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Battle of Kleidion

Battle of Kleidion
Part of the Byzantine-Bulgarian Wars

The Byzantines defeat the Bulgarians at Kleidion and Tsar Samuel becomes unconscious at the sight of his blinded army. Scene from the Manasses Chronicle.
DateJuly 29, 1014
Location
Belasitsa Mountains, close to the village of Klyuch, modern Blagoevgrad Province, Bulgaria
41°21′45″N 23°01′03″E / 41.36250°N 23.01750°E / 41.36250; 23.01750
Result Byzantine victory
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire Bulgarian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Basil II
Nikephoros Xiphias
Constantine Diogenes
Theophylaktos Botaneiates 
Samuel of Bulgaria
Gabriel Radomir
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Devastating almost entire forces, allegedly 15,000 captured
class=notpageimage|
Battle site indicated on a map of modern Bulgaria
Battle of Kleidion (Greece)
Battle of Kleidion (North Macedonia)

The Battle of Kleidion (Greek: Κλειδίον; or Clidium, after the medieval name of the village of Klyuch, "(the) key"; also known as the Battle of Belasitsa) took place on July 29, 1014, between the Byzantine Empire and the Bulgarian Empire. It was the culmination of the nearly half-century struggle between the Byzantine Emperor Basil II and the Bulgarian Emperor Samuel in the late 10th and early 11th centuries. The result was a decisive Byzantine victory.

The battle took place in the valley between the mountains of Belasitsa and Ograzhden, near the modern Bulgarian village of Klyuch. The decisive encounter occurred on July 29 with an attack in the rear by a force under the Byzantine general Nikephoros Xiphias, who had infiltrated the Bulgarian positions. The ensuing battle was a major defeat for the Bulgarians. Thousands of Bulgarian soldiers were captured and blinded by order of Basil II, who would subsequently be known as the "Bulgar-Slayer". Samuel survived the battle, but died two months later from a heart attack, reportedly brought on by the sight of his blind soldiers.

Although the engagement did not end the First Bulgarian Empire, the Battle of Kleidion reduced its ability to resist Byzantine advances, and it has been considered the pivotal encounter of the war with Byzantium.

Background edit

The origins of the conflict date back to the 7th century, when the Bulgars under Khan Asparukh established a state along the Danube in one of the provinces of the Eastern Roman Empire. As a result, the Bulgarian state fought a series of wars with Byzantium in order to secure its continued existence.[1]

In 968, Bulgaria was invaded from the north by the Kievan Prince Sviatoslav.[2] By that time, the Bulgarian Empire, which had once threatened the existence of Byzantium under the reign of Simeon, had lost much of its power.[3] During the conflict, the Kievan raids were repeatedly defeated by the Byzantines, who were also at war with the Bulgarians, a continuous conflict since the fall of the Bulgarian capital Preslav in 971. This war had resulted in the Bulgarian Emperor Boris II being forced to renounce his Imperial title in Constantinople, and eastern Bulgaria came under Byzantine rule.[4] The Byzantines assumed that this act would signify the end of independent Bulgaria, but the western Bulgarian lands remained autonomous and under the Comitopuli brothers David, Moses, Aaron and Samuel, resistance against the Byzantines emerged.[5][6]

When the Byzantine emperor Basil II ascended the throne in 976, he made the destruction of independent Bulgaria his first ambition. Opposing him were the Western Bulgarians, now led by Samuel of Bulgaria. Basil II's first campaign was disastrous, the emperor barely escaping with his life when the Bulgarians annihilated the Byzantine army in the Gates of Trajan Pass in 986.[7] Over the next fifteen years, while Basil was preoccupied with revolts against his rule and the Fatimid threat in the East, Samuel retook most of the previously conquered Bulgarian lands and carried the war into enemy territory in a series of campaigns. However, his invasion of southern Greece, that reached as far as Corinth, resulted in a major defeat in the Battle of Spercheios in 996. The next phase of the war began in 1000, when Basil, having secured his own position, launched a series of offensives against Bulgaria. He secured Moesia, and in 1003, his forces took Vidin. The next year, Basil inflicted a heavy defeat on Samuel in the Battle of Skopie. By 1005, Basil had regained control of Thessaly and parts of southern Macedonia. Over these and the next few years, a regular pattern emerged: the Byzantines would campaign in Bulgaria, laying siege to forts and pillaging the countryside, while the numerically inferior Bulgarians, unable to offer direct opposition, launched diversionary raids in Macedonia and Greece. Despite some successes, these did not achieve any permanent results, nor did they force Basil to abandon his campaigns in Bulgaria. A counter-attack in 1009 failed at the Battle of Kreta,[8][9] and although the Byzantines themselves did not achieve any decisive success, their methodical war of attrition deprived the Bulgarians of their strongholds and gradually weakened their forces.[10] In the words of Byzantine historian John Skylitzes: "The Emperor Basil II continued to invade Bulgaria each year and destroy and devastate everything on his way. Samuel could not stop him in the open field or engage the Emperor in a decisive battle, and suffered many defeats and began to lose his strength."[11] The culmination of the war came in 1014, when Samuel, at the head of his army, resolved to stop the Byzantine army before it could enter the Bulgarian heartland.

Prelude edit

 
Map of Bulgaria and Byzantium c.1000

Samuel knew that the Byzantine army would have to invade the country through a series of mountain passes, and so took precautions to bar them. The Bulgarians built ditches along the frontier and fortified many of the valleys and passes with walls and towers, especially the pass of Kleidion on the Struma River which Basil would need to pass through to reach the heart of Bulgaria. Samuel heavily fortified the northern slopes of the Belasitsa mountain to the south and east of Strumitsa Castle.[12] The wide valley of the Strumitsa River was a convenient place for attack and it had been used by Byzantine forces for this purpose in previous years. The Bulgarians disposed a strong guard to keep the pass safe. In addition, the Bulgarian ruler chose Strumitsa for his defensive base — it was located on the road from Thessaloniki leading to Thrace to the east and Ohrid to the west.[13] The rugged terrain to the south was dotted with earthworks and walls guarded by strong Bulgarian units.[14][15]

Samuel's decision to face Basil II and the bulk of his army at Kleidion was not only prompted by the constant defeats and invasions which had devastated the country, but also by concerns over his authority among the nobility, which had been fatally weakened by Basil's campaigns. In 1005 for example, the governor of the important Adriatic port of Dyrrhachium had surrendered the town to Basil II.[16] To face this threat, Samuel gathered a large army to face the Byzantines, some claiming it numbered as many as 45,000 soldiers.[17] Basil II also prepared carefully, assembling a large army of his own and taking his most experienced commanders, including the governor of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv), Nicephorus Xiphias, who had conquered the old Bulgarian capitals Pliska and Preslav from Samuel in 1001.[citation needed]

Battle edit

The Byzantine army marched from Constantinople through Komotini, Drama and Serres and reached the Rupel pass on the Struma river. From there the army entered the Strumitsa valley and reached the vicinity of the village of Klyuch, where the river bent and approached Belasitsa and Ozgrazhden. There the army was stopped by a thick wooden wall, defended by Bulgarian soldiers.[18][19] The Byzantines attacked the palisade immediately, but were repulsed with heavy casualties.[20][21]

In response, Samuel sent a large army under one of the most able Bulgarian nobles, Nestoritsa, to strike southwards and draw the attention of Basil away from the siege at Klyuch.[22] Nestoritsa's Bulgarians reached Thessalonika, but Byzantine troops under Theophylact Botaneiates, the strategos (Governor-General) of the city and his son Mihail managed to defeat them outside the city walls in a bloody battle. Theophylactus captured many soldiers and a large quantity of military equipment and marched north to join Basil at Klyuch.[23][24]

Basil's first attempt to overwhelm the defenders of the pass was unsuccessful and his army was unable to pass through the valley, which was defended by 15,000–20,000 Bulgarians.[25] Despite the difficulties the Byzantine Emperor did not abandon the attack. He ordered his general Nicephorus Xiphias to manoeuvre his troops around the high Belasitsa mountain and threaten the Bulgarians from behind, while he continued the assaults on the wall.[26][27] Xiphias led his troops along a steep path that led him into the Bulgarians' rear.[26] On July 29, Xiphias attacked the Bulgarian defenders, trapping them in the valley.[27] The Bulgarians abandoned their towers to face this new threat and Basil was able to break through the front line and destroy the wall.[28][29]

In the confusion of the rout, thousands of Bulgarian troops were killed and the remainder desperately attempted to flee westwards. Samuel and his son Gabriel Radomir immediately headed to the east from their headquarters in the Strumitsa fortress to aid their army, but in desperate fighting near the village of Mokrievo (present-day North Macedonia) they were overwhelmed by the quickly advancing enemy.[30] Many Bulgarian soldiers were killed at Mokrievo and many more were captured.[31] Emperor Samuel himself barely escaped, only breaking free through the bravery of his son, who mounted his father on his own horse and took him to safety in Prilep.[32] From Prilep, Samuel returned to Prespa while Gabriel Radomir headed towards Strumitsa to continue the struggle.[33]

Further developments edit

 
Battle of Kleidion

After his victory, Basil II advanced towards Strumitsa, which was key to holding the whole Vardar valley. On their way to the city, the Byzantines seized the Matsukion fortress to the east of their advance.[34] The Byzantine Emperor also sent an army under Botaneiates to surround Strumitsa and destroy all ramparts to the south and clear the passage to Thessalonica. With the remainder of his troops, Basil laid siege to the city itself. The Bulgarians allowed Botaneiates to destroy the fortifications, but he and his army were ambushed by Bulgarian raiders in a narrow valley, soon after their task was complete. In the ensuing battle Botaneiates was completely defeated and the Bulgarian commander Gabriel Radomir personally stabbed Botaneiates with his spear.[35][36] As a result, Basil II was forced to abandon the siege of Strumitsa and retreat. On the return, the eloquence of the cubicularius Sergius convinced the defenders of Melnik to surrender,[37] another heavy blow for the Bulgarians as the town guarded the main road to Sofia from the south.[citation needed]

Prisoners edit

Skylitzes records that Basil completely routed the Bulgarian army and took 15,000 prisoners (14,000 according to Kekaumenos). Modern historians, however, such as Vasil Zlatarski, claim that these numbers are exaggerated. The 14th century Bulgarian translation of the Manasses Chronicle numbers the prisoners at 8,000. Basil divided the prisoners into groups of 100 men, blinded 99 men in each group and left one man in each with one eye so that he could lead the others home;[38] this was done in retaliation for the death of Botaneiates, who was Basil's favourite general and advisor, and also to crush the Bulgarian morale.[39] Another possible reason was that, in Byzantine eyes, the Bulgarians were rebels against their authority, and blinding was the usual punishment meted out to rebels.[40] For this action, Basil gained the nickname Boulgaroktonos (Greek: Βουλγαροκτόνος, Bulgarian: Българоубиец), "the Bulgar-slayer". Samuel died of a heart attack on October 6, 1014, reportedly due to seeing his soldiers blinded.[41][42]

Aftermath edit

 
South-eastern Europe c.1000. The Byzantine possessions and independent western Bulgaria are depicted. By that time, eastern Bulgaria was also in Bulgarian hands.

The death of Botaneiates and the four more years of war that followed indicate that the Byzantine success was not complete.[43] Some modern historians doubt that the Bulgarian defeat was as complete as described by Skylitzes and Kekaumenos.[44] Other historians emphasize that the death of Emperor Samuel two months later was much more fateful for Bulgaria.[45] His heirs Gabriel Radomir and Ivan Vladislav were unable to effectively resist the attacks of Basil II, and Bulgaria was completely defeated in 1018.[46] In that year Emperor Ivan Vladislav was killed in a battle at Dyrrhachium,[47] and Bulgaria became a province of the Byzantine Empire until the successful uprising led by the Asen brothers in 1185.[citation needed]

Other theses in the historiography stress the significance of the battle. As a result of the battle of Belasitsa, the Bulgarian army suffered heavy casualties that could not be restored. The ability of the central government to control the peripheral and interior provinces of the Empire was reduced and the actions of the local and provincial governors became more decisive for the outcome of the war with Byzantium. Many of them voluntarily surrendered to Basil II.[48]

The battle also affected the Serbs and the Croats, who were forced to acknowledge the supremacy of the Byzantine Emperor after 1018.[49][50] The borders of the Byzantine Empire were restored to the Danube for the first time since the 7th century, allowing Byzantium to control the entire Balkan peninsula from the Danube to the Peloponnese and from the Adriatic Sea to the Black Sea.[51]

References edit

  1. ^ Mutafchiev, Book about the Bulgarians, p. 59
  2. ^ Gyuzelev, Short History of Bulgaria, p. 68
  3. ^ Bozhilov, Tsar Simeon the Great, pp. 115–116, 124–126, 137–144
  4. ^ Pirivatrich, The State of Samuel, pp. 58–59
  5. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, in "Selected sources" Vol. II, p. 64
  6. ^ Pirivatrich, The State of Samuel, pp. 94–95
  7. ^ Angelov / Cholpanov, Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages (10th–15th centuries), pp. 39–41, 43–44
  8. ^ Gyuzelev, Short History of Bulgaria, p. 71
  9. ^ Nikolov, Centralism and regionalism in early Medieval Bulgaria (end of the 7th – beginning of the 11th centuries) p. 130
  10. ^ Pirivatrich, The State of Samuel, pp. 135–136
  11. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, in "Selected sources" Vol. II, pp. 65–66
  12. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, II, p. 45
  13. ^ Zlatarski, History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages , Vol. I, Part 2, pp. 731–732, 736
  14. ^ Nikolov, Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria , pp. 179–180
  15. ^ A description of the palisade built by Samuel between Belasitsa and Ograzhden (in Bulgarian) – G. Mitrev, The palisade of Samuel and the battle in 1014[permanent dead link], pp. 76–79, in: Macedonian Review (journal), in Bulgarian, 1993, issue 2
  16. ^ Ostrogorski, History of Byzantium , pp. 404–405
  17. ^ Nikolov, Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria , p. 131. G. Nikolov estimates the total number of the Bulgarian army including the squads of local militia at maximum 45,000. The Byzantine historian Georgius Monachus Continuatus wrote that the Bulgarian army had 360,000 men, a greatly exaggerated number, the actual being 10 times smaller
  18. ^ Zlatarski, History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages, Vol. I, Part 2, p. 731
  19. ^ Nikolov, Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria, p. 180
  20. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, II, p. 457
  21. ^ Zonaras, ibid., IV, p. 121
  22. ^ Nikolov, Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria, p. 146
  23. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, "Selected sources", Vol. II, p. 66
  24. ^ Zlatarski, History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages, Vol. I, Part 2, pp. 732–734
  25. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, p. 457
  26. ^ a b Cedrin, pp. 457–458. George Kedrenos's Historical Synopsis is a compilation chronicle based on the writings of John Skylitzes, George Syncellus, Theophanes the Confessor and several other historians. It is not clear what edition is referred to here.
  27. ^ a b Savvidēs, Alexis G. K. (1994). "Προσωπογραφικό σημείωμα για τον Βυζαντινό στρατηλάτη Νικηφόρο Ξιφία [Profile of Byzantine soldier Nicephoros Xifias]". Βυζαντινή προσωπογραφία, τοπική ιστορία και βυζαντινοτουρκικές σχέσεις [Byzantine Prosopography, Topical History and Byzantine-Turkish Relations] (in Greek). Athens: Κριτική Ιστορική Βιβλιοθήκη. pp. 25–27. ISBN 960-218-089-7.
  28. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, "Selected sources", Vol. II, p. 66
  29. ^ Zlatarski, History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages, Vol. I, Part 2, pp. 734–736
  30. ^ Angelov / Cholpanov, Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages (10th–15th centuries), p. 55
  31. ^ Greek sources on the History of Bulgaria (in Bulgarian), Vol. VI June 12, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, с. 284 (retrieved on 29.01.2008)
  32. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, p. 458
  33. ^ Zonaras, ibid., p. 121
  34. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, p. 459
  35. ^ Zlatarski, History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages, Vol. I, Part 2, p. 738
  36. ^ Angelov / Cholpanov, Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages (10th–15th centuries), pp. 55–56
  37. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, р. 460
  38. ^ Ioannes Scylitzes, Historia, р. 458
  39. ^ Gyuzelev, Short History of Bulgaria, p. 74
  40. ^ Pirivatrich, The State of Samuel, p. 178. СS. Pirivatic indicates that blinding was the traditional punishment in Byzantium for a rebellion against the legitimate ruler.
  41. ^ Runciman, Steven (1930). . London: G. Bell and Sons. p. 242. OCLC 458819568. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 28, 2008. (retrieved on 7 September 2008)
  42. ^ Dobrev, Ivan (2004). Новооткритият надпис за цар Самуил и събитията в 1014 г. [The Newly Discovered Inscription of Tsar Samuel and the Events of the Year 1014]. Старобългарис-тика [Palaeobulgarica] (in Bulgarian). 28 (3): 3–24.
  43. ^ Holmes, Catherine, Basil II (A.D. 976–1025) March 13, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Stephenson, P., The Legend of Basil the Bulgar-Slayer, Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-521-81530-4, p. 4
  45. ^ Zlatarski, History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages, Vol. I, Part 2, pp. 740–741
  46. ^ Whittow, Making of Orthodox Byzantium, pp. 387–388
  47. ^ Runciman, A History of the First Bulgarian Empire, p. 248 March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine (retrieved on 7.9.2008)
  48. ^ Nikolov, Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria, pp. 130–131, 143
  49. ^ Stephenson, P., The Balkan Frontier in the Year 1000, pp. 123–124 (в: Magdalino, P., Byzantium in the Year 1000, Brill 2003, ISBN 90-04-12097-1); Ostrogorsky, History of Byzantium, p. 408; Mutafchiev, Lecture notes on Byzantine history, Vol. ІІ, p. 280; Ćirković, Sima, Doseljavanje slovena i dukljanska država February 16, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  50. ^ Croatia was not conquered by Byzantium but became its vassal – see Matanov, Hristo, The Medieval Balkans. Historical Essays (Средновековните Балкани. Исторически очерци), in Bulgarian, Paradigma Publishers, Sofia, 2002, ISBN 954-9536-61-0, p. 150
  51. ^ Vasiliev, A., History of the Byzantine empire, 6. The Macedonian epoch (867–1081), Relations of the Byzantine Empire with the Bulgarians and Magyars October 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved on 20 November 2007. (in Russian: Васильев, А. А., "История Византийской империи", том 1 May 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Взаимоотношения Византийской империи с болгарами и мадьярами October 19, 2016, at the Wayback Machine.)

Further reading edit

  • John Skylitzes, Synopsis Historion July 13, 2001, at the Wayback Machine, translated by Paul Stephenson. Original Greek version
  • Treadgold, Warren T. A History of the Byzantine State and Society. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8047-2630-2
  • Mutafchiev, Petar, Book about the Bulgarians (Kniga za balgarite, Книга за българите), in Bulgarian, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Publishing House, Sofia 1992, ISBN 954-430-128-3
  • Mutafchiev, Petar, Lecture notes on Byzantine history (Lektsii po istoria na Vizantia, Лекции по история на Византия), in Bulgarian, Vol. II, Anubis Publishers, Sofia 1995, ISBN 954-426-063-3 (т. 2)
  • Gyuzelev, Vasil, Bulgaria from the second quarter of the 10th century to the beginning of the 11th century, (Balgaria ot vtorata chetvart na X do nachaloto na XI vek, България от втората четвърт на Х до началото на ХІ век), in Bulgarian, In: Dimitrov, Ilcho (Ed.), Short History of Bulgaria (Kratka istoria na Balgaria, Кратка история на България), in Bulgarian, Science and Arts Publishers, Sofia 1983
  • Bozhilov, Ivan, Tsar Simeon the Great (893–927): The Golden Century of Medieval Bulgaria (Tsar Simeon Veliki (893–927): Zlatniyat vek na Srednovekovna Balgaria, Цар Симеон Велики (893–927): Златният век на Средновековна България), in Bulgarian, Fatherland Front Publishers, Sofia 1983
  • Pirivatrich, Sardzan, The State of Samuel. Territory and Characteristics (Samuilovata darzhava. Obhvat i harakter, Самуиловата държава. Обхват и характер), AGATA-A Publishing Group, Sofia 2000, ISBN 954-540-020-X
  • Selected sources of Bulgarian history (Podbrani izvori na balgarskata istoria, Подбрани извори за българската история), Vol. II: Bulgarian States and Bulgarians in the Middle Ages (Balgarskite darzhavi i balgarite prez Srednovekovieto, Българските държави и българите през Средновековието), TANGRA TanNakRA IK Publishers, in Bulgarian, Sofia 2004, ISBN 954-9942-40-6
  • Angelov, Dimitar, and Boris Cholpanov, Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages (10th–15th centuries) (Balgarska voenna istoria prez srednovekovieto (X-XV vek), Българска военна история през средновековието (Х–XV век), in Bulgarian, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Publishers, Sofia 1994, ISBN 954-430-200-X
  • Nikolov, Georgi (2005). Centralism and regionalism in early Medieval Bulgaria (end of the 7th – beginning of the 11th centuries) (Tsentralizam i regionalizam v rannosrednowekovna Balgariya (kraya na VII – nachaloto na XI vek), Централизъм и регионализъм в ранносредновековна България (края на VII – началото на XI век) (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Academic Press Marin Drinov. ISBN 954-430-787-7.
  • Ostrogorsky, George, History of Byzantium (Istoria na vizantiyskata darzhava, История на византийската държава), in Bulgarian, Sofia, 1998, ISBN 954-8079-92-5
  • Zlatarski, Vasil (1994) [1927]. История на българската държава през средните векове. Том I. История на Първото българско царство, Част II. От славянизацията на държавата до падането на Първото царство (852–1018) [History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages. Vol. 1. History of the First Bulgarian Empire, Part 2. From the Slavicization of the state to the fall of the First Empire (852–1018)]. Sofia: Marin Drinov Academic Publishers. ISBN 954-430-299-9.
  • Pavlov, Plamen, The Sunset of the First Bulgarian Kingdom (1015–1018) (Zalezat na Parvoto balgarsko tsarstvo (1015–1018), Залезът на Първото българско царство (1015–1018)), in Bulgarian, Marin Drinov Academic Publishers, Sofia, 1999, ISBN 954-430-630-7
  • Ćirković, Sima, Doseljavanje slovena i dukljanska država, from on 20 November 2007.
  • Holmes, Catherine, Basil II (A.D. 976–1025), publ. in: De Imperatoribus Romanis, An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors retrieved on 16 November 2007.
  • Vasiliev, А., History of the Byzantine empire, retrieved on 20 November 2007.
  • Runciman, Steven, A History of the First Bulgarian Empire, The end of an Empire March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved on 28 January 2008.
  • Stevenson, Paul (2003). The Legend of Basil the Bulgar-Slayer. Cambridge University Press (2003). ISBN 0-521-81530-4
  • , retrieved on 28 January 2008.
  • , retrieved on 28 January 2008.
  • Jireček, K. J. (1876). Geschichte der Bulgaren (in German). Nachdr. d. Ausg. Prag 1876, Hildesheim, New York : Olms 1977. ISBN 3-487-06408-1., pp. 195–200 (pp. 195–197, 200 can be seen inside the link)

Further reading edit

  • Stoyanov, Aleksandr (July 2019). "The Size of Bulgaria's Medieval Field Armies: A Case Study of Military Mobilization Capacity in the Middle Ages". Journal of Military History. 83 (3): 719–746.

battle, kleidion, part, byzantine, bulgarian, warsthe, byzantines, defeat, bulgarians, kleidion, tsar, samuel, becomes, unconscious, sight, blinded, army, scene, from, manasses, chronicle, datejuly, 1014locationbelasitsa, mountains, close, village, klyuch, mod. Battle of KleidionPart of the Byzantine Bulgarian WarsThe Byzantines defeat the Bulgarians at Kleidion and Tsar Samuel becomes unconscious at the sight of his blinded army Scene from the Manasses Chronicle DateJuly 29 1014LocationBelasitsa Mountains close to the village of Klyuch modern Blagoevgrad Province Bulgaria41 21 45 N 23 01 03 E 41 36250 N 23 01750 E 41 36250 23 01750ResultByzantine victoryBelligerentsByzantine EmpireBulgarian EmpireCommanders and leadersBasil IINikephoros XiphiasConstantine DiogenesTheophylaktos Botaneiates Samuel of BulgariaGabriel RadomirStrengthUnknownUnknownCasualties and lossesUnknownDevastating almost entire forces allegedly 15 000 capturedclass notpageimage Battle site indicated on a map of modern BulgariaShow map of BulgariaBattle of Kleidion Greece Show map of GreeceBattle of Kleidion North Macedonia Show map of North Macedonia The Battle of Kleidion Greek Kleidion or Clidium after the medieval name of the village of Klyuch the key also known as the Battle of Belasitsa took place on July 29 1014 between the Byzantine Empire and the Bulgarian Empire It was the culmination of the nearly half century struggle between the Byzantine Emperor Basil II and the Bulgarian Emperor Samuel in the late 10th and early 11th centuries The result was a decisive Byzantine victory The battle took place in the valley between the mountains of Belasitsa and Ograzhden near the modern Bulgarian village of Klyuch The decisive encounter occurred on July 29 with an attack in the rear by a force under the Byzantine general Nikephoros Xiphias who had infiltrated the Bulgarian positions The ensuing battle was a major defeat for the Bulgarians Thousands of Bulgarian soldiers were captured and blinded by order of Basil II who would subsequently be known as the Bulgar Slayer Samuel survived the battle but died two months later from a heart attack reportedly brought on by the sight of his blind soldiers Although the engagement did not end the First Bulgarian Empire the Battle of Kleidion reduced its ability to resist Byzantine advances and it has been considered the pivotal encounter of the war with Byzantium Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Battle 4 Further developments 4 1 Prisoners 5 Aftermath 6 References 7 Further reading 8 Further readingBackground editThe origins of the conflict date back to the 7th century when the Bulgars under Khan Asparukh established a state along the Danube in one of the provinces of the Eastern Roman Empire As a result the Bulgarian state fought a series of wars with Byzantium in order to secure its continued existence 1 In 968 Bulgaria was invaded from the north by the Kievan Prince Sviatoslav 2 By that time the Bulgarian Empire which had once threatened the existence of Byzantium under the reign of Simeon had lost much of its power 3 During the conflict the Kievan raids were repeatedly defeated by the Byzantines who were also at war with the Bulgarians a continuous conflict since the fall of the Bulgarian capital Preslav in 971 This war had resulted in the Bulgarian Emperor Boris II being forced to renounce his Imperial title in Constantinople and eastern Bulgaria came under Byzantine rule 4 The Byzantines assumed that this act would signify the end of independent Bulgaria but the western Bulgarian lands remained autonomous and under the Comitopuli brothers David Moses Aaron and Samuel resistance against the Byzantines emerged 5 6 When the Byzantine emperor Basil II ascended the throne in 976 he made the destruction of independent Bulgaria his first ambition Opposing him were the Western Bulgarians now led by Samuel of Bulgaria Basil II s first campaign was disastrous the emperor barely escaping with his life when the Bulgarians annihilated the Byzantine army in the Gates of Trajan Pass in 986 7 Over the next fifteen years while Basil was preoccupied with revolts against his rule and the Fatimid threat in the East Samuel retook most of the previously conquered Bulgarian lands and carried the war into enemy territory in a series of campaigns However his invasion of southern Greece that reached as far as Corinth resulted in a major defeat in the Battle of Spercheios in 996 The next phase of the war began in 1000 when Basil having secured his own position launched a series of offensives against Bulgaria He secured Moesia and in 1003 his forces took Vidin The next year Basil inflicted a heavy defeat on Samuel in the Battle of Skopie By 1005 Basil had regained control of Thessaly and parts of southern Macedonia Over these and the next few years a regular pattern emerged the Byzantines would campaign in Bulgaria laying siege to forts and pillaging the countryside while the numerically inferior Bulgarians unable to offer direct opposition launched diversionary raids in Macedonia and Greece Despite some successes these did not achieve any permanent results nor did they force Basil to abandon his campaigns in Bulgaria A counter attack in 1009 failed at the Battle of Kreta 8 9 and although the Byzantines themselves did not achieve any decisive success their methodical war of attrition deprived the Bulgarians of their strongholds and gradually weakened their forces 10 In the words of Byzantine historian John Skylitzes The Emperor Basil II continued to invade Bulgaria each year and destroy and devastate everything on his way Samuel could not stop him in the open field or engage the Emperor in a decisive battle and suffered many defeats and began to lose his strength 11 The culmination of the war came in 1014 when Samuel at the head of his army resolved to stop the Byzantine army before it could enter the Bulgarian heartland Prelude editSee also Medieval Bulgarian Army and Byzantine Army nbsp Map of Bulgaria and Byzantium c 1000 Samuel knew that the Byzantine army would have to invade the country through a series of mountain passes and so took precautions to bar them The Bulgarians built ditches along the frontier and fortified many of the valleys and passes with walls and towers especially the pass of Kleidion on the Struma River which Basil would need to pass through to reach the heart of Bulgaria Samuel heavily fortified the northern slopes of the Belasitsa mountain to the south and east of Strumitsa Castle 12 The wide valley of the Strumitsa River was a convenient place for attack and it had been used by Byzantine forces for this purpose in previous years The Bulgarians disposed a strong guard to keep the pass safe In addition the Bulgarian ruler chose Strumitsa for his defensive base it was located on the road from Thessaloniki leading to Thrace to the east and Ohrid to the west 13 The rugged terrain to the south was dotted with earthworks and walls guarded by strong Bulgarian units 14 15 Samuel s decision to face Basil II and the bulk of his army at Kleidion was not only prompted by the constant defeats and invasions which had devastated the country but also by concerns over his authority among the nobility which had been fatally weakened by Basil s campaigns In 1005 for example the governor of the important Adriatic port of Dyrrhachium had surrendered the town to Basil II 16 To face this threat Samuel gathered a large army to face the Byzantines some claiming it numbered as many as 45 000 soldiers 17 Basil II also prepared carefully assembling a large army of his own and taking his most experienced commanders including the governor of Philippopolis modern Plovdiv Nicephorus Xiphias who had conquered the old Bulgarian capitals Pliska and Preslav from Samuel in 1001 citation needed Battle editThe Byzantine army marched from Constantinople through Komotini Drama and Serres and reached the Rupel pass on the Struma river From there the army entered the Strumitsa valley and reached the vicinity of the village of Klyuch where the river bent and approached Belasitsa and Ozgrazhden There the army was stopped by a thick wooden wall defended by Bulgarian soldiers 18 19 The Byzantines attacked the palisade immediately but were repulsed with heavy casualties 20 21 In response Samuel sent a large army under one of the most able Bulgarian nobles Nestoritsa to strike southwards and draw the attention of Basil away from the siege at Klyuch 22 Nestoritsa s Bulgarians reached Thessalonika but Byzantine troops under Theophylact Botaneiates the strategos Governor General of the city and his son Mihail managed to defeat them outside the city walls in a bloody battle Theophylactus captured many soldiers and a large quantity of military equipment and marched north to join Basil at Klyuch 23 24 Basil s first attempt to overwhelm the defenders of the pass was unsuccessful and his army was unable to pass through the valley which was defended by 15 000 20 000 Bulgarians 25 Despite the difficulties the Byzantine Emperor did not abandon the attack He ordered his general Nicephorus Xiphias to manoeuvre his troops around the high Belasitsa mountain and threaten the Bulgarians from behind while he continued the assaults on the wall 26 27 Xiphias led his troops along a steep path that led him into the Bulgarians rear 26 On July 29 Xiphias attacked the Bulgarian defenders trapping them in the valley 27 The Bulgarians abandoned their towers to face this new threat and Basil was able to break through the front line and destroy the wall 28 29 In the confusion of the rout thousands of Bulgarian troops were killed and the remainder desperately attempted to flee westwards Samuel and his son Gabriel Radomir immediately headed to the east from their headquarters in the Strumitsa fortress to aid their army but in desperate fighting near the village of Mokrievo present day North Macedonia they were overwhelmed by the quickly advancing enemy 30 Many Bulgarian soldiers were killed at Mokrievo and many more were captured 31 Emperor Samuel himself barely escaped only breaking free through the bravery of his son who mounted his father on his own horse and took him to safety in Prilep 32 From Prilep Samuel returned to Prespa while Gabriel Radomir headed towards Strumitsa to continue the struggle 33 Further developments edit nbsp Battle of Kleidion See also Battle of Strumitsa After his victory Basil II advanced towards Strumitsa which was key to holding the whole Vardar valley On their way to the city the Byzantines seized the Matsukion fortress to the east of their advance 34 The Byzantine Emperor also sent an army under Botaneiates to surround Strumitsa and destroy all ramparts to the south and clear the passage to Thessalonica With the remainder of his troops Basil laid siege to the city itself The Bulgarians allowed Botaneiates to destroy the fortifications but he and his army were ambushed by Bulgarian raiders in a narrow valley soon after their task was complete In the ensuing battle Botaneiates was completely defeated and the Bulgarian commander Gabriel Radomir personally stabbed Botaneiates with his spear 35 36 As a result Basil II was forced to abandon the siege of Strumitsa and retreat On the return the eloquence of the cubicularius Sergius convinced the defenders of Melnik to surrender 37 another heavy blow for the Bulgarians as the town guarded the main road to Sofia from the south citation needed Prisoners edit Skylitzes records that Basil completely routed the Bulgarian army and took 15 000 prisoners 14 000 according to Kekaumenos Modern historians however such as Vasil Zlatarski claim that these numbers are exaggerated The 14th century Bulgarian translation of the Manasses Chronicle numbers the prisoners at 8 000 Basil divided the prisoners into groups of 100 men blinded 99 men in each group and left one man in each with one eye so that he could lead the others home 38 this was done in retaliation for the death of Botaneiates who was Basil s favourite general and advisor and also to crush the Bulgarian morale 39 Another possible reason was that in Byzantine eyes the Bulgarians were rebels against their authority and blinding was the usual punishment meted out to rebels 40 For this action Basil gained the nickname Boulgaroktonos Greek Boylgaroktonos Bulgarian Blgaroubiec the Bulgar slayer Samuel died of a heart attack on October 6 1014 reportedly due to seeing his soldiers blinded 41 42 Aftermath edit nbsp South eastern Europe c 1000 The Byzantine possessions and independent western Bulgaria are depicted By that time eastern Bulgaria was also in Bulgarian hands The death of Botaneiates and the four more years of war that followed indicate that the Byzantine success was not complete 43 Some modern historians doubt that the Bulgarian defeat was as complete as described by Skylitzes and Kekaumenos 44 Other historians emphasize that the death of Emperor Samuel two months later was much more fateful for Bulgaria 45 His heirs Gabriel Radomir and Ivan Vladislav were unable to effectively resist the attacks of Basil II and Bulgaria was completely defeated in 1018 46 In that year Emperor Ivan Vladislav was killed in a battle at Dyrrhachium 47 and Bulgaria became a province of the Byzantine Empire until the successful uprising led by the Asen brothers in 1185 citation needed Other theses in the historiography stress the significance of the battle As a result of the battle of Belasitsa the Bulgarian army suffered heavy casualties that could not be restored The ability of the central government to control the peripheral and interior provinces of the Empire was reduced and the actions of the local and provincial governors became more decisive for the outcome of the war with Byzantium Many of them voluntarily surrendered to Basil II 48 The battle also affected the Serbs and the Croats who were forced to acknowledge the supremacy of the Byzantine Emperor after 1018 49 50 The borders of the Byzantine Empire were restored to the Danube for the first time since the 7th century allowing Byzantium to control the entire Balkan peninsula from the Danube to the Peloponnese and from the Adriatic Sea to the Black Sea 51 References edit Mutafchiev Book about the Bulgarians p 59 Gyuzelev Short History of Bulgaria p 68 Bozhilov Tsar Simeon the Great pp 115 116 124 126 137 144 Pirivatrich The State of Samuel pp 58 59 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia in Selected sources Vol II p 64 Pirivatrich The State of Samuel pp 94 95 Angelov Cholpanov Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages 10th 15th centuries pp 39 41 43 44 Gyuzelev Short History of Bulgaria p 71 Nikolov Centralism and regionalism in early Medieval Bulgaria end of the 7th beginning of the 11th centuries p 130 Pirivatrich The State of Samuel pp 135 136 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia in Selected sources Vol II pp 65 66 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia II p 45 Zlatarski History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages Vol I Part 2 pp 731 732 736 Nikolov Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria pp 179 180 A description of the palisade built by Samuel between Belasitsa and Ograzhden in Bulgarian G Mitrev The palisade of Samuel and the battle in 1014 permanent dead link pp 76 79 in Macedonian Review journal in Bulgarian 1993 issue 2 Ostrogorski History of Byzantium pp 404 405 Nikolov Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria p 131 G Nikolov estimates the total number of the Bulgarian army including the squads of local militia at maximum 45 000 The Byzantine historian Georgius Monachus Continuatus wrote that the Bulgarian army had 360 000 men a greatly exaggerated number the actual being 10 times smaller Zlatarski History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages Vol I Part 2 p 731 Nikolov Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria p 180 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia II p 457 Zonaras ibid IV p 121 Nikolov Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria p 146 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia Selected sources Vol II p 66 Zlatarski History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages Vol I Part 2 pp 732 734 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia p 457 a b Cedrin pp 457 458 George Kedrenos s Historical Synopsis is a compilation chronicle based on the writings of John Skylitzes George Syncellus Theophanes the Confessor and several other historians It is not clear what edition is referred to here a b Savvides Alexis G K 1994 Proswpografiko shmeiwma gia ton Byzantino strathlath Nikhforo 3ifia Profile of Byzantine soldier Nicephoros Xifias Byzantinh proswpografia topikh istoria kai byzantinotoyrkikes sxeseis Byzantine Prosopography Topical History and Byzantine Turkish Relations in Greek Athens Kritikh Istorikh Biblio8hkh pp 25 27 ISBN 960 218 089 7 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia Selected sources Vol II p 66 Zlatarski History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages Vol I Part 2 pp 734 736 Angelov Cholpanov Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages 10th 15th centuries p 55 Greek sources on the History of Bulgaria in Bulgarian Vol VI Archived June 12 2018 at the Wayback Machine s 284 retrieved on 29 01 2008 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia p 458 Zonaras ibid p 121 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia p 459 Zlatarski History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages Vol I Part 2 p 738 Angelov Cholpanov Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages 10th 15th centuries pp 55 56 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia r 460 Ioannes Scylitzes Historia r 458 Gyuzelev Short History of Bulgaria p 74 Pirivatrich The State of Samuel p 178 SS Pirivatic indicates that blinding was the traditional punishment in Byzantium for a rebellion against the legitimate ruler Runciman Steven 1930 A History of the First Bulgarian Empire London G Bell and Sons p 242 OCLC 458819568 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 28 2008 retrieved on 7 September 2008 Dobrev Ivan 2004 Novootkritiyat nadpis za car Samuil i sbitiyata v 1014 g The Newly Discovered Inscription of Tsar Samuel and the Events of the Year 1014 Staroblgaris tika Palaeobulgarica in Bulgarian 28 3 3 24 Holmes Catherine Basil II A D 976 1025 Archived March 13 2015 at the Wayback Machine Stephenson P The Legend of Basil the Bulgar Slayer Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 0 521 81530 4 p 4 Zlatarski History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages Vol I Part 2 pp 740 741 Whittow Making of Orthodox Byzantium pp 387 388 Runciman A History of the First Bulgarian Empire p 248 Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine retrieved on 7 9 2008 Nikolov Centralism and Regionalism in Early Medieval Bulgaria pp 130 131 143 Stephenson P The Balkan Frontier in the Year 1000 pp 123 124 v Magdalino P Byzantium in the Year 1000 Brill 2003 ISBN 90 04 12097 1 Ostrogorsky History of Byzantium p 408 Mutafchiev Lecture notes on Byzantine history Vol II p 280 Cirkovic Sima Doseljavanje slovena i dukljanska drzava Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine Croatia was not conquered by Byzantium but became its vassal see Matanov Hristo The Medieval Balkans Historical Essays Srednovekovnite Balkani Istoricheski ocherci in Bulgarian Paradigma Publishers Sofia 2002 ISBN 954 9536 61 0 p 150 Vasiliev A History of the Byzantine empire 6 The Macedonian epoch 867 1081 Relations of the Byzantine Empire with the Bulgarians and Magyars Archived October 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine retrieved on 20 November 2007 in Russian Vasilev A A Istoriya Vizantijskoj imperii tom 1 Archived May 6 2007 at the Wayback Machine Vzaimootnosheniya Vizantijskoj imperii s bolgarami i madyarami Archived October 19 2016 at the Wayback Machine Further reading editJohn Skylitzes Synopsis Historion Archived July 13 2001 at the Wayback Machine translated by Paul Stephenson Original Greek version Treadgold Warren T A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford Stanford University Press 1997 ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Mutafchiev Petar Book about the Bulgarians Kniga za balgarite Kniga za blgarite in Bulgarian Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Publishing House Sofia 1992 ISBN 954 430 128 3 Mutafchiev Petar Lecture notes on Byzantine history Lektsii po istoria na Vizantia Lekcii po istoriya na Vizantiya in Bulgarian Vol II Anubis Publishers Sofia 1995 ISBN 954 426 063 3 t 2 Gyuzelev Vasil Bulgaria from the second quarter of the 10th century to the beginning of the 11th century Balgaria ot vtorata chetvart na X do nachaloto na XI vek Blgariya ot vtorata chetvrt na H do nachaloto na HI vek in Bulgarian In Dimitrov Ilcho Ed Short History of Bulgaria Kratka istoria na Balgaria Kratka istoriya na Blgariya in Bulgarian Science and Arts Publishers Sofia 1983 Bozhilov Ivan Tsar Simeon the Great 893 927 The Golden Century of Medieval Bulgaria Tsar Simeon Veliki 893 927 Zlatniyat vek na Srednovekovna Balgaria Car Simeon Veliki 893 927 Zlatniyat vek na Srednovekovna Blgariya in Bulgarian Fatherland Front Publishers Sofia 1983 Pirivatrich Sardzan The State of Samuel Territory and Characteristics Samuilovata darzhava Obhvat i harakter Samuilovata drzhava Obhvat i harakter AGATA A Publishing Group Sofia 2000 ISBN 954 540 020 X Selected sources of Bulgarian history Podbrani izvori na balgarskata istoria Podbrani izvori za blgarskata istoriya Vol II Bulgarian States and Bulgarians in the Middle Ages Balgarskite darzhavi i balgarite prez Srednovekovieto Blgarskite drzhavi i blgarite prez Srednovekovieto TANGRA TanNakRA IK Publishers in Bulgarian Sofia 2004 ISBN 954 9942 40 6 Angelov Dimitar and Boris Cholpanov Bulgarian Military History in the Middle Ages 10th 15th centuries Balgarska voenna istoria prez srednovekovieto X XV vek Blgarska voenna istoriya prez srednovekovieto H XV vek in Bulgarian Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Publishers Sofia 1994 ISBN 954 430 200 X Nikolov Georgi 2005 Centralism and regionalism in early Medieval Bulgaria end of the 7th beginning of the 11th centuries Tsentralizam i regionalizam v rannosrednowekovna Balgariya kraya na VII nachaloto na XI vek Centralizm i regionalizm v rannosrednovekovna Blgariya kraya na VII nachaloto na XI vek in Bulgarian Sofia Academic Press Marin Drinov ISBN 954 430 787 7 Ostrogorsky George History of Byzantium Istoria na vizantiyskata darzhava Istoriya na vizantijskata drzhava in Bulgarian Sofia 1998 ISBN 954 8079 92 5 Zlatarski Vasil 1994 1927 Istoriya na blgarskata drzhava prez srednite vekove Tom I Istoriya na Prvoto blgarsko carstvo Chast II Ot slavyanizaciyata na drzhavata do padaneto na Prvoto carstvo 852 1018 History of Bulgaria in the Middle Ages Vol 1 History of the First Bulgarian Empire Part 2 From the Slavicization of the state to the fall of the First Empire 852 1018 Sofia Marin Drinov Academic Publishers ISBN 954 430 299 9 Pavlov Plamen The Sunset of the First Bulgarian Kingdom 1015 1018 Zalezat na Parvoto balgarsko tsarstvo 1015 1018 Zalezt na Prvoto blgarsko carstvo 1015 1018 in Bulgarian Marin Drinov Academic Publishers Sofia 1999 ISBN 954 430 630 7 Cirkovic Sima Doseljavanje slovena i dukljanska drzava from Montenegrina digitalna biblioteka crnogorske kulture on 20 November 2007 Holmes Catherine Basil II A D 976 1025 publ in De Imperatoribus Romanis An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors retrieved on 16 November 2007 Vasiliev A History of the Byzantine empire retrieved on 20 November 2007 Runciman Steven A History of the First Bulgarian Empire The end of an Empire Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine retrieved on 28 January 2008 Stevenson Paul 2003 The Legend of Basil the Bulgar Slayer Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 0 521 81530 4 The battle of Kleidion in English retrieved on 28 January 2008 The battle of Kleidion in French retrieved on 28 January 2008 Jirecek K J 1876 Geschichte der Bulgaren in German Nachdr d Ausg Prag 1876 Hildesheim New York Olms 1977 ISBN 3 487 06408 1 pp 195 200 pp 195 197 200 can be seen inside the link Further reading editStoyanov Aleksandr July 2019 The Size of Bulgaria s Medieval Field Armies A Case Study of Military Mobilization Capacity in the Middle Ages Journal of Military History 83 3 719 746 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Kleidion amp oldid 1218920911, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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