Showing posts with label Alexios Komnenos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alexios Komnenos. Show all posts
Thursday, December 21, 2017
The Strategy Of The Decoy Camp—Alexios Komnenos Versus Nikephoros Basilakios
In the autumn of 1078, a young general (and future emperor) of the Byzantine Empire by the name of Alexios Komnenos handed a freshly captured rebel leader named Nikephoros Bryennios the Elder over to an agent of Emperor Nikephoros III Botaneiates (r. 1078-1081). In exchange for the prisoner, the agent of the emperor delivered a message for Alexios containing a new task set to him by the crown. Around the same time that Bryennios’ rebellion was crushed, another rebellion had erupted in the city of Dyrrakhion (modern Durrës, Albania), led by Nikephoros Basilakios—Alexios’ task was to hunt down this third Nikephoros (whom we will simply refer to as Basilakios) and put a stop to the rebellion.
Labels:
Alexios Komnenos,
Byzantine,
Greece,
Medieval,
Roman Empire,
War
Thursday, June 15, 2017
Did The Crusader Bohemond Escape The Middle East By Pretending To Be A Corpse? The Byzantine Emperor’s Daughter Believed He Did
(Bohemond of Antioch by Merry-Joseph Blondel (1781–1853), [Public Domain] via Creative
Commons)
When Pope Urban II announced
the First Crusade in 1095, the Norman noble, Bohemond (1050/58-1109 CE),
quickly grasped at the opportunity. Of all of the crusader lords that partook
in the armed pilgrimage, his motives are among the clearest. As his
half-brother seized the great majority of the family’s lands and assets,
Bohemond saw the crusades as an unequalled opportunity to amass land, gold and
glory. Plus, the spiritual rewards and absolution of sins promised by the pope
were also gladly welcomed.
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Six Years of Chaos In Byzantium: The Cumans Vs. The Pechenegs Vs. The Byzantine Empire Vs. Çaka Bey of Smyrna
The Invasion
(The Pechenegs defeating the Rus, from the Skyllitzes Matritensis, fol.
173r, [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)
In 1087 CE, a horde of
Pecheneg warriors (followed by their families) poured down from the steppes
above the Black Sea and into territory controlled by the Byzantine Empire. The
empire was ruled at that time by Emperor Alexios Komnenos, who had led the empire
since 1081 CE. These tens of thousands of hostile warriors threw the empire
into such a panic that memories of the old ‘barbarian’ enemies of the Roman
Empire were revived to describe the new Pecheneg threat. Anna Komnene, daughter
of Emperor Alexios, likened the invaders to the ancient Scythians, Sarmatians
and Dacians in her history, The Alexiad.
She estimated that the Pechenegs had crossed into imperial territory with as
many as 80,000 warriors.
Thursday, February 9, 2017
Robert Guiscard and Emperor Alexios In The Chaotic Battle of Dyrrakhion (1081 CE)
A Bloody Fight On Land And Sea Between An Emperor And
An Adventurer
The Norman Invasion
Emperor Alexios I Komnenos of Constantinople(r.
1081-1118 CE from his seat of power in modern-day Istanbul) had the misfortune
of his country being invaded by one of the Medieval Age’s greatest
opportunists—Robert Guiscard. Norman warriors and mercenaries, like Guiscard,
had found that there were plentiful lucrative opportunities among the warring
counts and dukes of Italy. Guiscard became the Duke of Apulia (the heel of
Itay) in 1059, and from there he expanded his influence into Calabria, Naples
and Sicily. While he increased his own power, Guiscard was also undermining the
authority of the emperors of Constantinople in southern Italy.
(Medieval illustration of Emperor Alexios Komnenos (r. 1081-1118),
[Public Domain] via Creative Commons)
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