A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

was as venerable as the Roman Empire—and as ambitious. (See Map 1.5 on pp. 30–


31.) King Chosroes II (r.590–628), not unlike Justinian a half-century before him,


dreamed of recreating past glories. In his case the inspiration was the ancient empire


of Xerxes and Darius, which had sprawled from a lick of land just west of Libya to a


great swathe of territory ending near the Indus River. Taking advantage of a dispute


between two claimants to the imperial throne, Chosroes marched into Byzantine


territory in 607. By 613 he had taken Damascus, by 614 Jerusalem. The whole of


Egypt fell to the Persians in 619. But Emperor Heraclius (r.610–641) rallied his


troops and turned triumph into defeat; all territories taken by the Persians were back


in Byzantine hands by 630. (For Heraclius and his successors, see the list on p. 337:


Byzantine Emperors.) On a map it would seem that nothing much had happened; in


fact, the cities fought over were depopulated and ruined, and both Sasanid and


Byzantine troops and revenues were exhausted.


Meanwhile, the Byzantines had to contend with Slavs and other groups north of


the Danube. Map 1.5 on pp. 30–31 makes the situation clear: Slavs—farmers and


stock-breeders in the main—were pushing into the Balkans, sometimes accompanied


by Avars, multi-ethnic horseback warriors and pastoralists. In 626, just before


Heraclius wheeled around and bested the Persians on his frontiers, he was confronted


with Avars and their Sasanid allies besieging—unsuccessfully, as it turned out—the


very walls of Constantinople. It took another half-century for the Bulgars, a Turkic-


speaking nomadic group, to become a threat, but in the 670s they began moving into


what is today Bulgaria, defeating the Byzantine army in 680 and again in 681. By


700 very little of the Balkan Peninsula was Byzantine. (See Map 2.1.) The place


where once the two halves of the Roman Empire had met (see Map 1.1 on pp. 2–3)


was now a wedge that separated East from West.


An even more dramatic obliteration of the old geography took place when attacks


by Arab Muslims in the century after 630 ended in the conquest of Sasanid Persia


and the further shrinking of Byzantium. We shall soon see how and why the Arabs


poured out of Arabia. But first we need to know what the shrunken Byzantium was


like.


Decline of Urban Centers


The city-based Greco-Roman culture on which the Byzantine Empire was originally


constructed had long been gradually giving way. Invasions and raids hastened this


development. Many urban centers, once bustling nodes of trade and administration,


disappeared or reinvented themselves. Some became fortresses; others were

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