaean emperor dizzied fell from his horse Kaykhusraw was already giving orders to his retinue to carry Laskaris away when the latter regained his composure and brought Kaykhusraw down by hacking at his mount s rear legs The sultan too fell on the ground and was beheaded His head was impaled on a lance and hoisted aloft for his army to see causing the Turks to panic and retreat It is unclear who delivered the fatal blow to the sultan Choniates and Gregoras attribute this deed to Laskaris himself Ibn Bibi to an unknown Frankish mercenary Akropolites says that neither the emperor nor his attendants saw who did this while George of Pelagonia claims that Kaykhusraw and not Laskaris was unhorsed first and that one of the emperor s attendants cut off his head Though the Turks retreated allegedly at speed the Nicaean army was so depleted in numbers that it could not mount a pursuit 18 20 Aftermath editIn this way Laskaris snatched victory from the jaws of defeat although his own army was well nigh destroyed in the process The battle ended the Seljuk threat Kaykhusraw s son and successor Kaykaus I concluded a truce with Nicaea on 14 June 1211 and the border between the two states would remain virtually unchallenged until the 1260s 18 21 The former emperor Alexios Laskaris s father in law was also captured during the battle Laskaris treated him well but stripped him of his imperial insignia and consigned him to the monastery of Hyakinthos in Nicaea where he ended his days 18 Following the battle the Turks carried the body of their sultan back to Konya where he was buried in the dynastic mausoleum 22 Ibn Bibi relates that Theodore Laskaris gave 20 000 dirhams to be distributed at the sultan s funeral as alms 23 The battle freed Nicaea from Seljuk pressure but Laskaris s army had suffered heavy casualties In particular his very effective though headstrong Latin mercenary cavalry had been almost destroyed As a result Laskaris could not adequately defend his territory from an attack by the Latin Empire of Constantinople defeated at the Battle of the Rhyndacus he had to cede some territory bordering the Sea of Marmara The Nicaeans were compensated for this territorial loss when in 1212 the death of David Komnenos allowed their annexation of his lands in Paphlagonia 24 The victory at Antioch on the Meander gave Laskaris considerable prestige and the capture of Alexios ended internal opposition to his rule The battle was the last major encounter between the Seljuks and the Byzantines Ultimately the Seljuks had failed to take all of Asia Minor However even though the Nicaean Empire would strengthen at the cost of the Latins and the Seljuks would weaken the Turks under Ottoman leadership would ultimately conquer Byzantine Asia Minor a little over 100 years later Notes edit Latin is the term used for people of mixed national origins from western Europe who followed the Latin Rite Roman Catholic rather than the Greek Rite Greek Orthodoxy Latins sometimes alternatively called Franks were prominent in many of the eastern Mediterranean lands in this period References editCitations edit Korobeinikov Dimitri 2014 Byzantium and the Turks in the Thirteenth Century Oxford University Press p 149 ISBN 978 0191017940 Theodore I had no choice but to fight In the battle at Antioch at the Maeander the Nicaean army was almost defeated but Laskaris met the sultan in person and after a short duel killed him The battle took place after 15 June 1211 probably on 17 June Treadgold 1997 p 717 a b Bartusis Mark C 1997 The Late Byzantine Army Arms and Society 1204 1453 University of Pennsylvania Press p 28 ISBN 9780812216202 Battle of Antioch on the Meander 1211 Adam Ali Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia Vol 1 ed Alexander Mikaberidze ABC CLIO 2011 118 119 Redford 1991 p 70 Finlay amp Tozer 1877 pp 365 366 Savvides 1991 pp 93 94 Macrides 2007 pp 79 80 123 127 Macrides 2007 pp 124 127 129 Savvides 1991 p 98 Note 12 Macrides 2007 p 129 Savvides 1991 pp 97 98 a b Macrides 2007 pp 129 130 Savvides 1991 pp 96 Note 7 98 99 Savvides 1991 p 93 a b Savvides 1991 p 99 Macrides 2007 p 131 a b c d Macrides 2007 pp 131 132 Savvides 1991 pp 99 100 Savvides 1991 pp 97 Note 11 100 101 Savvides 1991 p 101 Note 19 Redford 1991 p 70 The importance to the Seljuks of burial in the tomb tower in Konya is well known and is graphically illustrated by the care taken to reinter the body of Giyaseddin Keyhusrev in Konya after he was killed by the troops of Theodore Lascaris after the battle of Alasehir Macrides 2007 p 132 Note 6 Angold 1999 p 547 Sources edit Angold Michael 1999 Byzantium in exile In Abulafia David ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 5 c 1198 c 1300 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 543 568 ISBN 978 1 13905573 4 Finlay George Tozer Henry Fanshawe 1877 A History of Greece from its Conquest by the Romans to the Present Time B C 146 to A D 1864 The Byzantine and Greek Empires Part 2 A D 1057 1453 Vol III Oxford United Kingdom Clarendon Press Macrides Ruth 2007 George Akropolites The History Introduction Translation and Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 921067 1 Redford Scott 1991 The Alaeddin Mosque in Konya Reconsidered Artibus Asiae Zurich Artibus Asiae Publishers 51 1 2 54 74 doi 10 2307 3249676 ISSN 0004 3648 JSTOR 3249676 Savvides Alexis G C 1991 Acropolites and Gregoras on the Byzantine Seljuk confrontation at Antioch on the Maeander A D 1211 English translation and commentary PDF Ankara Universitesi Dil ve Tarih Cografya Fakultesi Tarih Bolumu Tarih Arastirmalari Dergisi 15 26 93 101 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 37 52 24 N 28 34 27 E 37 873435 N 28 574239 E 37 873435 28 574239 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Antioch on the Meander amp oldid 1183045632, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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