CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' |
MEDIEVAL HISTORY LIBRARY DOOR |
CHAPTER VII
THE
BYZANTINE EMPIRE IN THE ELEVENTH CENTURY
With the death of Basil II in 1025 there came to an
end the most brilliant period in the history of Byzantium. During this period
of roughly one and a half centuries, beginning with 867 when Basil I ascended
the throne and ending with 1025 when Basil II died, the Byzantine empire had
reestablished itself as the great power of the Christian and Moslem worlds.
Its armies had humbled the Saracens, subjugated the Bulgaria virtually
cleared the Mediterranean of corsairs, and strengthened its hold in southern
Italy. Its missionaries, aided by diplomats and sometimes by armies, spread
the gospel among the southeastern Slavs, a development of the greatest
significance, Byzantium was the center of Mediterranean civilization.
In less than sixty years after the death of Basil II
this great political and military structure was no more. The armies of the
empire had been decimated; internal order had broken down; hordes of
barbarians, the Selchukids in Asia Miner, the
Pechenegs and Uzes in the Balkans, were
ravaging its territories; and in southern Italy a new power, the Normans, had
arisen which not only had engulfed what possessions the empire still had in
that peninsula, but threatened its very existence. It is this disintegration
of the Byzantine empire which created the conditions without which the
crusading movement would not have taken place, at least not in the form which
it assumed.
One living at the time of the death of Basil II
might very well have felt that no external power could disturb the internal
security and peace of the empire. For the first time in its long existence
Byzantium had no well organized and powerful states on its borders. The
eastern caliphate still existed to be sure but it had been greatly weakened by
internal divisions, while the more powerful emirs had been defeated and
humiliated by the Byzantine armies. The Saracens might still make incursions
into Byzantine territories, but they had been so deeply impressed by the
might of the Byzantine armies that they were ready to accept humiliating
terms the moment they heard that an army was marching against them.
Farther north, in the regions south of the Caucasus,
the frontiers of the empire had been rounded off by the annexations Which
Basil II had made. The annexations included the domain of David (East
Armenian, Davit) of Taik, acquired by Basil in
1000, which extended from Manzikert, north of Lake Van, to Erzurum, near the
upper Euphrates, and northward to the district of Kola and Arran (Ardahan) northwest of Kars, and the realm of Vaspurkan, ceded to Basil in 1021 by its king, who had
found himself unable to protect it against the incursions of the Turks. The
acquisition of Vaspurkan extended the frontiers of
the empire from Lake Van eastward to the chain of mountains which today
separates Turkey from Iran. About the same time (1022) Sempad (East Armenian, Smbat)
of Ani, king of Greater Armenia, yielded his kingdom to the Byzantine
emperors on conditions that he remain its ruler until his death. These regions
were inhabited predominantly by Armenians and some Georgians. The
dispossessed Armenian princes were given lands elsewhere in the empire
whither they were followed by other Armenians. It is said for instance, that
the prince of Vaspurkan, who was given important
domains in Cappadocia, was followed there by 14.0oo of his compatriots, in
addition to their women and children. Other Armenians were forcibly evacuated
and settled in other provinces.
If in the east the Saracens no longer offered a
serious threat, the situation in the Balkan peninsula was still more
favorable, for the state which had so often challenged the empire was no
more. Ever since its foundation in the second half of the seventh century,
the Bulgarian kingdom had been a thorn in the side of Byzantium and at times
a serious menace to its very existence. But Basil II put an end to this
kingdom and annexed its territories. The territories were inhabited by masses
of Slavs who would not always be happy with their new status and would at
times rebel, but whatever disturbances these Slays might thus cause could not
be as dangerous as the devastating attacks for which the Bulgarian kingdom
had so often been responsible. The destruction of the Bulgarian kingdom
extended the frontiers of the empire to the Danube and the Drava. On the
Dalmatian coast its control, direct or indirect, extended as far as Istria
and as Venice was still a semi-dependency of the empire, this made the
Adriatic a Byzantine lake.
The prestige of the empire was also high in southern
Italy. Calabria and Apulia were firmly under its control, and its influence
in the Lombard principalities of Benevento, Capua, and Salerno was not
insignificant. The rebellion which had broken out in Apulia in 1017 under the
leadership of Melo, a wealthy citizen of Bari, and in which Norman
mercenaries participated —the first known appearance of Norman mercenaries in
southern Italy — was decisively put down. Basil Bojoannes,
the Byzantine governor who had defeated Melo gave to the country a
wise administration and assured its defenses by the foundation of a number of
fortified towns, of which the most famous was Troia in
the plains between the Ofanto and the
Forbore river. The effectiveness of these fortifications was demonstrated in
1021 when Henry II, the German emperor, failed to occupy Troia and had to give up his invasion of Apulia. So
impressed were the Byzantines by the work of Bojoannes that
they attributed to him the subjugation of "all Italy as far as
Rome".
Basil II transmitted to his successors an empire
whose prestige, power, and territorial extent had never been greater since
the days when Heraclius triumphantly entered the Persian capital. The men who
succeeded Basil were neither statesmen nor military leaders; nevertheless,
the empire was able to keep its prestige and position substantially
unimpaired for some time after his death.
In the east the Saracens still made incursions and
in 103o the emir of Aleppo defeated the emperor Romanus III Argyrus. His victory, however, was not decisive and he
was soon forced to put himself again tinder the suzerainty of the empire as
did the other emirs along the frontiers. The city of Edessa (Urfa) was ceded
to Byzantium and this put its frontiers beyond the Euphrates, Farther north,
the attempt made in 1038 to annex Ani and Greater Armenia did not
succeed, but the annexation was achieved a few years later during the reign
of Constantine IX. On the sea, several piratical expeditions, one in 1027,
another in 1032, and still another in 1035, launched by the Saracens of
Sicily and North Africa, were successfully dealt with. In the Balkan
peninsula, the Slavs, discontented over the transformation of the taxes from
levies in kind to levies in money, rallied around Peter Deljan, apparently a descendant of Samuel, the last great
Bulgarian king, and a formidable revolt broke out in 1040. The rebels
besieged Thessalonica and sent an army which devastated Greece, but the
dissensions which soon broke out among the leaders enabled the Byzantines to
suppress the rebellion, In 1043 the Russians, aroused apparently by some
misunderstanding concerning their trade privileges in the Byzantine capital,
a misunderstanding which had already resulted in the death of a high-ranking
Russian, attacked Constantinople, but their expedition, headed by the prince
of Novgorod, Vladimir, was broken up and their fleet virtually destroyed. In
Italy the situation had somewhat deteriorated as a result of the recall
of Bojoannes in 1028, but the position of
the empire was not yet definitely compromised. In 1o38 an expedition,
commanded by the redoubtable George Maniaces,
was launched for the conquest of Sicily in order to bring to an end the
piratical depredations of the Saracens of this island as well as of North
Africa. The Byzantine forces occupied a considerable part of the island, but
the recall of Maniaces as a result of a
quarrel with the brother-in-law of the emperor, who commanded the sea forces,
and the incompetence of his successor, enabled the Saracens to reestablish
themselves.
This record of the Byzantine armies during the two
decades which followed the death of Basil II, if not brilliant, is by no
means wanting in success. Byzantine forces suffered reverses here and there
and incursions by the enemy at times disturbed the internal security of the
empire, but on the whole the frontiers were well protected and even expanded.
But while the old enemies were kept at bay new and more vigorous enemies
appeared along the frontiers. Their apparently insignificant raids in the
period immediately following the death of Basil II became increasingly more
frequent and devastating until finally they shattered the political and
military power of the empire. Among these enemies the most important were the
Pechenegs, the Normans, and the Selchukids Turks.
The Pechenegs, called Patzinaks by
the Byzantines, a nomadic people of Turkish origin, were not unknown to the
Byzantines before the eleventh century. They had made their appearance
sometime in the ninth century and occupied the territory roughly between the
lower Danube and the Dnieper, which today is. Rumania and southwestern
Russia. The emper0rs of the tenth century pursued a friendly policy toward
them and sought to use them to keep Russians, Magyars, and Bulgars at bay.
“So long as the emperor of the Romans is at peace with the Pechenegs”, writes
Constantine Porphyrogenitus, "neither Russians nor Turks [Magyars] can
come upon the Roman dominions by force of arms, nor can they exact from the
Romans large and inflated sums in money and goods as the price of peace, for
they fear the strength of this nation which the emperor can turn against them
while they are campaigning against the Romans… To the Bulgars also the
emperor of the Romans will appear more formidable, and can impose on them the
need for tranquility, if he is at peace with the Pechenegs." But with
the annexation of Bulgaria the situation changed. The Pechenegs now became
the immediate neighbors of the empire along the Danube and, as they were
pressed from behind by other Turkish tribes, the Kumans (elsewhere
called Kipchaks or Polovtsy), they
turned their eyes toward the empire and began a series of raids which lasted
almost throughout the eleventh century.
There was virtually no reign from the accession of
Constantine VIII in 1025 to the end of the eleventh century which did not
witness some Pecheneg invasion of the territories of the empire in the Balkan
peninsula. Pechenegs crossed the Danube during the reign of Constantine VIII
and were driven back only after they had caused considerable damage, killed
many people, including high-ranking officers, and carried with them numerous
prisoners who ware ransomed only during the reign of Romanus III Argyrus. In July 1032 there was another destructive raid
upon Bulgaria and during the reign of Michael IV there were no less than four
different invasions which spread desolation and death and resulted in the
taking of many captives. including five generals, It was however, with the
reign of Constantine IX Monomachus, which witnessed
one of the most devastating Pecheneg invasions, that the Pecheneg menace
became very serious, as we are told by the Byzantine historians themselves.
A quarrel between two Pecheneg chieftains was the
first in a series of events which led to the devastation of the Balkan peninsula
by the Pechenegs during the reign of Constantine. Tirakh (or Tirek), a man of noble birth, was the khan of the
Pechenegs, while Kegen, a man of humble
origin, was their military leader, Kegen had
risen to this position through his own merits, but the reputation which he
enjoyed among his fellow tribesmen alarmed Tirakh,
who plotted to put him out of the way. Kegen,
however, learning of the plot escaped, and after many adventures found refuge
on a small island near the mouth of the Danube with 20,003 of his followers.
He then appealed to the Byzantine emperor for permission to settle on
imperial territory. Kegen was granted
this permission, was honorably received in Constantinople, and was given the
tide of patrician. In return he accepted Christianity and promised to have
his followers do likewise. The latter were settled along the Danube where
they were given lands and assumed the obligation of defending the frontier
against the incursions of their fellow tribesmen who had remained on the
other bank of the river. But Kegen and
his followers were not content to remain on the defensive; they took the
offensive and began a series of raids across the river. These raids
aroused Tirakh. He protested to the emperor,
but as his protests remained unheeded, he countered by launching a terrible
invasion of the empire, He crossed the Danube, which had frozen thickly, in
December 1048 with a force estimated by a Byzantine historian, no doubt with
gross exaggeration, at 800.000, and spread terror and death everywhere. The
barbarians, however, were not accustomed to the rich food of civilization and
overindulgence proved fatal. Dysentery soon broke out among them and this
together with the extreme cold carried thousands away. At the same time the
armies of the European provinces concentrated against the Pechenegs. Tirakh, with what remained of his forces, finally
capitulated. The khan and the other chieftains were taken to Constantinople
where they were well received and accepted Christianity. Their followers were
settled in the deserted regions of Sofia (Sardica) and Nish (Naissus) to
cultivate the land, pay taxes, and furnish recruits to the army.
In the meantime the frontier regions of the empire
in Asia Minor were threatened with another invasion by the Selchukid Turks. To help meet this invasion an army of
15,000 men was raised among these Pechenegs and was sent to Asia Minor under
the command of four of their own chieftains. Their destination was the
province of Iberia, but before they had gone very far in Bithynia they
revoked and, forcing their way back, they continued on to cross the Bosporus,
whence they marched to the region of Sofia and induced their fellow tribesmen
to rebel also. They were soon joined by those who had been settled around
Nish and they all retired toward the Danube, where they established
themselves in well protected places and then began to raid the Thracian
regions of the empire. To meet this new danger the emperor turned to Kegen and summoned him to Constantinople together
with his followers. But while the forces of Kegen were
encamped before the capital waiting for orders, an unsuccessful attempt was
made to take the life of their leader. The conspirators were themselves
Pechenegs, however, and when they were brought before the emperor, they
declared that Kegen planned to join the
rebels. Kegen was arrested, and when the
news of his arrest reached his followers, they immediately joined the rebels.
The emperor now released Tirakh, who promised
upon oath that he would reduce the rebels to obedience. But once Tirakh regained his freedom, he ignored his oath,
and put himself at the head of the rebellion. In the meantime the army of the
western provinces was defeated near Adrianople. The whole Pecheneg world was
in an upheaval, and all the country from the Danube to Adrianople was at
their mercy.
The emperor combined the armies of the Asiatic and
European provinces under one command and sent them against the Pechenegs
beyond the Balkan mountains. The combined armies, however, were routed and
their camp was taken by the nomads. This took place in 1049. In the following
year, as the Pechenegs continued to plunder the country at will, another
army, again drawn from the eastern and western provinces, was sent against
them. The encounter with the barbarians took place in June 1050, near
Adrianople, but the barbarians were again victorious and, although the timely
arrival of reinforcements forced them to flee northward, they continued to
ravage the country without fear. The emperor now tried diplomacy and
sent Kegen to the Pechenegs. But Kegen, whose object was to create dissension among them
and thus bring about their submission, was killed by them.
In the meantime, however, an army under the command
of Nicephorus Bryennius defeated three
detachments of Pechenegs in three different engagements, two near Adrianople
and the other near Chariopolis. These defeats
made them more cautious, but did not stop their incursions, which continued
throughout 1051 and 1052. In 1053 the emperor made another all-out effort
against the Pechenegs, but his army, which attempted to dislodge them from
the Bulgarian city of Preslav near the
Danube, was again defeated. Despite their victory, however, the Pechenegs now
asked for peace, and an agreement to that effect which was supposed to last
for thirty years was concluded. The Pechenegs, showered with gifts and
titles, remained south of the Danube.
The peace was not kept. To be sure, Constantine IX
had no further trouble with the Pechenegs, and there is no evidence that they
made any incursions during the short reigns of Theodora and Michael VI, but
in 1059 they "crawled out of the caves in which they were hidden,"
and joined the Hungarians in an attack upon the empire. Isaac I Comnenus
immediately took the field. While he was at Sofia the Hungarians, who had
sent an embassy to him, concluded peace and he was free to direct his
attention against the Pechenegs. But before any encounter took place, the
Pecheneg chieftains, with the exception of one named Selte,
asked for, and obtained, peace. Isaac now turned against Selte, defeated him, and destroyed his stronghold. Selte fled into the marshes of the Danube. While
campaigning against Selte, the emperor Isaac
barely escaped a stroke of lightning and, upon returning to Constantinople
shortly afterwards, he fell ill and abdicated,
During the reign of Constantine X Ducas, Isaac’s successor, the Pechenegs returned their
incursions, extending their activities as far as Sofia where they were
defeated by Romanus Diogenes, the future emperor. But more destructive than
the ravages of the Pechenegs during this reign were those of the Uzes, another nomadic people of Turkish origin, a
"race," according to a Byzantine historian, "more noble and
numerous than the Pechenegs, but distantly related to them". The Uzes crossed the Danube in 1065, defeated the
Byzantine garrisons that were opposed to there and took their generals,
Basil Apokapes and Nicephorus Botaniates
prisoners. It was a mass migration, the fighting strength alone of the
barbarians being said to have numbered six hundred thousand. As the Uzes entered the empire, they divided into groups,
one group going as far as Thessalonica, and even beyond into Greece. They
destroyed and killed, and took whatever booty they could carry. Their ravages
were so terrible, and their numbers so overwhelming, that the native
inhabitants of the European provinces of the empire despaired of safety and
began to think of emigrating. Meanwhile the emperor, although much
distressed, was slow in taking any measures either, as some thought, because
he was too parsimonious to raise an army, or, in the opinion of others,
because he felt that the barbarians were too strong to be met successfully in
the field. He tried at first to win the barbarian chieftains by means of
gifts and other inducements, but finally left the capital, presumably in
order to take the field. By that time, however, the backbone of the Uzes' invasion had been broken. Famine, disease, and cold
had decimated their ranks, and as they moved northward, Bulgars and Pechenegs
fell upon them and further reduced their numbers. Some of them surrendered to
the imperial authorities and were settled in Macedonia to cultivate the land
and furnish recruits to the army. Leading members among these settlers were
honored with the rank of senator and other dignities. The disaster suffered
by the barbarians was attributed by the Byzantines to divine intervention.
Pechenegs and Uzes again
invaded the empire in 1073, during the reign of Michael VII. On the advice of
his minister, the clever but unprincipled Nicephoritzes,
Michael VII had failed to make the payments which were due to the garrisons
of the fortified towns of the Danube, This put the soldiers in a state of
rebellion and they all flocked to the standard of the Byzantine governor of
the region, a former slave of Constantine X, Nestor by name, who took
advantage of the situation to rebel against the emperor. But beside the
garrisons of the towns, which were doubtless composed of barbarians, Nestor
obtained also the assistance of Pechenegs and Uzes from
across the river. Nestor directed his forces straight to the capital and
demanded the dismissal of Nicephoritzes; his
rebellion finally collapsed and the Pechenegs returned beyond the
Danube, but before they did so they plundered the country all the way from
the capital.
During the struggle for the possession of the throne
following the overthrow of Michael VII, the Pechenegs and Uzes were busily engaged in ravaging the country.
Pechenegs were in the army of the rebel Basilacius,
and Pechenegs and Kumans, another Turkish people, plundered the regions
of Adrianople while the armies of the rivals for the throne were engaged with
each other. Nicephorus Botaniates made peace with the Pechenegs and the Uzes, but the Pecheneg menace remained undiminished. It
was one of the most serious problems that Alexius Comnenus would have to
face.
The conquest of southern Italy by the Normans, which
was to have such an important effect on the relations between Byzantium and
the west, has been treated in more detail in an earlier chapter. It may,
however, be noted here that the Norman campaign was brought to a successful
end in 1071 when, under the leadership of Robert Guiscard, the Normans
captured Bari. The capture of Bari made Guiscard the unquestioned master of southern
Italy, but already before this event the Byzantines had reconciled themselves
to the loss of their Italian possessions and adopted a policy designed to win
the friendship of the Norman leader. This policy was initiated by the emperor
Romanus IV Diogenes, who proposed the marriage of one of his sons to one of
Guiscard’s daughters. The proposal, which must have been made either
immediately before or during the siege of Bari, was rejected by Guiscard.
Diogenes' policy was revived by his successor, Michael
VIII. In the hope that he might use the Normans to check the Selchukid Turks in Asia Minor, and at the same time
protect the empire from further attacks by Guiscard, Michael VII definitely
abandoned his claims to the former possessions of the empire in southern
Italy and sought the friendship of the Norman leader. This we are told
by Cedrenus, and the two letters in which
Michael VII asked for the alliance of Guiscard and the chrysobull to Guiscard, by which he confirmed the
conditions of the alliance which he succeeded in concluding with him, have
survived. The first letter was most probably written late in 1071 or early in
1072; the second letter was written either in 1072 or 1073 and the chysobul bears the date August 1074.
The subject of the two letters is a proposal for the
marriage of the emperor's brother, Constantine, to one of Guiscard's
daughters in return for Guiscard's friendship and alliance. Of the two
letters the first is rather general. It puts the emphasis on the common
religion of the two leaders; praises the greatness and intelligence of
Guiscard; recognizes by implication Guiscard's conquest of southern Italy;
and declares that the two rulers should in the future identify their
interests. The second letter is more specific. In return for the marriage of
one of his daughters to the emperor's brother, Guiscard was to become the
rampart of the Byzantine frontiers, spare the princes who were vassals of the
empire, furnish aid to Byzantium in all things, and fight with the Byzantines
against all the enemies of the empire. Guiscard rejected both proposals.
In 1074 the Byzantine court tried again. This time
the emperor proposed, as the basis of the alliance which he sought, the
marriage of his own son with one of Guiscard's daughters. Guiscard accepted
this proposal, and in August 1074 Michael VII issued a chrysobull which he addressed to the Norman leader
and by which he confirmed the conditions of the alliance the two leaders had
reached. The agreement provided for the marriage of the emperor's son
Constantine to Guiscard’s daughter, who subsequently took the name Helen; it
gave imperial titles to the young couple; granted to Guiscard the title
of nobillissimus; allowed him to name
one of his sons curopalates; and put at
his disposal eight other titles of varying rank which he was free to grant to
anyone among his followers. Some of these titles carried with them an annual
payment. Guiscard, in return, agreed not to violate the territories of the
empire, but to defend them against its enemies. The agreement was, as far as
the Byzantine empire was concerned, a defensive and of offensive alliance.
The Turks are nowhere mentioned, but we are told by Cedrenus (or
rather Skylitzes) that Michael’s motive was
the hope that with the assistance of the Normans he might be able to drive
the Turks out of Asia Minor.
Guiscard concluded the alliance with the Byzantine
emperor at a time when his relations with the papacy were bad, and it is
indeed extremely probable that he decided on this course in order to prevent
any agreement being reached between Byzantium and the Papacy. For while they
approached Guiscard the Byzantine authorities carried on negotiations also
with the papacy, and it is significant that these negotiations stopped as
soon as the alliance with the Norman leader was concluded. But Byzantium
derived no benefit from its treaty of alliance with Guiscard. Guiscard was
restlessly ambitious, and it was not long before he began to focus his eyes
upon the imperial title itself. In the overthrow of Michael in 1078 he
thought he saw an opportunity to realize his ambition and used the treaty
which he had concluded with Michael as an excuse to justify his action.
Meanwhile Guiscard had settled his differences with the papacy, and pope
Gregory VII, who had been bitterly disappointed over the failure of his
negotiations with Byzantium, sanctioned his aggressive plans against the
Byzantine empire. On July 25, 1080, Gregory wrote to the bishops of Apulia
and Calabria, asking them to lend all possible help to Guiscard, in the
expedition which he was about to undertake against Byzantium. Giscard, with
the pope's blessing, was on the point of invading the empire as Alexius
Comnenus ascended the throne. The issue at stake was no less than the very
existence of the empire.
While Pechenegs and Turks roamed within and
devastated the Balkan provinces of the empire, and the Normans in Italy
threatened the very existence of the state, the situation in Asia Minor had
so deteriorated that one did not know precisely what regions still belonged
to the empire. This situation was created by the advance of the Turks known
as Selchukids, a name born by the family which
furnished them their leaders. Like the Uzes,
to whom they were related, the Selchukid Turks were
nomads, but they could easily adapt themselves to the ways of civilization.
Already converted to Islam and accustomed to the life of the frontier
regions, they were motivated both by the desire for booty and by religious
fanaticism. The men who led them showed remarkable qualities of
statesmanship. The aim of those men was to conquer the more advanced regions
of Islam — Mesopotamia, Syria, Egypt —but they allowed the nomad, whose
movements they could not really effectively control, to penetrate the
Byzantine provinces of eastern Asia Minor. It was this penetration, which the
Byzantines utterly failed to stop, that undermined the position of the empire
in Asia Minor and created conditions which were to determine the history of
the Near East for centuries.
The Armenians of Vaspurkan were the first to feel the pressure of the movement of the Selchukid Turks toward Asia Minor. It is said that it was
because the king of Vaspurkan felt himself unable
to check this pressure against his realm that he ceded it to the Byzantines
(1021), receiving in return important domains in Cappadocia as well as the
governorship of that province. Against the Byzantine empire itself no serious Selchukid incursions are recorded until the reign
of Constantine IX Monomachus. It is indeed with
that reign that Byzantine historians date the beginning of the Selchukid menace and the eventual loss of the major part
of Asia Minor.
Two major Selchukid raids
in Byzantine territory took place during the reign of Constantine IX, one in
1048 under Inal (or Yinal)
and the other in 1o54 under the sultan, Tughrul-Beg
himself. Both times the situation was favorable to the invaders, for they
found the eastern provinces stripped of the major part of their troops: in
I048, because these troops had been recalled in order to suppress the revolt
of Leo Tornicius, which had broken out in
Adrianople in 1047; and in 1o54, because they were being used in an effort to
stop the Pechenegs.
Ibrahim Inal ravaged the
province of Iberia and the back country of Trebizond, but it was on Erzurum,
a city of commerce, wealth, and population, that he inflicted the greatest
disaster. The city was burned to the ground; the major part of its population
—one hundred and forty thousand, according to one Byzantine historian — was
destroyed; and its wealth was plundered and carried away. The Byzantine
governors of Vaspurkan and Iberia at first
hesitated as to what action to take, but when they were joined by the Iberian
prince Liparites, vassal of the empire, they
came to grips with Ibrahim Inal only to be
defeated. Liparites himself was taken
prisoner. An exchange of ambassadors between the Byzantine emperor, who was
in no position to send reinforcements to the east, and the Turkish sultan
followed, and Liparites was liberated;
but there was no stop to the Turkish raids, and in 1054 it was the sultan
himself who led the expedition into Byzantine territory. His forces plundered
the regions between Lake Van, Erzerum, and the
mountains of the back country of Trebizond; they also laid siege to
Manzikert, but failed to take it. The sultan withdrew, but not all of the
marauders left the territory of the empire. Three thousand under a
certain Samuk remained to continue their
pillaging; they were active during the reign of Michael VI (1o56-1o57).
These incursions under Ibrahim Inal and Tughrul-Beg were the beginning of a series of
raids which became increasingly more frequent. On this fact all the Byzantine
historians agree. In 1057, when the troops of the Armenian provinces were
withdrawn in order to support Isaac Comnenus in his rebellion against Michael
VI, the Turks under Samuk ravaged the
regions where the two branches of the Euphrates join. But it was especially
during the reign of Constantine X Ducas that
the Turkish raiders roamed far and wide. In 1059 Sebastia (Sivas)
was pillaged; in 1064 or 1065 Alp Arslan, the successor of Tughrul-Beg, took Ani; from 1065 onward both Edessa
and Antioch were continuously on the defensive; in 1067 Caesarea in
Cappadocia was ruined. About the same time we find Samuk active
as far as Galatia and Phrygia. The Byzantine emperor meanwhile made no
serious effort to counteract these raids.
The death of Constantine X Ducas,
however, brought to the Byzantine throne Romanus IV Diogenes, a soldier by
profession. The desires of the widow of Constantine X no doubt had something
to do with the choice of Diogenes, but the Selchukid menace was the primary consideration. Romanus was a brave, if somewhat rash,
soldier who had already distinguished himself against the Pechenegs near
Sofia. He ascended the throne in January 1068; a few months later he was in
the field against the Selchukids, but his army,
which was hastily brought together, was neither well armed nor well organized. He achieved some success, but nothing decisive. He
succeeded indeed in intercepting a Turkish band which had sacked Pontic Neocaesarea (Niksar), and forced it to abandon its booty, and in the
southeast he was able to take Artah near
Antioch and Manbij northeast of Aleppo, thus assuring
communications between Edessa and Antioch. But while he was active in Syria a
fresh band of Selchukids penetrated into the heart
of Asia Minor and pillaged Amorium. Diogenes returned to Constantinople,
but in 1o69 he again took the field. He first defeated the Norman chieftain
Crispin, who had rebelled with his troops, and then proceeded to clear the
regions around Caesarea in Cappadocia which were inundated with Turkish
bands. Near Melitene he left a part of his army
with Philaretus, a general of Armenian
descent, with instructions to bar the passage of the Turks, while he himself
proceeded toward the Armenian provinces in order to assure their defenses.
But Philaretus was defeated and Turkish
bands broke into Asia Minor to pillage Iconium (Konya). When Romanus heard of
the sack of Iconium he turned back in order to intercept the raiders, but
neither he nor his lieutenants were able to destroy them, although they
forced them to give up their booty. Romanus then returned to the capital
where he remained throughout 1o7o, entrusting the campaign against the
marauders of the east to his youthful general Manuel Comnenus. But, after a
minor success, Manuel was defeated near Sebastia and
taken prisoner, while another Turkish band penetrated deep into Asia Minor and
sacked Chonae. Meanwhile Alp Arslan, who was
preparing an expedition against the Fatimids of Egypt, was willing to come to
some agreement with the Byzantines, and a truce seems to have been concluded.
But Alp Arslan was in no position to stop the Turkish raids into the
territory of the empire, for they were often made without his knowledge and
sometimes even against his will. Under such conditions the truce, if indeed
there was a truce, could have no lasting effects. But Alp Aslan seems
to have been taken by surprise when in the spring of 1071 Romanus Diogenes
launched his third and last campaign against the Selchukids.
The campaign of 1071 was the greatest effort made by
Byzantium to stop the incursions of the Selchukids.
Oriental sources put the strength of the army which Romanus led deep into
Armenia at 30o,000 and say further that it was well equipped with various
weapons and siege engines. This is, of course, an exaggeration. This army, no
doubt, was numerically superior to the previous armies that Romanus had led
into Asia Minor. In morale, cohesiveness, and equipment, however, it was no
better than they. It was a motley force composed of Greeks, Slavs, Alans, Uzes, Varangians, Normans, Pechenegs, Armenians, and
Georgians. Some of these groups, as for instance, the Greeks and the
Armenians, did not trust each other; others, the Uzes,
for example, were Turks related to the Selchukids to whom they might, as in the event they did, desert. But even the numerical
strength of the army had been considerably reduced by the time of the
decisive engagement; for the Normans under Roussel of Bailleul and a contingent under the Georgian
Joseph Tarchaniotes had been dispatched
to take Akhlat (or Khilat) on Lake
Van, while others had been sent elsewhere to seek provisions. These troops
were recalled, to be sure, but they failed to arrive. Then too at a critical
moment of the campaign a contingent of the Uzes deserted
to the enemy, and this defection introduced doubts and distrust into the camp
of the Byzantines. It is said that at the time of the engagement Romanus had
no more than one third of the army which he had brought with him. Still the
Byzantine forces made a powerful impression and Alp Arslan, who commanded the
Turkish troops, made an effort to avoid a battle, but his overtures for peace
were rejected by the Byzantine emperor. He had made too great an effort to
return without meeting the enemy. The decisive battle took place on August 26,
1071, near Manzikert. Romanus fought bravely, but his forces were completely
routed and he himself was taken prisoner, the first Byzantine sovereign to be
captured by a Moslem opponent. After Manzikert there was no effective force
to stop the penetration of the Turks, who now came not only to raid, but to
stay.
Alp Arslan treated Romanus Diogenes generously and
liberated him at the end of eight days. The Byzantine emperor, however agreed
to pay a huge ransom and an annual tribute. It is said also that he promised
to cede the cities of Manzikert, Edessa, Manbij, and Antioch, but this
is extremely doubtful. For the moment at least, Alp Arslan did not envisage
the annexation of Byzantine territory, while the Byzantine emperor would have
preferred to die rather than agree to anything that was not worthy of his
dignity. The two men agreed to keep the peace and to exchange prisoners.
Diogenes was then given a Turkish guard and was allowed to return. to his
country. But in the meantime the authorities in Constantinople had declared
him deposed and had replaced him by the eldest son of Constantine X Lucas,
Michael VII. The result was civil war during which Diogenes called the Selchukids to his assistance. He was finally defeated and
captured; he died, shortly afterwards as a result of having been blinded. Alp
Arslan vowed to avenge his death and gave his bands freedom of action. They
soon inundated Asia Minor, where they were destined to remain. They were
helped in this, as will be seen later in this chapter, by the military
anarchy which broke out in the empire during the reign of Michael VII.
In less that twenty-five years after they had began their activities in earnest, the nomads from the
east and the adventurers from the west had reduced the empire to impotence
and had threatened its very existence. How this came about is a question that
cannot be easily answered, but an examination of the internal conditions of
the empire during this period may yield at least a partial explanation.
Between 1025 and 1081, when Alexius Comnenus
ascended the throne thirteen sovereigns, two of them women, occupied the
throne. This gives an average of little more than four years for each reign,
but this figure is less revealing than the actual duration of each reign.
Eight emperors occupied the throne for not more than three years. And only
one ruled for more than ten years, a fact which contemporaries did not fail
to notice. Of the remaining four reigns two lasted for seven years, one for
six, and the other for nine. Five emperors were overthrown by force, one died
under questionable circumstances, and another abdicated, probably under
pressure. Moreover, virtually every reign was troubled by some uprising aimed
at the overthrow of the emperor. Among the emperors who ruled during this
period, four owed the throne to Zoe, daughter of Constantine VIII; Romanus
III Argyrus, Michael IV, and Constantine IX Monomachus married Zoe and Michael V was adopted by her.
The emperor, with one or two possible exceptions,
were persons of no ability, of a caliber greatly inferior to what the
situation required. Constantine VIII was an old man when he became sole
emperor, but at no time in his life had he shown any interest in government.
The pursuits which attracted him the most were horse-racing, hunting,
dice-playing, and eating luxurious dishes. In his scant three years on the
throne he managed to dissipate the vast surpluses which his frugal brother,
Basil II, had accumulated. Romanus III Argyrus had
many pretensions, but nothing in his record shows that they were founded in
fact. He was neither a good general nor a good administrator. Nor did he have
strength of character, as his indifference to the infidelities of his wife,
which were to cost him his life, shows. His reign is noted for the favors he
bestowed upon the aristocracy to which he belonged. Michael IV, a Paphlagonian upstart, had a sense of duty and was
not incapable of action, but he was subject to epilepsy, which sapped his
strength and in the end deprived him of his life. Michael V was certainly
mentally unbalanced, and Zoe and Theodora could not rise above the foibles
and petty interests of their sex. Constantine IX Monomachus was a sick man, coarse and uncouth in his tastes and pleasures, more disposed
to seek the embraces of his mistresses than the hardships of the camp or the
cares of government. Michael VI was an old man, simple and inoffensive, a
tool of his ministers. Isaac I Comnenus and Romanus IV Diogenes were soldiers
of the old school, active and ready to take the field, men who saw dearly
what the empire needed, but neither the one nor the other was able to
withstand the pressure of intrigue. Constantine X Lucas was educated and not
intemperate in his habits, but he failed utterly to grasp the gravity of the
situation. Michael VII was considered by his contemporaries as insignificant
and there is not much that can be said in favor of Nicephorus Botaniates.
These men, while enjoying the privileges of power,
generally shied away from its responsibilities, which they entrusted to their
ministers. Some of the ministers, as, for instance, Leichudes,
who served under Constantine IX Monomachus and
again under Isaac I Comnenus, or Leo Paraspondyles,
who guided Theodora and Michael VI, were honest and conscientious, but they
were not always sound — this is especially true of Paraspondyles —their
judgment as to the policy that would best serve the interests of the state.
Others, men like John the Orphanotrophus under
the Paphlagonians, the eunuch John who served Constantine IX during the last
years of his reign, or Nicephoritzes under
Constantine X and Michael VII, sought their own aggrandizement or that of
their families; still others, as, for instance, Michael Psellus, who served virtually every one of these
emperors, intrigued and maneuvered in order to stay in power. Byzantium, at
one of the gravest moments of its existence, lacked what it most needed — the
guiding hand of a soldier-statesman.
The factor which lay at the bottom of the political
instability in Byzantium in the eleventh century was the conflict between the
landed aristocracy as a military class and the imperial court. The
antecedents of this conflict go back to the tenth century. Basil II had met
and defeated the aristocracy in the field and had then proceeded, by a series
of measures, to undermine the sources of their power. Among these measures
the severest was that of 1002, the law concerning the allelengyon, which required the landed aristocracy
to pay the tax arrears of peasants too poor to meet their own obligations.
After the death of Basil his measures were not enforced and the law
concerning the allelengyon was
actually repealed, but a certain distrust of the military magnates persisted.
This is strikingly illustrated by the fact that under the patriarch Alexius
of Studium in 1026 a synodal decision
was obtained pronouncing an anathema against all rebels and excommunicating
priests who might admit them to communion. It was, however, during the reign
of Constantine IX that opposition to the military magnates took a systematic
form. A political faction, composed principally of members of the civil
bureaucracy, emerged during the reign of this emperor. It had as its aim the
elimination of the military from the administration of the empire. But the
effort to achieve this aim plunged the empire into a series of civil wars
which squandered its resources and manpower at a time when they were needed
to cope with the new enemies.
Constantine IX was no soldier emperor; he preferred,
as we have noted, the comforts and pleasures of the palace to the hardships
of the military camp. This no doubt, was a factor in his anti-military bias,
bat it was not the principal factor. If he made peace the keynote of his
foreign policy, as he did, it was not primarily because of his aversion to
the military life; it was because of the general feeling that there was no
longer any need to follow a policy of expansion. The great military triumphs
of the tenth and eleventh centuries, the crushing of the Saracens and the
Bulgars and the pushing of the frontiers to the Euphrates and the Tigris in
the east, and to the Danube in the Balkans, seemed to have assured the
external security of the empire. Here and there, as in the case of Greater
Armenia, it might be necessary to make further annexations in order to round
off the frontiers, but these were not major operations. The protection of the
frontiers might be assured by the maintenance of a mercenary force under the
direct control of the capital. Continued expansion was not only unnecessary,
but too expensive for the empire to support. The maintenance of peace on the
other hand would reduce the financial burdens of the state; it would also
reduce the influence of the army in the administration and eliminate the
danger of revolts. Constantine took into his service a number of
intellectuals, men like Constantine Leichucles,
John Xiphilinus, Machael Psellus and John Mauropus,
and with their help refunded the University of Constantinople, one of whose
objectives must have been, no doubt the training of civil functionaries for
the state. Constantine did not retain the services of these men, however,
although to the end of his reign he relied principally on his Civil servants
and ignored the generals, many of whom he retired from service. Moreover, he
deprived the soldiers of the frontier regions of the payments which they were
accustomed to receive, diverting these funds to other purposes. These acts of
the emperor created wide discontent among the military leaders. Two serious
rebellions broke out during his reign. One, headed by the redoubtable
George Maniaces, had as its cause the private
grievances of that general, but the other, under the leadership of Leo Tornicius, was the work of generals who had been deprived
of their posts. The failure of both rebellions strengthened the party of
civil officials. This party kept its hold upon the government to the end of
the reign of Constantine, and when Theodora, who had succeeded him, died in
1056, it was instrumental in putting on the throne Michael VI (1056-1057),
"a simple and inoffensive man", who was already advanced in years.
Neither Constantine no his advisers seem to have realized the significance of
the incursions of the new enemies of the empire. The Byzantine historians who
wrote after the battle of Manzikert, however, attributed the beginnings of
the misfortunes of the empire to the reign of this emperor, mentioning
especially his extravagance and his neglect of the army.
The struggle between the civil and the military
factions came to a head during the reign of Michael VI. The influential
generals men such as Michael Bourtzes,
Constantine and John Ducasn Isaac
Comnenus, Catacalon Cecaumenus —
all of them great magnates of Asia Minor — openly resented the favoritism
shown by this emperor to his civil servants. The generals demanded that some
consideration be given to them also. But, as the emperor paid no attention to
them, and continued to treat their remonstrances with derision,
they countered by conspiring to bring about his overthrow. The revolution
which put Isaac Comnenus on the throne in 1057 had the support of important
elements in Constantinople, including the patriarch Cerularius, but it was
primarily the work of the generals who had become exasperated by the
anti-military policy of Michael VI. It may be recalled that it was at the
time of this revolt, when the troops of the Armenian provinces were withdrawn
in order to support Isaac Comnenus, that the Turk Samuk made
a devastating incursion into the territory of the empire.
Isaac Comnenus was a soldier-emperor, the first
soldier-emperor since Basil II had passed away. That there should be no
mistake as to where he stood on the issues of the day, he had himself
represented on coins with sword in hand. But the task which he faced was
overwhelming. The army was disorganized, the treasury empty, and the enemies
of the empire many and active. He put himself to work with diligence and took
the field in person, something which no emperor had done since Michael IV.
The reorganization of the army he considered his most pressing problems but
this reorganization could not be done without money. In order to find this
money he practiced the strictest economy, collected all taxes with care
annulled land grants that his predecessors had made to various persons, and
confiscated properties of the monasteries. These measures were applauded by
some as most desirable, but they aroused the opposition of powerful elements.
Isaac might have successfully resisted the intrigues of these elements, but
when in addition to these intrigues he had to cope with a serious illness, he
decided to abdicate. He designated Constantine Ducas as
his successor. This was perhaps his most serious mistake.
Constantine X Ducas belonged
to an illustrious family of military chieftains, but he himself disliked the
life of the soldier. He had come under the influence of the civil party, and
this combined with his own inclinations to bring about a reaction against the
military policy of his predecessor. During his reign the disorganization of
the army became complete. Its expenditures were cut, and its leaders removed
from the rolls. Constantine freely distributed dignities and honors, but
these dignities and honors did not go to the soldiers; they went to the civil
functionaries. The profession of the soldier which in the great days of
Byzantium carried with it prestige, honor, and position had no longer any
value and so, as Skylitzes says,
"the soldiers put aside their arms and became lawyers or jurists."
But the empire did not need lawyers and jurists; it needed soldiers. The Selchukid Turks in Asia Minor and the Pechenegs and Uzes in the Balkans roamed freely, and there was no
one to stop them. That Constantine X had gone too far in his neglect of the
army even some of the most intimate among his civil advisers realized. Psellus declares that the most serious fault he
committed was to ignore the disorganized state of the army at a time when the
empire was hard pressed by enemies from every side.
Romanus Diogenes, who succeeded Constantine X in
1068, tried to rebuild the army. The task was overwhelming and the new
emperor had neither the means not the time required to bring it to a
successful completion. His failure at Menzikert enabled
the civil party to get control of the government and to replace him with
Michael VII, the eldest son of Constantine X Ducas.
Educated according to the best literary standards of the period, a pupil
of Psellus, Michael VII was more interested in
rhetoric, philosophy, and poetry than in governing the empire. His reign
marked the complete disintegration of the state. Rebellions broke out
everywhere. In the European provinces Nicephorus Bryennius,
the governor of Dyrrachium (Durazzo), threatened with disgrace,
proclaimed himself emperor; the magnates of Asia Minor declared for
Nicephorus Botaniates, himself a magnate of Asia Minor; Botaniates overthrew
Michael VII, and then his soldiers under the command of Alexius Comnenus
defeated Bryenaius. But Botaniates himself was
shortly overthrown by Alexius; in the meantime Nicephorus Melissenus had rebelled in Asia Minor. Order was
reestablished with the triumph of Alexius in 1081. But these civil wars
enabled the Selchukids to establish themselves in
western Asia Minor.
Thus between 1042, when Constantine Monomachus became emperor, and 1081, when Alexius
Comnenus became emperor, a period which saw the appearance of new and
formidable enemies, the imperial government, with the exception of the two
short reigns of Isaac Comnenus and Romanus IV Diogenes, had made it a point
of policy to curtail the power of the army (and had weakened its efficiency).
The ultimate objective of this policy was to lessen the power and influence
of the great military magnates. In the end this objective was not achieved,
but the effort to achieve it had plunged the empire into a series of civil
wars. But more serious still was the increasingly depressed condition of the
enrolled soldiers, men who held small estates granted to them by the state in
return for their services, and who had played such an important role in the
great military triumphs of the tenth century. Writing of the army that took
the field in one of the expeditions which Romanus IV Diogenes commanded
against the Selchukids, Skylitzes states:
"The army was composed of Macedonians and Bulgars and
Cappadocians, Uzes, Franks, and Varangians and
other barbarians who happened to be about. There were gathered also those who
were Phrygia [the theme Anatolikon]. And what
one saw in them [i.e., in the enrolled soldiers of the theme Anatolikon] was something incredible. The renowned
champions of the Romans who had reduced to subjection all the east and the
west now numbered only a few, and these were bowed down by poverty and ill
treatment. They lacked weapons, swords, and other arms such as javelins and
scythes. They lacked also cavalry and other equipment, for the emperor had
not taken the field for a long time. For this reason they were regarded as
useless and unnecessary, and their wages and maintenance were reduced."
The enrolled soldiers, depressed and forgotten, became more and more a minor
element in the Byzantine army. The bulk of this army in the eleventh century
came to be composed almost entirely of foreign mercenaries: Russians,
Turks, Alans, English, Normans, Germans, Pechenegs, Bulgars, and others.
These mercenaries were swayed more by their own private interests than by
those of the empire. The harm which they did was much greater than the
services they rendered.
Among these mercenaries the most turbulent and
insatiable were the Normans. Their chiefs were given important positions in
the army and were even given land, but the slightest provocation was enough
to make them rebel. The Byzantine historians single out three of these chiefs
for their turbulent, warlike, and sanguinary spirit: Hervé, Robert
Crispin, and Roussel of Bailleul." Hervé deserted
to the Turks in 1057 and Crispin openly rebelled in 1o68. But more ambitious and
more terrible in his devastations was Roussel of Bailleul, who seems to have passed into the service of
the Byzantines about 1070 with a large group of his compatriots. At Manzikert
he played a doubtful role; two years later he openly rebelled against the
government and sought to play the role of emperor-maker. Defeated in this, he
retired into the interior of Asia Minor where he tried to carve out a
principality for himself, to do what his compatriots had done in Italy. It
was only by treachery that he was finally delivered into the hands of the
Byzantines. His captor was the youthful Alexius Comnenus, who was then in the
service of Michael VII.
Besides the Normans, there were in the service of
the empire other foreign troops whose loyalty was doubtful. The Uzes, for instance, deserted to the enemy at Manzikert, a
desertion which greatly contributed to the final defeat of the Byzantine
forces. But the foreign troops in the Byzantine forces which profited most
from the disturbed conditions in which the empire found itself after
Manzikert were the Selchukid Turks, who had entered
the service of the various Byzantine generals. It was with Turkish
auxiliaries that Romanus IV Diogenes tried to regain his throne after he had
been liberated by Alp Arslan, his captor at Manzikert. His example was
followed by almost all his successors. When Roussel of Bailleul openly rebelled, Michael VII called upon
Turkish auxiliaries to track him down. The same emperor tried to suppress the
rebellion of Nicephorus Botaniates with the help of the bands of Mansur
and Sulaiman, two brothers related to the Selchukid sultan Alp Arslan. It was indeed this use of Turkish Auxiliaries that enabled
the Selchukids to establish themselves in western
Asia Minor. Mansur and Sulaiman had agreed to come to the
assistance of Michael VII, but they were ready at the same time to listen to
the highest bidder, and they soon transferred their services to Botaniates.
Botaniates installed them in Nicaea, and there they established themselves as
masters. It was in this way that Nicaea was lost to the empire. In this way
also were lost the cities of Galatia and Phrygia. Nicephorus Melissenus, who rebelled against Botaniates, was
supported almost entirely by Turkish mercenaries. The cities of Galatia and
Phrygia opened their gates to him; he installed Turkish garrisons in them,
but while he never became emperor, the Turkish garrison took over the cities
in which he had installed them. The Byzantines, in using the Turks as
mercenaries, thus made them masters of western Asia Minor between 1078 and
1081.
Besides its serious effects upon the military
position of the state, the decline of the enrolled soldiers also had serious
consequences for the social structure of the empire. The establishment of the
military estates in the seventh and eighth centuries had contributed greatly
to the growth of the class of the small peasant proprietors. For, while the
eldest son of an enrolled soldier inherited his father's plot, together with
the obligation of military service, the rest of the family were free to
reclaim and cultivate land that was vacant, thus adding to the number of the
free peasant proprietors. But now the depression of the enrolled soldiers
reduced the free element in the agrarian structure of the empire and helped
to bring about the decline of the small peasant proprietors. The fundamental
cause, however, for the decline of the free peasantry in Byzantium was the
greed and love of power of the aristocracy, which used its wealth and
official position to absorb the holdings of the peasantry. The decline of the
free peasantry and the growth of the large estates constitute the
characteristic features of the social history of Byzantium in the tenth and
eleventh centuries.
The great emperors of the tenth century had realized
the dangerous social and political implications of this development and tried
to check it: "Every major emperor from Romanus Lecapenus up
to and including Basil II, with the exception of John Tzimistes, issued more than one novel for this purpose.
These emperors sought to preserve the free peasantry because they considered
it an essential element in the health of the state. As Romanus Lecapenus put it in one of his novels (in 934):
"It is not through hatred and envy of the rich that we take these measures,
but for the protection of the small and the safety of the empire as a
whole.... The extension of the power of the strong — will bring about the
irreparable loss of the public good, if the present law does not bring a
check to it. For it is the many settled on the land, who provide for the general
needs, who pay the taxes and furnish the army with its recruits. Everything
falls when the many are wanting." The strictest among the measures taken
for the protection of the free peasantry was that taken by Basil II
concerning the allelengyon, to which
reference has already been made. But with the death of Basil the effort to
stop the growth of the large estates Came to an end. His law concerning
the allelengyon was repealed, and
the other measures, although kept on the hooks, were not enforced. The fate
of the free peasantry was thus definitely decided. The struggle which in the
eleventh century the central government waged against the military magnates
was not fought for the protection of the free peasantry. Indeed, the government,
by the grants which it made to its partisans, promoted the further growth of
the large estates. Henceforth the large estates were to constitute the
dominant feature of the economic landscape of Byzantium. These estates were
worked by tenant farmers, the paroikoi of
the Byzantine texts, people who were personally free, but who were tied to
certain obligations and corvées which
curtailed their movement. Some free peasant proprietors continued to exist,
but they had become hardly distinguishable from the paroikoi.
Besides working for the lord, the paroikoi had
allotments of their own for which they paid rent and performed various
obligations and from which, after the passage of a number of years, they
could not be evicted. These allotments were transmissible from father to son.
The free peasantry, as Romanus Lecapenus declared, had constituted the principal
element of the strength of the empire. This class cultivated the land,
provided for the general needs, paid the taxes, and furnished the army with
recruits. But, as the holdings of the free peasantry decreased and the large
estates increased, this element of strength was undermined. All land in
Byzantium was in theory subject to taxation, but it was not always easy to
collect from the great magnates, whose influence in the administration
enabled them to obtain important exemptions. Throughout the eleventh century
there was a continuous cry for money, prompted in part no doubt by the
extravagances of some of the emperors, but in part by the reduction in the
revenues resulting from the granting of various exemptions and from the
failure to collect all the taxes. The things with which Isaac Comnenus was
reproached and which rendered him unpopular were his cancellation of
privileges and grants made by his predecessors and his careful collection of
the taxes. But if large magnates could escape the payment of taxes, it was
otherwise with the peasants, the vast majority whom were now tenants. They
had to bear the ever-increasing burden of taxation and, in addition,
numerous corvées. The welfare of the state no
longer had any meaning for them. The peasantry of the interior of Asia Minor
offered no resistance to the Turks. The military class which might have
offered the necessary resistance had also been undermined both by the expansion
of the large estates and the struggle between the military and civil parties
in the eleventh century. The enrolled soldiers, neglected and reduced to
poverty, had neither the will nor the equipment to fight. The mercenaries who
replaced them helped to complete the disintegration of the state.
The growth of the large estates and the consequent
depression of the peasantry resulted also from the development of what has
been called, by some scholars, Byzantine feudalism. This feudalism was based
on institutions which had their origin or became fully developed in the
eleventh century. These institutions were the pronoia, the charistikion and the exkousseia.
The pronoia, which consisted in the
assignment by the government of a revenue-yielding property to a person in
return for certain services, usually but not always military, rendered or to
be rendered, made its appearance about the middle of the eleventh century.
The grant consisted usually of land, but it could be a river or a fishery;
its holder was known as a pronoiarios,
The size of the grant varied from a territory of considerable extent to a
single village or estate sufficient to take care of one family. The grant was
made for a specific period, usually but not always for the lifetime of the
holder. It could he neither alienated nor transmitted to ones heirs, and it
was subject to recall by the imperial treasury. The pronoriarios served
in the army as an officer and was expected, upon call, to furnish some
troops, the number of them depending upon the size of his pronoia.
But at the beginning the pronoia was not granted primarily for
military service; it became primarily military under Alexius Comnenus and his
successors. Its extensive use contributed greatly not only to the growth of
the large estates but to the development of the appanage system, and thus
weakened the central administration.
The charistikion was
a development associated with the management of monastic properties. In
Byzantium the monastic and ecclesiastical properties were very extensive. It
has been estimated by a competent authority on the internal history of
Byzantium that at the end of the seventh century about one third of the
usable land of the empire was in the possession of the church and the
monasteries. Much of this property had been confiscated by the iconoclastic
emperors in the eighth century, but with the defeat of iconoclasm it began to
accumulate again. The attempt made by the emperors of the tenth century,
Nicephorus Phocas in particular, to check this growth met with no success,
about the middle of the eleventh century the monastic properties "were
in no way inferior to those of the crown."
The financial difficulties into which the empire had
fallen in the eleventh century led Isaac Comnenus to envisage the
confiscation of monastic properties. Isaac was primarily interested in
finding the funds which he needed for the military rehabilitation of the
empire, but it was hoped that this measure would also help to ameliorate the
condition of the peasantry. The historian Attaliates,
who reports this measure, writes that “it appeared to be profitable in two
ways: -1- it freed the ... peasants from a heavy burden, for the monks,
relying upon their extensive and wealthy estates, were wont to force them to
abandon their lots ... ; and -2- the public treasury which was forced in
diverse ways to spend its resources obtained an addition and relief which
were not inconsiderable without doing any harm at all to others”. But the
measure rendered Isaac unpopular and was no doubt one of the factors involved
in the intrigues which brought about his abdication. His immediate successors
abandoned the policy of direct confiscation, but at the same time they did
not refrain from the use of monastic properties. They used these properties,
however, not for the financial rehabilitation of the empire, bur in order to
reward friends and favorites. They did this by exploiting an old Byzantine
institution, the charistikion, an
institution not unlike the western beneficium.
The charistikion was
a grant which consisted of one or more monasteries and their properties.
Monasteries thus granted remained monasteries and did not lose title to their
properties, but their management was put under the direction of the persons
to whom they were granted, who, while undertaking to support the monks and
maintain the buildings, appropriated for themselves what remained of the
revenue. The charistikion seems to have
developed as early as the fifth century and may have been invented by the
ecclesiastical hierarchy itself in order to get around the canons of the
church, which did not permit the alienation of monastic properties. It was
greatly exploited by the iconoclastic emperors in their efforts to weaken
monasticism, but with the defeat of iconoclasm it fell into disuse. It
appeared again in the tenth century and reached its widest prevalence in the
eleventh. Originally only monasteries which had fallen into decay were
involved in such a grant, the aim being to have them restored. Gradually,
however, prosperous monasteries came to be included, and they were granted
not for their benefit and upkeep, but for the profit of the who obtained
them. This was so in the eleventh century. Many of the charistikia granted in this century were
granted by the ecclesiastical hierarchy, but there were not a few which were
granted by the emperors. The emperors made their grants to friends and
favorites. In this way they assured themselves of the momentary support of
those persona, but they added to the landed aristocracy whose growth in wealth
and power threatened to undermine the central government. The holder of
a charistikion was known as
a charistikasios, and the grant was
usually made to him for life.
Monastic and other large properties, although
theoretically subject to taxation and other obligations, were in actual fact
the beneficiaries of numerous exemptions. These exemptions were made by a
specific grant; they constitute the exkousseia of
the Byzantine documents.
The date of the origin of the exkousseia is still a matter of dispute, but
the institution already existed in the tenth century and it was widely used
in the eleventh. The term itself is no doubt the hellenized form
of the Latin excusatio (excusare); as an institution it comprised the
exemptions from taxes and corvées and
meant independence from the judicial administration (this independence being
limited); such grants were made by the government to monasteries and large
estates. Most of the documentation concerning the exkousseia dates
from the second half of the eleventh century, and this may mean that it was
during this period that this institution became crystallized. Thus, by the
second half of the eleventh century it became a regular practice to grant
immunities, especially from taxation, and this at a time when the treasury
needed all the resources that it could command.
The battle of Manzikert decided the fate of Asia
Minor and determined much of the subsequent history of the Byzantine empire.
Bet Manzikert was only a battle, and what was lost there might have been
retrieved had the society of the empire been healthier and more vigorous.
Despite its wide territorial extent, however, and its seemingly great power
the empire, such as it was in the eleventh century after the death of Basil
II, was not a healthy organism. The depression of the peasantry deprived it
of a strong pillar of support; the struggle between the military and the
civil parties dissipated its energies and consummated the decay of that group
of soldiers which had been its stoutest defenders. The mercenaries who
replaced them pursued their own interests and did infinitely more harm than
good. At the same time the extensive use of the institutions of the pronoia,
the charistikion, and the exkoussia planted the seeds of further
disintegration.
The most significant fact affecting the Byzantine
church in the eleventh century was the quarrel with Rome. The ecclesiastical
events of 1054 have come down in history as marking the definite separation
of the Greek and Roman churches. In actual fact, however, these events only
accentuated and made worse a situation which already existed. Rome and
Constantinople had not been in communion with each other for at least thirty
years when the quarrel between cardinal Humbert and the Byzantine patriarch
took place. In 1054 no one knew when and under what circumstances the break
had come about, and modern research has not been able to throw much light on
this problem. One thing is certain, however, the break took place before
1024, for in that year the patriarch of Constantinople offered to resume
relations with Rome, provided Rome recognized Constantinople as the head of
the churches in the east. Rome apparently refused, but her refusal did not
affect in any practical way the actual position of the Byzantine church in
the east. The church of Constantinople was in fact the head of the orthodox
churches in the east and what Rome thought made little difference.
This state of affairs might have continued
indefinitely if the situation in southern Italy had not provoked a new
crisis. For some time past the Normans had been conquering the country and
threatened to occupy all the territories which Byzantium still held there. To
check their advance the Byzantine emperor, Constantine IX Monomachus,
resolved to enter into an alliance with the papacy and appointed a new
governor for his Italian possessions with instructions to form such an
alliance. The new governor was Argyrus, the son of
that Melo who in 1017 had hired the Normans to help him in his
rebellion against the Byzantines.
Argyrus was Italian by birth, of Lombard origin, and Latin in religion and
tradition. He had not always been a royal subject, but the ruthlessness of
the Normans had led him definitely to embrace the Byzantine cause. He came to
Constantinople and there exerted his influence in favor of the alliance with
the papacy as the means of checking the Normans. Argyrus was the first native Italian to become Byzantine governor in Italy. But if he
won the confidence of the emperor, there were important elements in the
Byzantine capital, especially among the clergy, who were hostile to him and
looked upon his appointment with suspicion. The patriarch himself had on
several occasions exchanged bitter words with Argyrus when the latter was in Constantinople and had more than once refused him the
communion of his church. Argyrus arrived in Apulia
in 1051 and soon entered into negotiations with the papacy.
The pope with whom Argyrus sought alliance was Leo IX. Leo, who, as is well known, belonged to the party
of reform, had no sooner been elected pope than he began a vigorous campaign
in southern Italy for the elimination of simony and the enforcement of
clerical celibacy. His activities, to be sure, were directed against the
offenders among the Latin clergy under his jurisdiction, but the campaign for
reform, especially the drive for the celibacy of the clergy, was bound
eventually to affect the Greek clergy as well. For with the Greek clergy in southern
Italy continuing to marry, it would have been difficult, if not impossible,
to impose celibacy on their Latin colleagues. But this was a matter which
affected seriously the interests of the Byzantine patriarchate since the
Greek clergy in southern Italy were under its jurisdiction.
The man who then occupied the see of
Constantinople was Michael Cerularius. Cerularius was a powerful personality
and a clever and ambitious politician. He had come near, at one time, to
occupying the imperial throne, and when he became patriarch (1043), his
ambition was to render his church independent of the state. Already disturbed
by the appointment of Argyrus, Cerularius saw in
the Alliance with the papacy and the activities of the pope in southern Italy
a definite threat to the interests of the patriarchate, and this threat he
determined to eliminate. His plan was to provoke a crisis calculated to
render ineffective, at least in so far as it might involve his church, the
alliance with the papacy. He began by closing the Latin churches in
Constantinople (1052 or 1053), and then issued, through Leo, archbishop of
Ochrida, a manifesto against certain usages of the Latin church, particularly
the use of unleavened bread in the celebration of the Eucharist. This
manifesto was addressed to John, bishop of Trani,
who, although Latin, was friendly to the Byzantines, and through him to all
the bishops of the west, including the pope. Subsequent developments in
Italy, the failure of the Byzantines and of Leo IX to stop the Normans, together
with the captivity of Leo IX, made it more imperative for pope and emperor to
cooperate. And Cerularius wrote the pope a more conciliatory letter in which
he said nothing of the Latin usages which he had previously criticized, but
in which he implied that he was the pope's equal. The pope now set aside the
sharp rejoinder which he had prepared against the manifesto of Leo of Ochrida
and drew up a reply to the letter of Cerularius. But if in this reply he
toned down the sharpness of his rejoinder to the manifesto of Leo of Ochrida,
he made it dear that on the fundamental issue, the Subordination of
Constantinople to Rome, he was offering no compromise. The papal delegation
which carried the letter of the pope to the Byzantine patriarch was headed by
cardinal Humbert. No less suitable a man could have been found to head this
delegation. Humbert was a man of limited learning, obstinate, arrogant,
tactless, and easily given to polemics. No sooner had he arrived in
Constantinople than his behavior completely alienated the Byzantine
patriarch. Humbert made matters worse by raising the question of the filioque,
a question to which the Byzantine patriarch had not referred, and charged
that the Byzantines had tampered with the Nicene creed by suppressing that phrase,
when in, truth it was the western church that had done the tampering by
inserting the controversial phrase. In the meantime Leo died (April 13,
1054), and his successor, Victor II, a creature of the German emperor Henry
III, did not take office until April 3, 1055. It is questionable whether
Humbert still had the authority to keep up his activities in Constantinople.
But he continued to make charges against the Byzantine patriarch, and, as the
latter refused to listen or enter into any negotiations, he resolved to hurl
against him and his followers the sentence of excommunication. On Saturday,
July 16, 1054, at the moment when the clergy of Hagia Sophia were
about to celebrate the holy liturgy, the Roman delegation, with Humbert at
the head, marched toward the principal altar and there deposited the Sentence
of excommunication while the Byzantine clergy and people looked on. The
sentence of excommunication was couched in language which could hardly have
been more arrogant and libelous.
It was now the turn of the. Byzantine patriarch to
act. He had been shocked and angered by the contents of the sentence of
excommunication and determined to obtain satisfaction. He straightway
transmitted the document to the emperor and declared that he could not endure
to have such audacity and effrontery go unpunished. Meanwhile the papal
legates had left the capital to return to Rome. They had reached Selymbria (Silivri) when a
message reached them from the emperor, urging them to return, and indicating that
Cerularius was ready to have an interview with them. The legates returned,
but no interview with the Byzantine patriarch ever took place. What actually
happened is difficult to determine since only the accounts of Humbert and
Cerularius have survived, and they are contradictory. This much seems
certain, however. When Cerularius turned to the emperor, he did not intend to
make amends to the papal legates he demanded amends instead. But when the
papal legates were asked to return, they were not informed of the true temper
of the Byzantine patriarch. It was only after they had returned to the
capital that they learned that what he wanted from them was a retraction and
an apology for the sentence of excommunication. This they would not give,
and, as the populace was in an uproar in support of its patriarch, they
decided to leave. The emperor himself, who seems finally to have realized the
seriousness of the situation, urged them to go.
The situation in the capital had indeed become very
serious. The populace, angered by the sentence of excommunication against
Cerularius, was in a riotous mood, and the refusal of the papal legates to
make amends accentuated its temper. A tumult broke out, which forced the
emperor to yield to the demands of the patriarch. Cerularius now proceeded to
take formal action against Humbert and his associates. On July 20, 1054, in
the presence of twenty-one bishops and an embassy from the emperor, he cast
the anathema upon the impious document of excommunication, its authors, and
all those who had participated in any way in its composition and circulation.
He decreed further that all copies of the document were to be
burned. The original, however, was to be kept in the archives of the
patriarchate "to the everlasting dishonor and permanent condemnation of
those who had cast such blasphemies against God". Four days later, on
Sunday, July 24, the same bishops sitting in synod renewed the condemnation
in an atmosphere of greater solemnity. It was then read to the public.
Scholars have tended to attribute the schism of 1054
to the Byzantine patriarch. This is because Cerularius was responsible, by
his sponsorship of the manifesto of Leo of Ochrida, for provoking the
controversy. That the manifesto of Leo of Ochrida was provocative there can be
no doubt, but Cerularius, as his letter to Leo IX shows, was not indisposed
to compromise. Any compromise, however, had to take into account the actual
position of the Byzantine patriarchate. Cerularius presided over the
Byzantine church at a time when the see of Constantinople had
achieved the widest territorial extent in its history, and its prestige and
power bad reached their highest point. The failure of the papal legates to
realize this was what made all negotiations impossible. As Jugie writes: "the Roman legates were under
illusions concerning the sentiments of the Byzantines on the whole toward the
Latins. They had wished to separate the cause of the patriarch and his clergy
from that of the emperor and the people, to treat Cerularius like a black
sheep of St. Peter's flock, to act in Constantinople as they would have acted
in a city of the west. And they did not notice that in Constantinople they
cut the figures of arrogant strangers with insupportable airs. It was enough
for their sentence to be known to provoke a popular tumult." The same
scholar writes with reference to the sentence of excommunication against the
Byzantine patriarch: "from every point of view this theatrical act was
deplorable; deplorable, because it could be asked whether the legates were
duly authorized to take a measure so serious at a time when the Holy See was
vacant; deplorable, because useless and ineffectual, for Humbert and his
companions had no means of having the sentence executed; deplorable
especially by the contents of the sentence itself and the tone in which it
was drawn up. Besides the well founded grievances,
it reproached Cerularius and his partisans, and indirectly all the
Byzantines, with a series of imaginary crimes and heresies."
The Greek chroniclers of the period make no mention
of the schism of 1054. This is somewhat puzzling, although there are other
events in the history of Byzantium which contemporary historians do not
record. Quite possibly this schism was not considered significant enough to
be recorded. Unlike previous schisms, that of 1054 did not involve any
division in the Greek church itself. The exchange of anathemas between
Humbert and Cerularius no doubt left some bitterness in its wake, but it did
not greatly affect the actual state of the relations between the two sees.
The names of the popes, which for some years before to 1054 had not been in
the diptychs of the Constantinopolitan church, simply remained off, and the
Byzantine church continued in its own independent way. There is some evidence
that Leichudes, who succeeded Cerularius,
communicated with the pope, Alexander II, in 1062, but it is not known what
prompted him to do so. The point of the communication was to ask the pope to
furnish irrefragable proof of the doctrine of the Filioque."
Ten years later pope Alexander II made an effort to end the schism, but the
Greeks showed no desire to enter into negotiations."
The deterioration in the external situation of the
empire finally induced the Greeks to try to establish better relations with
the papacy. In 1073 Michael VII addressed a letter to Gregory VII which was
supplemented by an oral message imparted to the pope by those who brought the
letter. Neither the letter nor a record of the oral message has survived but
a careful. study of Gregory's reply and his various letters relating to the
east indicate that the problem of the union of the churches and the need of
the empire for military assistance in order to check the Turks constituted
the subject matter of the imperial message. Gregory was very much impressed
by the emperor's messages and sent his representative to Constantinople for
further investigation, but nothing came out of the negotiations. A few years
later the relations between Rome and Constantinople actually became worse as
a result of Gregory’s open support of Guiscard's invasion of the Byzantine
empire. On July 25, 1080, Gregory wrote to the bishops of Apulia and Calabria
asking them to lend all possible help to the expedition which Guiscard was
about to undertake against Byzantium. Guiscard attacked the Greeks as
schismatics. Thus, as Alexius Comnenus ascended the throne, the empire faced,
in addition to its other enemies, the active enmity of the papacy. The reason
for was the refusal of the Greeks to agree to the union of the churches on
conditions dictated to them by the papacy.
The civil wars which followed Manzikert ended in
1081 when Alexius Comnenus ascended the throne. The empire which the youthful
Alexius now undertook to rule was on the brink of dissolution. Its treasury
was empty; its armies were still disorganized; its enemies were many and
active. In the Balkan peninsula, Guiscard, with the blessings of Gregory VII,
was on the point of invading the territories of the empire; the Serbs were
restless and hostile; and the Pechenegs and Kumans were ready to
launch new attacks. In Asia Minor the effective control of the empire was
restricted to localities on the coast of the Sea of Marmara, including
Nicomedia, but even these were threatened by the new Turkish state which was
arising in Nicaea. At the same time the Turkish adventurer Chaka established
himself in Smyrna (Izmir), built a fleet, seized some of the islands of the
Aegean, and threatened Constantinople itself.
That the empire was able to survive was due
primarily to the remarkable ability and almost inexhaustible energy of
Alexius. He found the funds which he needed immediately by the confiscation
of the valuables of the church; he improvised an army by enrolling numerous
mercenaries; he neutralized, by overtures and concessions, some of his
enemies in order that he might deal with them singly. Alexius was well versed
in the technique of Byzantine diplomacy and used very expertly the principle
of divide and rule.
When Guiscard invaded the empire in the spring of
1081, Alexius was engaged with the Selchukids of
Nicaea, but he quickly came to terms with them. About the same time he
entered into negotiations with Henry IV of Germany and tried to sow dimension
among the Normans in southern Italy. He also concluded a treaty with the
Venetians whereby he obtained their naval support in return for commercial
privileges (1082). The essential element of these privileges consisted in the
right to buy and sell in certain stipulated localities of the empire free
front all duties. The granting of these privileges was destined to undermine
the economic prosperity of the empire, but for the time at least it obtained
for Alexius an important source of support in his struggle against the Norman
leader. Alexius's first encounter with Guiscard near Dyrrachium ended
in disaster; Dyrrachium soon fell to the enemy and the way was
opened to Thessalonica and thence to Constantinople. But the negotiations of
Alexius with Henry IV and his intrigues among the Normans in southern Italy
now bore fruit. While Henry IV marched upon Rome to resolve his differences
with Gregory VII, a revolt broke out in southern Italy against the authority
of Guiscard. These events forced Guiscard to return to Italy, leaving his
son, Bohemond, to carry on the war against the emperor. Bohemond met with
initial successes, but Alexius kept after him with remarkable tenacity and
succeeded in breaking the backbone of the invasion. In 1083 Bohemond returned
to Italy. In the following year Guiscard organized another expedition; it won
some successes at first, but, when Guiscard suddenly died in 1085, it was
abandoned. The Norman danger, for the present at least, was over.
But not so the tribulations of Alexius. For it was
now the turn of the nomads from the north, the Pechenegs and Kumans, to
try their fortunes against the forces of the empire. This time they had the
cooperation of the Bogomiles, adherents of a
heretical sect, who dwelt in the region of Philippopolis and whose
hostility to the Greeks was no secret. Urged by the Begomiles,
the Pechenegs and Kumans broke into Thrace in 1086, defeated one
Byzantine general, but were stopped by another. They returned in 1087 only
to be driven beyond the Balkans. But in the autumn of the following year they
inflicted, near Dristra (Silistra) on the lower Danube, a terrible defeat on the
Byzantine emperor, who had taken the offensive against them. Alexius barely
escaped with his life. The situation was momentarily saved by the quarrel
over the spoils which broke out between the Pechenegs and the Kumans.
This momentary relief was further extended by a treaty of peace which Alexius
concluded with the Pechenegs but the respite thus gained was only of short
duration. The crisis came in the winter of 1090/1091, provoked this time by
the adventurer Chaka, who conceived the grandiose plan of making himself
emperor of Constantinople. He induced the Pechenegs to attack the empire by
land while he himself besieged the capital by sea and abu-l-Qasim, the sultan of Nicaea, attacked Nicomedia in
Asia Minor. Chaka had forged a ring around the Byzantine capital.
The Pechenegs broke into Thrace, defeated the
Emperor, and fought their way to the environs of the capital. The diplomacy
of Alexius saved the situation. Alexius entered into negotiations with
the Kumans and induced them to take up arms against their former
confederates. The decisive encounter took place on April 29, 1091. The
Pechenegs were literally cut to pieces and as a people, almost disappeared
from history.
Chaka still remained active, but the diplomacy of
Alexius eliminated him also. The peaceful relations which Alexius had
established with the Selchukids of Nicaea at the
time of the invasion of the empire by Guiscard were disturbed following the
death of Sulaiman, the sultan of Nicaea, who had been killed in 1085
while trying to extend his rule over Syria. His successor at Nicaea was abu-l-Qasim, the man who cooperated with Chaka by
attacking Nicomedia. Abu-l-Qasim, following the annihilation of the
Pechenegs, planned to attack Constantinople itself, but he was beaten by the
Byzantine forces and decided to accept a treaty of alliance which Alexius
offered to him. Meanwhile his relations with the great sultan Malik-Shah,
ruler, in theory at least, of all the Selchukids were not cordial, and this led to his death in 1o92. Shortly after this event
Nicaea fell into the hands of Kilij Arslan, the son of Sulaiman.
Alexius, who sea and land forces were making some progress against Chaka,
pointed out to Killj Arslan that the
growth of the power of Chaka would endanger his own lands and induced him to
accept the alliance which he offered him. Chaka went to see Arslan, but the
latter murdered him after a banquet. Constantinople was now free from any
immediate danger.
Meanwhile Alexius consolidated his position inside
the empire. He did this by the creation of a coterie of friends, with the
members of his family as the nucleus, upon whom he could rely and to whom he
could entrust the administration and defense of the empire. To keep their
loyalty he compensated these men by land grants and other favors. "To
his relatives and favorites," writes Zonaras, "Alexius
distributed the public goods by wagon loads; he granted to them sumptuous
annual revenues. The great wealth with which they were surrounded and the
retinue which was assigned to them were more becoming to kings than to
private individuals. The homes which they acquired appeared like cities in
size and were no less magnificent than the imperial palace itself." More
detailed and precise information about this is given in documents which
Alexius himself issued. These documents deal with the land grants that
Alexius made to his partisans. For instance, in 1084 Alexius granted the
entire peninsula of Cassandria to his
brother Adrian. But in this Alexius made no radical innovations. He exploited
more extensively institutions which were already in existence. This was
particularly true of the pronoia and the charistikion.
Alexius also established better relations with the
papacy. The initial step in this was taken by Urban II, but the matter was
really pushed by Alexius. In 1089 Alexius received a letter from Urban II in
which the pope urged the establishment of peace and harmony in the church,
complained that the papal name had been removed from the diptychs of the
Constantinopolitan church, without canonical justification, and made the
request that it be restored. In order that the papal request might be
considered, a synod was held in Constantinople in September 1089. It was
attended by the patriarch of Constantinople, the patriarch of Antioch,
eighteen metropolitans, and two archbishops, and was presided over by
Alexius.
When the synod met, Alexius submitted to it the
papal proposal, asked for the documents attesting the separation of Rome from
Constantinople, and inquired whether it was because of these documents that
the name of the pope was not in the diptychs of the church of Constantinople.
The ecclesiastics present replied that no such documents existed, but that
there were between the two churches important differences of a canonical
nature which it was necessary to regulate. Alexius then expressed the view
that, since there was no official record of the separation of Rome from
Constantinople, the papal name had been uncanonically removed from
the diptychs and it should be put back. To this the ecclesiastics replied
that too much time had elapsed since the removal of the papal name from the
diptychs to put it back before the elimination of the objections which they
had against the Latins. The synod, with Alexius agreeing, finally reached the
following compromise.
Urban II should first of all send to Constantinople
his profession of faith. If the pope's profession of faith were found to be
sound, if he accepted the seven ecumenical councils and the local synods
which the latter had approved, if he condemned the heretics and the errors
which the church condemned, and if he respected and accepted the holy canons
which the fathers of the church had adopted at the sixth ecumenical council,
then his name would be put back in the diptychs of the church of
Constantinople. This arrangement was to be temporary, pending the holding of
a council in Constantinople which was to regulate and eliminate the
differences between the two churches. This council was to be held within
eighteen months after the receipt of the papal profession of faith and was to
be attended either by a papal delegate or by the pope himself. The synod
urged the patriarchs of Alexandria and Jerusalem to accept this compromise.
At the same time a message from the patriarch of
Constantinople, Nicholas III, was sent to Urban II. In this message the
patriarch expressed his joy over the receipt of the papal letter, apparently
the letter which Urban had sent to Alexius requesting that his name be
reentered in the diptychs. He was pained to hear, however, that he had been
represented to the pope as indisposed towards the Latins and as excluding
them from the churches. The Latins, he declared, were free to enter the
churches and to celebrate their religious services, and he was aware that the
same freedom was enjoyed by the Greeks of southern Italy. But the pope would
have acted well if he had sent him, as was the custom of old, the
announcement of his elevation to the papal see together with his profession
of faith. He could still do it however. The patriarch himself desired, with
all his heart, the unity of the church. But if the patriarch desired the
unity of the church on the fundamental questions which separated Rome from
Constantinople he was far from willing to yield. This is quite clear from a
letter which he addressed to the patriarch of Jerusalem. The letter in
question is without title, signature, date, or address, but Grumel has produced sufficient evidence in support
of his view that it was written in 1o89 by the patriarch of Constantinople,
Nicholas III, to Symeon II, patriarch of
Jerusalem. In this letter the patriarch of Constantinople defended the
position of the Greek church on the question of the filioque,
the azyme, and the primacy of the papacy. He wrote to
the patriarch of Jerusalem in order to counteract the effects of a letter
which the pope had sent to the patriarch of Jerusalem in which he expressed
his desire for the unity of the churches, urging that there should be one
head for the church, and that the pope of Rome, as the successor of St.
Peter, should be that head.
It is not definitely known what the reaction of
Urban II was to the compromise offered to him by Alexius and the Byzantine
clergy. There is some evidence that he accepted it and that as a consequence
the communion between the two churches was provisionally reestablished. But
the step which was to make this communion permanent was never taken. The
realization of the union on a permanent basis was indeed a most difficult
task. For the crucial points the fundamental difference between the two churches,
was the primacy of Rome, and on that the Byzantine clergy, as is shown by the
attitude of the patriarch of Constantinople, were in no mood to compromise.
Yet Alexius did succeed in removing some of the differences which separated
him from the papacy and in establishing good personal relations with the
pope.
Thus by 1095 Alexius had removed the dangers which had threatened Constantinople, had consolidated his own position in the empire, and had established better personal relations with the papacy. He was now ready to undertake the offensive which he hoped would enable him to recover Asia Minor from the Turks. This task was difficult indeed, but he hoped to accomplish it with the aid. of the west. It was for this reason that in 1095 he appealed to Urban II for help. And to succeed in obtaining this help he used the argument that it was necessary to liberate the Holy Land from the Turks. The result was the First Crusade
CHAPTER VIIITHE COUNCILS OF PIACENZA AND CLERMONT
|