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Mediterranean Sea: From Yarmuk to Poitiers

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MEDITERRANEAN
SEA
From Yarmuk
to Poitiers
The Mediterranean
sea was called by the Romans "Mare nostrum." A multiethnic and multireligious
Empire found its own unity in the Roman culture of the right and the law, in
the respect of the traditions of every people, in the ideal of civil and political
virtue of the citizen. All the inhabitants of the Empire were in fact Roman
citizens with equal rights and duties since emperor Caracalla's times (212 edict
A.D.). The Roman emperors were men of noble or dark origins coming from every
country: Syria, Spain, Illyria, Thrace, Italy, etc.
Beginning
from the V century the immigratory waves of the Germanic people turned into
invasions. The Western Roman Empire was fragmented in a series of Roman-barbaric
states.
Beginning
from the VI century the Slavics immigrated in the Balkan peninsula and they
also transformed themselves in invaders, coming to threaten even Greece. The
Eastern Roman Empire had to undertake a difficulty work of defense.
With the
arrival of the Sassanid dynasty the Persian Empire had taken again the politics
of hostility toward the Roman Empire. At the end of the VI century a long war
began. Up to 630 the two Empires kept on fighting harshly among them.
In 632
the Arabic people, gathered by Mohammed in a very cohesive government and religious
organization, was ready to go out of the Arabic peninsula to attack the remains
of the two Empires.
The Arabs
will be stopped at Constantinople, in 678 and in 717, and at Poitiers, in 732.
After one
century of war the Mediterranean Sea won't be anymore a point of meeting of
people but a border among two cultures in struggle:
the culture of the West, prevailing in Europe and the culture of the Islam,
prevailing in the Middle East and in North Africa.
Place: Mediterranean
Sea
Epoch: from
632 to 732 A.D.
The political situation in the VII century
Following
the fall of the Western Roman Empire, beginning from the V century they were
formed some states defined Roman-barbaric, first nucleus of the future European
state-nations.
In Gaul and
in Central Europe the Franks, in Spain the Visigoths, in Italy the Lombards,
in Britain the Angles and the Saxons proceeded in the process of fusion with
the Roman or Romanized local populations. But above all the process of acculturation
that would have brought to the recognition of a new common identity, the West,
progressed.
Analogous
process began among the Slavs of the south that established themselves in the
Illyria and in the rest of the Balkan peninsula; and among the Slavs of the
north that occupied the actual Poland, Slovakia and Czech republic.
The Roman
Empire, called also Byzantine from the ancient name of the capital Byzantium
(from the IV century Constantinople, and from the XV century Istanbul), maintained
the control on coastal zones of Italy (including Sicily and the other islands),
on the whole coastal strip of North Africa (actual Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia,
Libya, Egypt), on the so-called Fertile Crescent (actual Israel, Palestine,
Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and part of Iraq), on Smaller Asia and neighboring zones
(actual Turkey and Armenia), on Greece and on part of the Balkan peninsula.
The other
great power of the time was the Persian Empire, eternal rival of the Roman Empire.
The two Empires clashed for centuries in the area of Syria and Iraq with alternate
results. In 630 the emperor Heraclius defeated the Persian Khosrow II.
The Arabic
peninsula was not traditionally involved in the international political stories.
An attempt of conquest of the actual Yemen, at the time of emperor August, was
resolved with the withdrawal, for the adverse meteorological conditions, of
the victorious Roman army, conducted by the prefect of Egypt Aelius Gallus.
Since then no Roman had more attacked the Arabic peninsula. Many Arabs had been
included in the Empire as citizens and as allied. In the III century Phillip
the Arab, belonging to a noble family of the Traconitides, became Roman Emperor.
The Arabic unity
Mohammed had
unified militarily and religiously the whole Arabic peninsula. At his death,
June 8 th 632, various tribes tried to detach themselves from the union taking
back their own independence. The caliph Abu Bakr succeeded in recomposing the
unity, in few months, submitting the command of the army to a capable general:
Halid ibn al-Walid, who had been the winner of the Muslims in the second battle
between Mecca and Medina. The caliph Omar, successor of Abu Bakr, arranged an
accurate ethnic-religious cleaning eliminating from Arabia Christians and Hebrews.
The Arabs conquer Syria and Palestine (633-640)
In the autumn
of 633 three armies attakhed Syria and Palestine.
On February
4 th 634 the general Sergius was defeated at Gaza. Subsequently the general
Theodorus, brother of the emperor Heraclius, was defeated at Rabbath Moab.
On July 30
th 634 the local forces of the Byzantine Empire were defeated in the battle
of Agnadain by the general Halid ibn al-Walid.
Bosra, capital
of the Ghassanidis, was conquered by the Arabs. On January 23 rd 635 it was
the time of Pella (Fihl) near the Jordan. Damascus withstood six months. Then
Homs, Hamath and other cities surrendered.
The emperor
Heraclius sent reinforcements. The Arabs withdrew abandoning Damascus. But on
August 30 th 636 the general Theodore, attacked during a storm of sand, was
defeated near the river Yarmuk, tributary of the Jordan.
Theodorus died in battle.
In December
of 636 the Arabs reentered in Damascus. Syria was lost.
Two cities
withstood still for a long time: Aelia Capitolina (Jerusalem), that fell in
638, and Caesarea, capital of Palestine, that surrendered in 640. Palestine
was lost.
The Arabs conquer Egypt and Libya (639-652)
In 639 the
general Amr ibn al-As, from his base of Palestine, attacked Egypt. Pelusium
surrendered after one month of siege. Amr arrived without obstacles up to Heliopolis.
In June 640
he besieged the fortress of Babylon. Reinforcements left from
Alexandria that however were defeated. Babylon fell on April 6 th 641.
Amr set the
siege to Alexandria, defended by the fleet and by a strong garrison. Unfortunately
Heraclius was dead and the new Emperor Constant II was barely twelve years.
The Patriarch Cyrus, sent bythe young emperor to govern Egypt, rather than to
defend the land of the Pharaohs, surrendered on November 8 th 641. In 642 the
Arabic troops entered Alexandria. Egypt was lost.
The advance
continued toward Tripoli that fell on November 18 th 643. Libya was lost.
In 645 Constant
II sent a fleet, commanded by the admiral Manuel, that succeeded in freeing
Alexandria. The general Amr intervened, defeated the Byzantines at Nikiu and
in 646 retook Alexandria.
In 652 the
Byzantines tried again to free Egypt, but they were rejected.
Always in
652 the Arabs arrived in Nubia. Afterwards the Christian kingdoms of Dongola
and Axum will stop the Arabic advance toward south.
The Arabs conquer the Byzantine Mesopotamia and Armenia (639-640)
In 639-640 the Arabs occupied the Byzantine Mesopotamia and in October 640 they took the most important Armenian fortitude:
Dvin.
The Arabs in Asia Minor
(647)
In 647 Mu'awiya
burst in Cappadocia, occupied Caesarea and arrived in Phrygia. Then he withdrew
with a rich booty.
The
Arabs attack Carthage (647)
In 647 the
Arabs attacked the Exarchate of Carthage, they took a great booty and they returned
in Egypt.
The Arabs to Cyprus, Crete,
Rhodes, Cos and in Sicily (649-655)
In 649 the
Arabs attacked and conquered Cyprus.
In 652 the
coasts of Sicily were ransacked and in 654 those of Rhodes. It followed the
conquest of Cos and the pillage of Crete.
In 655 the
Arabs defeated the Byzantine fleet, commanded by the emperor Constant II, to
Fenike of Lycia.
The Arabs conquer the Persian
Empire (634-651)
Persia was
attached in 634. In 637 the Mesopotamia fell and the Arabs reached Ctesiphon.
In 641 the Arabs won a battle at Nehawend in Media. Then they advanced in the
Elam and in 644 they attacked Fars. In
650, after a hard resistance, the persianis yielded and the Arabs arrived up
to Afghanistan and to Pakistan. The last shah of Persia, Yezdegherd III was
murdered at Merv in 651. The Persian Empire stopped existing.
First peace treaty (659)
In 659 the
Arabs, engaged in a civil war for the story of the fourth caliph Alì ibn
Abi Talib, cousin and son-in-law of Mohammed to have married his daughter Fatima,
concluded an peace treaty with the emperor Constant II.
The Arabs besiege Constantinople,
but they are defeated by Constantine IV (678)
In 663 the
Arabs took back the attacks against Byzantium. They made raids in Asia Minor.
In 670 the Arabs took the peninsula of Cyzicus in the immediate proximities
of Constantinople. In 672 Smyrna fell and the coastal zones of Cilicia were
taken.
In 674 it
began the attack to Constantinople. But the Byzantines succeeded to reject the
assault and in 678 Constantine IV defeated the Arabs. This victory has to be
considered similar to that of Leo II the Isauricus in 717 and to that that Charles
Martel will get at Poitiers in 732. They were these three victories that saved
Europe and its culture.
Second peace treaty (685)
In 685 a peace
treaty was concluded between the emperor Justinian II and the caliph 'Abd al-Malik
ibn Marwan.
In 691 the
war resumed. The Byzantines were defeated at Sebastopol (today's Sulu-saray)
in Armenia.
The Arabs conquer Africa up to Ceuta (697-711)
In 697 the
Arabs poured into Latin Africa. They occupied Carthage (698). The emperor Leontius
sent a fleet. But it was defeated. The Arabs reached the Atlantic ocean overwhelming
the resistances of the Berbers. The Byzantines tried to defend Septem Fratres
(today's Ceuta) that fell in 711. Africa (Tunisia,
Algeria, Morocco) was lost.
The Arabs attack Asia Minor
(709-711)
In 709 the
Arabs besieged Tiana, a fortress in Cappadocia. The Byzantines were defeated
and Tiana fell in Arabic hands.
In 710 and
711 the Arabs made some raids in Cilicia and an Arabic division reached Crysopolis
in front of Constantinople.
The Berbers conquer Spain (709-712)
In 709 Musa
ibn Nuayr sent in the Iberian peninsula, then dominated by the Visigoths, 500
Berbers under the command of Tarif. Tarif disembarked near the future Tarifa
and arrived up to Algesiras.
Verified the
scarce ability of resistance of the Visigoths, Musa organized an army with 7000
Berbers and set it to the orders of Tariq ibn Ziyad. Tariq disembarked near
the future Gibraltar that is "Mountain of Tariq".
Some assert
that the fleet was furnished by the count Olian, desirous of revenge towards
king Roderic who had seduced his daughter.
In July 711
Roderic was defeated at the mouth of the river Salado, near Cadiz, also for
the betrayal of some of his adversaries, headed by the bishop Oppas, brother
of the dead king Witiza. In fact in 709 Roderic had dethroned the legitimate
heir Achila.
Tariq conquered
Malaga and Cordoba. Then he took Toledo, the Visigothic capital.
The Arabs conquer Spain (712-713)
In June 712
Musa arrived in Spain with an army constituted by 10000 Arabs. He conquered
Medina Sidonia, Carmona, Merida and Seville. He finally reached Toledo.
The emirate of Andalusia (711-756)
The reunited
armies of Musa and Tariq conquered Augusta Caesarea (Saragossa) and almost all
the rest of the Iberian peninsula. Spain was lost.
The emirate
of Andalusia was constituted with capital Cordoba. The first emir was 'Abd al-Aziz,
son of Musa. He made the error to marry Egilona, the widow of Roderic, and was
sentenced to death in 716, being suspected to have become Christian.
The Berbers' revolt (740-742)
In 740 the
Berbers rebelled themselves and defeated the Arabic troops in the plain of Tangier.
Near the river Masfa, in 742, the Berbers still had the best on a second army sent by the Arabs.
Then also
the Berbers that had conquered Andalusia rose up.
The Arabs
were forced to send a third army that defeated the Berbers and succeeded in
taking back the control of Africa and Andalusia.
The Arabs besiege Constantinople
(716-717), but they are defeated by Leon II
The caliph
Sulayman gave to his brother Maslama the task to conquer Constantinople. The
siege lasted since August 716 to September 717. The emperor Leon II the Isauricus
withstood. The Arabs had to retire themselves. This victory showed
decisive to stop the advance of the Arabs toward Europe from east.
The Arabs are defeated at
Poitiers by Charles Martel (732)
In 718 the
Arabs occupied the Septimania, the southern part of the Gaul, and in 720 they
conquered Narbona. Autun was ransacked in 725. Then they tried to reach Toulouse,
but they were stopped by the duke Eudes on the Garonne. Then they directed toward
Burdigala (Bordeaux) and they set the siege to Tours.
Charles Martel
intervened and, together with the duke Eudes, attacked the Arabs at Cenon near
Poitiers. On October 17 th 732 the Frank infantry and the Aquitainian cavalry
defeated the Arabs, who had to retire. This victory proved decisive to stop
the advance of the Arabs toward Europe from west.
One century of wars (632-732)
The victories
of Constantinople (717) and of Poitiers (732) allowed Europe to survive, even
if sad events still waited a lot of zones of the South Europe (Arab conquest
of Sicily, assaults to the coasts of Provence, of Liguria, of Sardinia, of Corsica,
etc.).
After one
century of war, practically nonstop, the West had succeeded not to be crushed
by the Arabic armies. European culture was safe. But its center of gravity was
moved toward north.
Unfortunately
the unity of the Mediterranean Sea was shattered. By now part of the European
coastal strip, the whole African and great part of the Asian one was in the
hands of the Arabs.
Of all the
lost territories (today's Spain, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Israel,
Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Turkey) only Spain would have been
freed after a long and hard struggle. It will be necessary in fact to wait for
January 2 nd 1492 to see the definitive defeat of the Arabic kingdom of Granada.
In the XIV
century the Turks will take back the assault against Europe invading the Balkan
peninsula (see Bosnia before the Turks and Bosnia
dominated by the Turks). Constantinople will fall in 1452 and will have
the new name of Istanbul.
In 1683 Austrians
and Polish will save Europe defeating the Turks who had set the siege to Vienna.
Beginning from the end of 1600 the Europeans will begin the liberation of the
Balkans.
Bibliographical references:
|
Arborio
Mella F. A.
|
|
Mursia |
|
Hourani
A.
|
|
Mondadori |
|
Maier
F. G.
|
|
Feltrinelli |
|
Noja
S.
|
Storia
dei popoli dell'Islam - L'Islam dell'espansione (632-1258)
|
Mondadori |
|
Ostrogorsky
G.
|
Storia
dell'Impero Bizantino
|
Einaudi |
|
Pirenne
H.
|
|
Newton |
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