Showing posts with label Seventh Century. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seventh Century. Show all posts

Saturday 31 December 2022

Encounters with the medieval past 1: The early middle ages in ten objects Part 1 (400 - 800)

 Hello everyone. As 2022 draws to a close, I thought I'd do something a little bit different. You see, most of my posts have focused overwhelmingly on textual sources because they're what I've mostly worked with and very rich and fascinating they are too. But they're only a fraction of what's out there in terms of the whole sum of what survives from the early medieval period. And since all societies across Europe, Asia and Africa in the early medieval period were at best partially literate, with only a minority (sometimes a very small one at that) being able to read and write documents, texts arguably provide quite a distorted view of how most early medieval people saw and experienced their world. And in all ages of human history, the way we have experienced the world has been, first and foremost, through some or all of the five senses - hearing, seeing, touching, smelling, tasting. Of all these, the visual is the most easy for us to access because a fairly substantial number (though not as large as we'd like) of buildings, images and objects do survive from the early medieval period. Though no landscape has remained unaltered since the early medieval period traces of it do nonetheless remain - from grand projects like Offa's Dyke on the border between England and Wales and the Nahrawan Canal in central Iraq to more mundane things like field boundaries and woodland clearings. Touching what early medieval people touched is also somewhat possible, though most museums, heritage sites, libraries and archives do not take kindly to random members of the public doing such things for good reasons. Hearing, smelling and tasting are a lot more difficult. That is very much the domain of experimental archaeologists, who will painstakingly try and reconstruct what an early medieval Latin mass would have sounded like, what a busy commercial street in tenth century Constantinople, Cairo or Cordoba would have smelt like (no one has done anything like that yet, to my knowledge, but maybe that'll be the new frontier of the future) or how Anglo-Saxon bread would have tasted (you can actually try this at home yourself).

I've decided on the visual, since that's probably the one I'm most qualified to talk about, though I'm sure those of you reading this who are actually cognisant in archaeology, art history and epigraphy will find plenty of fault in what I say. I've decided to try and do a foolhardy task - to tell the history of early medieval Afro-Eurasia (the Old World you might say) in ten objects. This is obviously going to be a very selective history - not all aspects of early medieval life will have justice done to them. Nor will all the regions of the Old World. The Iberian Peninsula, Eastern Europe (unless Byzantium counts), Iran, Central Asia, China, Japan and Sub-Saharan Africa are all going to be conspicuous by their absence here. Meanwhile, the very label early medieval is being stretched to its limits here as these objects span the whole period this blog produces posts on - the fifth to twelfth centuries. I don't want to get into a long discussion about periodisation, but 400 - 1200 is the most generous periodisation for the early medieval that still has some sense in it. And of course, for a lot of the regions that we will be talking about here, notably South and Southeast Asia, a lot of people would argue that the label "early medieval" is inappropriate no matter what the periodisation and that we should throw out all that Eurocentric baggage. I must say that I'm not in that camp, which strikes me as postcolonialism gone too far. All it really does is keep premodern African and Asian studies, which are themselves quite small self-contained fields in Europe and North America given that they require the mastery of some very difficult languages and source material, isolated from the mainstream of medieval history. Basically, just so long as we don't hold up Europe as the gold standard for historical development we're good, and by doing some comparisons we can see what's similar and shared and what's particular and unique about what we study. But now let's get on the exciting part - meet our ten objects!

Object number one: a child's tombstone from Trier, 400 - 500 AD (Trier Cathedral Museum, Germany, visited 11 May 2022)



The inscription on this Roman tombstone, found in the grounds of the abbey of Saint Maximin at Trier, in the Rhineland-Palatinate region of Germany, reads (according to my own faulty translation:

Valentina lies here in peace. She lived for three years, six months and five days. Her kinsmen placed this inscription here. 

Below it are two doves. The doves are an important Christian symbol - it was a dove carrying an olive branch that Noah saw when the Great Flood ended. The gospels of Matthew and Luke also claim that the Holy Spirit appeared as a dove at the Baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan. Because of this, doves symbolised peace, hope and the soul, and thus were more than appropriate to have on a tombstone - they became a very common motif on late Roman tombstones from Edict of Milan in 313, which officially made Christian worship legal in the Roman Empire, onwards. Indeed, there are plenty of tombstones just this one in Trier alone, to say nothing of other places where late Roman cemeteries have been found. 

The location of the cemetery this was found in is worth noting as well. This grave was found in the grounds of the Abbey of Saint Maximin in Trier, founded in the sixth century, destroyed by the Vikings in 882, rebuilt in the tenth century and again, after a fire, in the thirteenth. I passed by it when I was walking from Trier Hauptbahnhof to my accommodation in a village in the hills of the Moselle valley outside Trier. Before the abbey, there was an early Christian basilica and cemetery that had grown up around the tomb of Saint Maximin (d.346), one of the earliest known Christian bishops of Trier, a courtier at the courts of Constantine II and Constans (sons of Constantine the Great) and a renowned defender of the doctrine of the Trinity against the Arian heresy which we have talked about here briefly before. This cemetery was located in what was essentially a suburb of Trier, or Augusta Treverorum as it was then known. You see, Roman law forbade the dead from being buried inside the city walls. So the location of this burial is very much in keeping with ancient Roman tradition, going back at least to the days of the Early Republic. The Christian symbols, however, represent a more recently established tradition, as does the decision to have this toddler buried in close proximity to a saint - the cult of the saints itself being a very recent development. Saints were believed to be able to intercede for those who had recently departed to help them get to heaven, which was why as we get into the early middle ages proper, kings and aristocrats chose to be buried in monasteries. 

But above all, it reveals one of the few things that stayed completely same throughout our period (400 - 1200). That is, high infant mortality. We have no concrete statistics for it in this period, but in all ages before modern medicine almost a third of children did not live past the age of five. That's why life expectancy in this period was so low. Its not because everyone was dropping dead in their thirties (I've encountered more than enough early medieval octogenarians and nonagenarians to disprove that), but because more than 30% of all the people born in this period would have never lived to see adulthood at all. This continued to be more or less the case even into the Industrial Age. For example, in England and Wales in 1850, 16.2% of babies born died before their first birthday and approximately a further 11.2% did not live to see their fifth - cumulatively, that's about 27.4% of children dying before the age of five in early Victorian England. By contrast, in 2020, just 0.4% of children in England and Wales did not live to see their fifth birthday. For this we have to thank the huge quantum leaps in medicine and healthcare that were made in the twentieth century. Still, huge disparities remain around the world i.e. the infant mortality rate (deaths before the age of one) is still 1.1% in Ecuador, 4.7% in Mozambique and 5.7% in Pakistan. This tombstone really reminds us of how harsh life could be across this period. 

Of course, going on in the backdrop when this tombstone was placed there was indeed the fall of the Western Roman Empire. Trier had been an absolutely thriving place in the fourth century AD, when it was the de facto imperial capital in the West. Having the imperial court that far north is part of what explains why so many deluxe Roman villas survive from the fourth century in Britain. However, after the rebellion of Magnus Maximus in the 380s, who we've met a few times before, the western imperial court moved permanently back to Milan, and later Rome and Ravenna. In 406, the Roman magister militum (head of the armed forces) Stilicho, decided to remove all field armies from the Rhine frontier to deal with Radagaisus, an Ostrogothic leader who wanted to sack Rome and sacrifice all the senators to Odin and Thor. Radagaisus was defeated and executed near Fiesole in Tuscany, but in the winter the Rhine froze over and the Burgundians, Vandals, Swabians and Alans, who were all fleeing the coming of the Huns from Mongolia to the Great Hungarian Plain, crossed into Gaul. 

The countryside around Trier will have been ravaged a lot by the barbarians in 407, though the city itself doesn't seem to have been sacked that year - a fate that befell Metz and Rheims to the west. Shortly after this, half a dozen usurpers appeared in Gaul and one of them, Constantine III (later believed to be King Arthur's grandfather), withdrew all Roman field armies from Britain later in 407. The end of the Western Roman Empire was still far from inevitable at this point, and no one could have foreseen it then, but this can with some justification be called the beginning of the end. Trier and the Moselle valley still remained firmly under Roman imperial authority, though it was attacked by the Franks several times in the early fifth century, and was sacked by Attila the Hun during his invasion of Gaul in 451. 

After 461, the imperial centre lost control of Gaul north of the Loire. The emerging Visigothic kingdom in Aquitaine and the Burgundian kingdom in Savoy cut off the corridor between it and the still centrally controlled and very Roman Provence. To add to this, Aegidius, the commander of the Roman field armies in Gaul, whom we've met so many times before because our friend Adhemar of Chabannes remembered him almost 600 years later and talked a lot about him, refused to recognise the western emperor Libius Severus (r.461 - 465). But its unclear if Aegidius, who was based in Soissons, actually controlled Trier. 

Trier after 461 was under the control of Count Arbogast, a descendant of the Frankish leader by the same name who had served as magister militum for the western Roman Empire in the late fourth century. Count Arbogast himself, like many Roman generals of barbarian ancestry (Stilicho and Flavius Aetius to name a few) was thoroughly Roman himself and like any good Roman aristocrat he had received an excellent literary education. Our only sources for his life are his correspondence with the Gallo-Roman aristocrat and bishop Sidonius Apollinaris and with his cousin Bishop Auspicius of Toul, preserved in a ninth century Carolingian manuscript called the Austrasian Letters (once again, thank the Carolingians for preserving all our ancient sources). Count Arbogast relied on the surviving units of Roman limitanei (garrison and border defence troops) and Frankish mercenaries for military defence. We do not know when his rule ended, but it was sometime after 470. Adhemar of Chabannes, writing in the eleventh century but using much earlier sources (though from well after the time of the events themselves), claims that Childeric, the father of Clovis, took Trier for the Franks and sacked and burned the city to the ground sometime in the 470s. But there's no contemporary source that says this, and by Adhemar's day the all-out destructiveness of the barbarian invasions was already being played up in the standard histories - the cataclysmic vision of the fall of Rome didn't have to wait until the Renaissance. Some instead think that Arbogast simply gave his allegiance to Childeric, again without much foundation. At any rate, as far as the archaeology is concerned, Frankish style graves do not appear in the area around Trier until after 500. So, as this gravestone itself attests, Trier remained firmly Roman during the turbulent fifth century and, like in many other parts of the erstwhile Western Roman Empire, the early middle ages took a long while to arrive there. 

Object number two: socks from Roman Egypt, 400 - 500 AD (Victoria and Albert Museum, London, visited 27 October 2022)




Lets now take a look at the other side of the Roman world, to the eastern Roman Empire. This pair of red woollen socks was knitted with needles in Egypt sometime in the fifth century, though they might actually be fourth century - like with a lot of archaeological material, dating is difficult (I shall resist any temptation to make awful puns). Their odd, cloven shape can be explained by the fact that they were meant to be worn with sandals - a hugely unfashionable look now, though I may be a little behind the curve on current cultural trends, but the height of fashion then. They were excavated in the 1890s in a burial ground in Oxyrhynchus, a town founded in the Ptolemaic Era (323 - 31 BC) by Hellenistic Greek settlers in the Middle Nile Valley. Many other finds from there are also displayed in the Victoria and Albert Museum, as well as in other museums in Europe and North America.

Why does clothing survive so easily from Egypt but not from other parts of the Roman Empire? The answer to that is that all source material survives better in Egypt than in any other part of the Roman Empire. The extremely dry climate, except by the Nile itself which is incredibly fertile, means that most organic material doesn't perish so easily as it does in places with wetter, more temperate climates. Given that papyrus, which rots very easily in temperate climates, was the main writing material of the ancient Romans in Classical times and in Late Antiquity, we have more surviving documentation from Egypt than we do anywhere else in the Roman Empire, and thus we know more about ordinary provincial Egyptian society than for any other region of the Roman Empire. Indeed, its possible to say that we know more about ancient Roman life from Egyptian rubbish dumps, including those at Oxyrhynchus, than we do from all the works of Cicero, the Vindolanda Tablets or even the remains of Pompeii. Amidst these Egyptian rubbish dumps we have lots of ordinary documents which survive in quantities unparalleled anywhere else in the Roman Empire - soldiers' letters home, wills, land purchases, shopping lists, petitions etc. At Oxyrhynchus, even lost poems of Sappho and plays of Sophocles, and some of the earliest ever copies of the Gospels, have been found there. Thus, Roman Egypt has the potential to cast quite a distorting mirror on the Roman world, as the ancient historian Brett Devereaux explores here (I do highly recommend his excellent blog). 

We have no idea who these socks belonged to, though they most likely belonged to a peasant. The Egyptian peasantry in the late Roman period (third to seventh centuries in Egypt) were fairly prosperous and largely independent of aristocratic landlords, though they did have to pay high taxes to the Roman state. Surviving land registers from (surprise, surprise) Oxyrhynchus, show that taxes were paid routinely and proportionately in Egypt, even by the Apion family - one of the wealthiest families in the Eastern Roman Empire, whose home base was in Oxyrhynchus itself. They were also becoming more culturally Roman in this period - during fourth and fifth centuries, temple complexes to native Egyptian deities started to be abandoned (in part due to Christianisation), hieroglyphics ceased to be used for writing inscriptions and the Egyptians ditched their venerable taste for beer and started drinking Palestinian wine instead.

In Egypt the experience of the fifth century was very different to in Gaul, where we were for object one, and the other western provinces. In part that was because the Eastern Mediterranean had always been richer than the West, and had been urbanised for much longer (indeed by millennia). But it was also in part thanks to the imperial capital, Constantinople being supremely well-defended, the eastern frontier with Persia being largely peaceful as the two empires faced the Hunnic threat together, which meant that the most economically productive, tax-rich provinces of Anatolia, Syria, Cyprus, Palestine and Egypt were kept safe from external attack. The Eastern Roman Emperors pursued shrewd diplomacy, which kept potential barbarian invaders like Alaric the Visigoth, Atilla the Hun, Geiseric the Vandal and Theodoric the Ostrogoth from being too troublesome for them. Indeed, the Eastern Roman Empire experienced something of an economic boom in the fifth and early sixth centuries, which made Justinian's reconquest of Africa, Italy and Southern Spain for the Roman Empire in the mid-sixth century possible, as well as Constantinople growing to at least half a million inhabitants and architecturally ground-breaking churches like Hagia Sophia being built. Perhaps these socks are somehow reflective of this late antique prosperity in Egypt.

Notably, these socks are the only item in this group of ten objects I've chosen which are completely secular - they have nothing about them which relates to gods, myths, saints, worship or anything religious. They are also the only item which is at all representative of the lived experiences of 80 - 90% of the population of the early medieval world. In part that's due to biases of survival, in part due to my own personal choices and preferences. Much as I have respect for the work of the Annales school historians, especially Georges Duby (I'm not so fussed about Fernand Braudel), and the less dogmatic British and French Marxist historians like Pierre Bonnassie, Guy Bois and most of all Chris Wickham, elite culture really is my cup of tea. I just don't find peasants as interesting as aristocrats, clerics and scholars, which also links to the fact I've always preferred studying texts to archaeological material, though that's not to say I don't think peasants and agriculture boring and unimportant - my blogging record says otherwise. Thus I felt I had to bring them in there, somewhere, to remind us of the lived experiences of the great majority, even if in a token way.


Object number three: The Isola Rizza Dish, 550 - 600 AD (Castelvecchio Museum, Verona, Italy, visited 10 June 2022)


This magnificent silver dish was found amidst a late sixth century treasure hoard, excavated in a churchyard in Isola Rizza, a village near Verona in the Veneto region of Italy, in 1873. At the bottom of the bowl is an engraved relief medallion showing a clean-shaven cavalryman wearing a lamellar cuirass and a plumed Spangenhelm-type helmet and carrying a kontos spear charging over a fallen enemy soldier. Another who, like his fallen comrade, is bearded, wears no armour and carries an oval-shaped shield and a longsword called a spatha, appears to be fleeing the cavalryman. 

Where this was made, and for whom, is uncertain. Historians such as Neil Christie have thought on stylistic grounds that it is an East Roman work, produced in Italy shortly after the completion of Justinian's reconquest in 554. They assume that it commemorates the defeat of the Ostrogoths by the East Roman armies of Justinian,  and that the cavalryman is a Germanic (possibly a Goth or Gepid from Pannonia, modern day Hungary) or Steppe (possibly an Alan from the Caucasus) mercenary in Roman service. Meanwhile, the infantrymen are presumed to be Ostrogoths, though they could plausibly be Franks, who also tried to wrestle control of Northern Italy in the 550s but were repelled by the East Roman eunuch general, Narses. Their lack of armour indicates that they are fairly low-ranking free men serving their king as levies, not professional soldiers or aristocratic retainers. It is thus presumed that the dish was buried in 569, when another Germanic people, the Lombards, invaded Italy from across the Alps under their king, Alboin, and successfully took Verona after a siege. The assumption is that a worried local bigwig didn't want the Lombards getting their dirty hands on his nice shiny household silverware. But as is so often the case, the dating and provenance can be questioned. It could have been made by the Lombards and show an elite Lombard warrior on horseback running down some invading Franks or Slavs. Alternatively, a Lombard warrior may have acquired it in battle, with the East Romans. Or he might have been given it by the Avars, a Steppe nomad people from Central Asia who settled on the Great Hungarian Plain from the 560s and who definitely had mounted warriors that looked exactly like the one shown here - it was the Avars and Lombards who together destroyed the Gepid kingdom in Hungary in 566, before the Lombards invaded Italy. We will never have the answer.

Nonetheless, it does undoubtedly represent an even bigger sixth century change. That is the militarisation of society and the rise of warrior elites. Lots of silverwares from the fourth and fifth century Roman Empire survive, but they don't show scenes of contemporary warfare. Instead they overwhelmingly show scenes from classical mythology and literature and the pleasures of the imagination, and are overwhelmingly non-martial in nature. This reflects the educated and cultured civilian aristocracy, including senators, career bureaucrats in the imperial administration and local municipal officeholders, they were produced for. While it disappeared earlier in many other regions of the Empire, notably fifth century Britain which we discussed on this blog earlier this year, it survived in Italy into the first half of the sixth century under the Ostrogothic kings, where one would have been entirely forgiven for thinking the Western Roman Empire hadn't fallen at all. But Justinian's wars to recover Italy for the actual Roman Empire ended up being a messy and protracted affair, which resulted in the Italian economy being left in ruins, cities being depopulated and villas being abandoned for fortified hilltop villages (read: not proto-castles!). The invasion of the Lombards both took full advantage of this and made the situation worse. As elsewhere in the former Western Empire, economic and urban collapse combined with increased warfare and political instability led to the replacement of civilian aristocracies with warrior elites. In those circumstances, being able to quote Virgil from memory was less important than being able to wield a sword proficiently. And this new warrior elite, while they still loved luxury would have had a less of a taste for scenes of playful cupids, dancing girls, temples and bucolic dreamscapes and more of a taste for scenes of war and martial valour. None of this was to do with "Germanic influence." The rise of military aristocracies can be similarly seen in the areas of late sixth and seventh century Italy still under Roman control, just like it can be seen in both Anglo-Saxon England and Romano-British Wales as any comparison between Beowulf and Y Goddodin shows. In some ways all the different regions of the former Western Roman Empire were all headed down fairly similar cultural trajectories, whether they fell to Germanic invaders or not. Above all, the very uncertainties about this object's provenance are indicative of one thing about it - that it belonged to an unstable militarised frontier society. 

And that links to our final point. The burial of weapons, jewellery and luxury items like silver bowls, which is so common in the former Western Roman Empire the fifth to seventh centuries but so much less common after. A lot of historians used to think that had something to do with paganism or ancient Germanic customs. All except, as Chris Wickham and Guy Halsall amongst others have ably demonstrated, actually it doesn't. Getting rid of moveable property to prepare for death was common in Roman times, and not just pagans but also Christians did it. Rather, what it shows is aristocrats and elites who were uncertain about their local power and status. The later sixth and seventh centuries in Italy was undoubtedly a time for elites to feel thus, due to all the constant warfare and political instability and upheaval. Elites in Anglo-Saxon England, where politics and society were much more primitive and unstable than in Lombard Italy, basically tribal, would have felt the same, which is why we find such rich hoards there like Sutton Hoo, or indeed the Harpole treasure discovered less than a month ago. But once aristocrats felt much more secure in their positions, as they did in Francia and Visigothic Spain by around 650 and in Anglo-Saxon England and Lombard Italy after 700, they started investing in more permanent displays of their wealth and local power by building churches and donating to monasteries. Its from this point on that grave goods disappear and treasure hoards become increasingly scarce. So the Isola Rizza dish we've discussed here, like the macho man of Marlow we discussed back in February, reflects the transition away from the late Roman civilian aristocracy to the early medieval warrior elite. 

Object number four: a coin of Emperor Heraclius, 629 - 630 AD, Eastern Roman Empire (Victoria and Albert Museum, London, visited 10 December 2022)



Moving east again, we at last have an item with a concrete, clearly identifiable date. This is the reverse of a gold solidus coin of the Roman emperor Heraclius (r.610 - 641), minted in Constantinople. The obverse of the coin, not shown here, has images of Heraclius and his two sons. But the reverse shows an image of the True Cross, believed to be the very cross on which Jesus Christ himself was crucified. Now coins are more than just items of monetary exchange, especially in late antique/ early medieval context. They could be a powerful vehicle for political propaganda. And this couldn't be clearer than in this case. In 628, as I've written about here in much more detail before, Heraclius had defeated Rome's eternal nemesis, Persia, and recovered the True Cross which the Persians had taken from Jerusalem in 614. The inclusion of the True Cross on a coin, a year later, was doubtless meant to celebrate Heraclius' triumph and portray him as a great Roman soldier emperor in the mould of Trajan and Constantine, as well as a defender of the Christian faith against the heathen Zoroastrian Persian foe. Alas, the euphoria was short-lived. Within the next decade Islam would spread out of the Arabian Peninsula and the Romans would lose Syria, Palestine and Egypt, which they had fought to hard to regain from the Persians, to the Arabs, and this time it would be forever. Nonetheless, Heraclius' victory immediately caught the attention of contemporaries not just in the Roman Empire but across the Christian world, and was a very well-known and celebrated moment in history for more than a thousand years after. Adhemar of Chabannes of course wrote about it in his Aquitanian monastic cell in the early eleventh century. And William Caxton wrote about it in Middle English in the late fifteenth century, and had Heraclius' story printed on his London printing press - his audiences in Yorkist and early Tudor England hugely enjoyed reading it. And a few decades earlier, the story of Heraclius and the True Cross had been immortalised in paint by the Renaissance artist Piero della Francesca in Arezzo. Linking to my first PGCE written assignment on teaching historical significance to schoolchildren, this is a nice illustration of how historical events can resonate both with people at the time and subsequently.

Object 5: a plaster cast of a relief showing a scene from the Gandavyuha Sutra, Borodbudur, Java, 700 - 800 AD (Victoria and Albert Museum, London, visited 10 December 2022)


This plaster cast of a high stone relief from the temple complex of Borobudur near Yogyakarta in central Java in Indonesia shows a scene from the Gandavyuha Sutra, a Buddhist text written in sixth century India. It shows how a pilgrim, Prince Sudhana, achieved enlightenment with the help of several Buddhist holy men, known as bodhisattvas. On the left, the prince receives instruction from the bodhisattva Samantabhadra (the large seated figure), and on the centre-right of the picture with his palms put together in reverence the Prince meditates and comes close to achieving full nirvana

Now I must admit I know little about the history of Indonesia in this period. But there are many reasons why I chose it. Firstly, notice how, by showing the ascetic holy men Samantabhadra as a figure more than twice as large as Prince Sudhana, the artist is making him out as much more important. This image thus nicely illustrates how the universalising religions that emerged across Eurasia in  like Christianity, Buddhism and Islam could potentially challenge the prevailing social hierarchies with their new ideas about morals and spirituality, even if the established elites willingly embraced them. Pagan Roman writers sometimes accused Christianity of being a religion of women and slaves. And while so many early medieval saints, bishops, abbots and abbesses were of aristocratic and royal backgrounds, to the point that German scholars speak of adelsheilige (noble saintliness) like its a concrete phenomenon, all early medieval people knew that the poor peasant could go to heaven at least as easily as a rich count. Meanwhile, on the other side of Eurasia, the Chinese imperial authorities were often afraid of Buddhism as socially and politically subversive, and the Tang emperors cracked down on it with full-scale persecutions  It also reflects the power of holy men, especially those who practiced asceticism, to advise and educate rulers and even correct them for bad behaviours. A Carolingianist like myself can more than easily see the eighth and ninth century Frankish parallels here. Likewise, the importance of pilgrimage in this story would have resonated with people in the early medieval Christian West just as much as in the Buddhist world. 

Secondly, what makes it interesting is indeed the most obvious. That it shows the spread of Indian culture and religions across south and southeast Asia. As I mentioned before, the first millennium AD sees the momentous spread of the three great universalising world religions, Christianity, Islam and Buddhism, across Afro-Eurasia. Buddhism had already reached southeast Asia in the fourth and fifth centuries AD, around the same time as the Christianisation of the Roman Empire. Around the time this temple was being built, Islam had reached Spain and Central Asia and Saint Boniface was converting Frisia and Central Germany on behalf of Charles Martel and Pippin the Short. Its possible to find many parallels between the establishment of Hindu and Buddhist temples in peninsular India, Burma, Thailand, Cambodia and Indonesia and the creation of Christian monasteries in Northwest Europe, not just in the religious changes they brought but also the social and economic ones. Comparing Borobudur with the bishopric of Wurzburg and the nearby abbey of Fulda, founded by St Boniface and his disciples around the same time it was built, would be intriguing indeed. Likewise, the spread of Indian culture to Southeast Asia would have meant the spread of literacy, of the Vedas and the Indian epic cycles like the Ramayana and the Mahabharata and of the Sanskrit language. Similarly, the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons in the seventh century and of Central and Northern Germany in the eighth century brought Latin, the Bible and the Roman Classics, which transformed elite culture there too. I must confess that while I know so little about Southeast Asia, I find the potential parallels between it and the Frankish and Anglo-Saxon worlds in the seventh to tenth centuries so intriguing that I'd love to explore them more. 

















Thursday 28 April 2022

Charles Martel and the battle of Tours: a turning point in world history? A four part series (part 2)

 The early Islamic Conquests to 721

The areas under the rule (on paper, anyway) of the Muslim Umayyad Caliphs in Damascus in 721. By this point it covered a land area of 4.3 million square miles. This would have made it the largest empire in human history to date at that time - for reference, Alexander the Great's empire covered just over 2 million square miles at the time of his death in 323 BC, and the Roman Empire controlled 1.93 square miles in land area at its territorial height under Trajan in 117 AD. Within the subsequent span of human history, only six empires have ever been bigger than the Umayyad Caliphate in 721 - (in ascending order) the Second French Colonial Empire (territorial height reached in 1920), the Spanish Empire (territorial height reached in 1789) China under the Qing Dynasty (territorial height reached 1760), the Russian Empire/ the Soviet Union (territorial height reached in 1895/ 1945), the Mongol Empire (territorial height reached in 1270/ 1309) and the British Empire (territorial height reached in 1920). Note that maximum territorial extent does not equate to when that empire was at the height of its power generally, the Spanish Empire being a case in point. Nor is land area what determines everything for imperial power - the ancient Roman Empire derived much, or indeed most, of its strength from making the Mediterranean mare nostrum and controlling all its trade routes, and in the case of the British Empire, don't you know the song "Rule Britannia, Britannia rules the waves." Map Credit: Gabagool - File:Umayyad750ADloc.pngAnd based on: The expansion of the Muslim Caliphate until 750, from William R. Shepherd's Historical Atlas., CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=92884827


So in order to understand the battle of Tours, we need to have a look at the other side. How did Muslim armies get to Gaul only a century after the death of the Prophet Muhammad in Arabia, more than 3700 miles away. Why had Arab Muslim power expanded so far so fast? After all, never before or since in history has everywhere between the Atlantic Ocean and the Tian Shan mountain range and between the Caspian Sea and the Sahara Desert been unified under the control of a single political entity (the Arab Muslim Umayyad Caliphate in this case? So what made this achievement possible? Before we get to the Islamic conquests themselves, we need to cast our minds back a little bit to the geopolitical situation that created them.


Twilight of the ancient world: Rome and Persia's final showdown (602 - 628)


Around the time Clovis and the early Merovingians, whom we talked about in the previous post, were establishing their control over Gaul, and the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms were forming in lowland Britain, the geopolitical situation in West Asia was essentially stable, as it had been half a millennium prior. Since the first century BC, the Near East had been dominated by two superpowers - Rome and Persia. The geopolitical situation in 525 AD was, in its fundamentals, the same it had been in 25 BC, and looked something like this:

Map Credit: 
https://www.timemaps.com/history/middle-east-500ad/

Note that stable does not imply peaceful. In 53 BC, Rome's attempts to expand east of the Euphrates were halted when Marcus Licinius Crassus was slain by the Parthians, who ruled in Persia at that time, at Carrhae near Harran in modern day Turkey. When the Bacchae by Euripedes was subsequently performed at the Parthian court, they brought out Crassus' severed head. In 114 - 117 AD, Trajan had conquered Armenia, Assyria and Babylonia (modern day Iraq) from the Parthians, but Hadrian decided it wasn't worth trying to hold on to them and that it was better to scale back and focus on defensible frontiers. Caracalla (r.211 - 217) seems to have been intent on bringing Persia itself under Roman rule, clearly indicated by his proposal to marry the daughter of the Parthian king Artabanus IV in 216, but was assassinated while on campaign against the Parthians.


In 224, the Parthians, who were generally happy to not to bother the Romans so long as they agreed to keep to their established zones of control, were overthrown and replaced by a new dynasty - the Sassanians. The Sassanians took a much more aggressive approach towards the Romans. It was under them that Zoroastrianism, the ancient religion of Persia which saw the material world as divided between the cosmic forces of good and evil, underwent a massive revival and became a huge part of the official ideology of the Sassanian state. The Sassanians were convinced that they were the descendants of the legendary Aryan kings mentioned in the Avesta (the authoritative collection of Zoroastrian holy texts). It was thus their goal to subject all of humanity to the rule of Eransahr ("the empire of the Iranians), so that peace and justice could reign throughout the world and the forces of light and good could triumph over the forces of darkness and evil. It was thus necessary for them to bring to heel all rival civilisations, especially Rome and India, by at the very least making their rulers acknowledge the Sassanian Shahanshah (literally "king of kings") as their rightful overlord. An early propaganda victory was scored for the new dynasty when the second Sassanian King of Kings, Shapur I (r.242 - 270), captured the Roman emperor Valerian (r.254 - 260) at the battle of Edessa. This moment would then be immortalised in a stone relief at Naqsh-e-Rostam in Fars province, Iran.


The Naqsh-e-Rostam relief showing the Roman emperor Valerian kneeling before Shapur. photo credit:
Carole Raddato from FRANKFURT, Germany. Licenced by Wikimedia Commons. 


What stopped the Romans and Sassanians from knocking seven bells out of each other nearly as regularly as either might have liked came down to a combination of factors on either side. In the case of the Romans:
  1. The need to deal with barbarian invaders on their other frontiers. For example, Roman attempts to invade Persia in the 430s were diverted by Attila the Hun going on a rampage through the Balkans; the Roman Imperial court in the East also sent large expeditionary forces to try help their beleaguered Western counterpart deal with the Vandals in Africa and Sicily in 441 and 474. 
  2. Opportunistic generals trying to usurp the imperial throne. Always a big problem in Roman history. It was thus imperative that if a full-scale military campaign against Persia should be launched, the emperor should be in charge of it. The last pagan Roman emperor, Julian the Apostate, tried to personally lead a massive amphibious campaign against the Sassanians in Iraq in 363. However, being an edgy Neoplatonist philosopher, he thought he was above wearing armour, which needless to say left him vulnerable, and so he died in battle.
  3. Religious divisions, specifically over the nature of Jesus Christ. We saw in the previous post, when we talked about Clovis' conversion, that it mattered a lot whether he chose to be a Chalcedonian/ Catholic Christian (someone who believed that God the Father and God the Son were equal and had always coexisted) or an Arian (someone who believed that God the Son was inferior to, and had been created by, God the Father). In the Eastern Roman Empire, the divide wasn't between Arians and Chalcedonians but between Chalcedonians and Monophysites. Monophysites, like the Chalcedonians, believed that God the Father and God the Son were coequal, but that God the Son was made of one substance. The Chalcedonians, on the other hand, believed that God the Son was made of two separate substances, one completely divine and one completely human. This was the real, super divisive issue of the day kind of like Brexit, Trump, Extinction Rebellion, Black Lives Matter, Megxit or whatever. The sort of thing that could split families and neighbourhoods against each other. Even the Blues and the Greens, the two chariot-racing teams at the Hippodrome in Constantinople took sides on this issue - the Greens and their fans were Chalcedonian and the Blues and their fans were Monophysite. The obvious modern parallel to this would be the rivalry between the Celtic and Rangers football teams in Glasgow tapping into the bitter religious divisions there - Celtic being supported by the Catholics and Rangers by the Protestants. Much like with Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland and Glasgow, these religious divisions between Monophysites and Chalcedonian often led to violent confrontations and riots in Constantinople and provincial cities like Thessalonica and Antioch. This naturally made issues of public order and religious unity more prominent on emperor's minds than launching costly military campaigns in the east.

In the case of the Sassanians, their main problems were:
  1. Regular dynastic instability. Like most societies in the ancient world, the Sassanians practiced open polygamy, or more accurately polygyny (women didn't get to have multiple husbands). The ancient Greeks and Romans were thoroughly unusual at the time in only permitting men of all social ranks to have one legitimate wife, though divorce and remarriage were easy and it was socially acceptable for married men to have sexual relations with concubines (so long as the relationship didn't become public), prostitutes and slaves (male or female). Having many legitimate wives meant that Sassanian Shahanshahs had multiple sons from different mothers with valid claims to the throne. And while the Sassanians didn't divide up the realm following the death of a king like the Merovingians (as we saw in the previous post) did, they didn't have a concept of primogeniture either. Thus, disputed successions and dynastic civil wars were not uncommon, which could draw in foreign powers. For example, Bahram V had to rely on the support of the king of the Lakhmids, a large Arab tribal confederacy, in order to claim the throne from his half-brother, Shapur IV, in 420. Sassanian Shahanshahs often had to placate potentially rebellious brothers and half-brothers by carving out autonomous territories for them to rule as sub-kings.
  2. Trouble with the aristocracy. There is some debate amongst historians as to how the Sassanian Empire worked internally. Was it a centralised and bureaucratic state, like Rome or China? Or was it a more decentralised regime, with the Shahanshah essentially being a high king presiding over a federation? What we cannot really doubt, however, is that Sassanid Persia had an very rich and powerful class of nobles, who could boast agricultural estates as extensive, genealogies as ancient and martial abilities as impressive as the House of Sassan. Nobles believed that they had the right to rebel against kings they saw as unjust or incompetent. After the exceptionally long reign of Shapur II (309 - 379), the Sassanians went through four kings in the next forty-one years, each one of them being violently deposed by the nobility. This isn't quite the level of political turnover as the Roman Empire during the crisis of the third century (235 - 284), but comparable to England during the Wars of the Roses (1455 - 1487) or indeed the Merovingian kingdoms in the second half of the seventh century as we saw in the previous post. But, unlike in the Roman empire (no ancient Roman imperial dynasty survived for even a century) and somewhat like with the Merovingian case, there was a strong sense that the House of Sassan was special and had a unique right to rule. Thus when the nobles rebelled and tried to depose a king, they would replace him with one of his brothers or half-brothers. Only in 589 would a member of the nobility, Bahram VI Chobin from the House of Mihran, try to claim the throne for himself. 
  3. Invaders from the Eurasian Steppe. It wasn't just the Romans who were troubled by barbarians on their northern frontiers. We all know the Romans were menaced by Attila the Hun in the fifth century AD. But the Sassanians were menaced by Huns too, and for much longer. In the late fourth century, some of the Huns chose to migrate westwards from their Mongolian homeland to the Great Hungarian plain. Instead they went south and conquered the rich cities strategically located on the Silk Road and fertile river valleys of modern day Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Afghanistan from the Sassanians. Then they settled down there, worked hard to win the support of the native Sogdians and Bactrians who furnished them with literate administrators, levied the land tax, minted coins and did everything else sedentary rulers did. By the mid-fifth century the ruling dynasty of the Huns were known as the ... wait for it ... Heffalumps. I mean Hephthalites. Sorry about the slip there. But undoubtedly they were as terrifying as Heffalumps. And just as it wasn't an easy task for Winnie the Pooh and Piglet to try and catch a Heffalump, the Hephthalites with their formidable armies of nomadic horsemen and advanced structures of sedentary government were an absolute Devil for the Sassanians to defeat. Only by enlisting the help of the Gokturks, the new kids on the block among the nomadic peoples of the Eurasian Steppe, were the Sassanians able to finally defeat the Hephthalites and reclaim their Central Asian territories at last in 557. Indeed, it was the common Hunnic threat that meant that the fifth century was largely a period of peace and indeed some degree of co-operation between Romans and Persians.
Via Wikipedia Commons: a fifth century plate depicts Bahram V out hunting

Via Wikimedia Commons: a relief at Taq-e-Bostan, Kermanshah province, Iran, created to commemorate the coronation of Ardashir II (r.379 - 383) depicts him receiving the royal diadem from his brother, Shapur II (r.309 - 379), with the God of light, Mithra, guarding him from behind. The two brothers stand over the corpse of the Roman emperor Julian the Apostate, who they defeated in 363. Photo credit: By dynamosquito from France - Shapur II investiture at Taq-e Bustan, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=32705055

Via Wikimedia Common: '"Help! Help!" cried Piglet. "A Hephthalite! A horrible Hephthalite!"' A mural from the abandoned city of Dilberjin Tepe in Afghanistan depicts a Hephthalite king. 


Thus this superpower conflict dragged on for a very long time, with neither side really gaining an obvious upper hand. In the meantime, it consumed everyone's attention, just as a few generations ago the Cold War did or the tensions between the USA and China does today. Let's take as an example a fairly typical passage from our old friend, Gregory of Tours, in the year 579:

The troops of Tiberius beat the Persians in battle and came home victorious, carrying enough booty to satisfy the cupidity of any man, or so one would have thought. Twenty elephants which they had captured were paraded before the emperor (Book 5, Chapter 30).

How did Gregory, tucked away in his corner of Merovingian Gaul, find out what was going on more than 2000 miles away. His account of what went on in the year 591 gives us some indications:

In the sixteenth year of King Childebert's reign and the thirtieth year of King Guntram's, a bishop called Simon travelled to Tours from foreign parts. He gave us news of the overthrow of Antioch and described how he himself had been led away captive from Armenia to Persia. The King of the Persians had invaded Armenia, sacking the country, burning down the churches and, as I have said, taking this bishop away into captivity with his flock. It was on that occasion that they tried burning down the church of the Forty-eight Saints and Martyrs, who met their deaths in this region, as I have described in my Book of Miracles. They piled the church high with heaps of wood soaked in pitch and pigs' fat, and then set blazing torches to it. Despite all their efforts this inflammable material would not catch fire, and when they saw this miracle performed by God they left the church. One of his fellow prelates came to hear of how Bishop Simon had been led off into captivity, and he sent his men with ransom-money to the King of the Persians. The King accepted the ransom, unchained Simon and released him from slavery. The Bishop then left the region and travelled to Gaul, where he sought help from the faithful. That was how he came to tell me this story, just as I have set it out above (Book X, Chapter 23).

People in the sixth century West hearing news about (attempted) desecration of holy sites and the brutal treatment of civilians in war in the Middle East, and what sounds like an Eastern Christian refugee coming to Europe, really makes you think when reading this "does anything change at all?"

How did this equilibrium come to an end? The answer is that the internal situation was changing in each of the empires.

In the case of the Sassanians, from the time of the aforementioned Bahram V (r.420 - 438), the Sassanian Kings of Kings went about building a strong working consensus with the nobility. Slowly they managed to convince them that a superior kind of power and prestige came from service to the state than from being, well, noble alone. The seals of sixth century Persian nobles, for example, depict them wearing the headgear their offices entitled them to wear at court, and only occasionally vaunted their noble lineage alongside their official, state-issued title. They also began ramping up the propaganda. Court scholars in the fifth century worked to write down the epics and histories of the mythical early dynasties of Persian kings, which had hitherto been passed down orally. These explicitly identified the Sassanians with the Kaynian dynasty, who had saved the world from the legions of nomadic barbarians from the far north and east and demons in the service of Angra-Mainyu, the Zoroastrian equivalent of the Devil. The aristocrats could see themselves in the heroes that had faithfully served the Kaynian kings against the forces of darkness and evil. For exaple, after the general Sukhra had liberated the men held captive by the Huns after they'd defeated and killed Shahanshah Peroz (r.457 - 484), he claimed descent from the heroes Karen and Tus who'd saved Iranian kingship after King Nawdhar had been slain by the forces of evil. Meanwhile the Hephthalites could be identified with the "evil and oppressive" xiaona or xyonyan (too similar to "Hun" to be merely coincidental), one of the Steppe barbarian peoples in the service of Angra-Mainyu. In the Avesta, they had invaded Iran under their King Arjasp but had been been defeated by King Wishtasp. Indeed, Sassanian kings from Yazdegerd I (399 - 420) on had included the title ramsahr, which King Wishtasp had held, to their coins. No doubt as a consequence of this ideology, they were able to get the nobles to co-operate in building 195 km wall in what is now Turkmenistan called the Great Wall of Gorgan, on which permanent forces of 15 - 30,000 soldiers would be stationed, to defend against the Hephthalites. Indeed it was located almost exactly where, in the Avesta, the hero Arash had fired an arrow to define the limit between Iran (the land of good, light and civilisation) and Turan (the land of barbarism, darkness and evil). So through a powerful religious ideology and effective consensus-building with the aristocracy, the Sassanian kings were able to, by the sixth century, build up a stronger, more centralised state than they'd had in the fourth century. And once the Hephthalites were out the way in 557, they were able to focus all their attentions westwards, towards the Roman Empire.

Meanwhile, the Romans were experiencing a downturn in their fortunes. Under Justinian the Great (r.527 - 565) the Roman military, and the tax-system that supported it, became overstretched in his attempts to reconquer the Western provinces from 533 to 554. The long drawn-out war against the Ostrogoths in Italy, was so downright devastating for the Italian economy that the Roman state was barely able to collect taxes in the reconquered province afterwards. Meanwhile, the coming of pandemic disease in the form of bubonic plague in the 540s, decimated the population, especially in the cities of the Eastern Mediterranean, which in turn meant less economic productivity and less people to tax. In subsequent decades it would go on to wreak havoc in Gaul (as we mentioned in the previous post), and would even reach Britain. Famines induced by climate change and volcanic activity also depleted the tax base. And from the 560s, new barbarian threats came from the north. Even in good times, the raising of the tax revenues necessary to support the bureaucracy and army was hampered by corruption and various forms of passive resistance. Now, funding them was becoming extremely difficult. And to make matters worse, while all this was going on, new external barbarian threats were appearing on the horizon. The Lombards invaded and overran roughly two thirds of Italy in 568 - not until 1870 would the Italian peninsula be under the effective authority of a single ruler again. And towards the end of the sixth century, the Avars, a Steppe nomad confederacy that had settled on the Great Hungarian Plain, and their vassals the Slavs, began to terrorise the Balkans. It was in the context of the unravelling of Justinian's imperial project in the West, pandemic disease, catastrophic global cooling, famine and incessant warfare, that there was a growing sense among Christians from Gaul (apocalyptic thought is implicit in Gregory of Tours' Histories) to Syria that Biblical prophecies were being fulfilled and the end of the world was coming soon. With everything that's going on in the world right now, its perhaps easier for us to get inside the headspace of people living in the late sixth century than it would have been for historians, say, twenty-five years ago.

Under Emperor Maurice (r.582 - 602), the situation was starting to improve a bit for the Romans. By intervening decisively on the side of the legitimate Sassanian Shahanshah Khosrow II during the revolt of the usurper Bahram Chobin in 589 - 591, Maurice managed to guarantee peace and security on the eastern frontier. This meant he could divert the Roman legions towards dealing with the Lombards in Italy and the Avars and Slavs on the Danube. But money continued to be a problem. Maurice had faced mutiny in the army back in 588, when he cut soldiers' wages by a quarter. But in 600, he refused to ransom 12,000 Roman legionaries who had been captured by the Avars, despite protests from within the army led by one of his generals, Phocas, and so the legionaries were slaughtered. In 602, when Maurice tried to get his troops to campaign beyond the Danube during the Winter because it was too expensive to have them quartered in Roman territory, they revolted and overthrew him. Maurice and his two sons were executed, and Phocas was proclaimed emperor.

Phocas proved to be a highly authoritarian and unpopular ruler, and the Roman Empire was plunged into a state of effective civil war. Khosrow II saw his chance, reneged on what he had promised a decade ago and renewed war with Rome. By 610, the Euphrates frontier had collapsed. In the same year, Heraclius, the son of the governor of Africa, sailed up to Constantinople with a massive fleet, Phocas' supporters abandoned him and Heraclius was proclaimed the new Roman emperor. 

In 613, Persian armies entered Damascus, and in 614, with the help of local Jews and Samaritans, they captured Jerusalem, massacred the Christians and seized the remains of the True Cross on which Christ was crucified, sending them back to Persia. At this point, the Roman senate in Constantinople tried to sue for peace. They sent envoys, who told Khosrow II that Heraclius was the Shahanshah's "true son, eager to perform the services of your serenity in all things." Khosrow immediately had the envoys executed. He was not fighting an old-style war with the aim of capturing strategic frontier cities and fortresses or making the Romans pay tribute and acknowledge the Shahanshah's authority over all civilised humanity. This was a war of annihilation! Only one empire was going to make it out of the war alive!
Coin of Khosrow II, minted at Ram Hormuz in southwestern Iran and found at Thamesfield, Greater London, in 2017. Another coin of his has been found at Anglesey in Wales. As for how they might have got to Britain in the early seventh century, see this post from Dr Caitlin Green's excellent blog. 

In 619, Egypt fell to the Persians. Now only Anatolia stood in their path. Meanwhile, Heraclius was making crisis measures. The salaries of soldiers and government officials were halved and churches were having their gold and silver plate stripped and melted down to make more coins to be used to pay off the Avars and buy allies in the Caucasus. He also made a religious propaganda drive, tapping into the widespread fears of imminent apocalypse at the time, playing up the Persian atrocities committed in Jerusalem and describing the war against the Persians as a Christian "holy war." He also managed to train a large force of soldiers in guerrilla warfare, so that they could push through the mountains of Armenia to attack the Persians in their own heartland - Heraclius knew that the best defence was a good offense!

In 624, Heraclius got his revenge for the massacre of the Christians in Jerusalem by invading Armenia and destroying the Zoroastrian fire temple at Takht-i-Suleiman. He also dispatched envoys to the Gokturks (its them again), asking them to send armies to fight the Persians. Meanwhile, the Persians were laying waste to the ancient cities and senatorial great estates of Anatolia. Ephesus, Sardis, Halicarnassus, Magnesia, cities that went back to Dark Age and Archaic Greek colonies and were more than a millennium old, were mostly reduced to smouldering ruins, and even after the war was over they were either completely abandoned or were reduced to a much smaller urban area. In 626, Khosrow enlisted the support of the Avars and they laid siege to Constantinople from both sides of the Bosphorus. Heraclius did not take the bait and the siege failed, apparently with the miraculous intervention of the Virgin Mary. 

By 627, Heraclius and his Gokturk allies had broken through the Persians' northern frontier defences in the Zagros mountains and the Caspian littoral. Soon they had reached the plains of Syria, and on 12 December 627, Heraclius won a decisive victory over the Persians at Nineveh. For this battle for the fate of two empires, at the twilight of the ancient world, to have have happened at the site of the old capital of the Assyrian Empire which the Babylonians and Medes had captured and destroyed in 612 BC, is too poetic to be true. The Roman and Gokturk armies then came down into Iraq, one of the great breadbaskets since the dawn of civilisation itself, destroying the rich agricultural estates of the Sassanian nobility. When Heraclius reached the Sassanian capital of Ctesiphon in 628, he was told that Khosrow II had been deposed in a coup, and that the Sassanians now wanted peace. The eastern provinces were restored to Roman rule and the True Cross was restored to Jerusalem. Heraclius was triumphant - he had saved the empire from destruction by showing the political and military skills worthy of an Augustus, a Trajan or a Constantine. Roma Invicta indeed!

News reached far and wide of Heraclius' accomplishments, including to Merovingian Gaul where King Dagobert (remember him from our previous post), at Heraclius' insistence, had forcibly converted his Jewish subjects to Christianity. Such anti-Jewish persecution was in part collective punishment for what had happened at Jerusalem in 614, but no doubt was also linked to a strong sense that the end of the world was coming and thus the remaining Jews needed to be won over to Christ. And they would be much remembered for a long time afterwards. Adhemar of Chabannes, writing in the early eleventh century, remembered what had happened four hundred years ago very well indeed:

(Original Latin) Tunc Eraclius imperator crucem Domini de fano Cosdroe, quod erat in Perside, victor detulit in Hierusalem, et exaltacio sancte Crucis in sua civitate tunc facta est. Eo Tempore, piissimus imperator Eraclius Dagoberto munera misit, et rogavit ut baptizare compelleret omnes Judeos qui erant in omni regno ejus; quod et factum est.

(My translation) Then, the emperor Heraclius, who was in Persia, defeated Khosrau, who had taken away the cross of the Lord from the temple in Jerusalem, and so with holy exaltation erected the Cross in his city [Constantinople]. At that time, the most pious emperor Heraclius sent gifts to Dagobert, and asked that he would force all the Jews who were living throughout his kingdom to be baptised; and that was done. 

The Roman emperor Heraclius, watched over by a Cherubim, receives submission from the defeated Persian King of Kings, Khosrow II, on an enamel and gilt copper plaque from a cross made in Northern France sometime in the 1160s. 

Heraclius defeats the Persians at Nineveh, from a fresco cycle of the history of the true cross painted by the Italian renaissance artist, Piero della Francesca, at Arezzo c.1452.

Islam appears on the stage, the fall of the Persian Empire and goodbye Mare Nostrum 

While the ultimate showdown between Romans and Persians was taking place, a new religion was stirring in Arabia. After all, the Prophet Muhammad (570 - 632), peace be upon him, was of exactly the same generation as Heraclius (575 - 641) and Khosrow II (570 - 628). It was in 610, when the Persians overran the Euphrates and entered Roman Syria, that Muhammad began receiving visions for an angel, as the Quran and the Hadiths relate. It was in 622, as Heraclius was preparing his counter-offensive through the Caucasus, that Muhammad, having established himself as a prophet and started a new religion, fled Mecca to escape his enemies and came to Medina, where he created a model Muslim community. As the Roman-Sassanian war drew towards its climax, Muhammad was starting to unify the tribes of Arabia through a series of military campaigns. And it was four years after Heraclius had utterly defeated Khosrow that Muhammad, having unified all of Arabia, made his sermon at Mount Arafat near Mecca, embarked on his final pilgrimage, and died. 

Now there's a lot of controversy over the life of the Prophet and when exactly did something that we can legitimately call Islam really emerge. While some fragments of the Quran have been pretty conclusively dated to within a generation or two after the death of Muhammad, like the Birmingham folia, the Tubingen fragment and the Sana'a manuscript (the most complete, containing 70% of the Quran we have today), the earliest biographical account of Muhammad's life does not appear until the eighth century, when it was written by Ibn Ishaq (704 - 767). And the earliest complete Qurans - the Topkapi and Samarkand manuscripts - date from the eighth century as well. Likewise the hadiths, authoritative collections of the things Muhammad and his followers said and did, were not compiled until around 800. 

Via Wikimedia Commons: Folio 2 Recto of the Birmingham Quran, putatively dated to 645


Given that this is ancient/ early medieval history we're dealing with, this really shouldn't be surprising at all - our sources are always few, mostly fragmentary and fairly often written relatively late in relation to the events they describe. We've seen problems of this kind on this blog before, with Syagrius and King Arthur (although admittedly much worse in the latter case). At the same time, whatever facts we can or can't ascertain about the lives of Syagrius and King Arthur don't impinge on the beliefs of more than two billion people across the globe. This is undoubtedly an area where one has to tread carefully and sensitively. Much in contrast to historical criticism of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, which got going in earnest in early nineteenth century Germany and has been thriving among liberal Protestants and Jews ever since (but still gets steely reception from traditionalist Catholics and Ultra-Orthodox Jews and hysterical reactions from evangelical Protestants), historical criticism is a very new approach to Islamic holy texts. Basically it all really started in the 1970s with the work of John Wansborough, Patricia Crone and Michael Cook, none of whom were practicing Muslims. Thus it was inevitable that their work would be seen as somewhat culturally insensitive. And the positions they took were very extreme. Wansborough cast doubt on whether Muhammad even existed, and argued that nothing reliable could be said about Muslim Arab history until the 690s and that the Quran didn't come together until the ninth century. Patricia Crone and Michael Cook developed his ideas further, and suggested that Islam had originated as a Messianic Jewish sect, which they called Hagarism. Now these positions have been rejected, including by their own authors. Its now fairly clear that Muhammad did exist and played a significant role in the emergence of Islam - a clear indication of this is that an Egyptian Papyrus of 643 dates itself by the Hijri Calendar (in which time began again following Muhammad's flight from Mecca) -  though there's still much debate over the historicity of the traditional accounts of his life. Its also now clear, as we discussed earlier, that bits of the Quran were circulating from the 640s. And inscriptions from the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, the first major piece of Islamic architecture (completed 691 - 692) clearly name Islam as a religion distinct from either Judaism or Christianity, and Muhammad as its founder (follow this link here for the inscriptions on both the inner and outer octagonal arcade in English translation - together they really do amount to a remarkably coherent summary of Islamic theology as Muslims would still recognise it today).


The Dome of the Rock Interior. The mosaics, circular arches and and Corinthian style capitals show clear Roman influence, especially from early Christian basilicas, though its not without distinctively Islamic features either - inscriptions in Kufic script and an absence of figurative artwork. Photo credit: By Virtutepetens - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=66061506


Section of the Dome of the Rock front with Kufic inscriptions above the entrance. Photo credit:By Leon petrosyan - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=31680539 

I can claim little expertise in any of these debates about the origins of Islam. But what I can say is that all of what we've discussed in this post and the previous one - the cataclysmic all-out war between the Romans and Persians from 602 - 628, the Bubonic Plague pandemic (an ongoing concern from the 540s through to the 760s),  the collapse of imperial tax bases, famine, the devastating effects of climate change, intense theological disputes about the relationship between humanity and the divine, apocalyptic religious ideas (in Christianity, Judaism and Zoroastrianism) and a plethora of saints and other charismatic holy men - really give us a sense of the world that gave birth to Islam. The Arabian Peninsula may have been peripheral to most of this, but the Arabs were not oblivious to these developments and weren't isolated from what was going on politically and culturally elsewhere. Indeed, the two biggest Arab tribal confederacies, the Ghassanids and Lakhmids, were clients of the Romans and Sassanids respectively. And around the time Muhammad was born in 570, the Sassanids decisively intervened in Yemen, ending the occupation of it by the Christian Ethiopian kingdom of Aksum, which had conquered the Jewish Arab kingdom of Himyar in the region. In other words, Islam definitely did not appear out of the blue - rather, it was kindled by the dying embers of the world of late antiquity. 

After the Prophet Muhammad's death in 632, armies of Arab tribesmen began pouring out of the Arabian Peninsula. As you might have deduced, both the Romans and the Persians were pretty exhausted in terms of resources and military might, after a quarter-century of intense and costly warfare. The Roman imperial control over the eastern provinces of Syria, Palestine and Egypt, which it had temporarily lost to the Sassanids in the 610s, had largely been restored only on paper. Meanwhile, most of the great cities of Anatolia had been reduced to rubble by the Persians and the agricultural great estates of the senators had been torched to the ground. And in Greece, the Avar invasions going on alongside the Persian war had led to most of Macedonia, Epirus and the Peloponnese being settled in by hostile Slavic tribes - it was around this time that ancient Sparta was finally abandoned. The Roman imperial administration and its tax base were in complete tatters!

Meanwhile, on the Persian side, the crushing defeat of Khosrow II and the end of the Sassanid dream of all of humanity being united under the Empire of the Iranians, immediately generated a crisis of legitimacy for the regime. Between 28 February 628 (death of Khosrow II) and 16 June 632 (accession of Yazdegerd III), the Sassanids went through twelve different monarchs in succession. Some of them were from the House of Sassan, others were from aristocratic factions. Interestingly, and uniquely in Sassanian history, two of them were women - Queen Boran (r.630 and again in 631 - 632), daughter of Khosrow II, and her sister Queen Azarmidokht (r.630 - 631). All of them, however, ended their reigns by being violently deposed or assassinated. In terms of levels of political violence and internecine strife reached, seventh century Sassanian Persia really would make England during the Wars of the Roses look like a teddy bears' picnic, and even Merovingian Gaul a generation or so later would appear pretty tame by comparison. Thus Sassanian Persia was left utterly destabilised and enfeebled by the 630s.

Via Wikimedia Commons: Coin of Queen Boran. Note how she appears exactly like a male Shahanshah, just minus the beard and plus the long braids.


At Yarmouk in Syria in 636, the Arab armies under the leadership of Khalid ibn al-Walid, one of the greatest military commanders in medieval history, led a significantly smaller force to completely decimate the Roman field army in the east. This event was a complete and utter disaster for the Romans. Having neither the money nor the manpower to dislodge the victorious Arab invaders, Heraclius had no choice but to leave Antioch. He blamed the defeat on his own moral failure, specifically his incestuous marriage to his niece, Martina. Two years later, all the cities in Syria and Palestine had surrendered to the Arabs. Yarmouk really isn't all that well-known, but it definitely deserves a place among the greatest defeats suffered by the Roman army, alongside more familiar ones like Cannae (216 BC) or Teutoburg Forest (9 AD). Indeed, in the grand scheme of world history, it was almost certainly more decisive than either of them. Indeed, the consequences of Yarmouk are still with us in the present day - without it, the politics of the Middle East, which so rarely escapes our headlines, would be unimaginably different. 

The next stop for the Muslim Arabs was Egypt. There they will have faced the last surviving documented Roman legion - the Legio V Macedonica, which had begun life as one of the 28 legions raised by Gaius Octavianus Augustus in 43 BC. By 642, Egypt had fallen to the Arabs as well - the Roman Empire had now lost three of its richest, most urbanised, most taxable provinces, and without the Egyptian grain fleet Constantinople could no longer sustain a population of half a million people.


Via Wikimedia Commons: Roman legionaries as we're most familiar with them depicted on Trajan's column. Of course the Roman legionaries of the Fifth Legion facing the Muslim onslaught in Egypt no longer looked like this. But they retained the same command structure (i.e. their regiments were still commanded by centurions and tribunes), were given the same level of training, held to the same level of discipline and had the best, cost-effective, up-to-date military equipment. While Roman armies stopped being called legions after the seventh century, they remained  paid, drilled, professional standing forces whose commanding officers were versed in the latest tactical theory (some military manuals were written by Roman emperors themselves), until at least the beginning of the thirteenth century. 

Meanwhile, on the Sassanian front, in 637 Muslim armies had conquered Iraq. By 651 they had penetrated so deep into Sassanian territory that they had reached the modern day Iran-Afghanistan border, and the last Shahanshah Yazdegerd III, grandson of Khosrow II, was killed. His son, Peroz III (d.679), went into exile in China, where he served as a general for the Tang emperors and led the "Governorate of Persia", a Sassanian court in exile which lasted until at least the 720s.

Heraclius' grandson, the Roman emperor Constans II (r.641 - 668), taking advantage of some breathing space gained from a peace treaty with the Arabs, tried to move the capital to Syracuse in 663. While his most immediate concern was his unpopularity with the citizens of Constantinople, it may have been that he had more long term strategic concerns. His reasoning might have been that Sicily was an island, occupying a central place in the Mediterranean, that was less at risk of Muslim attack than Constantinople - already in the 650s, Arab armies were invading the soft underbelly of Anatolia and, having gained a fleet, the Arabs were starting to raid Crete and Rhodes. It would have also placed him much closer to Africa, which after Justinian's reconquest of it from the Vandals had once again become a tax rich province providing valuable financial and economic muscle to the empire. And Italy, where he successfully campaigned against the Lombard principalities in the south, taking advantage of the fact the Merovingians were attacking the Lombard kingdom in the north. Constans II was also the first Roman emperor to visit Rome in two centuries - and the last to visit it until John VIII in the 1420s! One can see why, as we saw in the previous post, Ebroin, mayor of the palace of Neustria, was fearful of his intentions. But none of this was to last. Reminiscent of the fate that had befallen his predecessor as Roman emperor, Commodus, all the way back in 192, Constans II died at Syracuse on 15 July 668 after being suffocated in the bathtub with a bucket by his chamberlain.

Under Constans' successors, Constantine IV (r.668 - 685) and Justinian II (r.685 - 695), the situation in the east began to stabilise - it was clear that the Romans were going to hold on to Anatolia and the Aegean. However, the situation to the west began to deteriorate, which was what Constans II had hoped to prevent. In 698 the Arabs were at the walls of Carthage and the Romans sent out emissaries to request aid from their Berber tribal allies, from King Witiza of the Visigoths and from King Childebert IV and Pepin of Herstal of the Franks. The Merovingians and their (not quite yet Carolingian) mayors of the palace couldn't spare any troops, though the Visigoths sent 500 warriors. As always, the Arabs sent emissaries to the commander of the city garrison giving the offer of surrender or die. Having received explicit instructions from Emperor Leontius not to surrender, the Romans decided to fight on, believing that they could wear out the Arabs while being supplied from the sea. In the end, an amphibious assault from the Arabs led to the city being captured and the Romans being forced to retreat to Sardinia and Sicily. What was going through Arab commander Hasan ibn al-Numan's mind was "Carthago delenda est" (or rather the Arabic equivalent thereof). Thus came the second and final destruction of Carthage and the end of 850 years of Roman rule in Africa that had only been briefly interrupted by the period of Vandal rule from 439 to 534. Just as the the fall of Carthage to the forces of the Roman Republic under Scipio Aemilianus in 146 BC had brought about the beginning of the period of Roman dominance in the Mediterranean, so the fall of Carthage to the Arabs in 698 ended it. History does not get more poetic than this. The seventh century really has always felt to me like a truly epic finale to antiquity, more so than anything a poet, novelist or playwright could imagine. And lets not be in denial that stories are a huge part of what makes us interested in history in the first place!

How did the Arabs do it?

But now we've reached a perfect break in the story, its time for some ultra-necessary sober historical analysis. How did the Arabs manage to it all? They had managed to conquer for themselves a continuous territory stretching from Tunisia to Afghanistan in 65 years, a speed of conquest surpassed only by Alexander the Great and the Mongols. That in itself is not difficult to explain. Arab tribesmen were good fighters, hence why both the Romans and Sassanids had sought them as allies and mercenaries, as briefly alluded to earlier. Recruiting troops for campaigns was not a problem for the Arab commanders - newfound religious unity, the promise of abundant booty and slaves and a stellar military track record after two crushing victories inflicted on the Romans and Sassanians respectively in 636 - 637 would have meant that every able-bodied Arab man with a camel wanted to take part. And the conditions for conquest could not have been more favourable, given the critically weakened state the two empires were in, as described above.

Yet the Arab conquests down to 698 held together as a single unified empire until the 860s. By contrast the empire of Alexander the Great barely lasted a minute after his death, and by the time of Genghis Khan's great-grandsons, the Mongol Empire had irreversibly fractured into four different smaller empires based on pre-Mongol geopolitical and cultural divides. And while that's not to say we can't still speak of a Hellenistic world or a Mongol world existing for centuries after 323 BC or 1294 AD (give the Graeco-Bactrian kingdom or the Crimean Khanate a quick google search), they no longer exist today. The Arab world, on the other hand, does and consists of roughly the same areas as it did in 698, plus Sudan, Algeria, Morocco and Mauretania and minus Israel, Iran and Afghanistan. All those regions are majority Arabic-speaking, are governed by people who ethnically identify as Arabs, belong to the Arab League and and possess a sense of shared history and culture. Why should all this have been the case?

Another way of going about it would be comparisons with post-Roman Europe. Like the Germanic tribes that formed successor kingdoms in the former Western Roman Empire, the Arabs who conquered half of the Eastern Roman Empire's territories were simply too few in number to demographically replace the indigenous Romanised peoples or engage in any large-scale ethnic-cleansing. But with the notable exceptions of England, Flanders, the German Rhineland, the Alpine countries and Bavaria, none of the former territories of the Western Roman Empire were majority Germanic-speaking either in 700 or indeed today. Most of Gaul, Spain and Italy had some form of Vulgar Latin as the dominant language among both the elites and the general population in 700, from which French, Spanish, Catalan, Portuguese and Italian all descend. The Illyrian provinces meanwhile have now ended up speaking South Slavic languages (Slovene and Serbo-Croatian), as a result of their extremely complicated post-600 history which I am not getting into. So why don't Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco speak some kind of African Romance language today? They had been in the Roman Empire for longer than most of Spain and Gaul, and the Romans had definitely laid down just as deep roots in those places, with the possible exception of Morocco. Why weren't the Arabs just assimilated or form a Romano-Arabic hybrid identity, like the Franks in Gaul (as we saw in the previous post) or the Visigoths in Spain?

Obviously, we shouldn't get too ahead of ourselves. None of this transformation happened overnight, and much of it happened a lot later than our timeframe. In the ninth century, there were still communities of people in Tunisia and Algeria speaking Vulgar Latin and even Punic (the language of the ancient Carthaginians). And when the Crusaders conquered Syria and Palestine in the First Crusade, they found that many, if not most, of the inhabitants were not Muslims and spoke languages other than Arabic. Not to mention that the persecution of Kurds, Assyrians, Copts, Maronites and Armenians in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Egypt in recent decades reminds us that Arabisation/ Islamisation was never total. But nonetheless, the point still stands that the Arabs managed to remain in charge of all of those regions, avoid assimilation by the locals and slowly spread their culture, religion and identity downwards. How?

The first thing to note is that the Arab rulers (the Caliphs), unlike the kings of Ostrogothic Italy, Visigothic Spain or Frankish Gaul, did not derive their right to rule by claiming to be the successors of the Roman emperors. Roman imperial imagery didn't feature that much in their propaganda. Instead, they claimed their legitimacy from being "deputies" and "successors" to Muhammad, God's Prophet on Earth, which gave them the right to lead the Muslim community (Ummah). What exactly gives any individual the right to call themselves Caliph is the most hotly contested thing in Islam. Indeed the primary sectarian division in Islam, between Sunnis and Shi'as is over what makes a legitimate Caliph. Shi'as believe that the Caliph must be a biological descendant of the Prophet Muhammad, whereas Sunnis believe that the Caliph must simply be a righteous leader of the faith. The Sunni-Shi'a divide emerged during the first fitna of 656 - 661. The first Caliphs - Abu Bakr (r.632 - 634), Umar (634 - 644) and Uthman (r.644 - 656), were not biologically related to Muhammad. But after Uthman's assassination in 656, at whose instigation we don't really know, civil war broke out within the Arab Empire. On one side was Ali, who claimed that as Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law he should be Caliph and that Uthman and his two predecessors were usurpers. On the other side was Mu'awiya (602 - 680), Uthman's second cousin and a member of the Umayyad clan, who claimed that Uthman's murder was unlawful and needed to be punished. In the end, Mu'awiya won after his rival Ali was assassinated by the Kharijites, who were outraged when Ali tried to submit the Caliphal succession to arbitration, believing that only God could judge the issue. He and his descendants, the Umayyad caliphs, would rule the Arab Empire from 661 to 750. That wouldn't stop Ali's descendants and the Kharijites from trying to seize power again in the Second Fitna of 680 - 692. Talking of civil wars and assassinations again ... really does feel like seventh century politics is the same everywhere, doesn't it?

Panoramic view of the Mosque of the Umayyad Caliphs in Damascus (completed 715), the most monumental building project commissioned anywhere west of Tang China at that time. Photo Credit: By علي الصمادي - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28240133

Mosaics from the courtyard of the great mosque at Damascus. Still done in a late Roman style, but notice how there's no animals or people, thus asserting its distinctively Islamic character. Photo credit:  By Dosseman - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=104570492

Shrine of the Prophet Yahya (John the Baptist) at the Great Mosque in Damascus - the architecture here, for the most part, couldn't be more late Roman in style. Photo credit: By Lars Mongs, Arxfoto - https://arxfoto.se/, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=107615055

Via Wikimedia Commons: Coin of Caliph Al-Walid I (r.705 - 715), under whom the Great Mosque of Damascus was completed. Unlike his predecessors, who continued to issue Roman and Sassanian style coins, this represents something radically new - there is no image of the ruler, only Arabic inscriptions in Kufic writing. 

Via Wikimedia Commons: but that's not to say figurative images were prohibited outright in all contexts. While Islam was opposed to figurative religious artwork, which it saw as idolatrous, from an early stage, secular artwork was a different matter. Here is a scene of a semi-nude woman bathing from the bathhouse of the place of the future Caliph Walid II, built in 743 at Qusayr Amra in Jordan. 



The non-Muslim peoples within the Arab Empire, who made up the majority of the Caliph's subjects, constituted the "garden protected by our spears. Their relationship with their Muslim Arab rulers was simple - pay taxes, including the jizya (poll tax on infidels) and in return they'd get protection backed up by the military might of the Arab armies and freedom to practice their faith. 

A really prudent political decision was made early on, most likely by Caliph Umar in 640 - 642, to settle the Arab armies as garrisons in cities. By contrast, the Ostrogoths, Visigoths and Franks had settled their armies on the land - as stated in the previous post, there's still good reason to regard them as standing armies, but this meant they collected their pay in tax revenues at source. Arab soldiers were paid generously in tax revenues and being on the diwan (the army payroll) became a coveted privilege. Very little Arab landholding is recorded, certainly in the core provinces, before 750. As a result the army was kept separate from civilian society and thus there was little chance of it assimilating into provincial society and soldiers becoming landowners, as happened in the West by 600. All of this guaranteed that the tax systems the Arabs had inherited from the Romans and Sassanians never broke down as, given that the army remained directly dependent on tax revenue for funding, no one ever questioned why taxes needed to be paid at all. This in turn meant that the central government remained strong. 


It also meant that the Arabs were preserved as a separate and superior social stratum. They intermarried with the conquered peoples, but their children would be raised as Arabic-speakers and as Muslims. Meanwhile, the old civil government structures and provincial elites from both the Roman and Sassanian empires were maintained - some Sassanian noble houses were still producing local lords in northern Iran as late as the Seljuk Turkish and Mongol conquests in the eleventh and thirteenth centuries. It was still possible, even two generations after the conquest, to be powerful in the civil administration without changing one's religion or identity at all i.e. John of Damascus (d.749), the last of the Orthodox Church Fathers, was one of many prominent Greek-speaking Christian administrators in the Umayyad capital, Damascus. But after 700, when the basic language of administrative documents changed from Greek or Persian to Arabic, it became more and more necessary to Arabize if one had the ambition of becoming anything more than a local bigwig. By contrast, in the post-Roman West, neither the Visigoths or the Franks never tried to make Gothic or Old Frankish an administrative language at all, which led to much greater cultural fusion and much more hybridised identities. As we saw in the previous post, Frankish and Gothic identities that had become universally adopted in northern Gaul and Spain in the seventh century were more Romano-Germanic than exclusively Germanic.

Conversion to Islam and Arabisation among the elite was thus essentially incentivised on the grounds that it would grant you access to political power at the centre. By contrast, staying Christian/ Zoroastrian and non-Arab in culture and ethnicity would mean that you could only have power through being a local magistrate or lord. For the peasantry, the benefits of becoming a Muslim were obvious - you got to pay less in taxes. In the meantime, the regime of the Umayyad Caliphs was happy to work with the grain of established local government and social structures in the conquered provinces, and allow the indigenous cultures (i.e. Coptic culture in Egypt) to thrive like nothing had happened. It would be accurate to describe the the internal governance of the Arab Empire under the Umayyad Caliphs as being very light-touch or laissez-faire in approach.

Islam enters Europe

By the opening decades of the eighth century, the Berber tribes of North Africa had acknowledged the authority of the Caliph and nominally converted to Islam. The Berber warrior elites desired booty, slaves and martyrdom, and so were willing to expand with or without the Caliphs in Damascus giving the go ahead. Tariq ibn Ziyad, a Berber military commander, landed at Gibraltar in 711 - it is from him it gets its name (Jabal Tariq in Arabic). 

What was in all likelihood going to be just a raid on Spain turned into an accidental conquest when Tariq ibn Ziyad defeated the Visigothic army at the battle of Guadalete and killed their king, Roderic. The Visigothic kingdom, left leaderless, went into political turmoil. The Arabs quickly conquered the south of Iberia. They successfully made deals with the Visigothic governors in many parts of the country, like the treaty of Orihuela with General Theodemir (d.744) which I've discussed before. But in the north east, a Visigothic rump state led by King Ardo survived until 721 when Narbonne (remember the Visigoths still had a tiny strip in what's now the South of France) fell to the Muslims. In the Northwest, in Asturias and Galicia, older tribal communities rooted in not just the pre-Visigothic but even the pre-Roman past asserted themselves. They gathered together under the leadership of a Christian Visigothic king called Pelagius, and thus ensured the mountainous Atlantic fringe of Spain would never come under Muslim rule. 

The political situation for the Umayyads in Spain was very shaky at this early stage. Arab administrators from Damascus were being sent over by the 720s, but it took a while for them to have effective authority outside of the far south. The areas to the north were entrusted to Berber military commanders who were both not very happy up there and not very amenable to increased control from the centre. Meanwhile, the Merovingian realm to the north was attractive for plundering. As we'll see in the next post, these provide the circumstances for the events that led up to the battle of Tours. 

 Finishing with Theodore

A figure who perhaps nicely links up everything we've discussed in the two posts so far is Theodore of Tarsus (602 - 690), whom we've met before. Theodore was a Greek-speaking Roman from Tarsus in Asia Minor. When he was 11 years old, the Sassanian Persians invaded and conquered his home town of Tarsus, thus meaning that he experienced first-hand the apocalyptic final war between Rome and Persia. Then when he was thirty-five, the Arab armies of the Caliphate came and attacked Tarsus, and he decided it was best to move to Constantinople. From there, he ended up moving to Rome, and then in 667 he and Hadrian, his African friend, were dispatched to Anglo-Saxon England, which had only been converted to Christianity half a century ago, to take up ecclesiastical posts there. When travelling through Francia, as mentioned several times before, they experienced extensive suspicion and surveillance from Ebroin, the mayor of the palace of Neustria for King Chlothar III. Then when he came to Anglo-Saxon England and took up the position of Archbishop of Canterbury, Theodore found himself in one of the most dynamic religious and intellectual centres in the former Roman world. This was strange, given that Roman Britain had never produced any great Roman writer and no great church leaders, except for the heretic Pelagius. In the sixth century it had been a magical mystery land to learned authors like Procopius, who managed to be well-informed on things taking place as distant as Transoxiana. But now the Anglo-Saxons, who had been pagans within living memory and many of whose ancestors had never been under Roman rule, had converted to Christianity. Their kingdoms were becoming cosmopolitan hubs for churchmen and learning, both Christian and Classical. Theodore contributed much to his new home by convening important church councils and at Hatfield in Hertfordshire and Twyford in Northumbria setting up a school of Greek at Canterbury. His life was a truly extraordinary. One could say that, with all the different stages put together, he personally witnessed both the final unravelling of the ancient world and the first stirrings of a new era. Thus in these first two posts we have now been completely introduced to the world that Charles Martel was born into and spent his formative years in. Now let us move on to his career as a statesman and military commander and the Battle of Tours itself, where all the threads of the story come together.

Sources I used

Primary 

Gregory of Tours, The History of the Franks, translated by Lewis Thorpe, Penguin Classics (1974)

Adhemar of Chabannes, Historia Francorum, edited by Jules Chavanon, Collection de Textes pour servir a l'etude et l'enseignement de l'historie (1897)

Secondary 

Chris Wickham, The Inheritance of Rome: A History of Europe from 400 - 1000, Penguin (2008)

Peter Sarris, Byzantium: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press (2015)

Richard Payne, "The Reinvention of Iran: the Sassanian Empire and the Huns", in Michael Maas (ed), The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila, Cambridge University Press (2015)

Peter Brown, The World of Late Antiquity, 150 - 750, Thames and Hudson (1971)




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