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Heraclius

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Heraclius
Emperor of the Byzantine Empire
Heraclius and Heraclius Constantine
Reign October 5, 610 – February 11, 641
Coronation October 5, 610
Full name Flavius Heraclius Augustus
Born c. 575
Birthplace Cappadocia, present-day Turkey
Died February 11, 641
Predecessor Phocas
Successor Constantine III
Heraklonas
Consort Eudokia
Martina
Offspring Constantine III
Heraklonas
Dynasty Heraclian Dynasty
Father Heraclius the Elder

Flavius Heraclius (Greek: Φλάβιος Ἡράκλειος; known in English as Heraclius, or Herakleios; c. 575 - February 11, 641) was a Byzantine Emperor of Armenian origin, who ruled the East Roman Empire for over thirty years, from October 5, 610 to February 11, 641. His rise to power began in 608, when he and his father, the viceregal Exarch of Africa, successfully led a revolt against the unpopular usurper Phocas. Heraclius' reign was marked by several military campaigns, and he was remembered in future generations both for his battles against the Sassanian Persian king Khosrau Parvez, and as the first of the Byzantine emperors to engage the Muslims (though probably indirectly; notwithstanding the Battle of Tabouk). At his request Pope John IV (640-642) sent Christian teachers and missionaries to the Dalmatia, newly Croatian Provinces settled by Porga, and his clan who practiced Slavic paganism. He is also remembered for abandoning the use of Latin in official documents, further Hellenising the Empire. He was also traditionally credited with establishing the Thematic system, though modern scholarship marginalizes his role in this development.

Contents

[edit] Origins

Heraclius was born into an Armenian family from Cappadocia,[1] although beyond that, there is little specific information known about his ancestry. He was the son and namesake of Heraclius (generally referred to retrospectively as Heraclius the Elder), who had been a key general of Emperor Maurice's in the 590 war with Bahram Chobin, usurper of the Sassanid Empire. His mother was named Epiphania. After the war, Maurice appointed Heraclius the Elder to the position of Exarch of Africa. Though the younger Heraclius' birthplace is unknown, he grew up in Roman Africa; according to one tradition, he engaged in gladiatorial combat with lions as a youth.

[edit] Revolt against Phocas and the accession of Heraclius

Heraclius

In 608, Heraclius the Elder renounced his loyalty to the Emperor Phocas, who had overthrown Maurice six years earlier. The rebels issued coins showing both Heraclii dressed as consuls, though neither of them explicitly claimed the imperial title at this time. The younger Heraclius' cousin Niketas launched an overland invasion of Egypt; by 609, he had defeated Phocas' general Bonosus and secured the province. Meanwhile, the younger Heraclius sailed eastward with another force via Sicily and Cyprus.

As he approached Constantinople, he made contact with leading aristocrats in the city, and soon arranged a ceremony where he was crowned and acclaimed as emperor. When he reached the capital, the Excubitors, an elite imperial guard unit led by Phocas' son-in-law Priscus, deserted to Heraclius, and he entered the city without serious resistance. When Heraclius captured Phocas, he asked him, "Is this how you have ruled, wretch?" Phocas said in reply, "And will you rule better?" With that, Heraclius got so mad he cut off Phocas' head on the spot.

On October 5, 610, Heraclius was crowned for a second time, this time in the Chapel of St. Stephen within the Great Palace, and at the same time married Fabia, who took the name Eudokia. After her death in 612, he married his niece Martina in 613; this second marriage was considered incestuous and was very unpopular.

In the reign of Heraclius' two sons, the divisive Martina was to become the center of power and political intrigue. Despite widespread hatred for Martina in Constantinople, Heraclius took her on campaigns with him and refused attempts by Patriarch Sergius to prevent and later dissolve the marriage.[2]

Sassanid King Khosrau II submitting to Byzantine Emperor Heraclius, from a plaque on a 12th century French cross

[edit] War against Persia

When Heraclius took power the Empire was in a desperate situation. Phocas' initial revolt had stripped the Danube frontier of troops, leaving most of the Balkans at the mercy of the Avars.

Khosrau II (Chosroes) of the Sassanid Empire had been restored to his throne by Maurice and they had remained allies. He had used the death of his ally Maurice as an excuse to launch a war against the Romans. Chosroes had at his court a man who claimed to be Maurice's son Theodosius, and Chosroes demanded that the Romans accept him as Emperor.

The Persians had slowly gained the upper hand in Mesopotamia over the course of Phocas' reign; when Heraclius' revolt resulted in civil war, the Persians took advantage of the internal conflict to advance deep into Syria.

Heraclius offered peace terms to the Persians upon his accession, but Chosroes refused to treat with him, viewing him as an usurper of Theodosius' throne. Heraclius' initial military moves against the Persians ended disastrously, and the Persians rapidly advanced westward.

In 613, the Persian army took Damascus with the help of the Jews, took Jerusalem in 614, damaging the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and capturing the Holy Cross and Egypt in the process.

They made raids deep into Anatolia as far as Chalcedon, a town lying almost opposite of Constantinople across the Bosphorus. The Persians were also in communication with the Avars.

The situation was so grave that Heraclius reportedly considered moving the capital from Constantinople to Carthage, but was dissuaded by Patriarch Sergius I of Constantinople.

According to the trend in more recent scholarship, the theme system, often attributed to Heraclius, was actually developed by Heraclius' successors, most notably his grandson Constans II. However, the blueprint for it was provided by the exarchates set up by Maurice at Carthage and Ravenna.

Once he had rebuilt the army, Heraclius took the field himself in 621; he was the first emperor to campaign against a foreign enemy in person since Theodosius I. Confident that Constantinople was well defended and unwilling to engage in a war of attrition over the lost eastern provinces, he and his army of 50,000 men marched across Asia Minor and invaded Persia itself.[3] He would stay on campaign for several years.

In 626, Constantinople itself was besieged by the Avars but Persian attempts to cross the Bosporus and aid the Avars were repulsed by the Roman navy. The Avars then went on fighting Croat tribes in Dalmatia.

Byzantine Empire by 626 A.D under Heraclius (dotted line), shortly before the restoration of the pre-war boundaries. Syria and Palestine (striped area) were conquered by the Sassanids in 613-14, Egypt in 618.

Meanwhile, Heraclius acquired the assistance of the Western Turkic Khaganate and its leader, Ziebel, who invaded Persian Transcaucasia. Heraclius also exploited divisions within the Persian Empire, keeping the Persian general Shahrbaraz neutral by convincing him that Chosroes had grown jealous of him and ordered his execution.

A Byzantine army of 70,000 men defeated the Persians under Rhahzadh at the Battle of Nineveh in 627.[4] Heraclius personally defeated and killed Rhahzadh in the battle.

When Chosroes still refused to make peace, Heraclius continued his campaign; as he approached the Persian capital of Ctesiphon, the Persian aristocracy deposed Chosroes. His successor Kavadh II made peace with Heraclius by restoring all the empire's former territories.

The Persian Sassanid dynasty never recovered from this war; it took years for a strong king to emerge from a series of coups, and soon the MuslimCaliphate overwhelmed the sinking state.

Heraclius took for himself the ancient Persian title of "King of Kings", virtually dropping the traditional Roman imperial title of Augustus. Later on, starting in 629, he styled himself simply as Basileus, the standard Greek word for "monarch", and that title was used by the Roman emperors for the next 800 years. The reason Heraclius chose this word, instead of previous Roman terms such as Augustus, has been attributed by some scholars to having to do with Heraclius' Armenian origins.[5]

Heraclius also Hellenised the Empire by largely discontinuing the use of Latin as its official language, replacing it with Greek. Nonetheless, the empire continued to call itself Roman throughout the rest of its history. In 630, he reached the height of his power, marching barefoot as a pious Christian pilgrim into Jerusalem and restoring the True Cross to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

[edit] War against the Arabs

The Islamic Prophet Muhammad had recently succeeded in unifying all the nomadic tribes of the Arabian Peninsula. The Arabs, who had been too divided in the past to pose a military threat, now comprised one of the most powerful states in the region, and were animated by their new conversion to Islam. Heraclius fell ill soon after his triumph over the Persians and never took the field again. When the Muslim Arabs attacked Syria and Palestine 634, he was unable to oppose them personally, and his generals failed him. The Battle of Yarmuk in 636 resulted in a crushing defeat for the larger Roman army and within three years, Syria and Palestine were lost again. By the time of Heraclius' death, most of Egypt had fallen as well.

[edit] Legacy

Battle between Heraclius' army and Persians under Khosrau II. Fresco by Piero della Francesca, c. 1452

Although the territorial gains produced by his defeat of the Persians were lost to the advance of the Muslims, Heraclius still ranks among the great Roman emperors. His reforms of the government reduced the corruption which had taken hold in Phocas' reign, and he reorganized the military with great success. Ultimately, the reformed imperial army halted the Muslims in Asia Minor and held on to Carthage for another 60 years, saving a core from which the empire's strength could be rebuilt.

The recovery of the eastern areas of the Roman Empire from the Persians once again raised the problem of religious unity centering around the understanding of the true nature of Christ. Most of the inhabitants of these provinces were Monophysites who rejected the Council of Chalcedon.

Heraclius tried to promote a compromise doctrine called Monothelitism; however, this philosophy was rejected as heretical by both sides of the dispute. For this reason, Heraclius was viewed as a heretic and bad ruler by some later religious writers. After the Monophysite provinces were finally lost to the Muslims, Monotheletism rather lost its raison d'être and was eventually abandoned.

Perhaps the most important legacy of Heraclius was changing the official language of the East Roman Empire from Latin to Greek in 620 [6].

Owing to his role as the Byzantine emperor at the time Islam emerged, he was remembered in Arabic literature, such as the Islamic hadith and sira. His wars against King Chosroes were celebrated in the (still extant) Heraclias or Heracliad by his court poet George Pisida.

The Swahili "Utendi wa Tambuka", an epic poem composed in 1728 at Pate Island (off the shore of present-day Kenya) and depicting the wars between the Muslims and Byzantines from the former's point of view, is also known as Kyuo kya Hereḳali ("The book of Heraclius"). This reflects the considerable impression which this Emperor made on his Muslim foes, being still prominently remembered by Muslims more than a millennium after his death and at a considerable geographical and cultural distance.

Edward Franks notes that "(...)the traces of Heraclius' work are still visible in the present day map of the Middle East. It was Heraclius' line of defence in Eastern Anatolia which would permanently define the border between lands Islamised by Arabs in the first flush of Islamic conquest and those which would only be Islamised many centuries later - by Turks. And it was this ethnic and cultural dividing line which, at the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, would become the eastern border of the present Turkish Republic. Unwittingly, Attaturk - seeking to save something from the wreck of an ancient empire - established his country's new eastern border along much the same line where Heraclius had done the same a millennium and half before.[7]

Heraclius returns the True Cross to Jerusalem, anachronistically accompanied by Saint Helena. 15th century, Spain

Edward Gibbon in his masterpiece The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (Chapter 46) wrote:

Of the characters conspicuous in history, that of Heraclius is one of the most extraordinary and inconsistent. In the first and last years of a long reign, the emperor appears to be the slave of sloth, of pleasure, or of superstition, the careless and impotent spectator of the public calamities. But the languid mists of the morning and evening are separated by the brightness of the meridian sun; the Arcadius of the palace arose the Caesar of the camp; and the honor of Rome and Heraclius was gloriously retrieved by the exploits and trophies of six adventurous campaigns. [...] Since the days of Scipio and Hannibal, no bolder enterprise has been attempted than that which Heraclius achieved for the deliverance of the empire.

[edit] Recovery of the True Cross

Despite his actual heterodox theology, Heraclius was long remembered favourably in the Western church for his reputed feat in recovering the True Cross, which had supposedly been captured by the Persians. The story was included in the Golden Legend the famous 13th century compendium of hagiography, and he is sometimes shown in art, as in The Legend of the True Cross sequence of frescoes painted by Piero della Francesca in Arezzo, or a similar sequence on a small altarpiece by Adam Elsheimer (Städel, Frankfurt). Both of these show scenes of Heraclius and Constantine I's mother Saint Helena, traditionally responsible for the excavation of the cross. The scene usually shown is Heraclius carrying the cross; according to the Golden Legend he insisted on doing this as he entered Jerusalem, against the advice of the Patriarch. At first (shown above), when he was on horseback, the burden was too heavy, but after he dismounted and removed his crown it became miraculously light, and the barred city gate opened of its own accord.

Probably because he was one of the few Byzantine emperors widely known in the West, the Late Antique Colossus of Barletta was considered to depict Heraclius.

[edit] Family

Heraclius and Fabia Eudokia, a daughter of Rogatus, had two children:

With his second wife, Martina, the Emperor had at least 10 children, though the names and order of these children are questions for debate:

  • Constantine
  • Fabius (Flavius), who had a paralyzed neck
  • Theodosios, who was a deaf-mute, married Nike, daughter of Persian general Shahrbaraz or daughter of Niketas, cousin of Heraclius.
  • Constantine Heraclius (Heraklonas), Emperor 638 – 641
  • David (Tiberios), proclaimed Caesar in 638
  • Martinos or Marinos
  • Augoustina, Augusta
  • Anastasia and/or Martina, Augusta
  • Febronia

Of these at least two were handicapped, which was seen as punishment for the illegality of the marriage.

He also had at least one illegitimate son, Ioannes Atalarichos, who conspired a plot against Heraclius with his cousin, the magister Theodorus, and the Armenian noble David Saharuni. He was mutilated and exiled to Prinkipo, one of the Princes' Islands, in 637.

During the last years of Heraclius' life, it became evident that a struggle was taking place between Heraclius Constantine and Martina, who was trying to position her son Heraklonas in line for the throne. When Heraclius died, in his will he left the empire to both Heraclius Constantine and Heraklonas to rule jointly with Martina as Empress.

[edit] Note

  1. ^ Treadgold, Warren. A History of Byzantine State and Society. Stanford: University of Stanford Press, 1997, p. 287 ISBN 0-8047-2630-2
  2. ^ Kaegli, Walter. Heraclis: Emperor of Byzantium.
  3. ^ W. Treadgold, A History of the Byzantine State and Society, 294
  4. ^ W. Treadgold, A History of the Byzantine State and Society, 298
  5. ^ Kouymjian, Dickran. "Ethnic Origins and the ‘Armenian’ Policy of Emperor Heraclius." Revue des Études Arméniennes. vol. XVII, 1983, pp. 635-642.
  6. ^ Europe: A History. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1996. ISBN 978-0-19-820171-7
  7. ^ Edward Franks, Introduction to "Roots of the Modern Middle East"

[edit] Sources

  • The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, Oxford University Press, 1991.
  • (primary source) Charles, R. H. The Chronicle of John, Bishop of Nikiu: Translated from Zotenberg's Ethiopic Text, 1916. Reprinted 2007. Evolution Publishing, ISBN 978-1-889758-87-9. [1]
  • W. Kaegi, Heraclius Emperor of Byzantium, Cambridge University Press, 2003.
  • (primary source) C. Mango & R. Scott (trans.), The Chronicle of Theophanes Confessor, Oxford University Press, 1997.
  • (primary source) C. Mango (trans.), Nikephoros Patriarch of Constantinople. Short History, Dumbarton Oaks Texts 10, 1990.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Heraclius
Born: c. 575 Died: 11 February 641
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Phocas
Byzantine Emperor
610–641
with Constantine III from 613
Succeeded by
Constantine III and Heraklonas
Political offices
Preceded by
Imp. Caesar Flavius Phocas Augustus, 603, then lapsed
Consul of the Roman Empire
608
with Heraclius the Elder
Succeeded by
Lapsed, then Imp. Caesar Constantinus Augustus in 642
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