For a long time Rome with
its vast church treasures had tempted them.
its vast church treasures had tempted them.
Cambridge Medieval History - v2 - Rise of the Saracens and Foundation of the Western Empire
In the northern
corner of Spain a remnant of the opposition against the penetration of
Islam had preserved its independence as a State; year by year this small
State grew in size, and in a short time it inserted itself like a wedge
between the Arabian magnates and the Pyrenees. On this was founded
the legend of St Pelagius, which is treated more fully in another part of
this work.
Under these circumstances the expansion of the Muslims came to a
natural standstill from internal causes, and the consequences of the
battle of Tours or Poitiers must therefore not be exaggerated. The
plundering of these towns would decidedly not have resulted in a
permanent occupation of Gaul by the Saracens. Their defeat before
Constantinople was of vastly greater significance. The fall of Constan-
tinople would have entirely remodelled the history of the East, as in
fact it did, seven centuries later.
The battle then of Tours or Poitiers marked the extreme point of
advance of the Saracens into Western Europe, but it was not the cause
of the sudden stoppage, or rather recess of the movement. That fact
lay, as above stated, in the feud between Arabs and Berbers. This strife
was bound to be so much the more fatal for the Arabs, as at the same
time the discord between Kais and Kalb in the East made its influence
felt in the West also, and thus broke up the compact unity of the
hitherto paramount nationality. The details of this process have little
value for the history of the Saracen expansion treated in these chapters.
A brief description of the principal events will suffice to explain the
other great advance of the Saracens against Mid-Europe (Sicily, Sardinia
and South Italy).
The whole of the western portion of the empire of the Caliph, the
so-called Maghrib, i. e. Northern Africa and Spain, was placed after the
## p. 376 (#408) ############################################
376 Disturbances under Hishdm [c. 730
completion of the conquest under various governors, who had their
seat of government in Kairawan. The Spanish sub-prefects however
often had an almost independent position. They resided at first at
Seville, but shortly afterwards chose as the seat of government
Cordova, which was thus destined for centuries to become the brilliant
residence of the western Caliphate. Until its secession from the eastern
main empire, and in fact for centuries afterwards, the destinies of Spain
were united in the closest manner with those of Northern Africa through
the Berbers, who were now settled on both sides of the Straits of
Gibraltar. Thus it came that Spain, on the outbreak of Berber unrest
in Northern Africa, was at once drawn into this fatal movement. The
only difference was that in Northern Africa the Berbers were the
subjects, who had however expected to attain an equal footing with
the Arabs by the adoption of Islam, whilst in Spain the Arabs and
Berbers had together conquered a foreign land, whose wealth and
territory they divided. At this stage the Arabs committed the great
mistake of shewing themselves too ostentatiously as the masters, i. e.
in Africa they proceeded arrogantly and violently against the proud
Berbers, who had cost so much trouble to subdue, whilst in Spain they
allotted the Berbers the worst portion of the booty. This caused a
first revolt, which was however but partial. The Berber Munusa in
Northern Spain declared his independence, and entered into friendly,
even family connexions with the Duke Eudo. His call however found
but little response among his countrymen, and he was put down with
little trouble (729 or 730).
More serious were the developments in Africa. It was at the
time of Caliph Hisham, under whom the revision of Omar's system
of taxation, which had gradually become a necessity, was enforced more
generally and energetically. The bureaucracy which accompanied this
revision, and the Asiatic despotism which was gradually creeping in,
were nowhere so unsuitable as in the mountain homes of the Berbers,
who were only held in check by diplomacy and the prospect of booty.
As with the Orientals in general and especially with the Berbers every
national or economical opposition easily assumes a religious tinge, so it
was in this case too. We have already spoken of the Kharijites, who
had detached themselves from Ali after the battle of Siffin. Their
doctrine was that of the absolute sovereignty of the people, who were
justified at all times in deposing an unjust Caliph or Imam. We have
already indicated that the Umayyads had much trouble with these
people. The profession of the doctrine of the Kharijites was one of
the most important forms in which the opposition against the growing
despotism and the bureaucracy found expression, especially among the
old-Arabian circles, just as, among the Persians, this opposition took
the form of the ShI'a. With the increasing tension betwixt Umayyad
ti'oops and the Berber populace, the Kharijite ideas had an unsuspected
## p. 377 (#409) ############################################
741-745] Fall of the Umayyads ',■ 377
spread among the latter. And as the Arabs had now lost their readiness
for battle by reason of their tribal feuds, the Berbers ventured, under
the Caliph Hisham, openly to secede. After local revolts, which were
quickly suppressed, a serious rebellion began in the extreme west. The
whole territory of what is now called Morocco within a short period
shook off the domination of the Arabs (741). Hisham hereupon sent
a powerful army, composed of the best Syrian troops, to Africa, and it
was intended that this force should co-operate with the garrisons already
there. But the feuds amongst the Arabs themselves more than counter-
balanced their better equipment, and in consequence the Berbers won a
mighty victory (741) at the river Sebu, or, as the best Latin authority
gives it, "super Huvium Nauam," and thus put in doubt the supremacy
of the Arabs. Later on numerous fugitives crossed over into Spain and
brought new confusion into the confusion there prevailing. But here as
there for a short period the authority of Damascus was once more
restored. Hanzala ibn §afwan, the new governor, managed by time-
honoured methods to prevent common action on the part of the Berbers,
and then later vanquished the main body of the Berber troops (742) at
Asnam, not far from Kairawan. His representative, 'Abu-1-Khattar,
then enforced order in Spain. The Berber revolt was thus broken, but
it was the Berbers notwithstanding, and not the Arabs, who decided the
destinies of the countries. Though the majority returned to Muslim
orthodoxy, remnants of the Kharijites have maintained their position
in Northern Africa even to the present day, under the name of Ibadites.
This peace lasted scarcely three years. Spain arose out of the new
tumults as an independent State, for which a period of high prosperity
was in prospect. In North Africa too a series of independent States was
gradually formed. After the residence of the Caliph had been removed
nearer to Central Asia it was probably natural that the Mediter-
ranean territories, inhabited by a vigorous population, should begin
a separate existence as States. After the fall of the Umayyads the
countries to the east of Barka, permeated by the Saracen expansion, only
occasionally and then only nominally held common cause with the
Eastern Empire. The first usurper preserved at least the appearance of
dependence. In the year 745 'Abd-ar-Rahman ibn Habib, of the tribe
of Fihr, declared himself in Tunis independent of the governor Hanzala,
who had conducted the affairs of the Maghrib since the revolt of
Kairawan. Belonging to a race long tried and approved on African
soil, 'Abd-ar-Rahman could count on followers by reason of the universal
discontent. By a brutal intrigue he compelled Hanzala to leave Africa
without drawing the sword. The last of the Umayyads, Marwan, sub-
sequently legalised the de facto authority of 'Abd-ar-Rahman. For this
'Abd-ar-Rahman paid a small tribute and named the Caliph in his pulpit
prayers, but he was otherwise his own master; and his position was not
influenced by the change in the dynasty in the East. When the rule of
## p. 378 (#410) ############################################
378 Saracen Kingdoms in Northern Africa [754-800
the Abbasids had become consolidated and it was proposed to make an
energetic attack on him from Bagdad, he renounced his obedience to
the Abbasids and received fugitive Umayyads as honoured guests in
Kairawan (754-755). These Umayyad princes however brought discord
into 'Abd-ar-Rahman's family, in connexion with which he himself and
two of the princes met their deaths. A third prince, 'Abd-ar-Rahman
ibn Mu'awiya, forced his way through to Spain and became the founder
of the western Caliphate. In Africa the murder of Ibn Habib led to a
general disorganisation and set free all the tendencies towards decentral-
isation. Independent Berber dynasties arose in the extreme West, as
for instance the Banu Midrar in Sijilmasa (757) and Banu Rustam in
Tahert (761), the latter under the banner of the Kharijites; in the
nearer West the Arabs on the one hand and the Berbers, who had also
separated into parties, on the other, fought for the possession of
Kairawan, which did not again acknowledge the authority of the
Abbasids until 761, and then only for a short time; the province of
Africa, as far as to the border of Algeria, was once more restored,
though with disturbances and interruptions, but the whole of the far
West remained irretrievably lost.
Here in the far West a third State was soon founded. A descendant
of Ali named Idris, who had fled from the Abbasids, created for himself,
in the year 788, an independent kingdom, which soon extended eastward
to beyond the town of Tlemcen. Here again a clever leader managed to
unite the Berbers by a religious party-cry. The kingdom of the Idrisids
was the first Shi'ite State founded in the West.
The remainder of the province of Maghrib once so extensive was
moreover destined to make itself independent in the last decade of the
eighth century. The constant dissensions between the Arab leaders and
tribes could no longer be permanently controlled by the governors sent
from Bagdad. The Amir of Mzab (in the back-country of Algeria) Ibrahim
ibn Aghlab, who had grown up in Africa, and whose father had been
the means of reconquering the Mzab, was on the other hand the right
man in the right place to restore state authority (800). When he had
succeeded in this however he demanded from the Caliph the hereditary
investiture in return for payment of a tribute and the customary
naming of the Caliph in the pulpit prayers and on the coinage. This
amounted to complete independence. Thus arose the dynasty of the
Aghlabids of Kairawan, which gave to Africa a series of clever, but
also often worthless, rulers. In proportion to the smallness of their
kingdom they had a considerable naval force, and thus they became the
leaders of the expansion of Islam into Mid-Europe. It was under them
that Sicily was conquered.
Before turning however to Sicily, we must still sketch the further
destinies of Northern Africa, in as far as it is connected with the history
of Islam in Southern Europe. In spite of their brilliant performances
## p. 379 (#411) ############################################
909—H71] Idrisids and Fatimites 379
the authority of the Aghlabids was in a tottering state. The diversion
to Sicily of the generals and troops, always inclining towards insub-
ordination, gave them a respite for a considerable time; after lasting
for a century their kingdom was destroyed by the political lack of
discipline of the Berber tribes and by bloody quarrels within the dynasty
itself.
These conditions were cleverly utilised by the Shi'ite opposition,
which just at that time, after many ill-successes in Asia, had pushed
forward into Africa, where the propaganda of the Idrisids had paved
the way for them. The leader of the movement was named 'Ubaidallah,
whose descent from AH is by no means established beyond doubt; the
race itself however was called, after Fatima, the daughter of the Prophet,
the Fatimites. When 'Ubaidallah had become master of the situation
in the year 909, through the fortunate trend of circumstances and
his skill in recruiting, he assumed the cognomen Mahdi, i. e. the
directed one, a title in which the old claims of Alfs kinsmen to the
Caliphate found expression. Mahdi founded a new capital, Mahdiya,
and established a State which for centuries held the supremacy in the
eastern Mediterranean. For this end of course the possession of Egypt
was needed, but the acquisition of this was first effected by Mu'izz
(969), Mahdrs third successor, who was the founder of Cairo. The
centre of gravity of the Fatimite kingdom was now transferred eastward,
especially when Syria also was conquered. Africa soon attained inde-
pendence again as a State under Yusuf Bulukkin, a Berber of the
Sanhaja, the governor appointed by the Fatimites; Yusuf founded the
dynasty of the Zlrids (972-1148), alongside of whom the Hammadids
held their ground in the West, and specially in Algeria, from 1107 till
1152. The kingdom of the Idrisids in Morocco had in the meantime
been split up into a number of petty principalities. The Fatimites
however remained the rulers of the eastern territory, and under them
Egypt experienced its most brilliant times, but suffered also its worst
defeat. In 1171 the heir to the Fatimite kingdom was Salad in.
We were compelled to give an anticipatory sketch of the history of
North Africa until the commencement of the times of the Crusades, in
order to understand the second great advance of the Saracens against
Sicily and Southern Italy as one connected whole. Incidents from the
standpoint of individual countries, these regular attacks of the Muslims
on Mid-Europe are presented, in the light of universal history, as a
connected movement, which naturally closes with the occupation of
Sicily and also of parts of the Continent. As in Spain, the reaction of
the Christian world follows upon the action of Islam. Just as they
came, so the Muslims are gradually forced back. Here we have to do
with the forward action alone, and though from chance reasons this
took place much later in Sicily and Italy than in Spain or Asia Minor,
yet its description comes notwithstanding within the scope of a general
## p. 380 (#412) ############################################
380 First Raids on Sicily [c. 664
history of the expansion of the Saracens, for the conquest of Sicily is
connected in the most intimate way with the occupation of Northern
Africa, and could only succeed after the conditions in the latter territory
had somewhat improved. It is the same movement which took the
Saracens across the Straits of Gibraltar. The subsequent advance of
the world of Islam against Eastern Europe and the occupation of
Constantinople by the Turks are in no way connected with the original
movement as described here; the events now related below are the hut
ramification of the Arabian exodus.
As Michele Amari says in his classical work on the Muslims in Sicily,
only a glance at the map is needed to shew that Sicily must be
involved in continuous war with the Saracens after their occupation
of Africa. And yet this same great historian represents the first naval
expedition against Sicily not as starting from Africa but from Syria,
and that too at a time when the subsequent Caliph Mu'awiya was still
governor of Syria. The strongly contradictory reports about this event
may most easily be reconciled by regarding the first appearance of an
Arabian fleet in Sicily as taking place under the Caliphate of Mu'awiya,
and connecting it with the expedition of his African governor, Mu'awiya
ibn Hudaij, against the Byzantines (664). Arabian tradition also
accepts this Ibn Hudaij as the leader. It is quite probable that he
himself never saw Sicily, but that the raid was made under his orders by
his representative, 'Abdallah ibn Kais. It is however quite certain that
this naval expedition did not start from Syria but from the Pentapolis
(Barka); the Syrian fleet had opportunities of booty nearer home; of
the Pentapolis however we learn from the papyri that it was an
important naval base in the seventh century, and here the fleet operating
in the west received recruits from the fleets coming from Egypt. This
opportunity serves to point out once again that, with the exception oi
special occasions the regular war of the Arabs against the Byzantines
consisted of individual summer campaigns, which bore the name Kovpavi
and took place by water or on land. From this old custom piracy, that
terrible scourge of the western Mediterranean, was developed in course
of time as the great kingdoms became split up into small states, and the
name Corsair is also etymologically related to the word Kovp<rov. The
despatch of the fleet by Ibn Hudaij was such a Kovpaov. The booty
consisted of captive women and church treasures, images, which according
to the Arabian historians Mu'awiya endeavoured to sell for gold a>
quickly as possible among the idol-worshipping Indians.
Just as this first expedition against Sicily was connected with
the occupation of Northern Africa, so we must not disconnect the
occasional raids of the following decades from the ever-increasing use of
the fleet in the western seat of war. It can therefore cause no surprise
that during the regime of the great pacificators of the Berbers, tV.
under Hassan and Musfi, war was waged on Sicily more frequently.
## p. 381 (#413) ############################################
740—827] Conquest of Sicily 381
At that time also the small island of Pantellaria, the stepping-stone
between Africa and Sicily, was occupied by the Arabs, and Sardinia was
plundered. It is needless to recount in detail all these numerous
piratical expeditions against the islands of the Mediterranean. They
were the terror of the residents on the coast, but very little was in reality
attained by them. In any case Sicily must have been well defended. But
if Syracuse itself could only purchase the retirement of 'Abd-ar-Rahman
ibn Habib by payment of tribute (740), and even if this ruler, after
acquiring the sovereignty in Northern Africa, attempted to gain Sicily
also, these matters were but incidents which had no influence on the
course of history. During the second half of the eighth century Sicily
was scarcely troubled at all by its tormentors, for, as we have seen,
Northern Africa was almost in a state of anarchy.
It was not until after a more powerful State had been formed by the
Aghlabids that the expeditions against Sicily were at once renewed.
Not only the Aghlabids but also the Idrisids and even the Spanish
Muslims took part in these piratical raids, each as a rule on their own
account but occasionally working conjointly. When the Sicilians had
perhaps succeeded in completing a treaty with the Aghlabids and
looked forward to a period of rest and peace, then the vessels of the
Idrisids would suddenly appear. A large proportion of these ex-
peditions have another connexion, for the raids are episodes in the long
fight between the Franks and the Spanish Umayyads, but in the case of
many of these sudden attacks we cannot now determine the State to
which the Saracens in question belonged. One expedition in the year
813 is specially well known to us, because it advanced far to the north-
ward and even touched on Nice and Civita Vecchia. In the same year
or shortly afterwards Reggio also received a first Saracenic visitation.
Corsica in particular was in the midst of the fighting, whilst Sardinia
was better able to defend itself; the smaller islands, eg. the Pontine
group and even Ischia (8-12 Aug. 812), were occasionally attacked—in
fact, a revival of the Saracen expansion began. But still great successes
could not be recorded, for on the one hand various Saracenic fleets were
lost at sea through storms, and on the other hand not only the
Byzantines but also Charles the Great took energetic steps to secure
their lands against the ravages of the Saracens, though they generally
confined themselves to acting on the defensive. As for such a thing as
paying the Saracens off in their own coin by undertaking a piratical
expedition to Northern Africa, that occurred but once, when the African
coast between Utica and Carthage was terrorised by a small Frankish
fleet under Earl Bonifacius of Tyrrhenia.
There was no really serious advance of the Saracens against European
territory, until the year 827. Acting not on their own initiative, but
called in to the assistance of a Christian insurrection, the Aghlabids
conquered the rich island of Sicily. By this means an outpost of Islam
## p. 382 (#414) ############################################
382 Conquest of Sicily [829—859
was pushed forward close to Italy, and it followed as a matter of course
that the Saracens became an important factor in the diversified confusion
of the States of Central and Southern Italy.
The occasion was a military revolt, such as was of everyday occurrence
in Sicily, the "Siberia" of the Byzantine Empire. The details are not
clear, but we may probably assume, with Amari, that Euphemius, the
leader of the rebels, was compelled to flee from the Byzantine governor,
Photeinos. He went to Africa to Ziyadatallah I, the third prince of
the race of Aghlabids, requested help, and promised, after the conquest
of the island, to regard himself as Ziyadatallah's vassal. The latter
took counsel with his all-powerful minister, the Kadi Asad ibn al-Furat,
then seventy years of age, who, as head of the clergy, was leader of the
internal policy of the Aghlabids, founded as it was on orthodoxy, and
who moreover must be described as a military leader of eminence. The
opportunity was favourable, and therefore no delay could be brooked in
carrying the religious war to the long-coveted island. Apart from this,
no better opportunity could be found to keep the ever-insubordinate
Arabs and Berbers employed. Thus the undertaking was resolved on
and at once commenced.
The aged Kadi himself undertook to lead the army, consisting of
11,000 men, which landed at Mazara, defeated Photeinos and advanced
to Syracuse. But at this stage of the proceedings a reverse followed.
The town was impregnable; an epidemic, to which Asad himself succumbed,
broke out among the besieging troops; Euphemius was murdered; the
Byzantines sent fresh troops, but Ziyadatallah was unable to send
reinforcements on account of the unrest in Africa. The Africans there-
fore were compelled to retire on Mazara and Mineo, and it began to
appear as if this energetic attempt to conquer the island would fail.
The blockaded Africans however were relieved by Spanish co-religionists
(829), and then the aspect of affairs was changed. Palermo was
conquered in the beginning of September 831 by fresh troops from
Africa. The Muslims even began to form connexions with the States
on the Continent, of which we shall see more presently. The Byzantines
were forced back step by step. For all that, the war lasted over ten
years longer before the capture of Messina (probably 843) by the Aghlabid
prince, Abu-1-Aghlab Ibrahim. Byzantium could no longer help the
Sicilians, for all the troops were required in the East. They still
held out however at a few points. The apparently impregnable Castro-
giovanni, situated on a high sugar-loaf mountain, which even to the
present has maintained a remarkably sinister medieval character, did
not fall till the year 859, after a long defence, into the hands of
'Abbas ibn al-Fadl, who had succeeded Ibrahim. But the energy of
the undisciplined African soldiery did not last beyond this stage, and
even before the island was completely conquered the Arabs and Berbers
were at daggers drawn and the Saracenic advance appears to have
## p. 383 (#415) ############################################
814-1061] Invasion of Italy 383
come to a standstill here from the same reasons as in Southern France.
The last energetic prince of the house of the Aghlabids, Ibrahim II,
further succeeded (21 May 878) in capturing and destroying Syracuse.
Later on he came himself to Sicily and attacked with brutal cruelty the
only Christian communities who were still independent, in the Etnadistrict,
and he also destroyed Taormina (902). The conquest of Sicily was thus
completed. The re-conquest by the Normans did not begin till 1061.
Ibrahim II met his death in the same year before Cosenza, after
having carried the religious war across the straits into Calabria. He
was not the first Saracen on Italian ground, for immediately after the
conquest of Palermo the Aghlabid generals had interfered in the
internecine quarrels of the Lombard States in Southern Italy, and thus
these Aghlabids had soon become the terror of Southern and Central
Italy. Everyone who has travelled along the incomparable coast
between Naples and Palermo knows the numerous "Saracen towers,'" the
ruins of the coastguard towers, from which the approach of Sicilian or
African fleets had to be announced. Even to-day, in the time of a
peaceful, money-bringing invasion of foreigners, there still dwells in the
memories of the people occupying this favoured country the recollection
of that other invasion of quite other character, the Saracen calamity,
which for centuries restricted all healthy development. This forms the
final chapter in the spread of Islam into Central Europe. In depicting
it we must rely mostly on western sources, as the Arab-Berber robber-
States which sprang up in Southern Italy never attained civilisation
enough to have literary records, and Sicilian and Eastern writers tell us
little about Italy1.
As in Sicily so in Italy the Saracens did not come without an appeal.
For a long time past the Duchy of Benevento had endeavoured to annex
the free town of Naples, which was besieged at various times and was
compelled to agree to the payment of a tribute, which however was
at once suspended whenever any resistance appeared possible. After
having unsuccessfully requested Louis the Pious (814-840) to intervene,
and having also been unable to find any sufficiently powerful allies in
his own neighbourhood, Duke Andreas of Naples turned to the Saracens
in Sicily. These availed themselves eagerly of this opportunity to
interfere in Italy and in the year 837 they relieved Naples, at that time
besieged by Duke Sikard of Benevento. Sikard retired with indignation,
but the alliance thus formed by Naples lasted for many a long year to
the benefit of both parties. The Duchy of Benevento was a natural
enemy to both of them and it could not be otherwise than agreeable to
the Neapolitans when, shortly afterwards, Sikard's troops were defeated
by Saracens at Brindisi, and the town itself was burnt. In fact Naples
even returned the assistance rendered in 837 by helping the Saracens in
842-843 to conquer Messina.
1 The following account utilises the results of Aniari and Lokys.
f
## p. 384 (#416) ############################################
384 Dealings of Sikonolf [839-844
After SikarcTs death the Duchy of Benevento was divided into two
principalities; Radelchis resided in Benevento and Sikonolf in Salerno,
and the two were constantly fighting. This self-destruction on the part
of the sole great power of Southern Italy was of course in the highest
degree welcome to the Saracens. Sikard died in 839, and immediately
afterwards the Saracens of Sicily were once more in Calabria. They even
advanced as far as Apulia, and though the conquest of Bari was not at
first attained, Taranto fell and was not relieved even with the help of
the Venetians, whom the Byzantines had called to their assistance
(840). The victorious Muslims pushed forward to the Adriatic, burned
Ossero on the island of Cherso, and Ancona, and even appeared
temporarily in the neighbourhood of Venice, whose trading ships they
captured. In 842 also the Venetians suffered a further defeat. Bari,
which was to be the main base of the Saracens for thirty years, had
already fallen (probably 841). Radelchis, pressed hard by Sikonolf, had
called the masters of Sicily to his assistance, and they had begun by
taking Bari from their ally. Radelchis had of course in his distress to
accept this with a good grace and come to terms with these strange and
unruly allies. The Saracens under the Berber Khalfun advanced from
Bari as a base against Sikonolf, but after a bloody battle they were
driven back on Bari, which in the meantime they had converted into a
strong fortress. As the Muslims constantly received reinforcements this
one victory served Sikonolf but little; and Radelchis too, especially after
he had received (in 842), whether he liked it or not, his infidel allies under
the leadership of Masar into his capital, Benevento, became the puppet
of the Saracens, who ravaged the whole country with their despotism
and cruelty—a terrible scourge for friend and foe alike.
In spite of all such misfortunes however Radelchis was of course
under the circumstances victorious over his adversary. As Sikonolf could
not help himself in any other way, he too sought Saracen allies. He is
said to have applied to the Spaniards, whose numerous raids into
Provence, Northern Italy and in fact as far afield as Switzerland do not
come within the scope of this chapter. It is moreover much more
probable that Sikonolf did not draw his auxiliaries directly from the
Iberian peninsula, but from Crete, where a Muslim robber-State had
been in existence since 826, founded there by Spanish Saracens who had
been expelled for mutiny from their country. With these new troops,
who were more easily governed, as they had no neighbouring great
power on whose support they could calculate, Sikonolf succeeded in
defeating his opponent and locking him up in Benevento. He was
however unable to take the town owing to difficulties in his own camp,
and so everything remained in the same state as before. Masar with his
Saracens swept through the whole country, plundering as he went, and
undertook expeditions far towards the north.
These advances however of the Saracens, starting from Bari and
## p. 385 (#417) ############################################
845-849] • Attack on Rome 385
Benevento, were not the only raids with which the unfortunate country
was infested. The large ports of the western coast were in constant
dread of unpleasant surprises, for in the year 845 the Sicilians had
chosen Ponza and Ischia as naval bases, to which moreover they soon
added Cape Miseno. The towns of Naples, Gaeta, Amalfi and Sorrento
formed an alliance for the purpose of mutual defence, as the Duke of
Salerno was not in a position to assist them. In the following years the
Muslims prepared to deal a severe blow.
For a long time Rome with
its vast church treasures had tempted them. On 23 Aug. 846, a fleet of
73 vessels, stated to have been manned by 1100 Muslims, appeared
before Ostia, and in the early morning of 26 August the Saracens stood
before the walls of Rome, where they plundered the quarters of the town
lying outside the walls, especially the church of St Peter and the
cathedral of St Paul, and they broke open the graves of the apostolic
prelates. Unfortunately the information we have respecting this event
is extremely scanty and it is moreover distorted by legend, for the very
idea of the hordes of the false prophet having ravaged in the capital of
Christendom gave a magnificent scope for the imagination of the western
world. God himself immediately afterwards seemed to desire to avenge this
visitation, for after a few successes before Gaeta, whither the Saracens had
withdrawn from Rome, and just when they proposed to return, their entire
fleet, conveying all their stolen treasures, was destroyed in a storm (847).
The impression made by these events was enormous. In 847 King
Louis II appeared in Southern Italy, defeated the Saracens and
conquered Benevento. With the disputing parties there he arranged
that thev should make common cause against the infidels in Bari and
Taranto. This plan was frustrated through the selfish policy of the
small States of Southern Italy. Nothing was effected against the con-
tinued piratical raids of the Sicilians. It was not until the year 849,
when the Saracens planned another great expedition against Rome and
collected for this purpose in Sardinia, that the seaports of the western
coast united for the defence of Rome. The fleets met before Ostia, and
the fight had already begun when the elements waxed tempestuous and
the naval battle and the Sicilian fleet came to a sudden and violent end.
The Italian fleet was probably also destroyed—information on the point
is missing—but the sacred city was rescued. Even now, in the Stanzas
of the Vatican, the celebrated picture of this sea fight, painted from
sketches by Raphael, recalls this wonderful rescue of Rome.
Even though these naval expeditions were but episodes, the Saracen
fortress at Bari was a constant menace to Southern Italy. The successes
gained by King Louis had been lost again immediately after his departure,
and Bari once more extended its power to Benevento. Louis II, who
had in the meantime been crowned as Emperor, was therefore compelled
once more to decide on an expedition to the south. On this occasion he
advanced on Bari, but was unable to capture it, as his vassal States failed
C. MED. H. VOL. II. CH. XII. 25
## p. 386 (#418) ############################################
386 Successes of Louis II [852-875
him at the critical moment. However he managed to obtain possession
of Benevento for the second time, and he caused the Saracen leader Masar
to be executed (28 May 852). The Saracen commander-in-chief in
Sicily, 'Abbas ibn al-Fadl, avenged this deed by plundering and occupying
the Calabrian coast.
The same performance was repeated as after the first departure
of Louis. Meanwhile Mufarrij ibn Salim had taken up Khalfun>
position at Bari. He took his revenge for past failures by founding an
independent State, declaring his allegiance directly to the Abbasic
Caliph. His successor assumed the title of Sultan, thus proclaiming his
independence of the Sicilian Amir. Little is known of the doings of
these rulers of Bari, who were probably soldier-emperors like the sub-
sequent Mamelukes in Egypt. The country as far as Central Italy lay
defenceless at their feet, as the troubles in the territory of the old
Duchy of Benevento became greater and greater, and prevented all
defence. The western historians give the most incredible reports of the
bloodthirstiness of these sultans. Capua and Naples had to suffer tit
most, but the rich monasteries further to the north, as San Vincenzo on
the Volturno, and Monte Cassino, also saw the enemy either within their
walls, or at least before them.
In order to put a stop to this distress the Emperor once more
undertook (866) a great expedition against the Saracens, and finally
forced them back on Bari and Taranto. In order to subjugate Ban
however a fleet was necessary, and after long negotiations this *as
eventually placed at his disposal by the Byzantines. By co-operation
at this stage the two emperors and their vassals at last succeeded
(2 Feb. 871) in breaking the power of Bari. On his way to Taranto
however to take this last bulwark from the Muslims the Emperor w&*
compelled to fall back on Ravenna, and this too through the treachery
of the self-same petty princes, whom he had just rescued from the
severest distress. At the same time the Saracens appeared once more.
this time on the western coast, and attacked Salerno, pushing forward
also even as far as Capua. Louis sent help once more, and the Saracens
were defeated at Capua on the Volturno, whereupon they left Italy-
but only to return shortly afterwards with renewed forces. They did not
meet the Emperor again in the south. He died in 875 in Northern
Italy, and with his death all his successes appear to have vanished.
At this point Byzantium assumed the moral heritage of the
Carolingian and profited by his deeds. The further struggle with the
Saracens and their final expulsion from Italy belongs to the great
Byzantine restoration under the Macedonian emperors of the Basiliss
dynasty. A few words only may here be added in regard to the con-
clusion of the Saracen domination on Italian soil. With the consent
of the residents the Byzantines, who were up to that time stationed
in Syracuse, had also settled in Bari. The loss of Syracuse in the I
## p. 387 (#419) ############################################
876-916] Byzantine Conquest of Bari 387
year 878 was certainly a severe blow; Calabria and Taranto were
still in the hands of the Muslims, and the Adriatic too was not safe
from them. Basil was however the first to succeed in defeating the
Saracens at sea, to land in Calabria, conquer Taranto (880) and a few
years later to expel the last remnants of the Saracens from Calabria.
Thus Southern Italy became once more a portion of the Byzantine
Empire. The subsequent attacks of the Saracens in this quarter were no
more than episodes, although the coast towns were again occasionally
laid under tribute to the Saracens, and the constant strife between
Saracens and Byzantines did not in fact cease until the Normans
conquered both contending parties.
Through the downfall of Bari, the Saracens' base of attack for
Central Italy had naturally been shifted. They came now exclusively
from the West. The small Lombard States, rendered shrewd by their
experiences in the past, had made a treaty with the Sicilian Saracens,
on which account the latter, from 875 onwards, directed their raids
principally towards the north, and harassed the pope. In 878 Pope
John VIII was even compelled to pay the Saracens a tribute, in order to
purchase a short period of rest and quiet. For several years thereafter
the Saracens succeeded once again in gaining strong bases on the coast
and in the interior, as, for instance, in the mountains to the north of
Benevento and on the right bank of the Garigliano at Trajetto.
Especially from the latter point they still undertook numerous plundering
expeditions through Central Italy up to the gates of Rome; Monte
Cassino too, which they had not previously entered, was looted and
destroyed in the course of one of these raids. It was not until 915
that, thanks to the initiative of John X, the camp on the Garigliano was
destroyed. Thus ended the reign of Islam on Italian soil, though we
still hear of many a later piratical excursion.
Owing to the irregular nature of the Saracenic raids in Southern
Italy, the events in Sicily and on the mainland have had to be pourtrayed
separately, but it is easy to see the inner connexion of the two. The
subsequent march of events can be given without further ceremony in
connexion with the history of the island. The Muslim command here
had been in the meantime changed. On the ruins of the Aghlabid
dominion the Fatimite Mahdi had founded a new and promising State;
the Arabs and Berbers of Sicily seemed apparently to have submitted
with a good grace to the new order of things in their native country
(910), but the fact soon made itself apparent, that the governor sent by
Mahdi was not equal to the situation. The Saracens of Sicily, under
the leadership of the Arab Amir Ahmad ibn Kurhub, thereupon declared
their independence and named the Abbasid Caliph instead of the
Fatimite in their pulpit prayers (913). But such a period of unity,
patched up in times of need, between Berbers and Arabs, never lasted
long. As early as 916 the Berbers gave up the unfortunate Amir to
ch. xii. 26—2
## p. 388 (#420) ############################################
388 Hasan ibn Ali [91P
the Caliph Mahdl to be cruelly executed, and Sicily became once morta
province of the Fatimite Empire (917).
Thus strengthened the Fatimites again commenced their piraticst
trips from Africa and Sicily, and the Byzantines purchased peace fa
their coasts for some time by a treaty with Mahdl. The latter recoups
himself for this in the north, by plundering the district of Genoa and
the town itself in 934 and 935, at the same time casually honouring
Corsica and Sardinia with a visit.
These years were not happy ones for Sicily; one unscrupuloc
governor drove the Islamic upper classes to revolt, whilst another
subjected them in an unprecedentedly bloody struggle. Thereafter a
more favoured time began under the rule of the Arab Hasan ibn Ali,
who had been entrusted with the governorship by the second Fatimite
in 948. Hasan belonged to a family called Banu abi-1-Husain, and the
Fatimite to the Kalb; he and his successors and relatives who rulei
after him are therefore called the Kalbites, a brilliant dynasty, under
whom all the gifts of civilisation began to collect and take shape, which
gave later a distinctive character to the Norman culture, and even to
that of Frederick II.
The energetic Amir repressed the particularism which militated
against successful development, and thus created the foundations of a
well-regulated and more or less independent State. The Fatimites were
shrewd enough to restrict their choice to members of the race of Banu
abi-1-Husain, whenever a new governor was required, without however
permitting too much private power to arise by so doing. Closely related
members of the family were always employed by the Fatimites in
Egypt, thus securing themselves against any efforts at independence
on the part of the Amir for the time being. But apart from this
the governor had complete freedom, especially since the Fatimites had
removed their capital to Egypt. In this way the Amir of Sicily acted
as a necessary counterpoise to the Amir of Kairawan. In the foreign
policy of the Fatimites moreover Sicily played in the long run a more
and more important part, especially since the Fatimites had become the
leading Muslim power in the eastern Mediterranean territory and were
engaged in constant struggles with the Byzantines for supremacy. This
however can only for the present be briefly touched upon.
Hasan ibn Ali reigned until 965. During his rule renewed fio-nts
took place in Calabria and Apulia, in fact the Byzantines even ventured
on a landing in Sicily, but in the year 965 the Greek fleet was utterly
destroyed off Messina. But shortly after, when the conquest of Egypt
was impending, the Fatimites concluded terms of peace with Byzantium
and thus Italy also obtained a period of rest from the Saracens, and
an alliance was even made with them temporarily when thejaovements
of the Emperor Otto II began in Lower Italy. In 982 however Otto
was seriously defeated by the Saracens at Stilo iij the Bay of T&ranto.
:'
## p. 389 (#421) ############################################
989-1042] Decline of the Saracens in Sicily 389
This strange friendship soon came to an end, and in the decades
before and after the year 1000 we come across the Kalbite Amir again
in Southern Italy. In Sicily however the population experienced years
of progress and prosperity under intelligent rulers. The general welfare
was shewn most completely in the households of the Amirs. The
material prosperity of the Orient of the time, the refined style of living,
the rich intellectual life of Court circles in Bagdad, Cordova and Cairo,
were also to be met with in Palermo, whose best period corresponds to the
reign, unfortunately but too short, of the Amir Yusuf (989-998). But
immediately after YusuFs decease indications began to appear which
shewed that the Kalbite dynasty had passed its highest point of
excellence. Yusuf was rendered incapable of holding the reins of
government by a stroke and his son Ja'far (998-1019) was not fortunate
in his methods. The opposition between Arabs and Berbers, never quite
extinct, now started up again. The revolt which followed ended with
the expulsion of the Berbers and the execution of a brother of the Amir,
who had led them. Ja'far was however compelled to yield to another
revolt, carried out by another brother. Thus weakened inwardly Sicily
was no longer able effectively to resist the various hostile naval powers,
such as Byzantium and Pisa, which threatened it; and early in the new
century the Sicilian fleet suffered various defeats. It was not until the
Zlrids allied themselves with the Sicilians that, during its third decade,
more extended raids could be undertaken against the Byzantine lands,
but these too always ended in defeat.
Added to these defeats there followed, from 1035 onwards, a civil
war, which was the beginning of the end of the dynasty and also of the
sway of Islam in Sicily. On this occasion the trouble was not between
Arabs and Berbers, but was the consequence of the expulsion of the
latter. The Berbers had to be replaced by other troops, and these of
course cost money, so that the taxes had to be raised. The native
population thereupon took up arms. The Amir Ahmad at this stage
applied to Byzantium for assistance, whilst the rebels, who were led by a
brother of the Amir, called in the help of the Zlrids. The Byzantine
general Maniakes, in whose army were numerous Normans, gained battle
after battle (1038-1040), but then experienced difficulties with the
Normans on account of his bad treatment of them, and also fell out with
Stephanos the leader of the Byzantine fleet, so that all the fruits of their
victories were lost to the Byzantines (up to 1042). The native popu-
lation too had in the meantime forced the Zlrids, on account of their
licentious behaviour, to return to Africa, so. that there would really have
been a good field for the revival of the Kalbite rule.
In the course of this general fight, each party against the others, the
individual minor magnates and the towns had learned to fight for
themselves, so that Sicily emerged from the great war no longer as an
undivided State, but as a conglomerate of petty principalities and civic
-
## p. 390 (#422) ############################################
390 Coming of the Normans [1061-1091
republics, all mutually at variance with each other. One main antagonism
was in evidence among these States, the same that had called forth the
whole civil war; the opposition between the Arab aristocracy and the
natives who had been converted to Islam. The former congregated
around Syracuse, the latter at Girgenti and Castrogiovanni. The leader
of the Arabs was Ibn ath-Thimna. Being defeated by the opposing party
he called the Normans into the country in 1061; these had in the
meantime founded a vigorous State on the mainland. The Norman
conquest, the details of which are given elsewhere, was completed in 1091.
The rule of Islam in Italy is therewith at an end, the expansion has
passed its zenith, and it is now thrown back on Africa. The process
lasted a few centuries longer in Spain, but here too Islam remained
merely an episode in history. The blessings of culture which were given
to the West by its temporary Islamitic elements are at least as important
as the influence of the East during the time of the Crusades. The
lasting injuries which the constant Saracen scourge inflicted on Europe
must not be exaggerated, for the Saracens did only what every Christian
maritime power of that period held to be justifiable. Robbery and a
trade in slaves were as legitimate on one side as on the other. As far
as their deeds were concerned the opponents were evenly matched. It
was only later on that the western land produced from its own inner
self a new world, whilst the East has never since attained a higher
pitch of excellence than that which immediately followed the Saracen
expansion.
## p. 391 (#423) ############################################
391
CHAPTER XIII.
THE SUCCESSORS OF HERACLIUS TO 717.
Besides Constantine, who had been his colleague since 613, Heraclius
left four sons by Martina—Theodosius, who was deaf and dumb, Heraclius,
who had been crowned in 638, David the Caesar, and Martin the nobilis-
simus, and (though Constantine was twenty-eight and Heraclius only six-
teen) he desired by his will that they should enjoy equal rights, while
Martina received the honours of an empress and a mother from both.
Relying upon this provision, Martina claimed to exercise the practical
sovereignty herself: but the people would not permit this, on the ground
that a woman could not receive foreign envoys, and compelled her to
leave the government to her stepson. Anticipating such a result,
Heraclius had entrusted a large sum to the patriarch Pyrrhus for her
benefit: but, Philagrius the treasurer having discovered this and informed
Constantine, Pyrrhus was forced to surrender it. As the Emperor was
suffering from consumption (which caused him to reside at Chalcedon),
Philagrius, fearing to be left exposed to Martina's vengeance, persuaded
him to send a donative to the soldiers through Valentine the Armenian,
the commander of Philagrius'' guard, urging them to protect his two sons
and maintain their claim to the succession. Valentine however used the
money to gain influence for himself; and after Constantine's death
(24 May 641) Philagrius was forcibly ordained and banished to Septum
(Ceuta), and many of his supporters were flogged, without opposition
from the army, though Martina tried to attach it to her son's cause by a
further donative in the name of the dead Emperor. But in consequence
of her incestuous marriage and her attempt to exclude Constantine from
power she was exceedingly unpopular, and by the malevolence of her
enemies she was now accused of poisoning him. Valentine, who had either
originated this report or used it for his own purpose, placed himself at the
head of a military force in Asia, occupied Chalcedon on the pretext that
the lives of Constantine's sons were in danger, and sent instructions to the
troops in the provinces not to obey Martina, while the Empress brought
the army of Thrace to defend the capital. To allay the commotion,
Heraclius produced his elder nephew, Heraclius, a boy of ten, to whom
CH. XIII.
## p. 392 (#424) ############################################
392 Fall of Martina [641-643
he had stood godfather, and, touching the wood of the cross, swore that
the children should suffer no harm; he even took the boy to Chalcedon
and gave the same assurance to Valentine and his army; but, though
Valentine allowed him to return, he refused to lay down his arms. By
these acts the Emperor succeeded for a time in gaining the support of
the capital. But the country round Chalcedon was covered with vine-
yards, many of which belonged to the citizens of Constantinople; and,
when the vintage came on and the produce was reaped by Valentine's
army, they cried loudly for an accommodation, directing their attack
against the patriarch Pyrrhus, who was the strongest supporter of
Martina and was suspected of having been concerned in the murder of
Constantine, and insisting on the coronation of the young Heraclius.
The Emperor then went to St Sophia and ordered Pyrrhus to crown his
nephew: but the people insisted that according to custom he should do
this himself; and they gave the new Augustus the name of Constantine,
though to distinguish him from his father he was popularly known as
Constans (Sept. ). The feeling against Pyrrhus was however still unabated;
and, after a mob had vainly sought him in the cathedral, and in revenge
desecrated the sanctuary, on the following night he laid his stole on the
altar in token of leave-taking (29 Sept. ), and after hiding for a time
escaped to Africa: and, though he had neither resigned nor been
deprived, Paul was ordained to succeed him (Oct. ).
Peace was now made, Valentine being appointed Count of the ex-
cubitors and receiving a promise that he should not be called to account
for the money received from Philagrius, who was recalled from exile, and
that his soldiers should receive a donative. The Caesar David was then
crowned as a third emperor under the name of Tiberius, and Valentine
marched to Cappadocia to act against the Arabs.
The peace was however of short duration. The troops in Cappadocia
produced a letter purporting to have been written by Martina to a
certain David, in which he was urged to attack Valentine, marry
Martina, and depose Constans. Soldiers and people rose against the
Empress under the leadership of Theodore the Armenian, who, having
seized David in a fortress to which he had fled, cut off" his head and had
it exhibited all over the eastern provinces. On Theodore's return to
Constantinople Martina was by decree of the Senate deprived of her
tongue, and Heraclius and Tiberius of their noses, and they were all
banished to Rhodes (Dec). Constans thus became sole emperor.
All this must have been done at the instigation of Valentine, who
after unsuccessful operations against the Arabs returned to Constantinople
with a guard of 3000 men and forced Constans to give him the rank of
Caesar (early in 643): but on strong opposition manifesting itself a
compromise was made, whereby he gave up this title, but was made
commander of the troops in the capital and gave his daughter in
marriage to Constans. Two years later his tyrannical acts led to a
## p. 393 (#425) ############################################
641-655] Arab War 393
popular rising, during which he was seized and beheaded. His military
command was given to Theodore (646)1.
The Arabs first invaded Asia Minor during the commotions of 641
In 642 a plan of Valentine for a combined attack on them was frustrated
by his defeat; but Theodore and Procopius penetrated as far as Batnae,
and an Armenian force occupied Amida and nearly reached Edessa before
they were routed. In 643, Valentine having returned to Constantinople,
the enemy again entered Asia Minor, and Arabissus capitulated to
'Umair. In 644 Mu'awiya, amir of Syria, took and plundered Euchaita;
and in 646 after besieging Caesarea for ten days he ravaged the neighbour-
hood, returned, and forced it to pay tribute, afterwards vainly attacking
Aniorium. On this expedition he found the Cilician fortresses deserted
and left garrisons in them till his return, but in 647 had them destroyed.
In 649 Hablb, and in 651 Busr, raided Isauria, and in 651 Sufyfin also
invaded Roman territory from Germanicea, while in 649 Mu'awiya
placed a fleet on the sea and plundered Constantia in Cyprus, but
retreated on the approach of a Roman fleet under Cacorizus the
chamberlain.
These were only plundering expeditions: but about 647 Hablb
occupied Melitene, Sozopetra, and Adata; and, as the war had gone
against the Romans, Constans in 651 sent Procopius to treat for peace
with Mu'awiya (the Caliph Othman was ignored), and a truce was made
for two years, the Emperor paying tribute and leaving Gregory, the
nephew of Heraclius, as a hostage.
The truce of 651 was hardly more than nominal; for the secession of
Armenia led to the Emperor's expedition to that country (652) and to
the outbreak of fresh hostilities there, and after the expiration of the
armistice the war was renewed on a larger scale than before. Great
preparations were made by Mu'awiya for an attack by sea and land
upon Constantinople. He himself, starting from Melitene, took Ancyra
and advanced to Dorylaeum (653), destroying all the fortresses on the
way. Meanwhile ships were being hastily built at Alexandria, Tripolis,
and other places; and in 654 a fleet under Abu'1-A'war after occupying
Cyprus pillaged Cos, Crete and Rhodes (where the famous colossus, long
since fallen, was broken up and sold to a Jew). But, while the work
was going on at Tripolis, two Roman brothers, Mu'awiya's slaves,
liberated the prisoners, and with their help killed the governor and his
guard, burnt the ships, and escaped by sea to Roman territory. Mu'awiya,
who was probably recalled by the news of this disaster, did nothing this
year beyond taking a fortress near Melitene: but the naval preparations
were not given up, and in spring 655 Abu'l-A'war was sent to Phoenix
in Lycia, a place celebrated for cypresses, to cut wood for shipbuilding,
where he was joined by the Egyptian ships under 'Abdallah. But the
1 The details and chronology of events after the death of Heraclius are very
doubtful.
## p. 394 (#426) ############################################
394 Constans in Italy [655-663
new naval policy of the Arabs had forced the Romans also to institute a
standing fleet; and the invaders were attacked by the Emperor in
person, who was accompanied by his brother, Theodosius. In the battle
which followed the Arabs were victorious, the Roman fleet being almost
destroyed and Constans with difficulty escaping in disguise; but the
Arabs, having attained their object, returned. Mu'awiya at the same
time made an expedition by land as far as Caesarea; but in 656 the
murder of Othman and the civil war which followed put an end to his
schemes, and he was at last glad to buy peace by paying tribute (659).
The Emperor used the respite to reduce some Slavonic tribes, some of
which he transferred to Asia to assist in the defence against the Arabs.
Constans had crowned his eldest son, Constantine, as Augustus in
Apr. 654, and in 659 conferred the same dignity on his two younger
sons, Heraclius and Tiberius, and had his brother Theodosius put
to death on a charge of conspiracy (659). This made him very un-
popular both with the citizens and with the army; he was greeted in the
streets with the appellation "Cain," and at last, finding life in Constanti-
nople irksome and perhaps dangerous, although war had again broken
out with the Arabs, resolved to leave his capital and devote his attention
to restoring the imperial power in the West, for which the disunion
among the Lombards after the death of Aripert (661) afforded an
obvious opportunity. In 662 he invaded the duchy of Benevento, and
took several cities with little or no resistance. He failed indeed before
the strong town of Acerenza; but he stormed Luceria, which he razed
to the ground, and laid siege to Benevento itself, which was defended
by Duke Romuald in person. Here he was met by a vigorous defence,
and, having heard that Grimoald was marching to his son's assistance,
made terms with the Duke, receiving his sister Gisa as a hostage, and
raised the siege. An attempt to attack Capua was foiled by a defeat
on the Calor, and he then withdrew to Naples for the winter. In spring
(663) he sent the Persian Sapor on a fresh invasion; but he had hardly
crossed the frontier when he was met by Romuald at a place called
Forinum and severely defeated. Constans then abandoned all thought
of reducing the duchy, and, secured against attack by the possession of
Gisa, betook himself to Rome, and was met by the Pope and clergy six
miles from the city, which he entered on 5 July, the first Emperor who
had been seen in the ancient capital for 190 years. He attended service
in the principal churches and made offerings, but left a more impressive
memorial of his visit by appropriating all the bronze ornaments that he
could find, including the tiled roof of the Pantheon. This last with
some of the other articles he sent to Constantinople, carrying the rest
with him. After a stay of twelve days he returned to Naples, and then went
on to Sicily, which was threatened by the Arabs, and settled at Syracuse,
where he set himself to organise measures for the defence of Sicily and
Africa. For this purpose heavy burdens were laid on his Italian and
## p. 395 (#427) ############################################
665-669] Murder of Constans 395
Sicilian subjects: but he was so far successful that no further invasion
of Sicily was made while he lived, and in Africa, though the patrician
Nicephorus is said to have been defeated in 665, no permanent conquest
was effected till after his death. From Syracuse he sent for his wife and
sons; but, as this foreshadowed a transfer of the seat of government,
the citizens, headed by Andrew the chamberlain and the patrician
Theodore of Colonia, refused to let them go.
It was not only at Constantinople that Constans was unpopular; and
in 668 a plot was formed among those who surrounded him, one of
whom, Andrew, son of Troilus, while the Emperor was bathing, poured
an unusual quantity of soap over his face so as to blind him, and then
killed him by striking him on the head with a silver ewer (15 July).
The army proclaimed as emperor an Armenian named Mzhezh, who is
said to have been of high character, but seems to have had no other
recommendation except good looks, and was reluctant to accept the
honour. His elevation found no favour elsewhere, the armies of Italy,
Sardinia, and Africa united to overthrow him1, the rebellion collapsed
(Feb. 669)2, and the assassin Andrew, Mzhezh himself, and his chief
adherents suffered death, among them the patrician Justinian, whose
young son, Germanus, afterwards patriarch, was mutilated.
Before turning to the eastern war it is necessary to speak of the
military and administrative organisation which by a process we cannot
trace in detail had been growing up during the reigns of Heraclius and
Constans. The co-ordination of civil and military officials instituted by
Diocletian had been greatly modified by Justinian, who in many places
combined both functions in the hands of one man. From this time the
civil governors, where they still existed, gradually became subservient to
the military power, and the process was completed by the Persian and
Saracen invasions, which made military rule a necessity, while the loss of
the eastern provinces caused a new distribution of forces, and therefore
new administrative divisions. Hitherto Asia Minor had hardly needed
defence; and the only large contingent permanently stationed there was
a portion of the palatine troops under the magister militum praesentalis
quartered in the north-west, where in a district reaching from Paphlagonia
and Galatia to the Hellespont they still remained under the name of
imperiale obsequium (oifrUiov), while their commander bore the title of
Count. Of the countries under the magister militum per Orientem only
Isauria and Cilicia remained; but, as his troops were required to defend
southern Asia Minor, they were also quartered in part of Cappadocia
and the district to the west of it, but were still known as Orientates
(avardkiKoi). Further west by the Aegean was a section of the Thracian
army which had followed Heraclius to the Persian war and were known
as Thracesii; but these were under the Anatolic general. Armenia and
1 For the alleged expedition of the young Emperor see Byz. Zeitschr, xvii. 455.
corner of Spain a remnant of the opposition against the penetration of
Islam had preserved its independence as a State; year by year this small
State grew in size, and in a short time it inserted itself like a wedge
between the Arabian magnates and the Pyrenees. On this was founded
the legend of St Pelagius, which is treated more fully in another part of
this work.
Under these circumstances the expansion of the Muslims came to a
natural standstill from internal causes, and the consequences of the
battle of Tours or Poitiers must therefore not be exaggerated. The
plundering of these towns would decidedly not have resulted in a
permanent occupation of Gaul by the Saracens. Their defeat before
Constantinople was of vastly greater significance. The fall of Constan-
tinople would have entirely remodelled the history of the East, as in
fact it did, seven centuries later.
The battle then of Tours or Poitiers marked the extreme point of
advance of the Saracens into Western Europe, but it was not the cause
of the sudden stoppage, or rather recess of the movement. That fact
lay, as above stated, in the feud between Arabs and Berbers. This strife
was bound to be so much the more fatal for the Arabs, as at the same
time the discord between Kais and Kalb in the East made its influence
felt in the West also, and thus broke up the compact unity of the
hitherto paramount nationality. The details of this process have little
value for the history of the Saracen expansion treated in these chapters.
A brief description of the principal events will suffice to explain the
other great advance of the Saracens against Mid-Europe (Sicily, Sardinia
and South Italy).
The whole of the western portion of the empire of the Caliph, the
so-called Maghrib, i. e. Northern Africa and Spain, was placed after the
## p. 376 (#408) ############################################
376 Disturbances under Hishdm [c. 730
completion of the conquest under various governors, who had their
seat of government in Kairawan. The Spanish sub-prefects however
often had an almost independent position. They resided at first at
Seville, but shortly afterwards chose as the seat of government
Cordova, which was thus destined for centuries to become the brilliant
residence of the western Caliphate. Until its secession from the eastern
main empire, and in fact for centuries afterwards, the destinies of Spain
were united in the closest manner with those of Northern Africa through
the Berbers, who were now settled on both sides of the Straits of
Gibraltar. Thus it came that Spain, on the outbreak of Berber unrest
in Northern Africa, was at once drawn into this fatal movement. The
only difference was that in Northern Africa the Berbers were the
subjects, who had however expected to attain an equal footing with
the Arabs by the adoption of Islam, whilst in Spain the Arabs and
Berbers had together conquered a foreign land, whose wealth and
territory they divided. At this stage the Arabs committed the great
mistake of shewing themselves too ostentatiously as the masters, i. e.
in Africa they proceeded arrogantly and violently against the proud
Berbers, who had cost so much trouble to subdue, whilst in Spain they
allotted the Berbers the worst portion of the booty. This caused a
first revolt, which was however but partial. The Berber Munusa in
Northern Spain declared his independence, and entered into friendly,
even family connexions with the Duke Eudo. His call however found
but little response among his countrymen, and he was put down with
little trouble (729 or 730).
More serious were the developments in Africa. It was at the
time of Caliph Hisham, under whom the revision of Omar's system
of taxation, which had gradually become a necessity, was enforced more
generally and energetically. The bureaucracy which accompanied this
revision, and the Asiatic despotism which was gradually creeping in,
were nowhere so unsuitable as in the mountain homes of the Berbers,
who were only held in check by diplomacy and the prospect of booty.
As with the Orientals in general and especially with the Berbers every
national or economical opposition easily assumes a religious tinge, so it
was in this case too. We have already spoken of the Kharijites, who
had detached themselves from Ali after the battle of Siffin. Their
doctrine was that of the absolute sovereignty of the people, who were
justified at all times in deposing an unjust Caliph or Imam. We have
already indicated that the Umayyads had much trouble with these
people. The profession of the doctrine of the Kharijites was one of
the most important forms in which the opposition against the growing
despotism and the bureaucracy found expression, especially among the
old-Arabian circles, just as, among the Persians, this opposition took
the form of the ShI'a. With the increasing tension betwixt Umayyad
ti'oops and the Berber populace, the Kharijite ideas had an unsuspected
## p. 377 (#409) ############################################
741-745] Fall of the Umayyads ',■ 377
spread among the latter. And as the Arabs had now lost their readiness
for battle by reason of their tribal feuds, the Berbers ventured, under
the Caliph Hisham, openly to secede. After local revolts, which were
quickly suppressed, a serious rebellion began in the extreme west. The
whole territory of what is now called Morocco within a short period
shook off the domination of the Arabs (741). Hisham hereupon sent
a powerful army, composed of the best Syrian troops, to Africa, and it
was intended that this force should co-operate with the garrisons already
there. But the feuds amongst the Arabs themselves more than counter-
balanced their better equipment, and in consequence the Berbers won a
mighty victory (741) at the river Sebu, or, as the best Latin authority
gives it, "super Huvium Nauam," and thus put in doubt the supremacy
of the Arabs. Later on numerous fugitives crossed over into Spain and
brought new confusion into the confusion there prevailing. But here as
there for a short period the authority of Damascus was once more
restored. Hanzala ibn §afwan, the new governor, managed by time-
honoured methods to prevent common action on the part of the Berbers,
and then later vanquished the main body of the Berber troops (742) at
Asnam, not far from Kairawan. His representative, 'Abu-1-Khattar,
then enforced order in Spain. The Berber revolt was thus broken, but
it was the Berbers notwithstanding, and not the Arabs, who decided the
destinies of the countries. Though the majority returned to Muslim
orthodoxy, remnants of the Kharijites have maintained their position
in Northern Africa even to the present day, under the name of Ibadites.
This peace lasted scarcely three years. Spain arose out of the new
tumults as an independent State, for which a period of high prosperity
was in prospect. In North Africa too a series of independent States was
gradually formed. After the residence of the Caliph had been removed
nearer to Central Asia it was probably natural that the Mediter-
ranean territories, inhabited by a vigorous population, should begin
a separate existence as States. After the fall of the Umayyads the
countries to the east of Barka, permeated by the Saracen expansion, only
occasionally and then only nominally held common cause with the
Eastern Empire. The first usurper preserved at least the appearance of
dependence. In the year 745 'Abd-ar-Rahman ibn Habib, of the tribe
of Fihr, declared himself in Tunis independent of the governor Hanzala,
who had conducted the affairs of the Maghrib since the revolt of
Kairawan. Belonging to a race long tried and approved on African
soil, 'Abd-ar-Rahman could count on followers by reason of the universal
discontent. By a brutal intrigue he compelled Hanzala to leave Africa
without drawing the sword. The last of the Umayyads, Marwan, sub-
sequently legalised the de facto authority of 'Abd-ar-Rahman. For this
'Abd-ar-Rahman paid a small tribute and named the Caliph in his pulpit
prayers, but he was otherwise his own master; and his position was not
influenced by the change in the dynasty in the East. When the rule of
## p. 378 (#410) ############################################
378 Saracen Kingdoms in Northern Africa [754-800
the Abbasids had become consolidated and it was proposed to make an
energetic attack on him from Bagdad, he renounced his obedience to
the Abbasids and received fugitive Umayyads as honoured guests in
Kairawan (754-755). These Umayyad princes however brought discord
into 'Abd-ar-Rahman's family, in connexion with which he himself and
two of the princes met their deaths. A third prince, 'Abd-ar-Rahman
ibn Mu'awiya, forced his way through to Spain and became the founder
of the western Caliphate. In Africa the murder of Ibn Habib led to a
general disorganisation and set free all the tendencies towards decentral-
isation. Independent Berber dynasties arose in the extreme West, as
for instance the Banu Midrar in Sijilmasa (757) and Banu Rustam in
Tahert (761), the latter under the banner of the Kharijites; in the
nearer West the Arabs on the one hand and the Berbers, who had also
separated into parties, on the other, fought for the possession of
Kairawan, which did not again acknowledge the authority of the
Abbasids until 761, and then only for a short time; the province of
Africa, as far as to the border of Algeria, was once more restored,
though with disturbances and interruptions, but the whole of the far
West remained irretrievably lost.
Here in the far West a third State was soon founded. A descendant
of Ali named Idris, who had fled from the Abbasids, created for himself,
in the year 788, an independent kingdom, which soon extended eastward
to beyond the town of Tlemcen. Here again a clever leader managed to
unite the Berbers by a religious party-cry. The kingdom of the Idrisids
was the first Shi'ite State founded in the West.
The remainder of the province of Maghrib once so extensive was
moreover destined to make itself independent in the last decade of the
eighth century. The constant dissensions between the Arab leaders and
tribes could no longer be permanently controlled by the governors sent
from Bagdad. The Amir of Mzab (in the back-country of Algeria) Ibrahim
ibn Aghlab, who had grown up in Africa, and whose father had been
the means of reconquering the Mzab, was on the other hand the right
man in the right place to restore state authority (800). When he had
succeeded in this however he demanded from the Caliph the hereditary
investiture in return for payment of a tribute and the customary
naming of the Caliph in the pulpit prayers and on the coinage. This
amounted to complete independence. Thus arose the dynasty of the
Aghlabids of Kairawan, which gave to Africa a series of clever, but
also often worthless, rulers. In proportion to the smallness of their
kingdom they had a considerable naval force, and thus they became the
leaders of the expansion of Islam into Mid-Europe. It was under them
that Sicily was conquered.
Before turning however to Sicily, we must still sketch the further
destinies of Northern Africa, in as far as it is connected with the history
of Islam in Southern Europe. In spite of their brilliant performances
## p. 379 (#411) ############################################
909—H71] Idrisids and Fatimites 379
the authority of the Aghlabids was in a tottering state. The diversion
to Sicily of the generals and troops, always inclining towards insub-
ordination, gave them a respite for a considerable time; after lasting
for a century their kingdom was destroyed by the political lack of
discipline of the Berber tribes and by bloody quarrels within the dynasty
itself.
These conditions were cleverly utilised by the Shi'ite opposition,
which just at that time, after many ill-successes in Asia, had pushed
forward into Africa, where the propaganda of the Idrisids had paved
the way for them. The leader of the movement was named 'Ubaidallah,
whose descent from AH is by no means established beyond doubt; the
race itself however was called, after Fatima, the daughter of the Prophet,
the Fatimites. When 'Ubaidallah had become master of the situation
in the year 909, through the fortunate trend of circumstances and
his skill in recruiting, he assumed the cognomen Mahdi, i. e. the
directed one, a title in which the old claims of Alfs kinsmen to the
Caliphate found expression. Mahdi founded a new capital, Mahdiya,
and established a State which for centuries held the supremacy in the
eastern Mediterranean. For this end of course the possession of Egypt
was needed, but the acquisition of this was first effected by Mu'izz
(969), Mahdrs third successor, who was the founder of Cairo. The
centre of gravity of the Fatimite kingdom was now transferred eastward,
especially when Syria also was conquered. Africa soon attained inde-
pendence again as a State under Yusuf Bulukkin, a Berber of the
Sanhaja, the governor appointed by the Fatimites; Yusuf founded the
dynasty of the Zlrids (972-1148), alongside of whom the Hammadids
held their ground in the West, and specially in Algeria, from 1107 till
1152. The kingdom of the Idrisids in Morocco had in the meantime
been split up into a number of petty principalities. The Fatimites
however remained the rulers of the eastern territory, and under them
Egypt experienced its most brilliant times, but suffered also its worst
defeat. In 1171 the heir to the Fatimite kingdom was Salad in.
We were compelled to give an anticipatory sketch of the history of
North Africa until the commencement of the times of the Crusades, in
order to understand the second great advance of the Saracens against
Sicily and Southern Italy as one connected whole. Incidents from the
standpoint of individual countries, these regular attacks of the Muslims
on Mid-Europe are presented, in the light of universal history, as a
connected movement, which naturally closes with the occupation of
Sicily and also of parts of the Continent. As in Spain, the reaction of
the Christian world follows upon the action of Islam. Just as they
came, so the Muslims are gradually forced back. Here we have to do
with the forward action alone, and though from chance reasons this
took place much later in Sicily and Italy than in Spain or Asia Minor,
yet its description comes notwithstanding within the scope of a general
## p. 380 (#412) ############################################
380 First Raids on Sicily [c. 664
history of the expansion of the Saracens, for the conquest of Sicily is
connected in the most intimate way with the occupation of Northern
Africa, and could only succeed after the conditions in the latter territory
had somewhat improved. It is the same movement which took the
Saracens across the Straits of Gibraltar. The subsequent advance of
the world of Islam against Eastern Europe and the occupation of
Constantinople by the Turks are in no way connected with the original
movement as described here; the events now related below are the hut
ramification of the Arabian exodus.
As Michele Amari says in his classical work on the Muslims in Sicily,
only a glance at the map is needed to shew that Sicily must be
involved in continuous war with the Saracens after their occupation
of Africa. And yet this same great historian represents the first naval
expedition against Sicily not as starting from Africa but from Syria,
and that too at a time when the subsequent Caliph Mu'awiya was still
governor of Syria. The strongly contradictory reports about this event
may most easily be reconciled by regarding the first appearance of an
Arabian fleet in Sicily as taking place under the Caliphate of Mu'awiya,
and connecting it with the expedition of his African governor, Mu'awiya
ibn Hudaij, against the Byzantines (664). Arabian tradition also
accepts this Ibn Hudaij as the leader. It is quite probable that he
himself never saw Sicily, but that the raid was made under his orders by
his representative, 'Abdallah ibn Kais. It is however quite certain that
this naval expedition did not start from Syria but from the Pentapolis
(Barka); the Syrian fleet had opportunities of booty nearer home; of
the Pentapolis however we learn from the papyri that it was an
important naval base in the seventh century, and here the fleet operating
in the west received recruits from the fleets coming from Egypt. This
opportunity serves to point out once again that, with the exception oi
special occasions the regular war of the Arabs against the Byzantines
consisted of individual summer campaigns, which bore the name Kovpavi
and took place by water or on land. From this old custom piracy, that
terrible scourge of the western Mediterranean, was developed in course
of time as the great kingdoms became split up into small states, and the
name Corsair is also etymologically related to the word Kovp<rov. The
despatch of the fleet by Ibn Hudaij was such a Kovpaov. The booty
consisted of captive women and church treasures, images, which according
to the Arabian historians Mu'awiya endeavoured to sell for gold a>
quickly as possible among the idol-worshipping Indians.
Just as this first expedition against Sicily was connected with
the occupation of Northern Africa, so we must not disconnect the
occasional raids of the following decades from the ever-increasing use of
the fleet in the western seat of war. It can therefore cause no surprise
that during the regime of the great pacificators of the Berbers, tV.
under Hassan and Musfi, war was waged on Sicily more frequently.
## p. 381 (#413) ############################################
740—827] Conquest of Sicily 381
At that time also the small island of Pantellaria, the stepping-stone
between Africa and Sicily, was occupied by the Arabs, and Sardinia was
plundered. It is needless to recount in detail all these numerous
piratical expeditions against the islands of the Mediterranean. They
were the terror of the residents on the coast, but very little was in reality
attained by them. In any case Sicily must have been well defended. But
if Syracuse itself could only purchase the retirement of 'Abd-ar-Rahman
ibn Habib by payment of tribute (740), and even if this ruler, after
acquiring the sovereignty in Northern Africa, attempted to gain Sicily
also, these matters were but incidents which had no influence on the
course of history. During the second half of the eighth century Sicily
was scarcely troubled at all by its tormentors, for, as we have seen,
Northern Africa was almost in a state of anarchy.
It was not until after a more powerful State had been formed by the
Aghlabids that the expeditions against Sicily were at once renewed.
Not only the Aghlabids but also the Idrisids and even the Spanish
Muslims took part in these piratical raids, each as a rule on their own
account but occasionally working conjointly. When the Sicilians had
perhaps succeeded in completing a treaty with the Aghlabids and
looked forward to a period of rest and peace, then the vessels of the
Idrisids would suddenly appear. A large proportion of these ex-
peditions have another connexion, for the raids are episodes in the long
fight between the Franks and the Spanish Umayyads, but in the case of
many of these sudden attacks we cannot now determine the State to
which the Saracens in question belonged. One expedition in the year
813 is specially well known to us, because it advanced far to the north-
ward and even touched on Nice and Civita Vecchia. In the same year
or shortly afterwards Reggio also received a first Saracenic visitation.
Corsica in particular was in the midst of the fighting, whilst Sardinia
was better able to defend itself; the smaller islands, eg. the Pontine
group and even Ischia (8-12 Aug. 812), were occasionally attacked—in
fact, a revival of the Saracen expansion began. But still great successes
could not be recorded, for on the one hand various Saracenic fleets were
lost at sea through storms, and on the other hand not only the
Byzantines but also Charles the Great took energetic steps to secure
their lands against the ravages of the Saracens, though they generally
confined themselves to acting on the defensive. As for such a thing as
paying the Saracens off in their own coin by undertaking a piratical
expedition to Northern Africa, that occurred but once, when the African
coast between Utica and Carthage was terrorised by a small Frankish
fleet under Earl Bonifacius of Tyrrhenia.
There was no really serious advance of the Saracens against European
territory, until the year 827. Acting not on their own initiative, but
called in to the assistance of a Christian insurrection, the Aghlabids
conquered the rich island of Sicily. By this means an outpost of Islam
## p. 382 (#414) ############################################
382 Conquest of Sicily [829—859
was pushed forward close to Italy, and it followed as a matter of course
that the Saracens became an important factor in the diversified confusion
of the States of Central and Southern Italy.
The occasion was a military revolt, such as was of everyday occurrence
in Sicily, the "Siberia" of the Byzantine Empire. The details are not
clear, but we may probably assume, with Amari, that Euphemius, the
leader of the rebels, was compelled to flee from the Byzantine governor,
Photeinos. He went to Africa to Ziyadatallah I, the third prince of
the race of Aghlabids, requested help, and promised, after the conquest
of the island, to regard himself as Ziyadatallah's vassal. The latter
took counsel with his all-powerful minister, the Kadi Asad ibn al-Furat,
then seventy years of age, who, as head of the clergy, was leader of the
internal policy of the Aghlabids, founded as it was on orthodoxy, and
who moreover must be described as a military leader of eminence. The
opportunity was favourable, and therefore no delay could be brooked in
carrying the religious war to the long-coveted island. Apart from this,
no better opportunity could be found to keep the ever-insubordinate
Arabs and Berbers employed. Thus the undertaking was resolved on
and at once commenced.
The aged Kadi himself undertook to lead the army, consisting of
11,000 men, which landed at Mazara, defeated Photeinos and advanced
to Syracuse. But at this stage of the proceedings a reverse followed.
The town was impregnable; an epidemic, to which Asad himself succumbed,
broke out among the besieging troops; Euphemius was murdered; the
Byzantines sent fresh troops, but Ziyadatallah was unable to send
reinforcements on account of the unrest in Africa. The Africans there-
fore were compelled to retire on Mazara and Mineo, and it began to
appear as if this energetic attempt to conquer the island would fail.
The blockaded Africans however were relieved by Spanish co-religionists
(829), and then the aspect of affairs was changed. Palermo was
conquered in the beginning of September 831 by fresh troops from
Africa. The Muslims even began to form connexions with the States
on the Continent, of which we shall see more presently. The Byzantines
were forced back step by step. For all that, the war lasted over ten
years longer before the capture of Messina (probably 843) by the Aghlabid
prince, Abu-1-Aghlab Ibrahim. Byzantium could no longer help the
Sicilians, for all the troops were required in the East. They still
held out however at a few points. The apparently impregnable Castro-
giovanni, situated on a high sugar-loaf mountain, which even to the
present has maintained a remarkably sinister medieval character, did
not fall till the year 859, after a long defence, into the hands of
'Abbas ibn al-Fadl, who had succeeded Ibrahim. But the energy of
the undisciplined African soldiery did not last beyond this stage, and
even before the island was completely conquered the Arabs and Berbers
were at daggers drawn and the Saracenic advance appears to have
## p. 383 (#415) ############################################
814-1061] Invasion of Italy 383
come to a standstill here from the same reasons as in Southern France.
The last energetic prince of the house of the Aghlabids, Ibrahim II,
further succeeded (21 May 878) in capturing and destroying Syracuse.
Later on he came himself to Sicily and attacked with brutal cruelty the
only Christian communities who were still independent, in the Etnadistrict,
and he also destroyed Taormina (902). The conquest of Sicily was thus
completed. The re-conquest by the Normans did not begin till 1061.
Ibrahim II met his death in the same year before Cosenza, after
having carried the religious war across the straits into Calabria. He
was not the first Saracen on Italian ground, for immediately after the
conquest of Palermo the Aghlabid generals had interfered in the
internecine quarrels of the Lombard States in Southern Italy, and thus
these Aghlabids had soon become the terror of Southern and Central
Italy. Everyone who has travelled along the incomparable coast
between Naples and Palermo knows the numerous "Saracen towers,'" the
ruins of the coastguard towers, from which the approach of Sicilian or
African fleets had to be announced. Even to-day, in the time of a
peaceful, money-bringing invasion of foreigners, there still dwells in the
memories of the people occupying this favoured country the recollection
of that other invasion of quite other character, the Saracen calamity,
which for centuries restricted all healthy development. This forms the
final chapter in the spread of Islam into Central Europe. In depicting
it we must rely mostly on western sources, as the Arab-Berber robber-
States which sprang up in Southern Italy never attained civilisation
enough to have literary records, and Sicilian and Eastern writers tell us
little about Italy1.
As in Sicily so in Italy the Saracens did not come without an appeal.
For a long time past the Duchy of Benevento had endeavoured to annex
the free town of Naples, which was besieged at various times and was
compelled to agree to the payment of a tribute, which however was
at once suspended whenever any resistance appeared possible. After
having unsuccessfully requested Louis the Pious (814-840) to intervene,
and having also been unable to find any sufficiently powerful allies in
his own neighbourhood, Duke Andreas of Naples turned to the Saracens
in Sicily. These availed themselves eagerly of this opportunity to
interfere in Italy and in the year 837 they relieved Naples, at that time
besieged by Duke Sikard of Benevento. Sikard retired with indignation,
but the alliance thus formed by Naples lasted for many a long year to
the benefit of both parties. The Duchy of Benevento was a natural
enemy to both of them and it could not be otherwise than agreeable to
the Neapolitans when, shortly afterwards, Sikard's troops were defeated
by Saracens at Brindisi, and the town itself was burnt. In fact Naples
even returned the assistance rendered in 837 by helping the Saracens in
842-843 to conquer Messina.
1 The following account utilises the results of Aniari and Lokys.
f
## p. 384 (#416) ############################################
384 Dealings of Sikonolf [839-844
After SikarcTs death the Duchy of Benevento was divided into two
principalities; Radelchis resided in Benevento and Sikonolf in Salerno,
and the two were constantly fighting. This self-destruction on the part
of the sole great power of Southern Italy was of course in the highest
degree welcome to the Saracens. Sikard died in 839, and immediately
afterwards the Saracens of Sicily were once more in Calabria. They even
advanced as far as Apulia, and though the conquest of Bari was not at
first attained, Taranto fell and was not relieved even with the help of
the Venetians, whom the Byzantines had called to their assistance
(840). The victorious Muslims pushed forward to the Adriatic, burned
Ossero on the island of Cherso, and Ancona, and even appeared
temporarily in the neighbourhood of Venice, whose trading ships they
captured. In 842 also the Venetians suffered a further defeat. Bari,
which was to be the main base of the Saracens for thirty years, had
already fallen (probably 841). Radelchis, pressed hard by Sikonolf, had
called the masters of Sicily to his assistance, and they had begun by
taking Bari from their ally. Radelchis had of course in his distress to
accept this with a good grace and come to terms with these strange and
unruly allies. The Saracens under the Berber Khalfun advanced from
Bari as a base against Sikonolf, but after a bloody battle they were
driven back on Bari, which in the meantime they had converted into a
strong fortress. As the Muslims constantly received reinforcements this
one victory served Sikonolf but little; and Radelchis too, especially after
he had received (in 842), whether he liked it or not, his infidel allies under
the leadership of Masar into his capital, Benevento, became the puppet
of the Saracens, who ravaged the whole country with their despotism
and cruelty—a terrible scourge for friend and foe alike.
In spite of all such misfortunes however Radelchis was of course
under the circumstances victorious over his adversary. As Sikonolf could
not help himself in any other way, he too sought Saracen allies. He is
said to have applied to the Spaniards, whose numerous raids into
Provence, Northern Italy and in fact as far afield as Switzerland do not
come within the scope of this chapter. It is moreover much more
probable that Sikonolf did not draw his auxiliaries directly from the
Iberian peninsula, but from Crete, where a Muslim robber-State had
been in existence since 826, founded there by Spanish Saracens who had
been expelled for mutiny from their country. With these new troops,
who were more easily governed, as they had no neighbouring great
power on whose support they could calculate, Sikonolf succeeded in
defeating his opponent and locking him up in Benevento. He was
however unable to take the town owing to difficulties in his own camp,
and so everything remained in the same state as before. Masar with his
Saracens swept through the whole country, plundering as he went, and
undertook expeditions far towards the north.
These advances however of the Saracens, starting from Bari and
## p. 385 (#417) ############################################
845-849] • Attack on Rome 385
Benevento, were not the only raids with which the unfortunate country
was infested. The large ports of the western coast were in constant
dread of unpleasant surprises, for in the year 845 the Sicilians had
chosen Ponza and Ischia as naval bases, to which moreover they soon
added Cape Miseno. The towns of Naples, Gaeta, Amalfi and Sorrento
formed an alliance for the purpose of mutual defence, as the Duke of
Salerno was not in a position to assist them. In the following years the
Muslims prepared to deal a severe blow.
For a long time Rome with
its vast church treasures had tempted them. On 23 Aug. 846, a fleet of
73 vessels, stated to have been manned by 1100 Muslims, appeared
before Ostia, and in the early morning of 26 August the Saracens stood
before the walls of Rome, where they plundered the quarters of the town
lying outside the walls, especially the church of St Peter and the
cathedral of St Paul, and they broke open the graves of the apostolic
prelates. Unfortunately the information we have respecting this event
is extremely scanty and it is moreover distorted by legend, for the very
idea of the hordes of the false prophet having ravaged in the capital of
Christendom gave a magnificent scope for the imagination of the western
world. God himself immediately afterwards seemed to desire to avenge this
visitation, for after a few successes before Gaeta, whither the Saracens had
withdrawn from Rome, and just when they proposed to return, their entire
fleet, conveying all their stolen treasures, was destroyed in a storm (847).
The impression made by these events was enormous. In 847 King
Louis II appeared in Southern Italy, defeated the Saracens and
conquered Benevento. With the disputing parties there he arranged
that thev should make common cause against the infidels in Bari and
Taranto. This plan was frustrated through the selfish policy of the
small States of Southern Italy. Nothing was effected against the con-
tinued piratical raids of the Sicilians. It was not until the year 849,
when the Saracens planned another great expedition against Rome and
collected for this purpose in Sardinia, that the seaports of the western
coast united for the defence of Rome. The fleets met before Ostia, and
the fight had already begun when the elements waxed tempestuous and
the naval battle and the Sicilian fleet came to a sudden and violent end.
The Italian fleet was probably also destroyed—information on the point
is missing—but the sacred city was rescued. Even now, in the Stanzas
of the Vatican, the celebrated picture of this sea fight, painted from
sketches by Raphael, recalls this wonderful rescue of Rome.
Even though these naval expeditions were but episodes, the Saracen
fortress at Bari was a constant menace to Southern Italy. The successes
gained by King Louis had been lost again immediately after his departure,
and Bari once more extended its power to Benevento. Louis II, who
had in the meantime been crowned as Emperor, was therefore compelled
once more to decide on an expedition to the south. On this occasion he
advanced on Bari, but was unable to capture it, as his vassal States failed
C. MED. H. VOL. II. CH. XII. 25
## p. 386 (#418) ############################################
386 Successes of Louis II [852-875
him at the critical moment. However he managed to obtain possession
of Benevento for the second time, and he caused the Saracen leader Masar
to be executed (28 May 852). The Saracen commander-in-chief in
Sicily, 'Abbas ibn al-Fadl, avenged this deed by plundering and occupying
the Calabrian coast.
The same performance was repeated as after the first departure
of Louis. Meanwhile Mufarrij ibn Salim had taken up Khalfun>
position at Bari. He took his revenge for past failures by founding an
independent State, declaring his allegiance directly to the Abbasic
Caliph. His successor assumed the title of Sultan, thus proclaiming his
independence of the Sicilian Amir. Little is known of the doings of
these rulers of Bari, who were probably soldier-emperors like the sub-
sequent Mamelukes in Egypt. The country as far as Central Italy lay
defenceless at their feet, as the troubles in the territory of the old
Duchy of Benevento became greater and greater, and prevented all
defence. The western historians give the most incredible reports of the
bloodthirstiness of these sultans. Capua and Naples had to suffer tit
most, but the rich monasteries further to the north, as San Vincenzo on
the Volturno, and Monte Cassino, also saw the enemy either within their
walls, or at least before them.
In order to put a stop to this distress the Emperor once more
undertook (866) a great expedition against the Saracens, and finally
forced them back on Bari and Taranto. In order to subjugate Ban
however a fleet was necessary, and after long negotiations this *as
eventually placed at his disposal by the Byzantines. By co-operation
at this stage the two emperors and their vassals at last succeeded
(2 Feb. 871) in breaking the power of Bari. On his way to Taranto
however to take this last bulwark from the Muslims the Emperor w&*
compelled to fall back on Ravenna, and this too through the treachery
of the self-same petty princes, whom he had just rescued from the
severest distress. At the same time the Saracens appeared once more.
this time on the western coast, and attacked Salerno, pushing forward
also even as far as Capua. Louis sent help once more, and the Saracens
were defeated at Capua on the Volturno, whereupon they left Italy-
but only to return shortly afterwards with renewed forces. They did not
meet the Emperor again in the south. He died in 875 in Northern
Italy, and with his death all his successes appear to have vanished.
At this point Byzantium assumed the moral heritage of the
Carolingian and profited by his deeds. The further struggle with the
Saracens and their final expulsion from Italy belongs to the great
Byzantine restoration under the Macedonian emperors of the Basiliss
dynasty. A few words only may here be added in regard to the con-
clusion of the Saracen domination on Italian soil. With the consent
of the residents the Byzantines, who were up to that time stationed
in Syracuse, had also settled in Bari. The loss of Syracuse in the I
## p. 387 (#419) ############################################
876-916] Byzantine Conquest of Bari 387
year 878 was certainly a severe blow; Calabria and Taranto were
still in the hands of the Muslims, and the Adriatic too was not safe
from them. Basil was however the first to succeed in defeating the
Saracens at sea, to land in Calabria, conquer Taranto (880) and a few
years later to expel the last remnants of the Saracens from Calabria.
Thus Southern Italy became once more a portion of the Byzantine
Empire. The subsequent attacks of the Saracens in this quarter were no
more than episodes, although the coast towns were again occasionally
laid under tribute to the Saracens, and the constant strife between
Saracens and Byzantines did not in fact cease until the Normans
conquered both contending parties.
Through the downfall of Bari, the Saracens' base of attack for
Central Italy had naturally been shifted. They came now exclusively
from the West. The small Lombard States, rendered shrewd by their
experiences in the past, had made a treaty with the Sicilian Saracens,
on which account the latter, from 875 onwards, directed their raids
principally towards the north, and harassed the pope. In 878 Pope
John VIII was even compelled to pay the Saracens a tribute, in order to
purchase a short period of rest and quiet. For several years thereafter
the Saracens succeeded once again in gaining strong bases on the coast
and in the interior, as, for instance, in the mountains to the north of
Benevento and on the right bank of the Garigliano at Trajetto.
Especially from the latter point they still undertook numerous plundering
expeditions through Central Italy up to the gates of Rome; Monte
Cassino too, which they had not previously entered, was looted and
destroyed in the course of one of these raids. It was not until 915
that, thanks to the initiative of John X, the camp on the Garigliano was
destroyed. Thus ended the reign of Islam on Italian soil, though we
still hear of many a later piratical excursion.
Owing to the irregular nature of the Saracenic raids in Southern
Italy, the events in Sicily and on the mainland have had to be pourtrayed
separately, but it is easy to see the inner connexion of the two. The
subsequent march of events can be given without further ceremony in
connexion with the history of the island. The Muslim command here
had been in the meantime changed. On the ruins of the Aghlabid
dominion the Fatimite Mahdi had founded a new and promising State;
the Arabs and Berbers of Sicily seemed apparently to have submitted
with a good grace to the new order of things in their native country
(910), but the fact soon made itself apparent, that the governor sent by
Mahdi was not equal to the situation. The Saracens of Sicily, under
the leadership of the Arab Amir Ahmad ibn Kurhub, thereupon declared
their independence and named the Abbasid Caliph instead of the
Fatimite in their pulpit prayers (913). But such a period of unity,
patched up in times of need, between Berbers and Arabs, never lasted
long. As early as 916 the Berbers gave up the unfortunate Amir to
ch. xii. 26—2
## p. 388 (#420) ############################################
388 Hasan ibn Ali [91P
the Caliph Mahdl to be cruelly executed, and Sicily became once morta
province of the Fatimite Empire (917).
Thus strengthened the Fatimites again commenced their piraticst
trips from Africa and Sicily, and the Byzantines purchased peace fa
their coasts for some time by a treaty with Mahdl. The latter recoups
himself for this in the north, by plundering the district of Genoa and
the town itself in 934 and 935, at the same time casually honouring
Corsica and Sardinia with a visit.
These years were not happy ones for Sicily; one unscrupuloc
governor drove the Islamic upper classes to revolt, whilst another
subjected them in an unprecedentedly bloody struggle. Thereafter a
more favoured time began under the rule of the Arab Hasan ibn Ali,
who had been entrusted with the governorship by the second Fatimite
in 948. Hasan belonged to a family called Banu abi-1-Husain, and the
Fatimite to the Kalb; he and his successors and relatives who rulei
after him are therefore called the Kalbites, a brilliant dynasty, under
whom all the gifts of civilisation began to collect and take shape, which
gave later a distinctive character to the Norman culture, and even to
that of Frederick II.
The energetic Amir repressed the particularism which militated
against successful development, and thus created the foundations of a
well-regulated and more or less independent State. The Fatimites were
shrewd enough to restrict their choice to members of the race of Banu
abi-1-Husain, whenever a new governor was required, without however
permitting too much private power to arise by so doing. Closely related
members of the family were always employed by the Fatimites in
Egypt, thus securing themselves against any efforts at independence
on the part of the Amir for the time being. But apart from this
the governor had complete freedom, especially since the Fatimites had
removed their capital to Egypt. In this way the Amir of Sicily acted
as a necessary counterpoise to the Amir of Kairawan. In the foreign
policy of the Fatimites moreover Sicily played in the long run a more
and more important part, especially since the Fatimites had become the
leading Muslim power in the eastern Mediterranean territory and were
engaged in constant struggles with the Byzantines for supremacy. This
however can only for the present be briefly touched upon.
Hasan ibn Ali reigned until 965. During his rule renewed fio-nts
took place in Calabria and Apulia, in fact the Byzantines even ventured
on a landing in Sicily, but in the year 965 the Greek fleet was utterly
destroyed off Messina. But shortly after, when the conquest of Egypt
was impending, the Fatimites concluded terms of peace with Byzantium
and thus Italy also obtained a period of rest from the Saracens, and
an alliance was even made with them temporarily when thejaovements
of the Emperor Otto II began in Lower Italy. In 982 however Otto
was seriously defeated by the Saracens at Stilo iij the Bay of T&ranto.
:'
## p. 389 (#421) ############################################
989-1042] Decline of the Saracens in Sicily 389
This strange friendship soon came to an end, and in the decades
before and after the year 1000 we come across the Kalbite Amir again
in Southern Italy. In Sicily however the population experienced years
of progress and prosperity under intelligent rulers. The general welfare
was shewn most completely in the households of the Amirs. The
material prosperity of the Orient of the time, the refined style of living,
the rich intellectual life of Court circles in Bagdad, Cordova and Cairo,
were also to be met with in Palermo, whose best period corresponds to the
reign, unfortunately but too short, of the Amir Yusuf (989-998). But
immediately after YusuFs decease indications began to appear which
shewed that the Kalbite dynasty had passed its highest point of
excellence. Yusuf was rendered incapable of holding the reins of
government by a stroke and his son Ja'far (998-1019) was not fortunate
in his methods. The opposition between Arabs and Berbers, never quite
extinct, now started up again. The revolt which followed ended with
the expulsion of the Berbers and the execution of a brother of the Amir,
who had led them. Ja'far was however compelled to yield to another
revolt, carried out by another brother. Thus weakened inwardly Sicily
was no longer able effectively to resist the various hostile naval powers,
such as Byzantium and Pisa, which threatened it; and early in the new
century the Sicilian fleet suffered various defeats. It was not until the
Zlrids allied themselves with the Sicilians that, during its third decade,
more extended raids could be undertaken against the Byzantine lands,
but these too always ended in defeat.
Added to these defeats there followed, from 1035 onwards, a civil
war, which was the beginning of the end of the dynasty and also of the
sway of Islam in Sicily. On this occasion the trouble was not between
Arabs and Berbers, but was the consequence of the expulsion of the
latter. The Berbers had to be replaced by other troops, and these of
course cost money, so that the taxes had to be raised. The native
population thereupon took up arms. The Amir Ahmad at this stage
applied to Byzantium for assistance, whilst the rebels, who were led by a
brother of the Amir, called in the help of the Zlrids. The Byzantine
general Maniakes, in whose army were numerous Normans, gained battle
after battle (1038-1040), but then experienced difficulties with the
Normans on account of his bad treatment of them, and also fell out with
Stephanos the leader of the Byzantine fleet, so that all the fruits of their
victories were lost to the Byzantines (up to 1042). The native popu-
lation too had in the meantime forced the Zlrids, on account of their
licentious behaviour, to return to Africa, so. that there would really have
been a good field for the revival of the Kalbite rule.
In the course of this general fight, each party against the others, the
individual minor magnates and the towns had learned to fight for
themselves, so that Sicily emerged from the great war no longer as an
undivided State, but as a conglomerate of petty principalities and civic
-
## p. 390 (#422) ############################################
390 Coming of the Normans [1061-1091
republics, all mutually at variance with each other. One main antagonism
was in evidence among these States, the same that had called forth the
whole civil war; the opposition between the Arab aristocracy and the
natives who had been converted to Islam. The former congregated
around Syracuse, the latter at Girgenti and Castrogiovanni. The leader
of the Arabs was Ibn ath-Thimna. Being defeated by the opposing party
he called the Normans into the country in 1061; these had in the
meantime founded a vigorous State on the mainland. The Norman
conquest, the details of which are given elsewhere, was completed in 1091.
The rule of Islam in Italy is therewith at an end, the expansion has
passed its zenith, and it is now thrown back on Africa. The process
lasted a few centuries longer in Spain, but here too Islam remained
merely an episode in history. The blessings of culture which were given
to the West by its temporary Islamitic elements are at least as important
as the influence of the East during the time of the Crusades. The
lasting injuries which the constant Saracen scourge inflicted on Europe
must not be exaggerated, for the Saracens did only what every Christian
maritime power of that period held to be justifiable. Robbery and a
trade in slaves were as legitimate on one side as on the other. As far
as their deeds were concerned the opponents were evenly matched. It
was only later on that the western land produced from its own inner
self a new world, whilst the East has never since attained a higher
pitch of excellence than that which immediately followed the Saracen
expansion.
## p. 391 (#423) ############################################
391
CHAPTER XIII.
THE SUCCESSORS OF HERACLIUS TO 717.
Besides Constantine, who had been his colleague since 613, Heraclius
left four sons by Martina—Theodosius, who was deaf and dumb, Heraclius,
who had been crowned in 638, David the Caesar, and Martin the nobilis-
simus, and (though Constantine was twenty-eight and Heraclius only six-
teen) he desired by his will that they should enjoy equal rights, while
Martina received the honours of an empress and a mother from both.
Relying upon this provision, Martina claimed to exercise the practical
sovereignty herself: but the people would not permit this, on the ground
that a woman could not receive foreign envoys, and compelled her to
leave the government to her stepson. Anticipating such a result,
Heraclius had entrusted a large sum to the patriarch Pyrrhus for her
benefit: but, Philagrius the treasurer having discovered this and informed
Constantine, Pyrrhus was forced to surrender it. As the Emperor was
suffering from consumption (which caused him to reside at Chalcedon),
Philagrius, fearing to be left exposed to Martina's vengeance, persuaded
him to send a donative to the soldiers through Valentine the Armenian,
the commander of Philagrius'' guard, urging them to protect his two sons
and maintain their claim to the succession. Valentine however used the
money to gain influence for himself; and after Constantine's death
(24 May 641) Philagrius was forcibly ordained and banished to Septum
(Ceuta), and many of his supporters were flogged, without opposition
from the army, though Martina tried to attach it to her son's cause by a
further donative in the name of the dead Emperor. But in consequence
of her incestuous marriage and her attempt to exclude Constantine from
power she was exceedingly unpopular, and by the malevolence of her
enemies she was now accused of poisoning him. Valentine, who had either
originated this report or used it for his own purpose, placed himself at the
head of a military force in Asia, occupied Chalcedon on the pretext that
the lives of Constantine's sons were in danger, and sent instructions to the
troops in the provinces not to obey Martina, while the Empress brought
the army of Thrace to defend the capital. To allay the commotion,
Heraclius produced his elder nephew, Heraclius, a boy of ten, to whom
CH. XIII.
## p. 392 (#424) ############################################
392 Fall of Martina [641-643
he had stood godfather, and, touching the wood of the cross, swore that
the children should suffer no harm; he even took the boy to Chalcedon
and gave the same assurance to Valentine and his army; but, though
Valentine allowed him to return, he refused to lay down his arms. By
these acts the Emperor succeeded for a time in gaining the support of
the capital. But the country round Chalcedon was covered with vine-
yards, many of which belonged to the citizens of Constantinople; and,
when the vintage came on and the produce was reaped by Valentine's
army, they cried loudly for an accommodation, directing their attack
against the patriarch Pyrrhus, who was the strongest supporter of
Martina and was suspected of having been concerned in the murder of
Constantine, and insisting on the coronation of the young Heraclius.
The Emperor then went to St Sophia and ordered Pyrrhus to crown his
nephew: but the people insisted that according to custom he should do
this himself; and they gave the new Augustus the name of Constantine,
though to distinguish him from his father he was popularly known as
Constans (Sept. ). The feeling against Pyrrhus was however still unabated;
and, after a mob had vainly sought him in the cathedral, and in revenge
desecrated the sanctuary, on the following night he laid his stole on the
altar in token of leave-taking (29 Sept. ), and after hiding for a time
escaped to Africa: and, though he had neither resigned nor been
deprived, Paul was ordained to succeed him (Oct. ).
Peace was now made, Valentine being appointed Count of the ex-
cubitors and receiving a promise that he should not be called to account
for the money received from Philagrius, who was recalled from exile, and
that his soldiers should receive a donative. The Caesar David was then
crowned as a third emperor under the name of Tiberius, and Valentine
marched to Cappadocia to act against the Arabs.
The peace was however of short duration. The troops in Cappadocia
produced a letter purporting to have been written by Martina to a
certain David, in which he was urged to attack Valentine, marry
Martina, and depose Constans. Soldiers and people rose against the
Empress under the leadership of Theodore the Armenian, who, having
seized David in a fortress to which he had fled, cut off" his head and had
it exhibited all over the eastern provinces. On Theodore's return to
Constantinople Martina was by decree of the Senate deprived of her
tongue, and Heraclius and Tiberius of their noses, and they were all
banished to Rhodes (Dec). Constans thus became sole emperor.
All this must have been done at the instigation of Valentine, who
after unsuccessful operations against the Arabs returned to Constantinople
with a guard of 3000 men and forced Constans to give him the rank of
Caesar (early in 643): but on strong opposition manifesting itself a
compromise was made, whereby he gave up this title, but was made
commander of the troops in the capital and gave his daughter in
marriage to Constans. Two years later his tyrannical acts led to a
## p. 393 (#425) ############################################
641-655] Arab War 393
popular rising, during which he was seized and beheaded. His military
command was given to Theodore (646)1.
The Arabs first invaded Asia Minor during the commotions of 641
In 642 a plan of Valentine for a combined attack on them was frustrated
by his defeat; but Theodore and Procopius penetrated as far as Batnae,
and an Armenian force occupied Amida and nearly reached Edessa before
they were routed. In 643, Valentine having returned to Constantinople,
the enemy again entered Asia Minor, and Arabissus capitulated to
'Umair. In 644 Mu'awiya, amir of Syria, took and plundered Euchaita;
and in 646 after besieging Caesarea for ten days he ravaged the neighbour-
hood, returned, and forced it to pay tribute, afterwards vainly attacking
Aniorium. On this expedition he found the Cilician fortresses deserted
and left garrisons in them till his return, but in 647 had them destroyed.
In 649 Hablb, and in 651 Busr, raided Isauria, and in 651 Sufyfin also
invaded Roman territory from Germanicea, while in 649 Mu'awiya
placed a fleet on the sea and plundered Constantia in Cyprus, but
retreated on the approach of a Roman fleet under Cacorizus the
chamberlain.
These were only plundering expeditions: but about 647 Hablb
occupied Melitene, Sozopetra, and Adata; and, as the war had gone
against the Romans, Constans in 651 sent Procopius to treat for peace
with Mu'awiya (the Caliph Othman was ignored), and a truce was made
for two years, the Emperor paying tribute and leaving Gregory, the
nephew of Heraclius, as a hostage.
The truce of 651 was hardly more than nominal; for the secession of
Armenia led to the Emperor's expedition to that country (652) and to
the outbreak of fresh hostilities there, and after the expiration of the
armistice the war was renewed on a larger scale than before. Great
preparations were made by Mu'awiya for an attack by sea and land
upon Constantinople. He himself, starting from Melitene, took Ancyra
and advanced to Dorylaeum (653), destroying all the fortresses on the
way. Meanwhile ships were being hastily built at Alexandria, Tripolis,
and other places; and in 654 a fleet under Abu'1-A'war after occupying
Cyprus pillaged Cos, Crete and Rhodes (where the famous colossus, long
since fallen, was broken up and sold to a Jew). But, while the work
was going on at Tripolis, two Roman brothers, Mu'awiya's slaves,
liberated the prisoners, and with their help killed the governor and his
guard, burnt the ships, and escaped by sea to Roman territory. Mu'awiya,
who was probably recalled by the news of this disaster, did nothing this
year beyond taking a fortress near Melitene: but the naval preparations
were not given up, and in spring 655 Abu'l-A'war was sent to Phoenix
in Lycia, a place celebrated for cypresses, to cut wood for shipbuilding,
where he was joined by the Egyptian ships under 'Abdallah. But the
1 The details and chronology of events after the death of Heraclius are very
doubtful.
## p. 394 (#426) ############################################
394 Constans in Italy [655-663
new naval policy of the Arabs had forced the Romans also to institute a
standing fleet; and the invaders were attacked by the Emperor in
person, who was accompanied by his brother, Theodosius. In the battle
which followed the Arabs were victorious, the Roman fleet being almost
destroyed and Constans with difficulty escaping in disguise; but the
Arabs, having attained their object, returned. Mu'awiya at the same
time made an expedition by land as far as Caesarea; but in 656 the
murder of Othman and the civil war which followed put an end to his
schemes, and he was at last glad to buy peace by paying tribute (659).
The Emperor used the respite to reduce some Slavonic tribes, some of
which he transferred to Asia to assist in the defence against the Arabs.
Constans had crowned his eldest son, Constantine, as Augustus in
Apr. 654, and in 659 conferred the same dignity on his two younger
sons, Heraclius and Tiberius, and had his brother Theodosius put
to death on a charge of conspiracy (659). This made him very un-
popular both with the citizens and with the army; he was greeted in the
streets with the appellation "Cain," and at last, finding life in Constanti-
nople irksome and perhaps dangerous, although war had again broken
out with the Arabs, resolved to leave his capital and devote his attention
to restoring the imperial power in the West, for which the disunion
among the Lombards after the death of Aripert (661) afforded an
obvious opportunity. In 662 he invaded the duchy of Benevento, and
took several cities with little or no resistance. He failed indeed before
the strong town of Acerenza; but he stormed Luceria, which he razed
to the ground, and laid siege to Benevento itself, which was defended
by Duke Romuald in person. Here he was met by a vigorous defence,
and, having heard that Grimoald was marching to his son's assistance,
made terms with the Duke, receiving his sister Gisa as a hostage, and
raised the siege. An attempt to attack Capua was foiled by a defeat
on the Calor, and he then withdrew to Naples for the winter. In spring
(663) he sent the Persian Sapor on a fresh invasion; but he had hardly
crossed the frontier when he was met by Romuald at a place called
Forinum and severely defeated. Constans then abandoned all thought
of reducing the duchy, and, secured against attack by the possession of
Gisa, betook himself to Rome, and was met by the Pope and clergy six
miles from the city, which he entered on 5 July, the first Emperor who
had been seen in the ancient capital for 190 years. He attended service
in the principal churches and made offerings, but left a more impressive
memorial of his visit by appropriating all the bronze ornaments that he
could find, including the tiled roof of the Pantheon. This last with
some of the other articles he sent to Constantinople, carrying the rest
with him. After a stay of twelve days he returned to Naples, and then went
on to Sicily, which was threatened by the Arabs, and settled at Syracuse,
where he set himself to organise measures for the defence of Sicily and
Africa. For this purpose heavy burdens were laid on his Italian and
## p. 395 (#427) ############################################
665-669] Murder of Constans 395
Sicilian subjects: but he was so far successful that no further invasion
of Sicily was made while he lived, and in Africa, though the patrician
Nicephorus is said to have been defeated in 665, no permanent conquest
was effected till after his death. From Syracuse he sent for his wife and
sons; but, as this foreshadowed a transfer of the seat of government,
the citizens, headed by Andrew the chamberlain and the patrician
Theodore of Colonia, refused to let them go.
It was not only at Constantinople that Constans was unpopular; and
in 668 a plot was formed among those who surrounded him, one of
whom, Andrew, son of Troilus, while the Emperor was bathing, poured
an unusual quantity of soap over his face so as to blind him, and then
killed him by striking him on the head with a silver ewer (15 July).
The army proclaimed as emperor an Armenian named Mzhezh, who is
said to have been of high character, but seems to have had no other
recommendation except good looks, and was reluctant to accept the
honour. His elevation found no favour elsewhere, the armies of Italy,
Sardinia, and Africa united to overthrow him1, the rebellion collapsed
(Feb. 669)2, and the assassin Andrew, Mzhezh himself, and his chief
adherents suffered death, among them the patrician Justinian, whose
young son, Germanus, afterwards patriarch, was mutilated.
Before turning to the eastern war it is necessary to speak of the
military and administrative organisation which by a process we cannot
trace in detail had been growing up during the reigns of Heraclius and
Constans. The co-ordination of civil and military officials instituted by
Diocletian had been greatly modified by Justinian, who in many places
combined both functions in the hands of one man. From this time the
civil governors, where they still existed, gradually became subservient to
the military power, and the process was completed by the Persian and
Saracen invasions, which made military rule a necessity, while the loss of
the eastern provinces caused a new distribution of forces, and therefore
new administrative divisions. Hitherto Asia Minor had hardly needed
defence; and the only large contingent permanently stationed there was
a portion of the palatine troops under the magister militum praesentalis
quartered in the north-west, where in a district reaching from Paphlagonia
and Galatia to the Hellespont they still remained under the name of
imperiale obsequium (oifrUiov), while their commander bore the title of
Count. Of the countries under the magister militum per Orientem only
Isauria and Cilicia remained; but, as his troops were required to defend
southern Asia Minor, they were also quartered in part of Cappadocia
and the district to the west of it, but were still known as Orientates
(avardkiKoi). Further west by the Aegean was a section of the Thracian
army which had followed Heraclius to the Persian war and were known
as Thracesii; but these were under the Anatolic general. Armenia and
1 For the alleged expedition of the young Emperor see Byz. Zeitschr, xvii. 455.
