Unbidan
Acme Inc.
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The light and the dark XIX

a cultural history of dualism
ID 257557
Slug the-light-and-the-dark-xix-pfm-fontaine
Contributors
Author : P.F.M. Fontaine
Annotation
Description The subject of Volume XIX of The Light and the Dark is the history of the Byzantine Empire from 642 to 1453. The general theme of the whole series is 'dualism', in short the impact of unsolvable oppositions on historical societies; this is also the subject of this volume: unsolvable oppositions in Byzantine history, in its interior policy as well as in the relationships with the surrounding nations and with Latin Europe. The concentration on this overall theme implies that many important aspects of Byzantine history are not discussed; for these the reader must turn to the existing general histories of the Byzantine Empire. Notes with references to sources and literature can be found after each chapter. There are also a Bibliography and a General Index at the back of the book. After the Preface there is a Manual, in which the reader can find, per volume and chapter, the subjects treated in the previous eighteen volumes. At the back there is also a Chronology of the history of the Byzantine Empire 642-1453, a list of all Byzantine emperors, and one of the Emperors of the Nicaean Empire. The history of the Byzantine Empire since 642 is one of permanently losing ground, until finally hardly more remained than the capital itself. Ch. I discusses the first Byzantine losses. Although the great Arabic storm ended in 642, even after this date the Empire lost several territories. Ca. 630 the Visigoths conquered Byzantine South Spain. Egypt was lost to the Arabs in the years after 639, in a few years' time. Byzantium was weakened by problems over the imperial succession; the Coptic population of Egypt felt oppressed by the Byzantines and was, in consequence, not prepared to defend their country. The Arabs founded Cairo as the new capital. The rest of North Africa, Libya and the Maghreb, were not more stoutly defended. In a very short time after 642 the Arabs conquered Libya (Cyrenaica and Tripolitania); in 654 they conquered Rhodes, while Cyprus became a kind of no man's land between Byzantium and the Arabs. The defence of the Maghreb (Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco) was weakened by the tactless ecclesiastical policy of Byzantium and by the anti-Byzantine attitude of the Berber population. The Arab invasion began in 670; in 698 the old capital Carthage was lost. Between 700 and 709 Morocco too was conquered. In 711 the Arabs invaded Visigothic Spain and conquered it in two years. Coming from Spain, the Arabs conquered Sicily, but this became a much tougher affair for them. Palermo was occupied in 831, Syracuse in 875, but the last Byzantine strongholds only in 965. Sardinia and Malta were also occupied, but an Arab attempt to conquer Crete misfired. Ch. II is about 'Byzantium and the Balkans'. From the sixth century onward the Byzantine Balkans saw the Slavs coming, first a trickle, then a stream. The tribes established themselves in the habitats where they still live: the Croats, the Slovenes, and the Serbs. The last to arrive were the Bulgarians. Their rulers acknowledged the suzerainty of the Byzantine emperors, but managed their own affairs. Byzantium's control over the Balkans was very slender and in the end virtually non-existent. The Slavs were pagans, but became Christians mainly through the efforts of the brothers Cyrillus and Methodius. The Bulgarians were the last to convert. The hardest Balkan problem for Byzantium was the relationship with Bulgaria. The Bulgarian khans began to style themselves czar, the Caesar title of the Byzantine emperors; some of them wanted to plant their throne in Constantinople. A long series of bloody wars, with great cruelties committed on both sides, were fought between the two states. It ended only when the Turks overran the Balkans in the fifteenth century. Ch. III discusses 'The threat from the East', coming first from the Seljuq and later from the Ottoman Turks. Yet, there was also a threat from the West. Normans coming from France, conquered Sicily on the Arabs between 1061 and 1091. They...
Genres
Subjects
694 Cultuur- en mentaliteitsgeschiedenis NUR
NSTC
Publisher Gopher B.V.
Imprint
Language dut
Page count 343
Duration
Publication date first 2006-05-05
Publication date latest 2006-05-05
Cover URL
Editions
  • ISBN: 9789051791341 (BC)

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