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Siege of Constantinople (717–718)

Second Arab siege of Constantinople
Part of the Arab–Byzantine wars and the early Muslim conquests

The second Arab siege of Constantinople, as depicted in the 14th-century Bulgarian translation of the Manasses Chronicle
Date15 July/August[a] 717 – 15 August 718
Location
Result
Belligerents
Umayyad Caliphate
Commanders and leaders
Strength
120,000 (al-Mas'udi)
1,800 ships (Theophanes)
c. 15,000 Byzantines (estimate)[1]
c. 12,000 Bulgars[2]
Casualties and losses
Very heavy, almost all men and ships Unknown

The second Arab siege of Constantinople was a combined land and sea offensive in 717–718 by the Muslim Arabs of the Umayyad Caliphate against the capital city of the Byzantine Empire, Constantinople. The campaign marked the culmination of twenty years of attacks and progressive Arab occupation of the Byzantine borderlands, while Byzantine strength was sapped by prolonged internal turmoil. In 716, after years of preparations, the Arabs, led by Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik, invaded Byzantine Asia Minor. The Arabs initially hoped to exploit Byzantine civil strife and made common cause with the general Leo III the Isaurian, who had risen up against Emperor Theodosius III. Leo, however, tricked them and secured the Byzantine throne for himself.

After wintering in the western coastlands of Asia Minor, the Arab army crossed into Thrace in early summer 717 and built siege lines to blockade the city, which was protected by the massive Theodosian Walls. The Arab fleet, which accompanied the land army and was meant to complete the city's blockade by sea, was neutralized soon after its arrival by the Byzantine navy through the use of Greek fire. This allowed Constantinople to be resupplied by sea, while the Arab army was crippled by famine and disease during the unusually hard winter that followed. In spring 718, two Arab fleets sent as reinforcements were destroyed by the Byzantines after their Christian crews defected, and an additional army sent overland through Asia Minor was ambushed and defeated. Coupled with attacks by the Bulgars on their rear, the Arabs were forced to lift the siege on 15 August 718. On its return journey, the Arab fleet was almost completely destroyed by natural disasters.

The siege's failure had wide-ranging repercussions. The rescue of Constantinople ensured the continued survival of Byzantium, while the Caliphate's strategic outlook was altered: although regular attacks on Byzantine territories continued, the goal of outright conquest was abandoned. Historians consider the siege to be one of history's most important battles, as its failure postponed the Muslim advance into Southeastern Europe for centuries.

Background edit

Following the first Arab siege of Constantinople (674–678), the Arabs and Byzantines experienced a period of peace. After 680, the Umayyad Caliphate was in the throes of the Second Muslim Civil War and the consequent Byzantine ascendancy in the East enabled the emperors to extract huge amounts of tribute from the Umayyad government in Damascus.[3] In 692, as the Umayyads emerged as victors from their civil war, Emperor Justinian II (r. 685–695, 705–711) resumed hostilities with the Caliphate. The result was a series of Arab victories that led to the loss of Byzantine control over Armenia and the Caucasian principalities, and a gradual encroachment upon Byzantine borderlands. Year by year, the Caliphate's generals, usually members of the Umayyad family, launched raids into Byzantine territory and captured fortresses and towns.[4] After 712, the Byzantine defensive system began to show signs of collapse: Arab raids penetrated further and further into Asia Minor, border fortresses were repeatedly attacked and sacked, and references to Byzantine reaction in the sources become more and more scarce.[5] In this, the Arabs were aided by the prolonged period of internal instability that followed the first deposition of Justinian II in 695, in which the Byzantine throne changed hands seven times in violent coups.[6] In the words of the Byzantinist Warren Treadgold, "the Arab attacks would in any case have intensified after the end of their own civil war ... With far more men, land and wealth than Byzantium, the Arabs had begun to concentrate all their strength against it. Now they threatened to extinguish the empire entirely by capturing its capital."[7]

Sources edit

The information available on the siege comes from sources composed in later dates, which are often mutually contradictory. The main Byzantine source is the extensive and detailed account of the Chronicle of Theophanes the Confessor (760–817) and secondarily the brief account in the Breviarium of Patriarch Nikephoros I of Constantinople (died 828), which shows small differences, mainly chronological, from Theophanes's version.[8] For the events of the siege, both authors appear to have used a primary account composed during the reign of Leo III the Isaurian (r. 717–741) which therefore contains a favourable depiction of the latter, while Theophanes apparently relies on an unknown biography of Leo (ignored by Nikephoros) for the events of 716. The 8th-century chronicler Theophilus of Edessa records the years leading up to the siege and the siege itself in some detail, paying particular attention to the diplomacy between Maslama and Leo III.[9] The Arab sources, mainly the 11th-century Kitab al-'Uyun and the more concise narrative in the History of the Prophets and Kings by al-Tabari (838–923), rely on primary accounts by early 9th-century Arab writers, but are more confused and contain several legendary elements. The Syriac language accounts are based on Agapius of Hierapolis (died 942), who likely drew from the same primary source as Theophanes, but are far briefer.[10]

Opening stages of the campaign edit

 
Gold solidus of Anastasius II, who prepared Constantinople for the coming Arab assault

The Arab successes opened the way for a second assault on Constantinople, an undertaking already initiated under Caliph al-Walid I (r. 705–715). Following his death, his brother and successor Sulayman (r. 715–717) took up the project with increased vigour, according to Arab accounts because of a prophecy that a Caliph bearing the name of a prophet would capture Constantinople; Sulayman (Solomon) was the only member of the Umayyad family to bear such a name. According to Syriac sources, the new Caliph swore "to not stop fighting against Constantinople before having exhausted the country of the Arabs or to have taken the city".[11] The Umayyad forces began assembling at the plain of Dabiq north of Aleppo, under the direct supervision of the Caliph. As Sulayman was too sick to campaign himself, however, he entrusted command to his brother Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik.[12] The operation against Constantinople came at a time when the Umayyad empire was undergoing a period of continuous expansion to the east and west. Muslim armies advanced into Transoxiana, India, and the Visigothic Kingdom of Hispania.[13]

Arab preparations, especially the construction of a large fleet, did not go unnoticed by the worried Byzantines. Emperor Anastasius II (r. 713–715) sent an embassy to Damascus under the patrician and urban prefect, Daniel of Sinope, ostensibly in order to plea for peace, but in reality to spy on the Arabs. Anastasius, in turn, began to prepare for the inevitable siege: the fortifications of Constantinople were repaired and equipped with ample artillery (catapults and other siege weapons), while food stores were brought into the city. In addition, those inhabitants who could not stockpile food for at least three years were evacuated.[14] Anastasius strengthened his navy and in early 715 dispatched it against the Arab fleet that had come to Phoenix—usually identified with modern Finike in Lycia, it may also be modern Fenaket across Rhodes,[15] or perhaps Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), famed for its cedar forests[16]—to collect timber for their ships. At Rhodes, however, the Byzantine fleet, encouraged by the soldiers of the Opsician Theme, rebelled, killed their commander John the Deacon and sailed north to Adramyttium. There, they acclaimed a reluctant tax collector, Theodosius, as emperor.[17] Anastasius crossed into Bithynia in the Opsician Theme to confront the rebellion, but the rebel fleet sailed on to Chrysopolis. From there, it launched attacks against Constantinople, until, in late summer, sympathizers within the capital opened its gates to them. Anastasius held out at Nicaea for several months, finally agreeing to resign and retire as a monk.[18] The accession of Theodosius, who from the sources comes across as both unwilling and incapable, as a puppet emperor of the Opsicians provoked the reaction of the other themes, especially the Anatolics and the Armeniacs under their respective strategoi ('generals') Leo the Isaurian and Artabasdos.[19]

 
Map of Byzantine Asia Minor and Thrace in the early 8th century

In these conditions of near-civil war, the Arabs began their carefully prepared advance. In September 715, the vanguard, under general Sulayman ibn Mu'ad, marched over Cilicia into Asia Minor, taking the strategic fortress of Loulon on its way. They wintered at Afik, an unidentified location near the western exit of the Cilician Gates. In early 716, Sulayman's army continued into central Asia Minor. The Umayyad fleet under Umar ibn Hubayra cruised along the Cilician coast, while Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik awaited developments with the main army in Syria.[20]

The Arabs hoped that the disunity among the Byzantines would play to their advantage. Maslama had already established contact with Leo the Isaurian. French scholar Rodolphe Guilland theorized that Leo offered to become a vassal of the Caliphate, although the Byzantine general intended to use the Arabs for his own purposes. In turn, Maslama supported Leo hoping to maximize confusion and weaken the Empire, easing his own task of taking Constantinople.[21]

Sulayman's first objective was the strategically important fortress of Amorium, which the Arabs intended to use as a base the following winter. Amorium had been left defenceless in the turmoil of the civil war and would have easily fallen, but the Arabs chose to bolster Leo's position as a counterweight to Theodosius. They offered the city terms of surrender if its inhabitants would acknowledge Leo as emperor. The fortress capitulated, but still did not open its gates to the Arabs. Leo came to the vicinity with a handful of soldiers and executed a series of ruses and negotiations to garrison 800 men in the town. The Arab army, thwarted in its objective and with supplies running low, withdrew. Leo escaped to Pisidia and, in summer, supported by Artabasdos, was proclaimed and crowned as Byzantine emperor, openly challenging Theodosius.[22][23]

 
Gold solidus of Leo III

Leo's success at Amorium was fortunately timed, since Maslama with the main Arab army had in the meantime crossed the Taurus Mountains and was marching straight for the city. In addition, as the Arab general had not received news of Leo's double-dealing, he did not devastate the territories he marched through—the Armeniac and Anatolic themes, whose governors he still believed to be his allies.[24] On meeting up with Sulayman's retreating army and learning what had transpired, Maslama changed direction: he attacked Akroinon and from there marched to the western coastlands to spend the winter. On his way, he sacked Sardis and Pergamon. The Arab fleet wintered in Cilicia.[25] Leo, in the meantime, began his own march on Constantinople. He captured Nicomedia, where he found and captured, among other officials, Theodosius's son, and then marched to Chrysopolis. In spring 717, after short negotiations, he secured Theodosius's resignation and his recognition as emperor, entering the capital on 25 March. Theodosius and his son were allowed to retire to a monastery as monks, while Artabasdos was promoted to the position of kouropalates and received the hand of Leo's daughter, Anna.[26]

Opposing forces edit

From the outset, the Arabs prepared for a major assault on Constantinople. The late 8th-century Syriac Zuqnin Chronicle reports that the Arabs were "innumerable", while the 12th-century Syriac chronicler Michael the Syrian mentions a much-inflated 200,000 men and 5,000 ships. The 10th-century Arab writer al-Mas'udi mentions 120,000 troops, and the account of Theophanes the Confessor 1,800 ships. Supplies for several years were hoarded, and siege engines and incendiary materials (naphtha) were stockpiled. The supply train alone is said to have numbered 12,000 men, 6,000 camels and 6,000 donkeys, while according to the 13th-century historian Bar Hebraeus, the troops included 30,000 volunteers (mutawa) for the Holy War (jihad).[27] The Byzantines' strength is entirely unknown, but Constantinople's defenders likely did not number over 15,000 men, given both the exhaustion of the Byzantine Empire's manpower and the limitations imposed by the need to maintain and feed such a force.[1]

Whatever the true numbers, the attackers were considerably more numerous than the defenders; according to Treadgold, the Arab host may have outnumbered the entire Byzantine army.[28] Little is known on the detailed composition of the Arab force, but it appears that it mostly consisted of, and was led by, Syrians and Jazirans of the elite ahl al-Sham ('People of Syria'), the main pillar of the Umayyad regime and veterans of the struggle against Byzantium.[29] Alongside Maslama, Umar ibn Hubayra, Sulayman ibn Mu'ad, and Bakhtari ibn al-Hasan are mentioned as his lieutenants by Theophanes and Agapius of Hierapolis, while the later Kitab al-'Uyun replaces Bakhtari with Abdallah al-Battal.[30]

Although the siege consumed a large part of the Caliphate's manpower and resources,[b] it was still capable of launching raids against the Byzantine frontier in eastern Asia Minor during the siege's duration: in 717, Caliph Sulayman's son Daud captured a fortress near Melitene and in 718 Amr ibn Qais raided the frontier.[31] On the Byzantine side, the numbers are unknown. Aside from Anastasius II's preparations (which might have been neglected following his deposition),[32] the Byzantines could count on the assistance of the Bulgar ruler Tervel, with whom Leo concluded a treaty that possibly included alliance against the Arabs.[33]

Siege edit

 
Map of the environs of Constantinople in Byzantine times

In early summer, Maslama ordered his fleet to join him and with his army crossed the Hellespont (Dardanelles) at Abydos into Thrace. The Arabs began their march on Cοnstantinople, thoroughly devastating the countryside, gathering supplies, and sacking the towns they encountered.[34] In mid-July or mid-August,[a] the Arab army reached Constantinople and isolated it completely on land by building a double siege wall of stone, one facing the city and one facing the Thracian countryside, with their camp positioned between them. According to Arab sources, at this point Leo offered to ransom the city by paying a gold coin for every inhabitant, but Maslama replied that there could not be peace with the vanquished, and that the Arab garrison of Constantinople had already been selected.[35]

The Arab fleet under Sulayman (often confused with the Caliph himself in the medieval sources) arrived on 1 September, anchoring at first near the Hebdomon. Two days later, Sulayman led his fleet into the Bosphorus and the various squadrons began anchoring by the European and Asian suburbs of the city: one part sailed south of Chalcedon to the harbours of Eutropios and Anthemios to watch over the southern entrance of the Bosporus, while the rest of the fleet sailed into the strait, passed by Constantinople and began making landfall on the coasts between Galata and Kleidion, cutting the Byzantine capital's communication with the Black Sea. But as the Arab fleet's rearguard, twenty heavy ships with 2,000 marines, was passing the city, the southerly wind stopped and then reversed, drifting them towards the city walls, where a Byzantine squadron attacked them with Greek fire. Theophanes reported that some went down with all hands, while others, burning, sailed down to the Princes' Islands of Oxeia and Plateia. The victory encouraged the Byzantines and dejected the Arabs, who, according to Theophanes, had originally intended to sail to the sea walls during the night and try to scale them using the ships' steering paddles. The same night, Leo drew up the chain between the city and Galata, closing the entrance to the Golden Horn. The Arab fleet became reluctant to engage the Byzantines, and withdrew to the safe harbour of Sosthenion further north on the European shore of the Bosporus.[36]

 
Photo of a restored section of the triple Theodosian Walls protecting Constantinople from its land side

The Arab army was well-provisioned, with Arab accounts reporting high mounds of supplies piled up in their camp, and had even brought along wheat to sow and harvest the next year. The failure of the Arab navy to blockade the city, however, meant that the Byzantines too could ferry in provisions. In addition, the Arab army had already devastated the Thracian countryside during its march and could not rely on it for foraging. The Arab fleet and the second Arab army, which operated in the Asian suburbs of Constantinople, were able to bring in limited supplies to Maslama's army.[37] As the siege drew into winter, negotiations opened between the two sides, extensively reported by Arab sources but ignored by Byzantine historians. According to the Arab accounts, Leo continued to play a double game with the Arabs. One version claims that he tricked Maslama into handing over most of his grain supplies, while another claims that the Arab general was persuaded to burn them altogether, so as to show the inhabitants of the city that they faced an imminent assault and induce them to surrender.[38] The winter of 718 was extremely harsh; snow covered the ground for over three months. As the supplies in the Arab camp ran out, a terrible famine broke out: the soldiers ate their horses, camels, and other livestock, and the bark, leaves and roots of trees. They swept the snow of the fields they had sown to eat the green shoots, and reportedly resorted to cannibalism and eating the dung of each other and their animals.[39] Consequently, the Arab army was ravaged by epidemics; with great exaggeration, the Lombard historian Paul the Deacon put the number of their dead of hunger and disease at 300,000.[40]

 
Depiction of the use of Greek fire, miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes

The Arab situation looked set to improve in spring when the new Caliph, Umar II (r. 717–720), sent two fleets to the besiegers' aid: 400 ships from Egypt under a commander named Sufyan and 360 ships from Africa under Izid, all laden with supplies and arms. At the same time, a fresh army began marching through Asia Minor to assist in the siege. When the new fleets arrived in the Sea of Marmara, they kept their distance from the Byzantines and anchored on the Asian shore, the Egyptians in the Gulf of Nicomedia near modern Tuzla and the Africans south of Chalcedon (at Satyros, Bryas and Kartalimen). Most of the Arab fleets' crews were composed of Christian Egyptians, however, and they began deserting to the Byzantines upon their arrival. Notified by the Egyptians of the advent and disposition of the Arab reinforcements, Leo launched his fleet in an attack against the new Arab fleets. Crippled by the defection of their crews, and helpless against Greek fire, the Arab ships were destroyed or captured along with the weapons and supplies they carried. Constantinople was now safe from a seaborne attack.[41] On land too the Byzantines were victorious: their troops managed to ambush the advancing Arab army under a commander named Mardasan and destroy it in the hills around Sophon, south of Nicomedia.[42]

Constantinople could now be easily resupplied by sea and the city's fishermen went back to work, as the Arab fleet did not sail again. Still suffering from hunger and pestilence, the Arabs also lost a major battle against the Bulgars, who killed, according to Theophanes, 22,000 men. The sources are divided on the details of the Bulgar participation in the siege: Theophanes and al-Tabari report that the Bulgars attacked the Arab encampment (likely because of their treaty with Leo), while according to the Syriac Chronicle of 846, it was the Arabs who strayed into Bulgar territory, seeking provisions. Michael the Syrian on the other hand mentions that the Bulgars participated in the siege from the beginning, with attacks against the Arabs as they marched through Thrace towards Constantinople, and subsequently on their encampment.[43] According to some modern interpretations of the original sources, the first Bulgar victory may have been against a separate Arab army under Ukhaida that ranged as far as Stara Zagora, followed by an attack against the Arabs in Thrace. The Bulgars continued harassing the Arab encampments for the duration of the siege.[44]

The siege had clearly failed, and Caliph Umar sent orders to Maslama to retreat. After thirteen months of siege, on 15 August 718, the Arabs departed. The date coincided with the feast of the Dormition of the Theotokos (Assumption of Mary), and it was to her that the Byzantines ascribed their victory. The retreating Arabs were not hindered or attacked on their return, but their fleet lost more ships in a storm in the Sea of Marmara, while other ships were set afire by ashes from the volcano of Santorini, and some of the survivors were captured by the Byzantines, so that Theophanes claims that only five vessels made it back to Syria.[45] Arab sources claim that altogether 150,000 Muslims perished during the campaign, a figure which, according to the Byzantinist John Haldon, "while certainly inflated, is nevertheless indicative of the enormity of the disaster in medieval eyes".[46]

Aftermath edit

 
The Umayyad Caliphate and the Byzantine Empire, c. 740

The expedition's failure weakened the Umayyad state. As historian Bernard Lewis commented, "Its failure brought a grave moment for Umayyad power. The financial strain of equipping and maintaining the expedition caused an aggravation of the fiscal and financial oppression which had already aroused such dangerous opposition. The destruction of the fleet and army of Syria at the sea walls of Constantinople deprived the regime of the chief material basis of its power".[47] The blow to the Caliphate's might was severe, and although the land army did not suffer losses in the same degree as the fleet, Umar is recorded as contemplating withdrawing from the recent conquests of Hispania and Transoxiana, as well as a complete evacuation of Cilicia and other Byzantine territories that the Arabs had seized over the previous years. Although his advisors dissuaded him from such drastic actions, most Arab garrisons were withdrawn from the Byzantine frontier districts they had occupied in the lead-up to the siege. In Cilicia, only Mopsuestia remained in Arab hands as a defensive bulwark to protect Antioch.[48] The Byzantines even recovered some territory in western Armenia for a time. In 719, the Byzantine fleet raided the Syrian coast and burned down the port of Laodicea and, in 720 or 721, the Byzantines attacked and sacked Tinnis in Egypt.[49] Leo also restored control over Sicily, where news of the Arab siege of Constantinople and expectations of the city's fall had prompted the local governor to declare an emperor of his own, Basil Onomagoulos. It was during this time, however, that effective Byzantine control over Sardinia and Corsica ceased.[50]

Besides this, the Byzantines failed to exploit their success in launching attacks of their own against the Arabs. In 720, after a hiatus of two years, Arab raids against Byzantium resumed, although now they were no longer directed at conquest, but rather seeking booty. The Arab attacks would intensify again over the next two decades, until the major Byzantine victory at the Battle of Akroinon in 740. Coupled with military defeats on the other fronts of the overextended Caliphate, and the internal instability which culminated in the Abbasid Revolution, the age of Arab expansion came to an end.[51]

Historical assessment and impact edit

The second Arab siege of Constantinople was far more dangerous for Byzantium than the first as, unlike the loose blockade of 674–678, the Arabs launched a direct, well-planned attack on the Byzantine capital, and tried to cut off the city completely from land and sea.[31] The siege represented a final effort by the Caliphate to "cut off the head" of the Byzantine Empire, after which the remaining provinces, especially in Asia Minor, would be easy to capture.[52] The reasons for the Arab failure were chiefly logistical, as they were operating too far from their Syrian bases, but the superiority of the Byzantine navy through the use of Greek fire, the strength of Constantinople's fortifications, and the skill of Leo III in deception and negotiations also played important roles.[53]

 
Along with the Battle of Tours in 732, the siege of Constantinople stopped the Muslim expansion into Europe

The failure of the Arab siege led to a profound change in the nature of warfare between Byzantium and the Caliphate. The Muslim goal of conquest of Constantinople was effectively abandoned, and the frontier between the two empires stabilized along the line of the Taurus and Antitaurus Mountains, over which both sides continued to launch regular raids and counter-raids. In this incessant border warfare, frontier towns and fortresses changed hands frequently, but the general outline of the border remained unaltered for over two centuries, until the Byzantine conquests of the 10th century.[54] The eastern fleets of the Caliphate entered a century-long decline; only the Ifriqiyan fleets maintained regular raids on Byzantine Sicily, until they too subsided after 752.[55] Indeed, with the exception of the advance of the Abbasid army under Harun al-Rashid up to Chrysopolis in 782, no other Arab army would ever come within sight of the Byzantine capital again.[56] Consequently, on the Muslim side the raids themselves eventually acquired an almost ritual character, and were valued mostly as a demonstration of the continuing jihad and sponsored by the Caliph as a symbol of his role as the leader of the Muslim community.[57]

The outcome of the siege was of considerable macrohistorical importance. The Byzantine capital's survival preserved the Empire as a bulwark against Islamic expansion into Europe until the 15th century, when it fell to the Ottoman Turks. Along with the Battle of Tours in 732, the successful defence of Constantinople has been seen as instrumental in stopping Muslim expansion into Europe. Historian Ekkehard Eickhoff writes that "had a victorious Caliph made Constantinople already at the beginning of the Middle Ages into the political capital of Islam, as happened at the end of the Middle Ages by the Ottomans—the consequences for Christian Europe [...] would have been incalculable", as the Mediterranean would have become an Arab lake, and the Germanic successor states in Western Europe would have been cut off from the Mediterranean roots of their culture.[58] Military historian Paul K. Davis summed up the siege's importance as follows: "By turning back the Moslem invasion, Europe remained in Christian hands, and no serious Moslem threat to Europe existed until the fifteenth century. This victory, coincident with the Frankish victory at Tours (732), limited Islam's western expansion to the southern Mediterranean world."[59] Thus the historian John B. Bury called 718 "an ecumenical date", while the Greek historian Spyridon Lambros likened the siege to the Battle of Marathon and Leo III to Miltiades.[60] Consequently, military historians often include the siege in lists of the "decisive battles" of world history.[61]

Cultural impact edit

Among Arabs, the 717–718 siege became the most famous of their expeditions against Byzantium. Several accounts survive, but most were composed at later dates and are semi-fictional and contradictory. In legend, the defeat was transformed into a victory: Maslama departed only after symbolically entering the Byzantine capital on his horse accompanied by thirty riders, where Leo received him with honour and led him to the Hagia Sophia. After Leo paid homage to Maslama and promised tribute, Maslama and his troops—30,000 out of the original 80,000 that set out for Constantinople—departed for Syria.[62] The tales of the siege influenced similar episodes in Arabic epic literature. A siege of Constantinople is found in the tale of Omar bin al-Nu'uman and his sons in the Thousand and One Nights, while both Maslama and the Caliph Sulayman appear in a tale of the Hundred and One Nights from the Maghreb. The commander of Maslama's bodyguard, Abdallah al-Battal, became a celebrated figure in Arab and Turkish poetry as "Battal Gazi" for his exploits in the Arab raids of the next decades. Similarly, the 10th-century epic Delhemma, related to the cycle around Battal, gives a fictionalized version of the 717–718 siege.[63]

Later Muslim and Byzantine tradition also ascribed the building of Constantinople's first mosque, near the city's praetorium, to Maslama. In reality, the mosque near the praetorium was probably erected in about 860, as a result of an Arab embassy in that year.[64] Ottoman tradition also ascribed the building of the Arap Mosque (located outside Constantinople proper in Galata) to Maslama, although it erroneously dated this to around 686, probably confusing Maslama's attack with the first Arab siege in the 670s.[65] The passing of the Arab army also left traces at Abydos, where "Maslama's Well" and a mosque attributed to him were still known in the 10th century.[56]

Eventually, following their repeated failures before Constantinople, and the continued resilience of the Byzantine state, the Muslims began to project the fall of Constantinople to the distant future. Thus the city's fall came to be regarded as one of the signs of the arrival of the end times in Islamic eschatology.[66] The siege became a motif in Byzantine apocalyptic literature as well, with decisive final battles against the Arabs before the walls of Constantinople being featured in the early 8th-century Greek translation of the Syriac Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius and the Apocalypse of Daniel, written either at about the time of the siege or a century later.[67]

References edit

Footnotes edit

^ a: Theophanes the Confessor gives the date as 15 August, but modern scholars believe that this is probably meant to mirror the Arabs' departure date in the next year. Patriarch Nikephoros I on the other hand explicitly records the duration of the siege as 13 months, implying that it began on 15 July.[68]
^ b: According to the historian Hugh N. Kennedy, based on the numbers found in the contemporary army registers (diwans), the total manpower available to the Umayyad Caliphate c. 700 ranged between 250,000 and 300,000 men, spread throughout the various provinces. It is unclear, however, what portion of this number could actually be fielded for any particular campaign, and does not account for surplus manpower that could be mobilized in exceptional circumstances.[69]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Decker 2013, p. 207.
  2. ^ Estimate based on primary sources, Stoyanov 2019, pp. 723–724.
  3. ^ Lilie 1976, pp. 81–82, 97–106.
  4. ^ Blankinship 1994, p. 31; Haldon 1990, p. 72; Lilie 1976, pp. 107–120.
  5. ^ Haldon 1990, p. 80; Lilie 1976, pp. 120–122, 139–140.
  6. ^ Blankinship 1994, p. 31; Lilie 1976, p. 140; Treadgold 1997, pp. 345–346.
  7. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 345.
  8. ^ Brooks 1899, pp. 19–20.
  9. ^ Mango & Scott 1997, pp. lxxxviil–xxxviii.
  10. ^ Brooks 1899, pp. 19–20, Guilland 1959, pp. 115–116
  11. ^ Brooks 1899, pp. 20–21; El-Cheikh 2004, p. 65; Guilland 1959, p. 110; Lilie 1976, p. 122; Treadgold 1997, p. 344.
  12. ^ Guilland 1959, pp. 110–111.
  13. ^ Hawting 2000, p. 73.
  14. ^ Mango & Scott 1997, p. 534; Lilie 1976, pp. 122–123; Treadgold 1997, pp. 343–344.
  15. ^ Mango & Scott 1997, p. 537 (Note #5).
  16. ^ Lilie 1976, p. 123 (Note #62).
  17. ^ Haldon 1990, p. 80; Mango & Scott 1997, pp. 535–536; Lilie 1976, pp. 123–124; Treadgold 1997, p. 344.
  18. ^ Haldon 1990, pp. 80, 82; Mango & Scott 1997, p. 536; Treadgold 1997, pp. 344–345.
  19. ^ Lilie 1976, p. 124; Treadgold 1997, p. 345.
  20. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 111; Mango & Scott 1997, p. 538; Lilie 1976, pp. 123–125.
  21. ^ Guilland 1959, pp. 118–119; Lilie 1976, p. 125.
  22. ^ Mango & Scott 1997, pp. 538–539; Lilie 1976, pp. 125–126; Treadgold 1997, p. 345.
  23. ^ For a detailed examination of Leo's negotiations with the Arabs before Amorium in Byzantine and Arab sources, cf. Guilland 1959, pp. 112–113, 124–126.
  24. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 125; Mango & Scott 1997, pp. 539–540; Lilie 1976, pp. 126–127.
  25. ^ Guilland 1959, pp. 113–114; Mango & Scott 1997, pp. 540–541; Lilie 1976, p. 127; Treadgold 1997, p. 345.
  26. ^ Haldon 1990, pp. 82–83; Mango & Scott 1997, pp. 540, 545; Lilie 1976, pp. 127–128; Treadgold 1997, p. 345.
  27. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 110; Kaegi 2008, pp. 384–385; Treadgold 1997, p. 938 (Note #1).
  28. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 346.
  29. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 110; Kennedy 2001, p. 47.
  30. ^ Canard 1926, pp. 91–92; Guilland 1959, p. 111.
  31. ^ a b Lilie 1976, p. 132.
  32. ^ Lilie 1976, p. 125.
  33. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 347.
  34. ^ Brooks 1899, p. 23; Mango & Scott 1997, p. 545; Lilie 1976, p. 128; Treadgold 1997, p. 347.
  35. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 119; Mango & Scott 1997, p. 545; Lilie 1976, pp. 128–129; Treadgold 1997, p. 347.
  36. ^ Guilland 1959, pp. 119–120; Mango & Scott 1997, pp. 545–546; Lilie 1976, p. 128; Treadgold 1997, p. 347.
  37. ^ Lilie 1976, p. 129; Treadgold 1997, p. 347.
  38. ^ Brooks 1899, pp. 24–28, 30; Lilie 1976, p. 129.
  39. ^ Stewart, Michael E. (2018). "A Furious Storm fell upon them: The Arab Siege of Constantinople, 717- 718', Medieval Warfare Magazine, VIII. 5". Academia. p. 32. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
  40. ^ Brooks 1899, pp. 28–29; Guilland 1959, pp. 122–123; Mango & Scott 1997, p. 546; Lilie 1976, pp. 129–130; Treadgold 1997, p. 347.
  41. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 121; Mango & Scott 1997, pp. 546, 548; Lilie 1976, p. 130; Treadgold 1997, pp. 347–348.
  42. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 122;Mango & Scott 1997, p. 546; Lilie 1976, pp. 130–131; Treadgold 1997, p. 348.
  43. ^ Canard 1926, pp. 90–91; Guilland 1959, pp. 122, 123; Mango & Scott 1997, p. 546; Lilie 1976, p. 131.
  44. ^ Stoyanov 2019, pp. 723–724.
  45. ^ Mango & Scott 1997, p. 550; Treadgold 1997, p. 349.
  46. ^ Haldon 1990, p. 83.
  47. ^ Lewis 2002, p. 79.
  48. ^ Blankinship 1994, pp. 33–34; Lilie 1976, pp. 132–133; Treadgold 1997, p. 349.
  49. ^ Blankinship 1994, p. 287 (Note #133); Lilie 1976, p. 133; Treadgold 1997, p. 349.
  50. ^ Treadgold 1997, pp. 347, 348.
  51. ^ Blankinship 1994, pp. 34–35, 117–236; Haldon 1990, p. 84; Kaegi 2008, pp. 385–386; Lilie 1976, pp. 143–144.
  52. ^ Lilie 1976, pp. 140–141.
  53. ^ Blankinship 1994, p. 105; Kaegi 2008, p. 385; Lilie 1976, p. 141; Treadgold 1997, p. 349.
  54. ^ Blankinship 1994, pp. 104–106; Haldon 1990, pp. 83–84; El-Cheikh 2004, pp. 83–84; Toynbee 1973, pp. 107–109.
  55. ^ Eickhoff 1966, pp. 35–39.
  56. ^ a b Mordtmann 1986, p. 533.
  57. ^ El-Cheikh 2004, pp. 83–84; Kennedy 2001, pp. 105–106.
  58. ^ Eickhoff 1966, p. 35.
  59. ^ Davis 2001, p. 99.
  60. ^ Guilland 1959, p. 129.
  61. ^ Crompton 1997, pp. 27–28; Davis 2001, pp. 99–102; Fuller 1987, pp. 335ff.; Regan 2002, pp. 44–45; Tucker 2010, pp. 94–97.
  62. ^ Canard 1926, pp. 99–102; El-Cheikh 2004, pp. 63–64; Guilland 1959, pp. 130–131.
  63. ^ Canard 1926, pp. 112–121; Guilland 1959, pp. 131–132.
  64. ^ Canard 1926, pp. 94–99; El-Cheikh 2004, p. 64; Guilland 1959, pp. 132–133; Hasluck 1929, p. 720.
  65. ^ Canard 1926, p. 99; Hasluck 1929, pp. 718–720; Mordtmann 1986, p. 533.
  66. ^ Canard 1926, pp. 104–112; El-Cheikh 2004, pp. 65–70; Hawting 2000, p. 73.
  67. ^ Brandes 2007, pp. 65–91.
  68. ^ Mango & Scott 1997, p. 548 (Note #16); Guilland 1959, pp. 116–118.
  69. ^ Kennedy 2001, pp. 19–21

Sources edit

  • Blankinship, Khalid Yahya (1994). The End of the Jihâd State: The Reign of Hishām ibn ʻAbd al-Malik and the Collapse of the Umayyads. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-1827-7.
  • Brandes, W. (2007). "Die Belagerung Konstantinopels 717/718 als apokalyptisches Ereignis. Zu einer Interpolation im griechischen Text der Pseudo-Methodios-Apokalypse". In Belke, K. (ed.). Byzantina Mediterranea: Festschrift für Johannes Koder zum 65. Geburtstag (in German). Vienna: Böhlau. pp. 65–91. ISBN 978-3205776086.
  • Brooks, E. W. (1899). "The Campaign of 716–718 from Arabic Sources". The Journal of Hellenic Studies. The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies. XIX: 19–33. doi:10.2307/623841. JSTOR 623841. S2CID 163360931.
  • Canard, Marius (1926). "Les expéditions des Arabes contre Constantinople dans l'histoire et dans la légende". Journal Asiatique (in French) (208): 61–121. ISSN 0021-762X. from the original on 17 April 2019. Retrieved 12 July 2012.
  • Crompton, Samuel Willard (1997). 100 Battles That Shaped World History. San Mateo, California: Bluewood Books. ISBN 978-0-912517-27-8. from the original on 30 July 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Davis, Paul K. (2001). "Constantinople: August 717–15 August 718". 100 Decisive Battles: From Ancient Times to the Present. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 99–102. ISBN 0-19-514366-3. from the original on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Decker, Michael J. (2013). The Byzantine Art of War. Yardley, Pennsylvania: Westholme Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59416-271-8.
  • Eickhoff, Ekkehard (1966). Seekrieg und Seepolitik zwischen Islam und Abendland: das Mittelmeer unter byzantinischer und arabischer Hegemonie (650-1040) (in German). De Gruyter.
  • El-Cheikh, Nadia Maria (2004). Byzantium Viewed by the Arabs. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies. ISBN 0-932885-30-6. from the original on 13 August 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Fuller, J. F. C. (1987). A Military History of the Western World, Volume 1: From the Earliest Times to the Battle of Lepanto. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80304-8. from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Guilland, Rodolphe (1959). "L'Expedition de Maslama contre Constantinople (717–718)". Études byzantines (in French). Paris: Publications de la Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de Paris: 109–133. OCLC 603552986.
  • Haldon, John F. (1990). Byzantium in the Seventh Century: The Transformation of a Culture. Revised Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31917-1. from the original on 28 January 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Hasluck, F. W. (1929). "LVII. The Mosques of the Arabs in Constantinople". Christianity and Islam Under the Sultans, Volume 2. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 717–735.
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  • Kaegi, Walter E. (2008). "Confronting Islam: Emperors versus Caliphs (641–c. 850)". In Shepard, Jonathan (ed.). The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire c. 500–1492. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 365–394. ISBN 978-0-521-83231-1. from the original on 23 May 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Kennedy, Hugh (2001). The Armies of the Caliphs: Military and Society in the Early Islamic State. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-25093-5.
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  • Lilie, Ralph-Johannes (1976). Die byzantinische Reaktion auf die Ausbreitung der Araber. Studien zur Strukturwandlung des byzantinischen Staates im 7. und 8. Jhd (in German). Munich: Institut für Byzantinistik und Neugriechische Philologie der Universität München. from the original on 25 December 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Mango, Cyril; Scott, Roger (1997). The Chronicle of Theophanes Confessor. Byzantine and Near Eastern History, AD 284–813. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-822568-7.
  • Mordtmann, J. H. (1986). "(al-)Ḳusṭanṭīniyya". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Lewis, B. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume V: Khe–Mahi. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 532–534. ISBN 978-90-04-07819-2.
  • Regan, Geoffrey (2002). Battles That Changed History: Fifty Decisive Battles Spanning over 2,500 Years of Warfare. London: André Deutsch. ISBN 978-0-233-05051-5. from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Stoyanov, Aleksandar (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. ISSN 0899-3718.
  • Toynbee, Arnold J. (1973). Constantine Porphyrogenitus and His World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-215253-X. from the original on 26 June 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  • Treadgold, Warren (1997). A History of the Byzantine State and Society. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-2630-2.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (2010). Battles That Changed History: An Encyclopedia of World Conflict. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-429-0. from the original on 2 August 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Radic, Radivoj (18 August 2008). "Two Arabian sieges of Constantinople (674–678; 717/718)". Encyclopedia of the Hellenic World, Constantinople. Athens, Greece: Foundation of the Hellenic World. from the original on 27 November 2018. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
  • Sheppard, Si (2020). Constantinople AD 717–18: The Crucible of History. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1472836922. from the original on 15 August 2021. Retrieved 7 November 2020.

41°00′45″N 28°58′30″E / 41.0125°N 28.9750°E / 41.0125; 28.9750

siege, constantinople, other, sieges, city, list, sieges, constantinople, second, arab, siege, constantinoplepart, arab, byzantine, wars, early, muslim, conqueststhe, second, arab, siege, constantinople, depicted, 14th, century, bulgarian, translation, manasse. For other sieges of the city see list of sieges of Constantinople Second Arab siege of ConstantinoplePart of the Arab Byzantine wars and the early Muslim conquestsThe second Arab siege of Constantinople as depicted in the 14th century Bulgarian translation of the Manasses ChronicleDate15 July August a 717 15 August 718LocationConstantinople Thrace Bithynia and Sea of Marmara modern day Istanbul Turkey ResultByzantine Bulgar victoryClimax of the Arab Byzantine warsBelligerentsUmayyad CaliphateByzantine EmpireBulgar KhanateCommanders and leadersMaslama ibn Abd al MalikUmar ibn HubayraSulayman ibn Mu adBakhtari ibn al HasanLeo III the IsaurianTervel of BulgariaStrength120 000 al Mas udi 1 800 ships Theophanes c 15 000 Byzantines estimate 1 c 12 000 Bulgars 2 Casualties and lossesVery heavy almost all men and shipsUnknown The second Arab siege of Constantinople was a combined land and sea offensive in 717 718 by the Muslim Arabs of the Umayyad Caliphate against the capital city of the Byzantine Empire Constantinople The campaign marked the culmination of twenty years of attacks and progressive Arab occupation of the Byzantine borderlands while Byzantine strength was sapped by prolonged internal turmoil In 716 after years of preparations the Arabs led by Maslama ibn Abd al Malik invaded Byzantine Asia Minor The Arabs initially hoped to exploit Byzantine civil strife and made common cause with the general Leo III the Isaurian who had risen up against Emperor Theodosius III Leo however tricked them and secured the Byzantine throne for himself After wintering in the western coastlands of Asia Minor the Arab army crossed into Thrace in early summer 717 and built siege lines to blockade the city which was protected by the massive Theodosian Walls The Arab fleet which accompanied the land army and was meant to complete the city s blockade by sea was neutralized soon after its arrival by the Byzantine navy through the use of Greek fire This allowed Constantinople to be resupplied by sea while the Arab army was crippled by famine and disease during the unusually hard winter that followed In spring 718 two Arab fleets sent as reinforcements were destroyed by the Byzantines after their Christian crews defected and an additional army sent overland through Asia Minor was ambushed and defeated Coupled with attacks by the Bulgars on their rear the Arabs were forced to lift the siege on 15 August 718 On its return journey the Arab fleet was almost completely destroyed by natural disasters The siege s failure had wide ranging repercussions The rescue of Constantinople ensured the continued survival of Byzantium while the Caliphate s strategic outlook was altered although regular attacks on Byzantine territories continued the goal of outright conquest was abandoned Historians consider the siege to be one of history s most important battles as its failure postponed the Muslim advance into Southeastern Europe for centuries Contents 1 Background 2 Sources 3 Opening stages of the campaign 4 Opposing forces 5 Siege 6 Aftermath 7 Historical assessment and impact 8 Cultural impact 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 10 Further readingBackground editFollowing the first Arab siege of Constantinople 674 678 the Arabs and Byzantines experienced a period of peace After 680 the Umayyad Caliphate was in the throes of the Second Muslim Civil War and the consequent Byzantine ascendancy in the East enabled the emperors to extract huge amounts of tribute from the Umayyad government in Damascus 3 In 692 as the Umayyads emerged as victors from their civil war Emperor Justinian II r 685 695 705 711 resumed hostilities with the Caliphate The result was a series of Arab victories that led to the loss of Byzantine control over Armenia and the Caucasian principalities and a gradual encroachment upon Byzantine borderlands Year by year the Caliphate s generals usually members of the Umayyad family launched raids into Byzantine territory and captured fortresses and towns 4 After 712 the Byzantine defensive system began to show signs of collapse Arab raids penetrated further and further into Asia Minor border fortresses were repeatedly attacked and sacked and references to Byzantine reaction in the sources become more and more scarce 5 In this the Arabs were aided by the prolonged period of internal instability that followed the first deposition of Justinian II in 695 in which the Byzantine throne changed hands seven times in violent coups 6 In the words of the Byzantinist Warren Treadgold the Arab attacks would in any case have intensified after the end of their own civil war With far more men land and wealth than Byzantium the Arabs had begun to concentrate all their strength against it Now they threatened to extinguish the empire entirely by capturing its capital 7 Sources editThe information available on the siege comes from sources composed in later dates which are often mutually contradictory The main Byzantine source is the extensive and detailed account of the Chronicle of Theophanes the Confessor 760 817 and secondarily the brief account in the Breviarium of Patriarch Nikephoros I of Constantinople died 828 which shows small differences mainly chronological from Theophanes s version 8 For the events of the siege both authors appear to have used a primary account composed during the reign of Leo III the Isaurian r 717 741 which therefore contains a favourable depiction of the latter while Theophanes apparently relies on an unknown biography of Leo ignored by Nikephoros for the events of 716 The 8th century chronicler Theophilus of Edessa records the years leading up to the siege and the siege itself in some detail paying particular attention to the diplomacy between Maslama and Leo III 9 The Arab sources mainly the 11th century Kitab al Uyun and the more concise narrative in the History of the Prophets and Kings by al Tabari 838 923 rely on primary accounts by early 9th century Arab writers but are more confused and contain several legendary elements The Syriac language accounts are based on Agapius of Hierapolis died 942 who likely drew from the same primary source as Theophanes but are far briefer 10 Opening stages of the campaign edit nbsp Gold solidus of Anastasius II who prepared Constantinople for the coming Arab assaultThe Arab successes opened the way for a second assault on Constantinople an undertaking already initiated under Caliph al Walid I r 705 715 Following his death his brother and successor Sulayman r 715 717 took up the project with increased vigour according to Arab accounts because of a prophecy that a Caliph bearing the name of a prophet would capture Constantinople Sulayman Solomon was the only member of the Umayyad family to bear such a name According to Syriac sources the new Caliph swore to not stop fighting against Constantinople before having exhausted the country of the Arabs or to have taken the city 11 The Umayyad forces began assembling at the plain of Dabiq north of Aleppo under the direct supervision of the Caliph As Sulayman was too sick to campaign himself however he entrusted command to his brother Maslama ibn Abd al Malik 12 The operation against Constantinople came at a time when the Umayyad empire was undergoing a period of continuous expansion to the east and west Muslim armies advanced into Transoxiana India and the Visigothic Kingdom of Hispania 13 Arab preparations especially the construction of a large fleet did not go unnoticed by the worried Byzantines Emperor Anastasius II r 713 715 sent an embassy to Damascus under the patrician and urban prefect Daniel of Sinope ostensibly in order to plea for peace but in reality to spy on the Arabs Anastasius in turn began to prepare for the inevitable siege the fortifications of Constantinople were repaired and equipped with ample artillery catapults and other siege weapons while food stores were brought into the city In addition those inhabitants who could not stockpile food for at least three years were evacuated 14 Anastasius strengthened his navy and in early 715 dispatched it against the Arab fleet that had come to Phoenix usually identified with modern Finike in Lycia it may also be modern Fenaket across Rhodes 15 or perhaps Phoenicia modern Lebanon famed for its cedar forests 16 to collect timber for their ships At Rhodes however the Byzantine fleet encouraged by the soldiers of the Opsician Theme rebelled killed their commander John the Deacon and sailed north to Adramyttium There they acclaimed a reluctant tax collector Theodosius as emperor 17 Anastasius crossed into Bithynia in the Opsician Theme to confront the rebellion but the rebel fleet sailed on to Chrysopolis From there it launched attacks against Constantinople until in late summer sympathizers within the capital opened its gates to them Anastasius held out at Nicaea for several months finally agreeing to resign and retire as a monk 18 The accession of Theodosius who from the sources comes across as both unwilling and incapable as a puppet emperor of the Opsicians provoked the reaction of the other themes especially the Anatolics and the Armeniacs under their respective strategoi generals Leo the Isaurian and Artabasdos 19 nbsp Map of Byzantine Asia Minor and Thrace in the early 8th centuryIn these conditions of near civil war the Arabs began their carefully prepared advance In September 715 the vanguard under general Sulayman ibn Mu ad marched over Cilicia into Asia Minor taking the strategic fortress of Loulon on its way They wintered at Afik an unidentified location near the western exit of the Cilician Gates In early 716 Sulayman s army continued into central Asia Minor The Umayyad fleet under Umar ibn Hubayra cruised along the Cilician coast while Maslama ibn Abd al Malik awaited developments with the main army in Syria 20 The Arabs hoped that the disunity among the Byzantines would play to their advantage Maslama had already established contact with Leo the Isaurian French scholar Rodolphe Guilland theorized that Leo offered to become a vassal of the Caliphate although the Byzantine general intended to use the Arabs for his own purposes In turn Maslama supported Leo hoping to maximize confusion and weaken the Empire easing his own task of taking Constantinople 21 Sulayman s first objective was the strategically important fortress of Amorium which the Arabs intended to use as a base the following winter Amorium had been left defenceless in the turmoil of the civil war and would have easily fallen but the Arabs chose to bolster Leo s position as a counterweight to Theodosius They offered the city terms of surrender if its inhabitants would acknowledge Leo as emperor The fortress capitulated but still did not open its gates to the Arabs Leo came to the vicinity with a handful of soldiers and executed a series of ruses and negotiations to garrison 800 men in the town The Arab army thwarted in its objective and with supplies running low withdrew Leo escaped to Pisidia and in summer supported by Artabasdos was proclaimed and crowned as Byzantine emperor openly challenging Theodosius 22 23 nbsp Gold solidus of Leo IIILeo s success at Amorium was fortunately timed since Maslama with the main Arab army had in the meantime crossed the Taurus Mountains and was marching straight for the city In addition as the Arab general had not received news of Leo s double dealing he did not devastate the territories he marched through the Armeniac and Anatolic themes whose governors he still believed to be his allies 24 On meeting up with Sulayman s retreating army and learning what had transpired Maslama changed direction he attacked Akroinon and from there marched to the western coastlands to spend the winter On his way he sacked Sardis and Pergamon The Arab fleet wintered in Cilicia 25 Leo in the meantime began his own march on Constantinople He captured Nicomedia where he found and captured among other officials Theodosius s son and then marched to Chrysopolis In spring 717 after short negotiations he secured Theodosius s resignation and his recognition as emperor entering the capital on 25 March Theodosius and his son were allowed to retire to a monastery as monks while Artabasdos was promoted to the position of kouropalates and received the hand of Leo s daughter Anna 26 Opposing forces editFrom the outset the Arabs prepared for a major assault on Constantinople The late 8th century Syriac Zuqnin Chronicle reports that the Arabs were innumerable while the 12th century Syriac chronicler Michael the Syrian mentions a much inflated 200 000 men and 5 000 ships The 10th century Arab writer al Mas udi mentions 120 000 troops and the account of Theophanes the Confessor 1 800 ships Supplies for several years were hoarded and siege engines and incendiary materials naphtha were stockpiled The supply train alone is said to have numbered 12 000 men 6 000 camels and 6 000 donkeys while according to the 13th century historian Bar Hebraeus the troops included 30 000 volunteers mutawa for the Holy War jihad 27 The Byzantines strength is entirely unknown but Constantinople s defenders likely did not number over 15 000 men given both the exhaustion of the Byzantine Empire s manpower and the limitations imposed by the need to maintain and feed such a force 1 Whatever the true numbers the attackers were considerably more numerous than the defenders according to Treadgold the Arab host may have outnumbered the entire Byzantine army 28 Little is known on the detailed composition of the Arab force but it appears that it mostly consisted of and was led by Syrians and Jazirans of the elite ahl al Sham People of Syria the main pillar of the Umayyad regime and veterans of the struggle against Byzantium 29 Alongside Maslama Umar ibn Hubayra Sulayman ibn Mu ad and Bakhtari ibn al Hasan are mentioned as his lieutenants by Theophanes and Agapius of Hierapolis while the later Kitab al Uyun replaces Bakhtari with Abdallah al Battal 30 Although the siege consumed a large part of the Caliphate s manpower and resources b it was still capable of launching raids against the Byzantine frontier in eastern Asia Minor during the siege s duration in 717 Caliph Sulayman s son Daud captured a fortress near Melitene and in 718 Amr ibn Qais raided the frontier 31 On the Byzantine side the numbers are unknown Aside from Anastasius II s preparations which might have been neglected following his deposition 32 the Byzantines could count on the assistance of the Bulgar ruler Tervel with whom Leo concluded a treaty that possibly included alliance against the Arabs 33 Siege edit nbsp Map of the environs of Constantinople in Byzantine timesIn early summer Maslama ordered his fleet to join him and with his army crossed the Hellespont Dardanelles at Abydos into Thrace The Arabs began their march on Constantinople thoroughly devastating the countryside gathering supplies and sacking the towns they encountered 34 In mid July or mid August a the Arab army reached Constantinople and isolated it completely on land by building a double siege wall of stone one facing the city and one facing the Thracian countryside with their camp positioned between them According to Arab sources at this point Leo offered to ransom the city by paying a gold coin for every inhabitant but Maslama replied that there could not be peace with the vanquished and that the Arab garrison of Constantinople had already been selected 35 The Arab fleet under Sulayman often confused with the Caliph himself in the medieval sources arrived on 1 September anchoring at first near the Hebdomon Two days later Sulayman led his fleet into the Bosphorus and the various squadrons began anchoring by the European and Asian suburbs of the city one part sailed south of Chalcedon to the harbours of Eutropios and Anthemios to watch over the southern entrance of the Bosporus while the rest of the fleet sailed into the strait passed by Constantinople and began making landfall on the coasts between Galata and Kleidion cutting the Byzantine capital s communication with the Black Sea But as the Arab fleet s rearguard twenty heavy ships with 2 000 marines was passing the city the southerly wind stopped and then reversed drifting them towards the city walls where a Byzantine squadron attacked them with Greek fire Theophanes reported that some went down with all hands while others burning sailed down to the Princes Islands of Oxeia and Plateia The victory encouraged the Byzantines and dejected the Arabs who according to Theophanes had originally intended to sail to the sea walls during the night and try to scale them using the ships steering paddles The same night Leo drew up the chain between the city and Galata closing the entrance to the Golden Horn The Arab fleet became reluctant to engage the Byzantines and withdrew to the safe harbour of Sosthenion further north on the European shore of the Bosporus 36 nbsp Photo of a restored section of the triple Theodosian Walls protecting Constantinople from its land sideThe Arab army was well provisioned with Arab accounts reporting high mounds of supplies piled up in their camp and had even brought along wheat to sow and harvest the next year The failure of the Arab navy to blockade the city however meant that the Byzantines too could ferry in provisions In addition the Arab army had already devastated the Thracian countryside during its march and could not rely on it for foraging The Arab fleet and the second Arab army which operated in the Asian suburbs of Constantinople were able to bring in limited supplies to Maslama s army 37 As the siege drew into winter negotiations opened between the two sides extensively reported by Arab sources but ignored by Byzantine historians According to the Arab accounts Leo continued to play a double game with the Arabs One version claims that he tricked Maslama into handing over most of his grain supplies while another claims that the Arab general was persuaded to burn them altogether so as to show the inhabitants of the city that they faced an imminent assault and induce them to surrender 38 The winter of 718 was extremely harsh snow covered the ground for over three months As the supplies in the Arab camp ran out a terrible famine broke out the soldiers ate their horses camels and other livestock and the bark leaves and roots of trees They swept the snow of the fields they had sown to eat the green shoots and reportedly resorted to cannibalism and eating the dung of each other and their animals 39 Consequently the Arab army was ravaged by epidemics with great exaggeration the Lombard historian Paul the Deacon put the number of their dead of hunger and disease at 300 000 40 nbsp Depiction of the use of Greek fire miniature from the Madrid SkylitzesThe Arab situation looked set to improve in spring when the new Caliph Umar II r 717 720 sent two fleets to the besiegers aid 400 ships from Egypt under a commander named Sufyan and 360 ships from Africa under Izid all laden with supplies and arms At the same time a fresh army began marching through Asia Minor to assist in the siege When the new fleets arrived in the Sea of Marmara they kept their distance from the Byzantines and anchored on the Asian shore the Egyptians in the Gulf of Nicomedia near modern Tuzla and the Africans south of Chalcedon at Satyros Bryas and Kartalimen Most of the Arab fleets crews were composed of Christian Egyptians however and they began deserting to the Byzantines upon their arrival Notified by the Egyptians of the advent and disposition of the Arab reinforcements Leo launched his fleet in an attack against the new Arab fleets Crippled by the defection of their crews and helpless against Greek fire the Arab ships were destroyed or captured along with the weapons and supplies they carried Constantinople was now safe from a seaborne attack 41 On land too the Byzantines were victorious their troops managed to ambush the advancing Arab army under a commander named Mardasan and destroy it in the hills around Sophon south of Nicomedia 42 Constantinople could now be easily resupplied by sea and the city s fishermen went back to work as the Arab fleet did not sail again Still suffering from hunger and pestilence the Arabs also lost a major battle against the Bulgars who killed according to Theophanes 22 000 men The sources are divided on the details of the Bulgar participation in the siege Theophanes and al Tabari report that the Bulgars attacked the Arab encampment likely because of their treaty with Leo while according to the Syriac Chronicle of 846 it was the Arabs who strayed into Bulgar territory seeking provisions Michael the Syrian on the other hand mentions that the Bulgars participated in the siege from the beginning with attacks against the Arabs as they marched through Thrace towards Constantinople and subsequently on their encampment 43 According to some modern interpretations of the original sources the first Bulgar victory may have been against a separate Arab army under Ukhaida that ranged as far as Stara Zagora followed by an attack against the Arabs in Thrace The Bulgars continued harassing the Arab encampments for the duration of the siege 44 The siege had clearly failed and Caliph Umar sent orders to Maslama to retreat After thirteen months of siege on 15 August 718 the Arabs departed The date coincided with the feast of the Dormition of the Theotokos Assumption of Mary and it was to her that the Byzantines ascribed their victory The retreating Arabs were not hindered or attacked on their return but their fleet lost more ships in a storm in the Sea of Marmara while other ships were set afire by ashes from the volcano of Santorini and some of the survivors were captured by the Byzantines so that Theophanes claims that only five vessels made it back to Syria 45 Arab sources claim that altogether 150 000 Muslims perished during the campaign a figure which according to the Byzantinist John Haldon while certainly inflated is nevertheless indicative of the enormity of the disaster in medieval eyes 46 Aftermath edit nbsp The Umayyad Caliphate and the Byzantine Empire c 740The expedition s failure weakened the Umayyad state As historian Bernard Lewis commented Its failure brought a grave moment for Umayyad power The financial strain of equipping and maintaining the expedition caused an aggravation of the fiscal and financial oppression which had already aroused such dangerous opposition The destruction of the fleet and army of Syria at the sea walls of Constantinople deprived the regime of the chief material basis of its power 47 The blow to the Caliphate s might was severe and although the land army did not suffer losses in the same degree as the fleet Umar is recorded as contemplating withdrawing from the recent conquests of Hispania and Transoxiana as well as a complete evacuation of Cilicia and other Byzantine territories that the Arabs had seized over the previous years Although his advisors dissuaded him from such drastic actions most Arab garrisons were withdrawn from the Byzantine frontier districts they had occupied in the lead up to the siege In Cilicia only Mopsuestia remained in Arab hands as a defensive bulwark to protect Antioch 48 The Byzantines even recovered some territory in western Armenia for a time In 719 the Byzantine fleet raided the Syrian coast and burned down the port of Laodicea and in 720 or 721 the Byzantines attacked and sacked Tinnis in Egypt 49 Leo also restored control over Sicily where news of the Arab siege of Constantinople and expectations of the city s fall had prompted the local governor to declare an emperor of his own Basil Onomagoulos It was during this time however that effective Byzantine control over Sardinia and Corsica ceased 50 Besides this the Byzantines failed to exploit their success in launching attacks of their own against the Arabs In 720 after a hiatus of two years Arab raids against Byzantium resumed although now they were no longer directed at conquest but rather seeking booty The Arab attacks would intensify again over the next two decades until the major Byzantine victory at the Battle of Akroinon in 740 Coupled with military defeats on the other fronts of the overextended Caliphate and the internal instability which culminated in the Abbasid Revolution the age of Arab expansion came to an end 51 Historical assessment and impact editThe second Arab siege of Constantinople was far more dangerous for Byzantium than the first as unlike the loose blockade of 674 678 the Arabs launched a direct well planned attack on the Byzantine capital and tried to cut off the city completely from land and sea 31 The siege represented a final effort by the Caliphate to cut off the head of the Byzantine Empire after which the remaining provinces especially in Asia Minor would be easy to capture 52 The reasons for the Arab failure were chiefly logistical as they were operating too far from their Syrian bases but the superiority of the Byzantine navy through the use of Greek fire the strength of Constantinople s fortifications and the skill of Leo III in deception and negotiations also played important roles 53 nbsp Along with the Battle of Tours in 732 the siege of Constantinople stopped the Muslim expansion into EuropeThe failure of the Arab siege led to a profound change in the nature of warfare between Byzantium and the Caliphate The Muslim goal of conquest of Constantinople was effectively abandoned and the frontier between the two empires stabilized along the line of the Taurus and Antitaurus Mountains over which both sides continued to launch regular raids and counter raids In this incessant border warfare frontier towns and fortresses changed hands frequently but the general outline of the border remained unaltered for over two centuries until the Byzantine conquests of the 10th century 54 The eastern fleets of the Caliphate entered a century long decline only the Ifriqiyan fleets maintained regular raids on Byzantine Sicily until they too subsided after 752 55 Indeed with the exception of the advance of the Abbasid army under Harun al Rashid up to Chrysopolis in 782 no other Arab army would ever come within sight of the Byzantine capital again 56 Consequently on the Muslim side the raids themselves eventually acquired an almost ritual character and were valued mostly as a demonstration of the continuing jihad and sponsored by the Caliph as a symbol of his role as the leader of the Muslim community 57 The outcome of the siege was of considerable macrohistorical importance The Byzantine capital s survival preserved the Empire as a bulwark against Islamic expansion into Europe until the 15th century when it fell to the Ottoman Turks Along with the Battle of Tours in 732 the successful defence of Constantinople has been seen as instrumental in stopping Muslim expansion into Europe Historian Ekkehard Eickhoff writes that had a victorious Caliph made Constantinople already at the beginning of the Middle Ages into the political capital of Islam as happened at the end of the Middle Ages by the Ottomans the consequences for Christian Europe would have been incalculable as the Mediterranean would have become an Arab lake and the Germanic successor states in Western Europe would have been cut off from the Mediterranean roots of their culture 58 Military historian Paul K Davis summed up the siege s importance as follows By turning back the Moslem invasion Europe remained in Christian hands and no serious Moslem threat to Europe existed until the fifteenth century This victory coincident with the Frankish victory at Tours 732 limited Islam s western expansion to the southern Mediterranean world 59 Thus the historian John B Bury called 718 an ecumenical date while the Greek historian Spyridon Lambros likened the siege to the Battle of Marathon and Leo III to Miltiades 60 Consequently military historians often include the siege in lists of the decisive battles of world history 61 Cultural impact editAmong Arabs the 717 718 siege became the most famous of their expeditions against Byzantium Several accounts survive but most were composed at later dates and are semi fictional and contradictory In legend the defeat was transformed into a victory Maslama departed only after symbolically entering the Byzantine capital on his horse accompanied by thirty riders where Leo received him with honour and led him to the Hagia Sophia After Leo paid homage to Maslama and promised tribute Maslama and his troops 30 000 out of the original 80 000 that set out for Constantinople departed for Syria 62 The tales of the siege influenced similar episodes in Arabic epic literature A siege of Constantinople is found in the tale of Omar bin al Nu uman and his sons in the Thousand and One Nights while both Maslama and the Caliph Sulayman appear in a tale of the Hundred and One Nights from the Maghreb The commander of Maslama s bodyguard Abdallah al Battal became a celebrated figure in Arab and Turkish poetry as Battal Gazi for his exploits in the Arab raids of the next decades Similarly the 10th century epic Delhemma related to the cycle around Battal gives a fictionalized version of the 717 718 siege 63 Later Muslim and Byzantine tradition also ascribed the building of Constantinople s first mosque near the city s praetorium to Maslama In reality the mosque near the praetorium was probably erected in about 860 as a result of an Arab embassy in that year 64 Ottoman tradition also ascribed the building of the Arap Mosque located outside Constantinople proper in Galata to Maslama although it erroneously dated this to around 686 probably confusing Maslama s attack with the first Arab siege in the 670s 65 The passing of the Arab army also left traces at Abydos where Maslama s Well and a mosque attributed to him were still known in the 10th century 56 Eventually following their repeated failures before Constantinople and the continued resilience of the Byzantine state the Muslims began to project the fall of Constantinople to the distant future Thus the city s fall came to be regarded as one of the signs of the arrival of the end times in Islamic eschatology 66 The siege became a motif in Byzantine apocalyptic literature as well with decisive final battles against the Arabs before the walls of Constantinople being featured in the early 8th century Greek translation of the Syriac Apocalypse of Pseudo Methodius and the Apocalypse of Daniel written either at about the time of the siege or a century later 67 References editFootnotes edit a Theophanes the Confessor gives the date as 15 August but modern scholars believe that this is probably meant to mirror the Arabs departure date in the next year Patriarch Nikephoros I on the other hand explicitly records the duration of the siege as 13 months implying that it began on 15 July 68 b According to the historian Hugh N Kennedy based on the numbers found in the contemporary army registers diwans the total manpower available to the Umayyad Caliphate c 700 ranged between 250 000 and 300 000 men spread throughout the various provinces It is unclear however what portion of this number could actually be fielded for any particular campaign and does not account for surplus manpower that could be mobilized in exceptional circumstances 69 Citations edit a b Decker 2013 p 207 Estimate based on primary sources Stoyanov 2019 pp 723 724 Lilie 1976 pp 81 82 97 106 Blankinship 1994 p 31 Haldon 1990 p 72 Lilie 1976 pp 107 120 Haldon 1990 p 80 Lilie 1976 pp 120 122 139 140 Blankinship 1994 p 31 Lilie 1976 p 140 Treadgold 1997 pp 345 346 Treadgold 1997 p 345 Brooks 1899 pp 19 20 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp lxxxviil xxxviii Brooks 1899 pp 19 20 Guilland 1959 pp 115 116 Brooks 1899 pp 20 21 El Cheikh 2004 p 65 Guilland 1959 p 110 Lilie 1976 p 122 Treadgold 1997 p 344 Guilland 1959 pp 110 111 Hawting 2000 p 73 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 534 Lilie 1976 pp 122 123 Treadgold 1997 pp 343 344 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 537 Note 5 Lilie 1976 p 123 Note 62 Haldon 1990 p 80 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp 535 536 Lilie 1976 pp 123 124 Treadgold 1997 p 344 Haldon 1990 pp 80 82 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 536 Treadgold 1997 pp 344 345 Lilie 1976 p 124 Treadgold 1997 p 345 Guilland 1959 p 111 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 538 Lilie 1976 pp 123 125 Guilland 1959 pp 118 119 Lilie 1976 p 125 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp 538 539 Lilie 1976 pp 125 126 Treadgold 1997 p 345 For a detailed examination of Leo s negotiations with the Arabs before Amorium in Byzantine and Arab sources cf Guilland 1959 pp 112 113 124 126 Guilland 1959 p 125 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp 539 540 Lilie 1976 pp 126 127 Guilland 1959 pp 113 114 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp 540 541 Lilie 1976 p 127 Treadgold 1997 p 345 Haldon 1990 pp 82 83 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp 540 545 Lilie 1976 pp 127 128 Treadgold 1997 p 345 Guilland 1959 p 110 Kaegi 2008 pp 384 385 Treadgold 1997 p 938 Note 1 Treadgold 1997 p 346 Guilland 1959 p 110 Kennedy 2001 p 47 Canard 1926 pp 91 92 Guilland 1959 p 111 a b Lilie 1976 p 132 Lilie 1976 p 125 Treadgold 1997 p 347 Brooks 1899 p 23 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 545 Lilie 1976 p 128 Treadgold 1997 p 347 Guilland 1959 p 119 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 545 Lilie 1976 pp 128 129 Treadgold 1997 p 347 Guilland 1959 pp 119 120 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp 545 546 Lilie 1976 p 128 Treadgold 1997 p 347 Lilie 1976 p 129 Treadgold 1997 p 347 Brooks 1899 pp 24 28 30 Lilie 1976 p 129 Stewart Michael E 2018 A Furious Storm fell upon them The Arab Siege of Constantinople 717 718 Medieval Warfare Magazine VIII 5 Academia p 32 Retrieved 13 December 2023 Brooks 1899 pp 28 29 Guilland 1959 pp 122 123 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 546 Lilie 1976 pp 129 130 Treadgold 1997 p 347 Guilland 1959 p 121 Mango amp Scott 1997 pp 546 548 Lilie 1976 p 130 Treadgold 1997 pp 347 348 Guilland 1959 p 122 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 546 Lilie 1976 pp 130 131 Treadgold 1997 p 348 Canard 1926 pp 90 91 Guilland 1959 pp 122 123 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 546 Lilie 1976 p 131 Stoyanov 2019 pp 723 724 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 550 Treadgold 1997 p 349 Haldon 1990 p 83 Lewis 2002 p 79 Blankinship 1994 pp 33 34 Lilie 1976 pp 132 133 Treadgold 1997 p 349 Blankinship 1994 p 287 Note 133 Lilie 1976 p 133 Treadgold 1997 p 349 Treadgold 1997 pp 347 348 Blankinship 1994 pp 34 35 117 236 Haldon 1990 p 84 Kaegi 2008 pp 385 386 Lilie 1976 pp 143 144 Lilie 1976 pp 140 141 Blankinship 1994 p 105 Kaegi 2008 p 385 Lilie 1976 p 141 Treadgold 1997 p 349 Blankinship 1994 pp 104 106 Haldon 1990 pp 83 84 El Cheikh 2004 pp 83 84 Toynbee 1973 pp 107 109 Eickhoff 1966 pp 35 39 a b Mordtmann 1986 p 533 El Cheikh 2004 pp 83 84 Kennedy 2001 pp 105 106 Eickhoff 1966 p 35 Davis 2001 p 99 Guilland 1959 p 129 Crompton 1997 pp 27 28 Davis 2001 pp 99 102 Fuller 1987 pp 335ff Regan 2002 pp 44 45 Tucker 2010 pp 94 97 Canard 1926 pp 99 102 El Cheikh 2004 pp 63 64 Guilland 1959 pp 130 131 Canard 1926 pp 112 121 Guilland 1959 pp 131 132 Canard 1926 pp 94 99 El Cheikh 2004 p 64 Guilland 1959 pp 132 133 Hasluck 1929 p 720 Canard 1926 p 99 Hasluck 1929 pp 718 720 Mordtmann 1986 p 533 Canard 1926 pp 104 112 El Cheikh 2004 pp 65 70 Hawting 2000 p 73 Brandes 2007 pp 65 91 Mango amp Scott 1997 p 548 Note 16 Guilland 1959 pp 116 118 Kennedy 2001 pp 19 21 Sources edit Blankinship Khalid Yahya 1994 The End of the Jihad State The Reign of Hisham ibn ʻAbd al Malik and the Collapse of the Umayyads Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 1827 7 Brandes W 2007 Die Belagerung Konstantinopels 717 718 als apokalyptisches Ereignis Zu einer Interpolation im griechischen Text der Pseudo Methodios Apokalypse In Belke K ed Byzantina Mediterranea Festschrift fur Johannes Koder zum 65 Geburtstag in German Vienna Bohlau pp 65 91 ISBN 978 3205776086 Brooks E W 1899 The Campaign of 716 718 from Arabic Sources The Journal of Hellenic Studies The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies XIX 19 33 doi 10 2307 623841 JSTOR 623841 S2CID 163360931 Canard 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Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Tucker Spencer C 2010 Battles That Changed History An Encyclopedia of World Conflict Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 429 0 Archived from the original on 2 August 2020 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Further reading editRadic Radivoj 18 August 2008 Two Arabian sieges of Constantinople 674 678 717 718 Encyclopedia of the Hellenic World Constantinople Athens Greece Foundation of the Hellenic World Archived from the original on 27 November 2018 Retrieved 14 July 2012 Sheppard Si 2020 Constantinople AD 717 18 The Crucible of History Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1472836922 Archived from the original on 15 August 2021 Retrieved 7 November 2020 41 00 45 N 28 58 30 E 41 0125 N 28 9750 E 41 0125 28 9750 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siege of Constantinople 717 718 amp oldid 1197506683, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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