THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD IN LATE ANTIQUITY
persisted with the Zoroastrian establishment, but by the end of the sixth cen-
tury the religious ferment in the Near East as a whole was felt at the highest
level. Imperial policy was also dictated by realism. What might seem a strange
decision on the part of Maurice, to support his natural enemy rather than to
profit from the internal discord in the Sasanian kingdom, as some urged, was
both a demonstration of solidarity between kings and a hardheaded recogni-
tion of reality; neither side could or would aim at the total defeat of the other.
Each side knew the strengths and weaknesses of the other from centuries
of experience, and Maurice himself is credited with the Strategikon, a military
manual discussing all aspects of late Roman warfare including the military
characteristics of the Persians.^17
ThessalonicaConstantinople
Nicomedia
Athens Artaxata
Melitene
Antioch
Resafa
Damascus
Hira
Gadara
Jerusalem
Gaza
Aila
Ctesiphon
San’a
Dvin
Medina
Mecca
SASANIAN
EMPIRE
ROMAN
EMPIRE
EGYPT ARABIA
NUBIA
AXUM/
ETHIOPIA
Alexandria
CYPRUS
HIMYAR
ARMENIA
Lake
Van
Mediterranean
Sea
Red
Sea
Indian Ocean
Persian
Gulf
Caspian
Sea
Black Sea
SINAI
R. Tig
ris
R.Eu
phra
tes
R. Ni
le
0 1000 km
Map 9.1 The east in the early seventh century