The Macedonian era: 867 - 1025
Military revival
A reassertion of Byzantine military and naval power in the East
began with victories over the Arabs by Michael III's general Petronas
in 856. From 863 the initiative lay with the Byzantines. The struggle
with the Arabs, which had long been a struggle for survival, became
a mounting offensive that reached its brilliant climax in the 10th
century. By 867 a well-defined boundary existed between the Byzantine
Empire and the territory of the 'Abbasid caliphate. Its weakest
point was in the Taurus Mountains above Syria and Antioch. Basil
I directed his operations against this point, recovered Cyprus for
a while, and campaigned against the Paulicians, a heretical Christian
sect whose anti-imperial propaganda was effective in Anatolia. But
the conflict with Islam was one that concerned the whole empire,
in the West as well as in the East, and by sea as well as by land.
In 902 the Arabs completed the conquest of Sicily, but they were
kept out of the Byzantine province of South Italy, for whose defense
Basil I had even made some effort to cooperate with the Western
emperor Louis II. The worst damage, however, was done by Arab pirates
who had taken over the island of Crete. In 904 they plundered Thessalonica,
carrying off quantities of loot and prisoners. Leo VI sent a naval
expedition to Crete in 911, but the Muslims drove it off and humiliated
the Byzantine navy off Chios in 912.
On the eastern frontier, the Byzantine offensive was sustained
with great success during the reign of Romanus I Lecapenus by an
Armenian general John Curcuas (Gurgen), who captured Melitene (934)
and then Edessa (943), advancing across the Euphrates into the caliph's
territory. It was Curcuas who paved the way for the campaigns of
the two soldier-emperors of the next generation. In 961 Nicephorus
Phocas, then domestic (commander) of the armies in the West, reconquered
Crete and destroyed the Arab fleet that had terrorized the Aegean
for 150 years; he thereby restored Byzantine naval supremacy in
the eastern Mediterranean. In 962 his strategy achieved unexpected
triumphs all along the eastern frontier and culminated in the capture
of Aleppo in Syria. When he was proclaimed emperor in March 963,
Nicephorus appointed another Armenian general, John Tzimisces, as
domestic of the East, though he retained personal command of operations
against the Arabs. By 965 he had driven them out of Cyprus and was
poised for the reconquest of Syria. The revived morale and confidence
of Byzantium in the East showed itself in the crusading zeal of
Nicephorus Phocas and John Tzimisces for the reconquest of Syria
and the Holy Land. The ground lost to Islam in the 7th century was
thus fast being regained; and, although Jerusalem was never reached,
the important Christian city of Antioch, seat of one of the patriarchs,
was recaptured in 969. These victories were achieved largely by
the new cavalry force built up by Nicephorus Phocas. In the areas
recovered from the Arabs, land was distributed in military holdings
with the interests of the cavalry in mind. But the victories were
achieved at the expense of the western provinces, and an attempt
to recover Sicily ended in failure in 965.
The campaigns of John Tzimisces, who usurped the throne in 969,
were directed against the Emir of Mosul on the Tigris and against
the new Fatimid caliph of Egypt, who had designs on Syria. By 975
almost all of Syria and Palestine, from Caesarea to Antioch, as
well as a large part of Mesopotamia far to the east of the Euphrates,
was in Byzantine control. The way seemed open for Tzimisces to advance
to the 'Abbasid capital of Baghdad on the one hand and to Jerusalem
and Egypt on the other. But he died in 976 and his successor, Basil
II, the legitimate heir of the Macedonian house, concentrated most
of his resources on overcoming the Bulgars in Europe, though he
did not abandon the idea of further reconquest in the East. The
Kingdom of Georgia (Iberia) was incorporated into the empire by
treaty. Part of Armenia was annexed, with the rest of it to pass
to Byzantium on the death of its king. Basil II personally led two
punitive expeditions against the Fatimids in Syria, but otherwise
his eastern policy was to hold and to consolidate what had already
been gained. The gains can be measured by the number of new themes
(provinces) created by the early 11th century in the area between
Vaspurakan in the Caucasus and Antioch in Syria. The annexation
of Armenia, the homeland of many of the great Byzantine emperors
and soldiers, helped to solidify the eastern wall of the Byzantine
Empire for nearly a century.
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