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Siege of Syracuse (877–878)

Coordinates: 37°05′N 15°17′E / 37.083°N 15.283°E / 37.083; 15.283
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Siege of Syracuse
Part of the Muslim conquest of Sicily
(Arab–Byzantine wars)

The capture of Syracuse, miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes
DateAugust 877 – 21 May 878
Location
Result Aghlabid victory
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire Aghlabids
Commanders and leaders
unknown patrikios  Executed Ja'far ibn Muhammad
Abu Ishaq

The Siege of Syracuse in 877–878 led to the fall of the city of Syracuse, the Roman and Byzantine capital of Sicily, to the Aghlabids. The siege lasted from August 877 to 21 May 878, when the city, effectively left without assistance by the central Byzantine government, was sacked by the Aghlabid forces.

Background

The Aghlabids had tried and failed to take the city soon after their initial landing on the island in 827. Despite their repulse, they had gradually taken over the western and central portions of the island.[1] Successive efforts after that to capture the capital of the Byzantine province, in 868, 869, and 873, failed.[2]

In 875, the unwarlike and pleasure-loving Aghlabid emir Muhammad II ibn Ahmad (r. 864–875) died, and was succeeded by his more energetic brother, Ibrahim II (r. 875–902).[3] The new emir was determined to finally capture Syracuse. He appointed a new governor for the island, Ja'far ibn Muhammad, and sent a fleet from Ifriqiya to assist the local Sicilian troops.[4][5]

Siege

Ja'far began his campaign in 877 by raiding the Byzantine territories in the east of the island and occupying some outlying forts around Syracuse. The siege of the city began in August, with the Arabs blockading it by sea and land.[4] The events of the siege are described in some detail by the eyewitness Theodosios the Monk, who included an account of it in a letter written during his subsequent captivity.[4][6]

The resistance of the city was led by an unnamed patrikios, while the Arabs were led initially by Ja'far, until he returned to Palermo and left the conduct of the siege to his son, Abu Ishaq.[7] The Muslims, well supplied with siege weapons, including a new type of mangonel, launched incessant attacks on the city's defenders by day and night. Theodosios focuses most of his account on the sufferings of the inhabitants, "reduced by starvation and disease", and the "hyper-inflationary prices paid for paltry amounts of staple foods", as described by Alex Metcalfe. A bushel of wheat came to cost 150 gold nomismata, a bushel of flour 200, an ox 300 nomismata, and the head of a horse or a donkey 15 to 20 nomismata. After several months of siege, the inhabitants had exhausted their supplies of oil, fruit, cheese, fish, and vegetables; they were reduced to eating grass, animal skins, ground bones mixed with water, and even, claims Theodosios, resorting to cannibalism and eating their dead and the children.[8][9]

Map of Sicily

Despite the importance of Syracuse, the sources report scant efforts from the Byzantines to aid the city. Ibn al-Athir reports that a few Byzantine vessels appeared before the city and were defeated without difficulty, but the main Byzantine fleet appears to have been occupied with ferrying building material for the erection of Emperor Basil I the Macedonian's Nea Ekklesia church in Constantinople. When the fleet eventually sailed, under the command of a certain Adrianos, it was so delayed by contrary winds at Monemvasia that news of the city's falls reached it there.[10][11] Unchallenged thus in their control of the sea, the Arabs were able to destroy the fortifications (βραχιόλια) protecting the city's two harbours: the incessant bombardment succeeded in collapsing one of the towers of the seaward fortifications, along with the adjoining stretch of walls, forming a breach where the Arabs concentrated their attack. Nevertheless, the patrikios of the city rallied the defenders, and for twenty days they managed to hold the breach against superior numbers, so that the surrounding area was filled with the dead and wounded.[12]

The city finally fell on the morning of 21 May 878, after nine months of siege. The defenders had withdrawn to the walls to rest and breakfast, leaving a small guard to hold the breach under a certain John Patrianos, when the Arabs launched a sudden attack, firing all their siege engines at once and charging the breach. By the time the patrikios came forth to rally the defence, the Arabs had killed the defenders of the breach and broken through into the city. A detachment that tried to blockade the way near the Church of the Saviour was likewise annihilated; the Arabs entered the church, where much of the populace had sought refuge, and massacred them all. The patrikios was left with some 70 men to hold an isolated tower, until he was forced to surrender the next day.[13] Theodosios himself was assisting the liturgy in the cathedral when news of the city's fall came, and was taken prisoner along with the archbishop. Unlike the Church of the Saviour, the Arab soldiers did not mistreat them, but forced the archbishop to reveal the location of the sacristy where the precious liturgical objects where held.[14]

Most of the population of the city was massacred during the sack; Theodosios writes that among the notables alone, over 4,000 were killed. The Arab commander, Abu Ishaq, had the commanding patrikios executed a week later, while the seventy men left with him along with other prisoners were reportedly taken out of the city and beaten to death with stones and clubs. One of the defenders, Niketas of Tarsos, who during the siege had daily insulted Muhammad, was taken apart and tortured to death. Only a few Mardaites from the Peloponnese along with some soldiers of the garrison were able to escape and, reaching Greece, inform admiral Adrianos of events.[15] The city itself was pillaged and practically destroyed. According to Ibn al-Athir, the Arabs remained there for about two months after the sack, before returning to their base, leaving the city in ruins. Ibn al-Athir also claims that a Byzantine squadron appeared before the city, but that it was driven off after a battle in which the Byzantines lost four ships.[16]

Aftermath

Ja'far did not long enjoy his victory; in the same year, he was killed by two of his slaves,[5] at the instigation of his uncle and his brother, who then usurped the governorship. This heralded a period of internal strife among Sicilian Muslims. Warfare continued through the 880s, with the Arabs attempting to subdue the remaining Byzantine strongholds in the northeastern third of the island, but with limited success: the raids yielded booty to pay the army, but no forts were taken.[17] The same period also saw a resurgence of Byzantine strength in the Italian mainland, where generals like Nikephoros Phokas the Elder won a string of victories against the Muslims.[18]

The lack of success exacerbated the tensions between the Muslims, leading to the rebellion of the Palermitans in 886 and again in 890, as manifold divisions—between the Arabs and Berbers, between the Sicilians and the Ifriqiyans, and between Palermitans and Arigentans—came to the fore. A full-scale civil war between Arabs and Berbers erupted in 898, and was not ended until Ibrahim II's son Abu'l-Abbas Abdallah captured Palermo in 900.[19] Abdallah also won a string of victories against the Byzantines, until he was recalled to Ifriqiya to replace his father; Ibrahim then came to Sicily with a group of volunteers, and captured the last major Byzantine stronghold, Taormina, in August 902.[20][21] Although few strongholds in the northeast remained unconquered and in Christian hands up to the fall of Rometta in 965,[22][23] the fall of Taormina marked the effective end of Byzantine Sicily, and the consolidation of Muslim control over the island.[24]

References

  1. ^ Metcalfe 2009, pp. 10–15.
  2. ^ Vasiliev 1968, p. 70.
  3. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 66, 70.
  4. ^ a b c Vasiliev 1968, p. 71.
  5. ^ a b PmbZ, Ǧa‘far b. Muḥammad (#22050).
  6. ^ ODB, "Syracuse" (A. Kazhdan, D. Kinney), pp. 1996–1997; "Theodosios the Monk" (A. Kazhdan), pp. 2053–2054.
  7. ^ PmbZ, Abū Isḥāq (#20067); Ǧa‘far b. Muḥammad (#22050).
  8. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 71–72, 73–74.
  9. ^ Metcalfe 2009, p. 27.
  10. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 72–73.
  11. ^ PmbZ, Adrianos (#20122); Ǧa‘far b. Muḥammad (#22050).
  12. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 74–75.
  13. ^ Vasiliev 1968, p. 75.
  14. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 76–77.
  15. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 76, 77.
  16. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 77–78.
  17. ^ Metcalfe 2009, p. 28.
  18. ^ Metcalfe 2009, p. 29.
  19. ^ Metcalfe 2009, pp. 29–30.
  20. ^ Metcalfe 2009, pp. 30–31.
  21. ^ Vasiliev 1968, pp. 143–147.
  22. ^ Metcalfe 2009, p. 55.
  23. ^ Vasiliev 1968, p. 147.
  24. ^ Metcalfe 2009, p. 31.

Sources

  • Kazhdan, Alexander, ed. (1991). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-504652-6. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • Lilie, Ralph-Johannes; Ludwig, Claudia; Zielke, Beate; Pratsch, Thomas, eds. (2013). Prosopographie der mittelbyzantinischen Zeit Online. Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Nach Vorarbeiten F. Winkelmanns erstellt (in German). De Gruyter http://www.degruyter.com/view/db/pmbz. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • Metcalfe, Alex (2009). The Muslims of Medieval Italy. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-2008-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Vasiliev, A.A. (1968). Byzance et les Arabes, Tome II, 1ére partie: Les relations politiques de Byzance et des Arabes à l'époque de la dynastie macédonienne (867–959) (in French). French ed.: Henri Grégoire, Marius Canard. Brussels: Éditions de l'Institut de Philologie et d'Histoire Orientales. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)

37°05′N 15°17′E / 37.083°N 15.283°E / 37.083; 15.283