(Redirected from Battle of Malazgirt)
'The Battle of Manzikert', or 'Malazgirt' was fought between the
Byzantine Empire and
Seljuk Turkic forces led by
Alp Arslan on
August 26,
1071 near Manzikert,
Armenia (modern
Malazgirt,
Turkey) in the
Basprakania [1] theme (province) of the Empire. It resulted in the defeat of the
Eastern Roman Empire (
Byzantine Empire) and the capture of Emperor
Romanos IV Diogenes.
Background
During the
1060s, the Seljuk Sultan Alp Arslan allowed his Turkic allies (
Turks and
Turkmens), as well as the
Kurds, to migrate towards
Armenia and
Asia Minor. In
1064, they conquered the Armenian capital at
Ani. In
1068, Romanos IV led an expedition against them, but his slow-moving
infantry could not catch the speedy Turkish
cavalry, although he was able to capture the city of
Hierapolis in
Syria. In
1070, Romanus led a second expedition towards
Malazgirt (then known as Manzikert) in the eastern end of
Anatolia (in today's
MuÅŸ Province), where a Byzantine fortress had been captured by the Seljuks, and offered a
treaty with Alp Arslan; Romanos would give back Hierapolis if Arslan gave up the siege of
Edessa (
Urfa). Romanos threatened war if Alp Arslan did not comply, and prepared his troops anyway, expecting the sultan to decline his offer, which he did.
Preparations
Accompanying Romanos was
Andronikos Doukas, the co-regent and a direct rival. The army consisted of about 5,000 Byzantine troops from the western provinces and probably about the same number from the eastern provinces; 500
Frankish and
Norman mercenaries under
Roussel de Bailleul; some Turkish,
Bulgarian, and
Pecheneg mercenaries; infantry under the duke of
Antioch; a contingent of Armenian troops; and some (but not all) of the
Varangian Guard, to total around 60-70,000 troops. The quality of the Byzantine Thematic (provincial) troops had declined in the years prior to the succession of Romanus as the central government diverted resources to the recruitment of mercenaries who were considered less likely to become involved in coups or factional fighting within the Empire.
The march across Asia Minor was long and difficult, and Romanos did not endear himself to his troops by bringing a luxurious baggage train along with him; the Byzantine population also suffered some plundering by Romanos' Frankish
mercenaries, whom he was forced to dismiss. The expedition first rested at
Sebasteia on the
Halys, and reached
Theodosiopolis in June 1071. There, some of his generals suggested continuing the march into Seljuk territory and catching Arslan before he was ready. Some of the other generals, including
Nikephoros Bryennios, suggested they wait there and fortify their position. Eventually it was decided to continue the march.
Thinking that Alp Arslan was either further away or not coming at all, Romanos marched towards
Lake Van expecting to retake Manzikert rather quickly, as well as the nearby fortress of
Khliat if possible. However, Arslan was actually in Armenia, with 30,000 cavalry from
Aleppo,
Mosul, and his other allies. Arslan's spies knew exactly where Romanus was, while Romanos was completely unaware of his opponent's movements.
Romanos ordered his general
Joseph Tarchaneiotes to take some of the Byzantine troops and Varangians and accompany the Pechenegs and Franks to Khliat, while Romanos and the rest of the army marched to Manzikert. This probably split the forces in half, each taking about 30,000 men. Although it is unknown precisely what happened to Tarchaneiotes and his half of the army after this, they apparently caught sight of the Seljuks and fled, as they later appeared at
Melitene and did not take part in the battle.
The battle
Romanos was unaware of the loss of Tarchaneiotes and continued to Manzikert, which he easily captured on
August 23. The next day some foraging parties under Bryennios discovered the Seljuk force and were forced to retreat back to Manzikert. The Armenian general Basilaces was sent out with some cavalry, as Romanos did not believe this was Arslan's full army; the cavalry was destroyed and Basilaces taken prisoner. Romanos drew up his troops into formation and sent the left wing out under Bryennios, who was almost surrounded by the quickly approaching Turks and was forced to retreat once more. The Turks hid among the nearby hills for the night, making it nearly impossible for Romanus to send a counterattack.
On
August 25, some of Romanos' Turkish mercenaries came into contact with their Seljuk relatives and deserted. Romanos then rejected a Seljuk peace embassy as he wanted to settle the Turkish problem with a decisive military victory and understood that raising another army would be both difficult and expensive. The Emperor attempted to recall Tarchaneiotes, who was of course no longer in the area. There were no engagements that day, but on
August 26 the Byzantine army gathered itself into a proper battle formation and began to march on the Turkish positions, with the left wing under Bryennios, the right wing under Theodore Alyates, and the centre under the emperor. Andronikos Doukas led the reserve forces in the rear. The Seljuks were organized into a crescent formation about four kilometres away, with Arslan observing events from a safe distance. Seljuk archers attacked the Byzantines as they drew closer; the centre of their crescent continually moved backwards while the wings moved to surround the Byzantine troops.
The Byzantines held off the arrow attacks and captured Arslan's camp by the end of the afternoon. However, the right and left wings, where the arrows did most of their damage, almost broke up when individual units tried to force the Seljuks into a pitched battle; the Seljuk cavalry simply fled when challenged, the classic
hit and run tactics of steppe warriors. With the Seljuks avoiding battle, Romanos was forced to order a withdrawal by the time night fell. However, the right wing misunderstood the order, and Doukas, as an enemy of Romanos, deliberately ignored the emperor and marched back to the camp outside Manzikert, rather than covering the emperor's retreat. Now that the Byzantines were thoroughly confused, the Seljuks seized the opportunity and attacked. The Byzantine right wing was routed; the left under Bryennios held out a little longer but was soon routed as well. The remnants of the Byzantine centre, including the Emperor and the Varangian Guard, were encircled by the Seljuks. Romanus was injured, and taken prisoner when the Seljuks discovered him. The survivors fled the field and were pursued throughout the night; by dawn, the professional core of the Byzantine army had been destroyed.
When the Emperor Romanos IV was conducted into the presence of Alp Arslan, he was treated with considerable kindness, and again offered the terms of peace which he had offered previous to the battle. He was also loaded with presents and Alp Arslan had him respectfully escorted by a military guard to his own forces. But prior to that, when he first was brought to the Sultan, this famous conversation is reported to have taken place:
:Alp Arslan: "''What would you do if I were brought before you as a prisoner?''"
:Romanus: "''Perhaps I'd kill you, or exhibit you in the streets of Constantinople.''"
:Alp Arslan: "''My punishment is far heavier. I forgive you, and set you free.''"
Shortly after his return to his subjects, Romanos was deposed, and then blinded and exiled in the island of
Proti; soon after, he died as a result of an infection caused by an injury during his brutal blinding.
Outcome
Despite being a complete tactical disaster and a long-term strategic catastrophe for Byzantium, Manzikert was by no means the massacre that earlier historians presumed. Modern scholars estimate that Byzantine losses were relatively low, considering that many units survived the battle intact and were fighting elsewhere within a few months. Certainly, all the commanders in the Byzantine side (Doukas, Tarchaneiotes, Bryennios, de Bailleul, and, above all, the Emperor) survived and took part in later events.
Doukas had escaped with no casualties, and quickly marched back to Constantinople where he led the coup against Romanos. Bryennios also lost few men in the rout of his wing. The Seljuks did not pursue the fleeing Byzantines, nor did they recapture Manzikert itself at this point. The Byzantine army regrouped and marched to Dokeia, where they were joined by Romanos when he was released a week later. The most serious loss materially seems to have been the emperor's extravagant baggage train.
The disaster the battle caused for the Empire was, in simplest terms, the loss of its Anatolian heartland.
John Julius Norwich says in his trilogy on the Byzantine Empire that the defeat was "its death blow, though centuries remained before the remnant fell. The themes in Anatolia were literally the heart of the empire, and within decades after Manzikert, they were gone." Or, as
Anna Komnene puts it a few decades after the actual battle,
:"the fortunes of the Roman Empire had sunk to their lowest ebb. For the armies of the East were dispersed in all directions, because the Turks had over-spread, and gained command of, countries between the Euxine Sea (
Black Sea) and the
Hellespont, and the
Aegean and Syrian Seas (
Mediterranean Sea), and the various bays, especially those which wash
Pamphylia,
Cilicia, and empty themselves into the Egyptian Sea (
Mediterranean Sea)."
[4]
Years and decades later, Manzikert came to be seen as a disaster for the Empire; later sources therefore greatly exaggerate the numbers of troops and the number of casualties. Byzantine historians would often look back and lament the "disaster" of that day, pinpointing it as the moment the decline of the Empire began. It was not an immediate disaster, but the defeat showed the Seljuks that the Byzantines were not invincible — they were not the unconquerable, millennium-old Roman Empire (as both the Byzantines and Seljuks still called it). The usurpation of Andronikos Doukas also politically destabilized the empire and it was difficult to organize resistance to the Turkish migrations that followed the battle. Within a decade almost all of Asia Minor was overrun. Finally, while intrigue and deposing of Emperors had taken place before, the fate of Romanos was particularly horrific, and the destabilization caused by it also rippled through the centuries.
What followed the battle was a chain of events - of which the battle was the first link - that undermined the Empire in the years to come. They included intrigues for the throne, the horrific fate of Romanos and Roussel de Bailleul attempting to carve himself an independent kingdom in
Galatia with his 3,000
Frankish,
Norman and
German mercenaries. He defeated the Emperor's uncle
John Doukas who had come to suppress him, advancing toward the capital to destroy
Chrysopolis (
Üsküdar) on the Asian coast of the Bosphorus. The Empire finally turned to the spreading Seljuks to crush de Bailleul (which they did, then delivering him over). These events all interacted to create a vacuum that the Turks filled. Their choice in establishing their capital in
Nikaea (
İznik) in
1077 could possibly be explained by a desire to see if the Empire's struggles could present new opportunities.
In hindsight, both Byzantine and contemporary historians are unanimous in dating the decline of Byzantine fortunes to this battle. It is interpreted as one of the root causes for the later
Crusades, in that the
First Crusade of 1095 was originally a western response to the Byzantine emperor's call for military assistance after the loss of
Anatolia. From another perspective, the West saw Manzikert as a signal that Byzantium was no longer capable of being the protector of
Eastern Christianity or Christian pilgrims to the Holy Places in the
Middle East.
Delbruck considers that the importance of the battle has been exaggerated; but it is clear from the evidence that as a result of it, the Empire was unable to put an effective army into the field for many years to come.
Notes
1. Armenia: a historical atlas, , Robert H., Hewsen, The University of Chicago Press, 2001, ISBN 0-226-33228-4
References
★ Haldon, John. ''The Byzantine Wars: Battles and Campaigns of the Byzantine Era'', 2001. ISBN 0-7524-1795-9.
★ Treadgold, Warren. ''A History of the Byzantine State and Society'', Stanford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8047-2421-0.
★ Runciman, Sir Steven. ''A History of the Crusades'' (Volume One), Harper & Row, 1951.
★ Norwich, John Julius. ''Byzantium: The Apogee'', Viking, 1991. ISBN 0-670-80252-2.
★ Carey, Brian Todd; Allfree, Joshua B.; Cairns, John. ''Warfare in the Medieval World'', Pen & Sword Books ltd, 2006. ISBN 1-84415-339-8
★ Konstam, Angus. ''Historical Atlas of The Crusades''
External links
★
Battle of Manzikert: Military Disaster or Political Failure? By Paul Markham
★
Debacle at Manzikert, 1071: Prelude to the Crusades, by Brian T. Carey (Issue 5 - January 2004)