De velitatione bellica

De velitatione bellica is the conventional Latin title for the Byzantine military treatise on skirmishing and guerrilla-type border warfare, composed circa 970. Its original Greek title is Περὶ Παραδρομῆς (Peri Paradromēs, "On Skirmishing").[1]

Historical context

For more details on this topic, see Byzantine–Arab Wars.

In the mid-7th century, the Byzantine Empire had lost most of its lands in the East to the Muslim conquests. Following the repulsion of two Arab sieges of Constantinople, the imperial capital, the situation was stabilized, and the border between Byzantium and the Muslim Caliphate was established along the Taurus Mountains defining the eastern edge of Asia Minor. For the next several centuries, warfare would assume the pattern of larger or smaller raids and counter-raids across this barrier. For the Arabs, these raids (razzias) were carried out as part of their religious obligation against their major infidel enemy, and assumed an almost ritualized character.[2] The Byzantines remained generally on the defensive, organizing Asia Minor into combined civil-military provinces called themata. On the mountainous border, smaller districts, the kleisourai (singular: kleisoura meaning "defile, enclosure"), were established.[3]

From the late 9th century, however, the fracturing of the Muslim world and the increasing strength of Byzantium caused a shift in the balance of power, as Byzantine campaigns penetrated into Cilicia, Armenia, northern Mesopotamia, and northern Syria.[4] The last major enemy to face the Byzantines in the region was the Hamdanid Emir of Aleppo, Sayf ad-Dawla. For ten years, from 944 to 955, he conducted raids into Asia Minor, inflicting several heavy defeats on the Byzantines in the process.[5] In the next decade, however, the situation was reversed, as the brothers Leo and Nikephoros Phokas (soon to be proclaimed emperor Nikephoros II) inflicted several defeats on his forces and proceeded to invade and occupy northern Syria in the late 960s.[6]

Book

Purpose and authorship

The De velitatione was composed as a treatise on this type of border fighting, but ironically at a time when this type of warfare became obsolete, due to Byzantine successes. The author himself was aware of that, and notes at the beginning of the work that Muslim power had been "greatly cut back", and that his instructions might "not find application in the eastern regions at the present time", but that they would be "readily available" should a need for them arise in the future.[7] The De velitatione is thus a backward-looking work, unique among the contemporary treatises, dedicated to codifying and preserving the experience gathered during the previous centuries.[8]

Although the work has been attributed to Nikephoros Phokas himself, the real author is unknown. He was certainly an experienced and high-ranking officer, close to the Phokas family, whose leading members he praises for their martial prowess. Since many of the events used to illustrate tactics in the De velitatione were actually carried out under Leo Phokas, George Dennis considers him as the likely author, or at least the guiding hand behind the book's composition.[6]

Chapters

The book is divided into twenty-five chapters:[9]

Analysis

The treatise gives emphasis on good reconnaissance, the use and control of terrain features, the desirability of achieving surprise, and the avoidance of pitched battle until the Byzantine forces have mobilized and are able to choose the appropriate time and place for their attack. Various options are presented, depending on the size of the force available as well as the size and composition of the enemy forces.[1]

The treatise is also interesting for revealing the militant Christian fervour of the times, particularly espoused by the ascetic Nikephoros Phokas,[1] and for illustrating, especially in Chapter 19, the disdainful attitude of its author, clearly a member of the provincial military aristocracy, to the Constantinopolitan bureaucracy and its agents in the provinces.[11]

Editions

The original Greek text is preserved in three 11th-century manuscripts, second-hand or third-hand copies of the original treatise. Two of them are in Rome, and the third, the only complete version, in the Escorial.[12]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Kazhdan 1991, p. 615.
  2. El-Cheikh 2004, pp. 83–84.
  3. Dennis 1985, pp. 137–138.
  4. Whittow 1996, pp. 311ff.
  5. Dennis 1985, pp. 138–139.
  6. 1 2 Dennis 1985, pp. 139–140.
  7. Dennis 1985, p. 147.
  8. Whittow 1996, p. 323.
  9. Dennis 1985, pp. 145, 147.
  10. Dennis 1985, p. 191. The mensuratores ("measurers, surveyors") were troops sent in advance of an army to locate and lay out a camp site.
  11. Whittow 1996, p. 349; Dennis 1985, pp. 214–219.
  12. Dennis 1985, pp. 140–141.
  13. Dennis 1985, p. 141.

Sources

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