Byzantine–Bulgarian war of 894–896

This is a good article. Click here for more information.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Byzantine–Bulgarian war of 894–896
Part of the Byzantine–Bulgarian wars

The Bulgarians rout the Byzantine army at the Battle of Boulgarophygon, considered one of the greatest battles of the century
Date894–896 AD (2 Years)
Location
Eastern Balkans, Thrace, Dobrudzha and Ukrainian steppes
Result

Bulgarian victory

Territorial
changes
Bulgarian territorial gains in Thrace
Magyars forced to migrate westwards and settle in Pannonia
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Simeon I the Great Leo VI the Wise
Prokopios Krenites
Leo Katakalon
Liüntika
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Heavy

The Byzantine–Bulgarian war of 894–896 (Bulgarian: Българо–византийска война от 894–896) was fought between the Bulgarian Empire and the Byzantine Empire as a result of the decision of the Byzantine emperor Leo VI to move the Bulgarian market from Constantinople to Thessalonica which would greatly increase the expenses of the Bulgarian merchants.

Following the defeat of the Byzantine army in the initial stages of the war in 894 Leo VI sought aid from the Magyars who at the time inhabited the steppes to the north-east of Bulgaria. Aided by the Byzantine navy, in 895 the Magyars invaded Dobrudzha and defeated the Bulgarian troops. Simeon I called for truce and deliberately protracted the negotiations with the Byzantines until securing the assistance of the Pechenegs. Cornered between the Bulgarians and the Pechanegs, the Magyars suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of the Bulgarian army and had to migrate westwards, settling in Pannonia.

With the Magyar threat eliminated, Simeon led his hosts south and routed the Byzantine army in the battle of Boulgarophygon in the summer of 896, which forced Byzantium to agree to the Bulgarian terms. The war ended with a peace treaty which restored the Bulgarian market in Constantinople and confirmed Bulgarian domination in the Balkans. The Byzantine Empire was obliged to pay Bulgaria an annual tribute in exchange for the return of captured Byzantine soldiers and civilians. Under the treaty, the Byzantines also ceded an area between the Black Sea and the Strandzha mountains to Bulgaria. Despite several violations, the treaty formally lasted until Leo VI's death in 912.

Background[edit]

A map of the Balkans in the late 9th century
A map of Bulgaria in the second half of the 9th century.

During the reign of Boris I (r. 852–889) Bulgaria underwent major changes — the Christianization of the country and the admission of the disciples of Saints Cyril and Methodius, which marked the beginning of the creation and consolidation of the medieval Bulgarian literature and alphabet. Following intense negotiations with the Papacy in Rome and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, Bulgaria converted to Eastern Orthodox Christianity, which caused discontent among part of the nobility who directly associated the new religion with the Byzantine Empire and feared that the country would fall under Byzantine influence.[1]

During the Council of Preslav in 893, assembled after the unsuccessful attempt of Boris I's eldest son Vladimir-Rasate (r. 889–893) to restore the traditional Bulgar religion, Tengriism, it was decided that Old Bulgarian would replace Greek as the language of the church and the Byzantine clergy would be banished and replaced with Bulgarians.[2][3] The Council sealed Boris I's ambitions to secure the cultural and religious independence from the Byzantine Empire[4] and calmed down the concerns among the nobility. It was also decided that his third son Simeon, born after the Christianization and called the "child of peace",[5] would become the next Prince of Bulgaria.[6][7] These events brought an end to the Byzantine hopes to exert influence over the newly Christianized country.[6][8]

Prelude[edit]

A page from a medieval manuscript
A Bulgarian delegation and Leo VI, Madrid Skylitzes.

In 894 Stylianos Zaoutzes, basileopator and leading minister of Leo VI the Wise (r. 886–912), convinced the emperor to move the Bulgarian market from Constantinople to Thessalonica.[9] That move affected not only private interests but also the international commercial importance of Bulgaria and the principle of Byzantine–Bulgarian trade, regulated with the Treaty of 716 and later agreements on the most favoured nation basis.[10][11][12] The Bulgarian merchants were allowed to live in Constantinople, resided in their own colony and paid favourable taxes.[10] The city was a major destination of trade routes from all over Europe and Asia and the transfer of the Bulgarian market to Thessalonica cut short the direct access to goods from the east, which under the new circumstances the Bulgarians would have to buy through middlemen, who were close associates of Stylianos Zaoutzes. In Thessalonica, the Bulgarians were also forced to pay higher tariffs to sell their goods, enriching Zaoutzes' cronies.[10]

The Byzantine chronicler Theophanes Continuatus described the reasons for the conflict as follows:

The cause of the war was the following — the basileopator Stylianos Zaoutzes had a eunuch slave named Mousikos. He befriended Staurakios and Cosmas, who originated from Hellas, merchants greedy for profit and covetous. In their desire to enrich themselves and through the mediation of Mousikos, they moved the market of the Bulgarians from the capital [Constantinople] to Thessaloniki and taxed the Bulgarians with heavier duties. When the Bulgarians acquainted Simeon with the issue, he informed emperor Leo. Infatuated in his predilection to Zaoutzes, he considered all this a trifle. Simeon was infuriated and raised arms against the Romans. —Chronographia by Theophanes Continuatus[8][13]

The ousting of the merchants from Constantinople was a heavy blow for Bulgarian economic interests.[14] The merchants complained to Simeon I, who in turn raised the issue to Leo VI, but the appeal was left unanswered.[6] Simeon, who according to the Byzantine chroniclers was seeking a pretext to declare war and to implement his plans to seize the Byzantine throne,[15] attacked,[16] provoking what has sometimes been called (inappropriately) the first commercial war in Europe.[8][9] However, many historians including Vasil Zlatarski and John Fine consider those claims unlikely, arguing that in the beginning of his reign Simeon needed to consolidate his power and imperial ambitions had not yet been crystallised, therefore his military intervention was a defensive act to protect the Bulgarian commercial interests.[10][15]

Initial campaigns and Magyar intervention[edit]

A page from a medieval manuscript
The Bulgarians defeat the Byzantines under Krenites and Kourtikios in Thrace, Madrid Skylitzes.
A page from a medieval manuscript
The Magyars pursue Simeon I to Drastar, Madrid Skylitzes.

In the autumn of 894 Simeon I launched an invasion of Byzantine Thrace, taking advantage of Byzantium's engagements with the Arabs to the east, which had left the Balkan provinces vulnerable. Leo VI hastily assembled an army under the generals Prokopios Krenites and Kourtikios and many archons, which included the Imperial Guard that consisted of Khazar mercenaries.[9] In the ensuing battle in the Theme of Macedonia (modern Eastern Thrace), probably around Adrianople,[17] the Byzantines were defeated and their commanders perished. Most of the Khazars were captured and Simeon had their noses cut and "sent them in the capital [Constantinople] for shame of the Romans".[18][19] The Bulgarians looted the region and retired to the north taking many captives.[20]

This failure urged the Byzantines to seek aid from the Magyars, who at the time inhabited the steppes between the Dnieper and the Danube. Leo VI sent his envoy Nicetas Scleros to the Magyar leaders Árpád and Kurszán in 894 or 895 "to give presents" and incite them against the Bulgarians.[21][22] At the same time, in the autumn of 894, Leo VI sent one Anastasios in Regensburg to Arnulf of Carinthia, king of East Francia. While no records have survived of that mission's purpose, it was most likely a pre-emptive move to discourage a German–Bulgarian alliance which existed between Arnulf and Simeon I's predecessor, Vladimir-Rasate.[23]

In the beginning of 895 the talented general Nikephoros Phokas the Elder was summoned to Constantinople and sent against the Bulgarians at the head of a large army.[24] While Simeon concentrated his forces along the southern border to confront Phokas, the Byzantine navy under admiral Eustathios Argyros sailed to the Danube Delta to assist the Magyars.[25] Believing that Simeon I would back off Leo VI sent an envoy, Constantinacios, to propose peace. Simeon I, who had studied in the University of Constantinople and was familiar with the Byzantine diplomacy, was suspicious of the Byzantine rapprochement, charged Constantinacios with espionage and put him into custody.[18][26] The Danube was barred with an iron chain to impede the movement of the Byzantine navy and the bulk of the army was dislocated northwards. The Byzantines, however, managed to break the chain and transported the Magyar hordes south of the river.[18] The Magyars, led by Árpád's son Liüntika,[22] ravaged Dobrudzha and dealt a heavy defeat on the Bulgarian army, led personally by Simeon I.[21][27] Simeon sought refuge in the strong fortress of Drastar while the Magyars pillaged and looted unopposed, reaching the outskirts of the capital Preslav.[26] Before retreating north, the Magyars sold thousands of captives to the Byzantines.[26][28]

Truce negotiations[edit]

A medieval seal
A seal of Simeon I.

Facing a difficult situation with war on two fronts, Simeon sent a peace proposal through admiral Eustathios to buy time to deal with the Magyar menace, promising to return the Byzantine captives. Leo VI gladly complied, ordered Eustathios and Nikephoros Phokas to retreat and sent the diplomat Leo Choirosphaktes to Bulgaria to negotiate the terms.[18][26] That was exactly what Simeon I had aimed. Leo Choirosphaktes was detained in one fortress and was repeatedly refused an audience. Instead, Simeon I exchanged letters with him, protracting the negotiations, showing suspicions over the wording of the Byzantine proposals, constantly seeking clarifications and adding new demands.[21] The main issue was the exchange of the captives — the Byzantine priority was to free the prisoners captured during the Bulgarian campaign of 894.[29] In one of his letters to Choirosphaktes Simeon I demonstrated his diplomatic skills deriding the emperor:

The eclipse of the sun, and its date, not only to the month, week or day, but to the hour and second, your emperor prophesied to us the year before last in the most marvellous fashion. And he also explained how long the eclipse of the moon will last. And they say he knows many other things about the movements of the heavenly bodies. If this is true, he must also know about the prisoners; and if he knows, he will have told you whether I am going to release them or keep them. So prophesy one thing or the other, and if you know my intentions, you shall get the prisoners as reward for your prophecy and your embassy, by God! Greetings!. —letter of Simeon I to Leo Choirosphaktes[30]

Choirosphaktes replied with an ambiguous answer, which was used by Simeon to claim that Leo could not prophesy the future and to refuse the return of the captives, further prolonging the negotiations.[31]

Defeat of the Magyars and battle of Boulgarophygon[edit]

While exchanging correspondence with Leo Choirosphaktes, Simeon sent envoys to forge an alliance with the Pechenegs, the eastern neighbours of the Magyars, and in the beginning of 896 the Bulgarians and Pechenegs attacked the Magyar homeland on two fronts.[32] In the decisive battle the Bulgarian army dealt a crushing defeat on the Magyars in the steppes along the Southern Bug river. The struggle was so bloody that it is said that the victorious Bulgarians lost 20,000 riders.[33] At the same time, the Pechenegs advanced westwards and prevented the Magyars from returning to their homeland.[34] The blow on the Magyars was so heavy that they were forced to migrate further west in search of new pastures, eventually settling in the Pannonian Basin, where they established the powerful Kingdom of Hungary.[28][34]

A page from a medieval manuscript
The Bulgarians rout the Byzantine army at Boulgarophygon, Madrid Skylitzes.

With the Magyar threat eliminated, Simeon returned to Preslav "proud of the victory"[32] and demanded the return of all Bulgarian captives as a precondition for further peace negotiations. Leo VI, who was in a difficult situation, facing the Arabs in the east and deprived of the services of the capable general Nikephoros Phokas, who was either disgraced as a result of the intrigues of Stylianos Zaoutzes or died in early 896, had to comply.[33][35] Leo Choirosphaktes and a Bulgarian envoy called Theodore, a trusted man of Simeon's, were sent to Constantinople to arrange the transfer which was successfully implemented.[36] Interpreting that as a sign of weakness, Simeon claimed that not all Bulgarians had been released and in the summer of 896 invaded Thrace.[34] The Byzantines secured an uneasy truce with the Arabs and transferred to Europe "all themes and tagmata",[32] i. e. all forces of the empire. The troops were commanded by the Domestic of the Schools Leo Katakalon, who lacked the ability of Phokas.[33] The two armies clashed in the battle of Boulgarophygon and the Byzantines were thoroughly routed — most of the soldiers perished, including the second-in-command, the protovestiarios Theodosius. Katakalon managed to escape with a few survivors.[9][32][34][37] The defeat was so grave that one Byzantine soldier retired from society and became an ascetic under the name of Luke the Stylite.[33]

The Byzantine sources have not recorded the aftermath of the battle but, according to the accounts of the contemporary Arab historian Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari, the Bulgarians marched towards Constantinople. Leo VI was in such a panic that he considered arming Arab prisoners of war and sending them against the Bulgarians in return for their freedom, but eventually abandoned the idea.[34][38] Further negotiations followed until the Byzantines agreed to the Bulgarian demands.[34]

Aftermath[edit]

A page from a medieval manuscript
A depiction of a battle during the Byzantine–Bulgarian war of 894–896, Radziwiłł Chronicle

The war ended with a peace treaty which confirmed the Bulgarian domination on the Balkans,[39] restored the status of Bulgaria as a most favoured nation, abolished the commercial restrictions and obliged the Byzantine Empire to pay annual tribute. Under the treaty, the Byzantines also ceded an area between the Black Sea and Strandzha[a] to Bulgaria. In exchange, the Bulgarians released the captured Byzantine soldiers and civilians, who were allegedly 120,000.[40][41] The peace treaty remained in force until Leo VI's death in 912 although Simeon I did violate it following the Sack of Thessalonica in 904, extracting further territorial concessions in Macedonia.[42]

The Bulgarian monarch was satisfied with the results and considered that he had superiority over the Byzantine Empire to achieve his political ambitions — to assume the throne in Constantinople.[32] Despite the success, however, Simeon I realized that there was still a lot to do in order to prevail over the Empire for good. He needed his own political and ideological base and launched an ambitious construction programme in Preslav so that it could rival Constantinople.[43] In addition, Simeon I took precautions to reduce the Byzantine influence over the Western Balkans by imposing his authority over the Principality of Serbia in return for recognizing Petar Gojniković as its ruler.[44]

The devastation in Dobrudzha at the hands of the Magyars indicated how vulnerable Bulgaria was to attacks from the north under the influence of the Byzantine diplomacy.[39] That experience paid off well in 917, when Simeon managed to counter the Byzantine efforts to ally with the Serbs or the Pechenegs, and forced them to fight alone in the battle of Achelous, where the Byzantines were soundly defeated in one of the biggest disasters in Byzantine history.[45]

See also[edit]

Footnotes[edit]

Notes[edit]

^ a: The borders established after the treaty are unknown but according to contemporary chronicles in 907 the town of Medea lied on the Byzantine–Bulgarian border.[46]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Andreev & Lalkov 1996, pp. 73, 75
  2. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 261–262
  3. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 272–273
  4. ^ Andreev & Lalkov 1996, p. 87
  5. ^ Andreev & Lalkov 1996, p. 91
  6. ^ a b c Andreev & Lalkov 1996, p. 92
  7. ^ Runciman 1930, p. 137
  8. ^ a b c Bakalov et al 2003, p. 251
  9. ^ a b c d "Selections from the Chronicle of Ioannes Skylitzes, translated and adapted from B. Flusin and J.-C. Cheynet (2003)". Ian Mladjov's Resources. Archived from the original on 2012-07-27. Retrieved 2014-11-08.
  10. ^ a b c d Fine 1991, p. 137
  11. ^ Runciman 1930, p. 144
  12. ^ Zlatarski 1972, p. 286
  13. ^ "Chronographia by Theophanes Continuatus" in GIBI, vol. V, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, pp. 121122. Archived pp. 121122
  14. ^ Obolensky 1971, p. 105
  15. ^ a b Zlatarski 1972, pp. 288–289
  16. ^ Andreev & Lalkov 1996, pp. 92–93
  17. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 289–290
  18. ^ a b c d Andreev & Lalkov 1996, p. 93
  19. ^ Whittow 1996, pp. 286–287
  20. ^ Zlatarski 1972, p. 290
  21. ^ a b c Fine 1991, p. 138
  22. ^ a b Spinei 2003, p. 52
  23. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 294–295
  24. ^ Zlatarski 1972, p. 295
  25. ^ Runciman 1930, pp. 145–146
  26. ^ a b c d Runciman 1930, p. 146
  27. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 297–299
  28. ^ a b Bozhilov & Gyuzelev 1999, p. 248
  29. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 301–305
  30. ^ Fine 1991, pp. 138–139
  31. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 306–307
  32. ^ a b c d e Andreev & Lalkov 1996, p. 94
  33. ^ a b c d Runciman 1930, p. 147
  34. ^ a b c d e f Fine 1991, p. 139
  35. ^ Zlatarski 1972, p. 315
  36. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 312–313
  37. ^ Kazhdan 1991, p. 317
  38. ^ Zlatarski 1972, p. 317
  39. ^ a b Whittow 1996, p. 287
  40. ^ Fine 1991, pp. 139–140
  41. ^ Zlatarski 1972, pp. 318–321
  42. ^ Fine 1991, p. 140
  43. ^ Andreev & Lalkov 1996, pp. 94–95
  44. ^ Fine 1991, p. 141
  45. ^ Andreev & Lalkov 1996, pp. 99–100
  46. ^ Zlatarski 1972, p. 320

Sources[edit]

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]