User:Antisyntagmatarchos/Byzantine North Africa

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Byzantine mosaic from Carthage
The so-called gate of Solomon, main gate of the Byzantine Theveste

Byzantine rule in the Maghreb was a period in Northwest Africa's history that spanned around 175 years. It began in the years 533/534 with the reconquest of territory formerly belonging to the Western Roman Empire by the Eastern Roman-Byzantine Empire under Justinian I and ended during the reign of Justinian II with the conquest of Carthage (698) and the last Byzantine outposts , especially Septem (708/711), in the course of Islamic expansion.[1]

The region's administrative structure was initially in line with the typical late Roman administrative structures that had been existing for the past 300 years. Civil powers were thus in the hands of a praetorian prefect, the head of the supreme civil administrative authority in the late Roman Empire. The military powers, however, were incumbent on a magister militum per Africam. These powers were bundled from 591 at the latest, and East Roman North Africa became the heartland of one of two exarchates, with the founding of which the East Roman Emperor Mauricio (582–602) was able to counteract the consequences of imperial overstretch through bundling and decentralization. No further change in these administrative structures took place until the end of Byzantine rule.

The reconquest of this region was of the greatest strategic and economic significance and the most enduring of all conquests in the West. While the Lombard kingdom was established in parts of East Roman Italy after 568 and East Roman rule in southern Spain came to an end at the beginning of the 7th century, the areas reconquered in the Maghreb remained entirely in East Roman hands until the Islamic expansion. This made the region the most important cornerstone of Eastern Roman/Byzantine power in the West.

Initial situation[edit]

The rapid establishment of Eastern Roman rule in today's Maghreb was the result of the increasing political vacuum in the African provinces of the former Western Empire and the Germanic successor state of the Vandals, which was primarily characterized by the dissolution of regional power and administrative structures.

Former Western Roman North Africa at the close of the 5th and beginning of the 6th century.[edit]

Addministrative structure of the Imperium Romanum after 395

With the partition of the empire in 395, all Roman areas in Africa west of the Great Syrte became part of the Western Roman Empire. Specifically, these were the provinces of Tripolitania, Byzacena, Zeugitana (also called Proconsularis provincia or Africa proconsularis), Numidia, Mauretania Sitifensis, Mauretania Caesariensis and Mauretania Tingitana. These provinces could be considered, at least in part, to be the heart of the western empire, since they supplied Italy with grain and generated a large part of the western empire's tax revenues. From 429 they were caught up in the political turmoil of the migration of peoples by the Vandals crossing at Septem. At the latest after the assassination of Emperor Valentinian III. In 455 no region in Africa was under Western Roman rule.

The Vandal Kingdom[edit]

The Vandal kingdom a few years before the East Roman conquest, weakened by secessions and Moorish attacks.

In parts of western Roman North Africa in 439, with the conquest of Carthage by the Vandals under their king Genseric, a de facto independent empire ruled by predominantly Germanic warriors had been established, which with its powerful fleet dominated the western Mediterranean region and, in addition to Corsica and Sardinia, the Balearic Islands and the western tip of Sicily under his control.[2] This was extremely consequential for Western Rome, as Africa was a rich and heavily urbanized province; In addition to olive production, the function of the province as a granary for Western Rome, especially Italy, was of central importance.[3]

In 441 an Eastern Roman attempt to defeat the Vandal fleet and end their rule failed. Rather, the Western Roman Empire had to recognize the Vandal rule east of Numidia in a treaty in 442.[4] In 468, the kingdom of the Vandals became the target of another, this time large-scale, joint venture between the Western Empire under Anthemius and the Eastern Roman Empire under Leo I. However, this Vandal campaign failed catastrophically, mainly because the Vandal king Gaiseric succeeded in setting fire to the large Roman fleet. After Vandal raids along the coast of eastern Roman Illyricum (and possibly the failure of another, smaller Roman campaign in 470), the eastern Roman emperor Zeno guaranteed the Geiseric family in a treaty (foedus) in 475 ownership of the province of Africa and the islands; subsequently there were no more conflicts between the Vandal Empire and the Eastern Roman Empire for decades.

In the 94 years of its existence, the kingdom of the Vandals was characterized by dynastic disputes over dominance and, above all, by the contrast between the Nicene Roman population and the Vandals, who were Romanized but adhered to the Arian faith of Christianity. In addition, they had considerable difficulties in defending the national borders against the Berbers or in keeping the Berbers under Vandal rule under control.[5] This situation prompted large landowners and smallholders alike to fortify their farms.[6] However, contrary to older opinions, the time of the Vandal Empire was not an era of serious economic decline, rather trade relations continued,[7] although probably limited by the independence of the Vandal Empire and its aggressive foreign policy, especially under Genseric.[8]

Roman-Berber areas[edit]

In the years following 439, Numidia and the provinces of ancient Mauritania initially remained under Western Roman rule .[9] Here, the Western Roman Emperor approved the raising of private armies by large landowners because he hoped that this would lead to attacks on Vandal territory.[10] After the assassination of the Western Roman Emperor Valentinian III. this warlord-like status of large landowners prompted the disintegration of these provinces into various small empires, which were perceived as Berber in the public of the rest of the Mediterranean area and especially in the region around Carthage.[11] Numidia and the coastal areas of the Mauritanian provinces were immediately conquered by the Vandals, but after the death of the Vandal king Huneric in 484, some of them broke away from the state association of the Vandal empire. Roman-Berber areas persisted throughout the Mauritanian provinces, above all a Regnum Maurorum et Romanorum with the capital Altava, whose importance continued to increase until the 570s. The exclusively Berber character of these areas, which were predominantly not under Vandal rule and were formerly Western Roman, has now been completely refuted.[12] In particular, the regions around Altava as well as Lixus and Volubilis in the extremely western Mauretania Tingitana showed continued existence of the old trade connections and Latin grave inscriptions, in some cases up to the year 655.[13] In addition, the petty empires of this region welcomed many Romans who were persecuted by the Vandals for religious and other reasons.[14]

The End of the Vandal Kingdom[edit]

Campaigning during the Vandal war.

Under the penultimate Vandal king, Hilderich, who was intent on reaching a settlement with the East and turning away from Arianism, the foreign and domestic political difficulties of his empire increased considerably, with a Vandal defeat against the Berbers leading to his fall at the hands of Gelimer in 530. The last Vandal king Gelimer, on the other hand, not only saw himself confronted with the threat from the Berbers after the coup d'etat, but also had to send part of his army and fleet to Sardinia to put down an uprising by the noble Godas there, and at the same time he had to face another uprising of the Tripolitan governor Prudentius initially watched idly.[15]

Under these conditions, the Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian I began the Vandal War in 533, which also enabled him to divert attention from the after-effects of the Nika uprising of the previous year.[16] He sent an army led by Belisarius and 15,000 infantry and cavalry to Carthage and a smaller army to support Prudentius in Tripolitania.[17] These troops were able to conquer most of the Vandals' domain within nine months[18] – a circumstance that was possibly additionally favored by the fact that some Roman-Berber petty empires saw a reason for war in the fall of Hilderich in a similar way as the Eastern Roman emperor did.[19]

Religions in the Late Antique/Byzantine Maghreb[edit]

Christian beliefs[edit]

Christianity spread in the area of ​​today's Maghreb during the Roman period from the 3rd century and was the dominant religion in late antiquity and probably also in the early Middle Ages. Up to three Christian faiths were represented here, which disappeared at the latest through Islamization

Roman Imperial Church[edit]

The majority of Christians in the Maghreb consisted consistently of Latino-Nicanic Christians, who thus belonged to the faith that was the state religion of the Roman Empire. The Vandal rule with the associated suppression of the Latin-Nicanic faith also had an effect in the Eastern Roman period. On the one hand, state control and the direct influence of the pope were absent for around a century. This required a certain degree of autonomy from local church dignitaries and religious scholars, who did not want to give them back to the Eastern Roman Emperor.[20] The region in particular was more open to religious debates than other provinces of the Roman Empire.[21] On the other hand, the Latino-Nicene Christian communities in the Maghreb had developed an aversion to any deviation from the ecumenical councils.[22] As far as Byzantine emperors tried to reach an agreement with oriental faiths through compromises such as the three-chapter dispute or monotheletism, this was also rejected in the Maghreb[23] as in Italy and thus burdened the cohesion of the empire. Together with the considerably more significant spatial expansion, population and economic power compared to the Italian possessions of the Byzantine Empire and the resulting lower dependence of the Byzantine Maghreb, this even led to secession. The Greek monk Maximus Confessor, who stayed in the Maghreb between 628 and 645 and became the mouthpiece of the African church, played a special role here[24] and held the new doctrine for an unthinkable compromise with the Monophysites and condemned monotheletism in a Lateran synod headed by Pope Martin I.

Other Faiths[edit]

In the Maghreb, as early as the last phase of the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire, Donatism (named after Donatus of Carthage, 315 to 355 primate of the Donatists) split off from the Western Church in the 4th and 5th centuries. This split, which had developed its own ecclesiology, remained limited to north-west Africa. The Donatist communities were the dominant faith in Mauretania Sitifensis and Numdia until the western Roman persecution from 411, were as strong in the western regions of the Mauritanian provinces and in Tripolitania as the Latin-Nicanic communities, in which Byzacena was a strong minority and elsewhere represented everywhere in Africa,[25] whereby they seem to have been particularly widespread among the Berbers.[26] The Donatists were also suppressed under the Vandal rule, which continued under the Eastern Roman rule[27]. Here their trace is lost. The extent to which Donatists were also persecuted in the Roman-Berber petty kingdoms has not been researched, but given the evidence of religious tolerance at the time of the Vandals and the lack of any information on suppression afterwards, it can probably be denied.

The conquest of the Arian Vandals was accompanied by the arrival of Arianism as the third Christian faith in the Maghreb, which, as the state religion of the Vandal Empire, stood in contrast to the Nicene creed of the emperors of both Roman empires, but also of the majority of the population in the Maghreb. Clergymen were exiled, monasteries dissolved and believers of the Nicene Confession put under pressure. However, the persecution by the Vandals met resistance from Catholic Christians as well as Donatists and ended with the Eastern Roman conquest, which also made the Arians an oppressed minority.

From then until the conquest by the Arabs, there were parallel Latin-Nicanic, Greek-Nicanic and Homoean-non-Nicanic (Arian) and probably also Donatist Christians in North Africa and Sardinia.

Judaism[edit]

It is unclear when the first Jewish communities in the Maghreb came into being, because Jewish traders may have settled there when the Phoenicians, who were also Semitic, established trading posts. At the latest since the Hadrianic founding of the city of Aelia Capitolina and the province of Syria Palaestina, the Jews finally dispersed as a regionally tangible and cohesive people. Jews also settled in the Roman Maghreb. Since Berbers subsequently converted to Judaism, it is already unclear for the pre-Islamic period to what extent the Maghreb Jews were of Berber or Israelite descent. In particular, the legend arose that the confederacy of Kāhina was Jewish. In contrast, the existence of a Judeo-Berber language is certain.

Similar to Donatists and Arians - the latter after the conquest of the Vandal kingdom by the Eastern Romans, the Jews were subjected to oppression, especially with regard to the ban on practicing religion, which experienced a first climax under Justinian I and in 632 under Heraclius with an edict for forced conversion across the empire also affected Byzantine North Africa.[28] It is possible that before this Christianization policy, Jews had moved to the parts of Maurentania Tingitana that were not under Byzantine rule.[29] In more recent research, however, it is pointed out that the concrete implementation of the edict throughout the empire is very questionable and the background to the measure was probably of an eschatological nature; it was hoped that this would stabilize the state at a time of religious unrest. Ultimately, however, the imperial strategy failed,[30] and Judaism in the Maghreb remained strong[31].

The Praetorian Prefecture Africa - East Roman North Africa 533 to 590[edit]

Remains of the Damous-El-Karita-Basilika in Carthage, a church that experienced a substantial expansion during the 6th century. Approxiimately 14.000 fragments of inscriptions were found during the discovery of the church some time between1876 and 1892.

After Belisar had annihilated the kingdom of the Vandals with his unexpectedly quick victories over Gelimer at the Battle of Ad Decimum and the Battle of Tricamarum, its territories – and thus the economically strongest province of the former Western Roman Empire[32] – became re-incorporated into the Roman Empire without major war-related destruction.

Justinian now intended to reconquer the other regions that had been under Roman rule before the Vandals and Berbers invaded.[33] The remaining areas of the defunct Western Roman Empire in today's Algeria and Morocco, which never[34] or not anymore[35] were under Vandal rule, but were already so established in their small statehood that they did not recognize the restored Roman rule in Carthage. Nevertheless, the Eastern Roman dominion was consolidated on African soil[36] and be extended beyond the borders of the former Vandal Empire, although in particular 534 to 548 exhausting battles went hand in hand with it.[37]

Wars, religious unrest and flight are discussed in contemporary historiography, but much less attention is paid to the fact that the reconquest made all the markets of the Eastern Roman Empire and later also Italy accessible again for the products of Africa.[38] In addition, intensive trade relations with the Frankish Empire are proven by corresponding coin finds.[39] In addition, the turbulent times, in particular revolts by Berbers belonging to the Reich or invasions by foreign Berbers, did not lead to coin hoarding to the same extent as was the case on the Balkan Peninsula in the comparable period.[40] In addition, dramatic statements in the sources are limited to individual periods of the approximately 170-year epoch, of which a significant period of crises falls in the early period of the Praetorian Prefecture of Africa.[41] thumb|East Roman/Byzantine North Africa compared to the Vandal kingdom in the latter's final years. At this point in time, like the other provinces of the Eastern Roman Empire, Africa was organized as a praetorian prefecture and initially included the areas that had previously remained in Vandal hands:

  • Africa proconsularis / Zeugitana;
  • most of the Byzacena;
  • the western half of Tripolitania;
  • Corsica and Sardinia as well as
  • the coastal strips of the provinces of Mauretania Sitifensis and Numidia and
  • the eastern coastal strip of the Mauretania Caesariensis.

Subsequently, the following regions were recaptured:

  • the northern tip of the Mauretania Tingitana facing Spain;
  • Inland areas of the provinces of Mauretania Caesariensis, Mauretania Sitifensis and Numidia;
  • the parts of Byzacena bordering on the Chott el Djerid;
  • the eastern half of Tripolitania bordering on Cyrenaica – at the same time land connection to Egypt and possibly
  • the western coastal strip of Mauretania Caesariensis and the adjoining eastern coastal strip of Mauretania Tingitana.

For a time, southern Spain and the Balearic Islands were also included.

Consolidation of Eastern Roman rule[edit]

East Roman/Byzantine North Africa as a base of operations during the Gothic wars.

Shortly after Belisar's victory, Carthage once again became the capital of the newly founded Praetorian Prefecture of Africa. Belisarius used the region he conquered in 535 as a base to attack Gothic Sicily, which began the Gothic Wars. Many Vandals were resettled east and used as soldiers there.[42] The Berbers, on the other hand, who had been won over by Belisarius as allies, did not see the empire as an ally, according to their traditions, but Belisarius as a person, which is why they immediately attacked the remaining East Roman troops after Belisarius left Africa, for example in the battle of Mammes and Bourgaon in 535.[43]

For their part, the formerly Vandal provinces not only had to be secured against the Berbers and - insofar as they were overrun by them during the Vandal War - conquered, but were also initially the scene of uprisings by the remaining Vandals. Some of these joined forces with dissatisfied East Roman soldiers under Stotzas, who probably made up up to two-thirds of the East Roman garrison in Africa.[44] The reason for this was, on the one hand, Justinian I's agenda to restore the detailed status quo ante in Africa.[45] This included a law from April 534 that gave the descendants of dispossessed Roman landowners the right to claim restitution from the Vandals within five years. In addition, because of this law, many Eastern Roman soldiers were encouraged by their Vandal wives to settle in the Vandal domiciles instead of fighting the Berbers.[46] With a religious law that came into force on April 1, 535, Justinian decreed the return of all Arian church property to the Catholic Church and prohibited Arians, Jews and Donatists from practicing religion and holding public offices,[47] although a council convened in Carthage in 535 dealt with the questions of the reincorporation of apostate clergy and the recognition of the baptisms they performed.[48]

By starting a fortress building program, the praetorian prefect Solomon created the conditions for the Eastern Roman rule to be consolidated despite the internal and external unrest.[49][50] This alone was not enough to overcome the resistance sparked by Emperor Justinian I's religious and domestic policies; Rather, Carthage of all places was plundered in 535/536 by its own mutinous garrison.[51]

A certain consolidation started especially from the end of 536 through the appointment of Germanus as magister militum, who ended the revolt of Stotza in 537 and then successfully reorganized the administration.

(Re)conquest of Septem and inland areas[edit]

Ruins of the Byzantine fort of Thamugadi close to the Belezma ridge, western foothills of the Aures-range, an area conquered by the Byzantines after 539.
Ruins of the Byzantine city walls of Theveste, one of the many cities reconquered and fortified by Salomon.

In 534, immediately after his victory over the Vandals, Belisarius had already conquered the traditional Roman legionary site of Septem, which at least at that point was no longer under Vandal rule. The extent of further conquests in the Mauretania Tingitana is not known, mainly because the retention of Roman culture and Latin language does not allow any compelling conclusions to be drawn about an Eastern Roman reconquest. The possession of Tingis, today's Tangier, can be considered reasonably certain.[52]

It was much more important than seizing the western outpost to bring Numidia under control of the Aurès mountain region and the areas bordering to the north. With its mountain ridge, this province played a special role in defense as early as in classical Roman times and at the same time represented the outer edge of the agriculturally usable area opposite the Sahara, with its south-western edge representing a natural border.[53] This was to be the task of the praetorian prefect Solomon, who was called back to Africa in 539. In 484, a few years after the death of Genseric, the Berber tribes living there had renounced the Vandal Empire, with their chief Masties proclaiming himself the "Emperor" of a Roman-Berber Empire.[54] His successor Iaudas had to have Solomon build a Byzantine fortress in Timgad in the summer of 539 including a resettlement of this city[55]. In the years 539/540 he finally lost despite a sensational ambush using irrigation canals[56] after the battle of Babosis and Zerboule against the Eastern Romans under Solomon and had to flee to the adjacent Mauretania Caesariensis.[57][58] However, individual remnant areas of this Roman-Berber empire south of the Aurès mountain ridge survived until the Arab conquest in 701. At an unspecified date (541?) the regions north of the Schott el Hodna followed, especially around the city Sitifis,[59] possibly in conjunction with the Kindom of Altava.

Of these regions reconquered and reincorporated from the Roman-Berber petty kings, Numidia in particular was to be the base of the mobile Byzantine troops in Africa until shortly before the end of Byzantine rule, not least because of its location on the middle section of the border.[60] Even if the directive of Justinian I was not fully implemented and large parts of the interior of the three Mauritanian provinces remained outside of imperial control,[61] the reconquests represented a doubling of the eastern Roman territory in the former western Roman Africa and at the same time shortened the border. In the period that followed, various fortresses were built on both the border[62] as well as within the area ruled by the Eastern Romans.[63]

Then there was a reorganization of the administration. Thus, the coastal areas of Mauretania Caesarensis and Mauretania Sitifensis were combined to form a province of Mauretania Prima, whereas the Eastern Roman possessions in Mauretania Tingitana were combined with the Balearic Islands and possibly also Spania to form the province of Mauretania Secunda. The areas inland of the Mauretania Sitifensis, on the other hand, were probably added to Numidia in 553/555.[64]

Plague Epidemic and Military Crisis 543–548[edit]

n 543, the Justinian plague reached the cities of Africa by sea and spread through the trade routes within the province. Those Berbers who kept their traditional way of life were spared. To the extent that they were hostile to the Eastern Roman Empire, they waited for the epidemic to subside and then rose up. This was accompanied by a series of revolts by Berbers belonging to the empire, led by their leader Antalas, fueled by the assassination of his brother and his removal from the Byzantine payroll. The climax of this uprising was a sensational Byzantine defeat in the spring of 544 at Cilium (today Kasserine), which cost the life of the praetorian prefect and general Solomon.[65] The result was further uprisings by Berbers and Vandals under Guntarith, a Vandal nobleman who had previously also been in Byzantine service. Neither the new praetorian prefect Sergius nor the new magister militum Areobindus were able to get the situation under control.[66] It was only under the leadership of the magister militum Johannes Troglita that Vandal attempts at restoration under Guntarith and Stotzas the Younger were thwarted in 546. The Eastern Roman campaigns between 544 and 547 initially led to failures in Tripolitania, but also to an advance as far as inland Ghirsa[67], the consequent destruction of this cultural center of the Berber clan of the Leuathae[68] (belonging to the Zanata tribal group). Finally, in 548, the Eastern Roman troops succeeded in decisively defeating and subjugating the Berbers under Antalas on the "Fields of Cato".[69]

Years of peace (548–569) and local revolt (563))[edit]

Remains of Thignica (Aïn Tounga) near Dougga, an interior fort arguably errected after the death of Justinian I.[70]

After this victory of Johannes Troglita, there are no records of battles in Africa until well after his death (552).[71] The praetorian prefecture of Africa was drawn into the Gothic War in 552/553 by the temporary occupation of Corsica and Sardinia, but the African mainland was spared. Only in December 562 did a local revolt break out when the Berber leader Cusina, who had been loyal to the empire since the times of Johannes Troglita, was murdered when he wanted to receive his reward. This led to an uprising led by his sons, which required a temporary expeditionary army to be sent from the eastern Roman heartland to combat them. The praetorian prefect Johannes Rogathinus blamed for the assassination and the unrest that accompanied it[72] was deposed in 564 and appointed a successor named Thomas in 564 or 565. In negotiations, this successor was able to restore the loyalty of the affected Berber tribe. The death of Emperor Justinian in 565 brought changes to East Roman Africa, but no turning point. New fortifications are known to have been built, such as the Thubursicu Bure Fortress in 565–569 and possibly the Thignica Fortress at the same time. The years 565-569 were also shaped by the expansion of diplomatic relations with the Garamants in Fezzan, who were converting to Christianity, and the Maccurites (probably in Mauretania).[73]

War against the Roman-Berber Kingdom of Altava (570–579)[edit]

Roman-Berber kingdom of Altava before 578, comprising the Mauretania Caesarenis excluding a Byzantine coastal strip in the east, but including interior parts of the Mauretania Sitifensis and Mauretania Tingitana
Dark red: possible extension of Byzantine rule in the Maghreb at the close of the 6. century, assuming that territories of the Altava kingdom were actually conquered.

The years of peace ended in 569/570 when there was a conflict with the Empire of Altava - which had previously probably expanded together with the Eastern Roman Empire at the expense of the other small states. At this point it comprised mostly the Mauretania Caesarensis with the exception of the Byzantine coastal strip to the east, making it the most important and largest of the Roman-Berber states.

The causes of this confrontation with the Eastern Roman Empire after more than 30 years of rather peaceful relations are not known. Possibly the causes were similar to the previous Berber wars and/or a certain amount of power that the empire of Altava had at that time. The persecution of Donatists and other religious minorities in the Eastern Roman Empire cannot be completely dismissed in view of the Donatist strongholds in western Mauritania and the associated influence on the Empire of Altava, although there are sources of increased persecution from the period up to 569/570 not available.

In any case, the praetorian prefect Theodor von Berbern from the Altava kingdom was killed during this period. Around 570/571 the king of Altava, Garmules, succeeded in defeating and killing two magistri militiae, Theoctistus and Amabilis. His actions, combined with the attacks of the Visigoths on the province of Hispania ulterior and the invasion of the Lombards in Italy, which had already begun in 568, represented a threat to the Eastern Roman power in the entire western Mediterranean area. Tiberios I called - either still in his function as Caesar or already as emperor - Thomas again in the office of praetorian prefect and the capable general Gennadius to magister militum to put an end to the campaigns of Garmules. Here, the Emperor Gennadius transferred some civil powers, which he anticipated parts of the reforms of his successor. The emperor may have reinforced the eastern Roman garrison in Africa by transferring some of the 15,000 mercenaries there that had probably been recruited earlier under his rule. This is supported by the fact that the emperor had the necessary breathing space by defeating the Persians in the Battle of Melitene in 576.

All that is known about the subsequent fighting is that the preparations were long and thorough, the campaign began in late 577, and Garmules lost battle and life in 578 or 579.[74]

Incorporation of the Roman-Berber Empire of Altava?[edit]

So far it has not been clarified whether the Altava area or at least the coastal strip was subsequently incorporated into the Eastern Roman Empire.[75] Only the expansion of Byzantine fortresses by Gennadius is discussed,[76] but not their locations. In any case, the question of the incorporation of parts of the Empire of Altava into the Eastern Roman dominion has not yet been researched, which is why only arguments for or against the thesis can be used at the moment.

No further expansion incorporation of the coastal areas Conquest/subjugation of the entire territory
- There are no sources about the construction of Byzantine fortresses.

- The source situation regarding the conquest of areas of the Empire of Altava is poor.

- No further fighting is known in this part of the Byzantine Maghreb. A connection to the formerly peaceful relations between the Roman-Berber Empire of Altava and the Eastern Roman Empire seems conceivable. Since the Eastern Roman Empire had been at war with Persia again since 572, a settlement seems likely in order to withdraw possible reinforcements back to the east, especially since the Persian Great King Chosrau I, who was fond of peace negotiations, died in 579.

- The preservation of the Roman character, as with the cities further west, does not allow any conclusions to be drawn about the restoration of Roman rule. Close cultural and economic ties are also conceivable, especially as this was not uncommon in antiquity, even between states that were proven to exist.

- The absence of Byzantine fortress ruins does not mean that Byzantine rule was absent. No ruined forts exist west of Setif and Tobna, although there is evidence of Byzantine rule extending further west on the coast beyond Caesarea.

- Under the Eastern Roman emperors up to and including Mauricius there was a claim to bring all former western Roman areas back under imperial control. This was also implemented in the realm of feasibility.

- To rule the coastal strip, a strong fleet was needed, which the Byzantine Empire had at its disposal.

- The continued existence of a larger Roman-Berber state would have remained a permanent threat and thus a source of further conflicts. This threat has been proven to be eliminated, for which a weakening was already sufficient.

− Nothing is reported about fighting from the other parts of the Byzantine Maghreb until the first Arab advance.

- Gennadius had a large number of troops available for a complete elimination, which might even have been reinforced from the old empire. In addition, as can be seen, he was the focus of the emperor's troop reinforcements, which is all the more remarkable given that the Eastern Roman Empire was again at war with Persia at this time.

- Judging by the extensive preparations, the campaign was surprisingly successful.

- The information on the subsequent battles with the Berbers up to 584 show a temporal connection to the short, rapid campaign against the Altavian king Garmules and could refer to the elimination of pockets of resistance.

− Possibly, Gennadius will have been content with smashing the empire of Altava and having his supremacy recognized by the splinter states.

The Last Years of the Praetorian Prefecture[edit]

From the period after Gennadius' campaign against the kingdom of Altava, only the explanations of Theophylactos Simokates indicate that the fighting with the weakened "Berbers" 584 had abated and that "all of Africa" had flared up again in 587. Due to this state of affairs, the merging of civil and military powers then became necessary.[77]

Known Praetorian Prefects[edit]

Amtszeit Name Bemerkungen
534 Archelaus
534–536 Solomon
536–539 Symmachus
539–544 Solomon (again) in personal union also magister militum and thus prototype of the later exarchs, fallen in 544 in the battle of Cilium
544–545 Sergius
545–548 (perhaps 550) Athanasius
552 Paul
558 Johannes
560–561 Boethius
563 Johannes Rogathinus relieved of his post for the assassination of the loyal Berber leader Cusina
563–565 Thomas
570 Theodor either killed in battle or murdered by Berbers from the Kingdom of Altava
574–578 Thomas (again)
582 Theodor

The Exarchate of Africa 591–698[edit]

Main Article

Whereas the Balkans were devastated by Avars and Slavs and Persian troops conquered eastern provinces, Africa enjoyed at least comparative stability.

The defense of the conquered territories not only strained the resources of the empire in North Africa. The constant threat, much more so in Italy by the Lombards and in southern Spain by the Visigoths, forced the Eastern Romans to decentralize civil and military power in the conquered areas, especially since the old empire was defending itself against the Avars and Slavs in the Balkans and again since 572 of the Persian Sassanids in Asia Minor, Armenia and Syria was also exposed to some threats in his heartland. Securing the rich oriental provinces had to take precedence over holding the Justinian conquests in the west.

Under these conditions, Mauriceus created the exarchates of Carthage and Ravenna in order to grant his governors the greatest possible freedom of action in these areas, which were now largely left to themselves. In doing so, he de facto granted them the powers of viceroys. While civil and military powers had been separated since the early 4th century in the late antique Roman Empire and this principle was maintained in the eastern Roman heartland until the middle of the 7th century, this principle was now abandoned in the western possessions. This bundling of powers along with the obviously stable conditions[78] in the economically strongest province of the former western empire led to a momentum of its own, which - favored by chaotic conditions in other parts of the empire - led to revolts against the imperial central authority. This development came to an end with the appearance of the Arabs, around half a century before the definitive end of Byzantine rule on the African continent.

The Exarchate between 591 and 642[edit]

The Exarchate under Maurice[edit]

Solidus of Heraclius, the Exarch of Carthage, dating to 608 and depicting him with his namesake son as Consul.

In the province of Africa, the separation of civil and military powers was repeatedly broken due to warlike events during Justinian I's lifetime, especially in the case of Solomon as praetorian prefect and Gennadius as magister militum. In this respect, the founding of the exarchates by Maurice was merely an institutionalization of what had already proven itself in times of crisis.[79] The founding of the Exarchate in Africa meant that Gennadius was also given the rest of the civil powers of the Praetorian Prefect and that this office was now subordinated to the Exarch - a process that must have taken place between May 6, 585 and July 591.

Gennadius was able to achieve victories against the Berbers during his tenure as the first exarch (591-598), in 591 and in Tripolitania in 595.[80] This, coupled with his earlier victory over Altava, brought decades of peace and prosperity to the province of Africa.[81] This is at least obvious because of the lack of contrary records or corresponding archaeological finds from the period. In addition, today's Maghreb was already a region in Roman times whose long border had to be secured with just one legion and has always been considered unproblematic. Only a new plague epidemic in 599/600 is mentioned in the written sources, which was probably less serious than the first wave of the "Justinian plague".[82] It is also known that at the end of the sixth century the region of Tripolitania was detached from the Exarchate of Carthage and annexed to Byzantine Egypt.[83] Due to the overall situation in Africa, Emperor Maurikios had his back free to negotiate an advantageous peace with Persia (see Roman-Persian Wars) and then to oppose the Avars and Slavs (see Maurices' Balkan campaigns).

The Exarchate during the last Roman-Persian War[edit]

Even when the situation in large parts of the empire deteriorated massively under Emperor Phocas, conditions in Africa were much more stable. Heraclius the Elder, presumably the successor of Gennadios and probably appointed exarch by Mauricius at the age of over 60,[84] could mint coins and hire mercenaries.[85]

During this period only remote Ceuta could have been (temporarily) conquered by the Visigoths (616). Heraclius the Elder was initially possibly in association with the Sanhāja and Zanata in battles against other Berber tribes - especially near the Aurès and possibly also near the former kingdom of Altava - involved.

When Heraclius the Elder and his son Heraclius of the same name revolted against the emperor in 608, they first fanned dissatisfaction with Phocas in Constantinople by imposing an embargo on grain and (olive) oil and significantly reducing the capital's supply of these staple foods. Then, in the fall of 609, they sent their nephew/cousin Niketas to Egypt with an army, which he brought under his control in the spring of 610. In the spring/summer of 610, Heraclius (the younger) sailed to Constantinople with a fleet mostly manned by Berbers, where he overthrew Phocas from October 2nd to 5th, 610 and had him publicly executed.

What is remarkable about this usurpation is that Africa could be stripped of its troops without immediately coming into military danger - a situation that would have been unthinkable in 533-548. A few years later, during the last and greatest Persian war (603 to 628)[86] as reigning emperor even in view of the Persian troops on the Asian side of the Bosphorus to move the capital of the empire from Constantinople to Carthage. This impressively demonstrates the stability and power of the Exarchate of Africa at this time. However, the emperor was dissuaded from these plans by Sergios I, the Patriarch of Constantinople.[87] As the war progressed, the Persian Sassanid Empire occupied Egypt, including Cyrenaica, for a good decade, but the Persians did not advance to Tripolitania, probably due to a lack of the necessary logistical capacities[88] and the ability to operate in desert terrain. Constantinople, on the other hand, defied its first siege in 626 and Heraclius finally defeated the Sassanids in 627/628, which also removed the temporary threat to the Exarchate of Carthage.

Otherwise little is known about the conditions in Byzantine Africa until 633,[89] except that trade with the eastern Mediterranean as a whole declined again after a steady increase until the late 6th century,[90] which was certainly due to the conquests of the Persians and later the Arabs in the eastern Mediterranean[91] and the associated effects on the corresponding sales markets have been accelerated.

Defence against the Arabs[edit]

As part of the Islamic expansion, Byzantine rule in the Maghreb came to an end after tough fighting. Unlike in Asia Minor, where the Arab attacks ultimately repelled, the southern half of the Mediterranean was conquered by the Arabs within a good half a century. Responsible for this were insufficient precautions, an essentially defective coordination with Berbers and the Byzantine heartland - which against the background of the Monothelite disputes - which included the African resistance to imperially decreed forced conversions of Jews[92] – culminating in a failed secession – and, to a lesser extent, geography. The process was also favored by the struggles of the empire in the other provinces, in particular a strong Arab pressure on Asia Minor,[93] but also the invasion of the Proto-Bulgarians in the lower Danube provinces are significant.[94] It is also believed that the Byzantine fortresses, which were smaller than the Roman fortresses, were only effective against tribal uprisings and Berber attacks, but not against larger armies.[95] which, however, is contradicted by the considerable difficulties that the Arabs had in their advance, especially in Numidia.

Above all, after several decades of war against the Sasanian Empire, Eastern Rome/Byzantium was completely exhausted economically, financially and militarily, especially since the fighting had primarily taken place on Eastern Roman territory. The East Roman army was also demobilized for financial reasons after the long wars against the Persians and required a long lead time before it could be reactivated.[96] This favored the rapid Arab successes quite significantly.

Centrifugal tendencies in the face of the new threat[edit]

Die islamische Expansion:
  Expansion under Muhammad,, 622–632
  Expansion under the Rashidun Caliphate, 632–661
  Expansion under the Umayyad Caliphate, 661–750

Africa was first confronted with Islamic expansion in 633, when Peter, the Exarch of Carthage, is said to have defied an order from Heraclius, on the advice of the Greek monk Maximus Confessor, to send troops to support the defensive battle in Egypt.[97] Even after the conquest of Egypt by the Arabs, the exarchate probably still did not take the threat seriously enough.[98] It is highly probable that the absence of Persian attacks in 619–627 and the overestimation of the inhospitable landscapes between Egypt and Africa (especially the Surt) were the cause. Refugees from Egypt were also known from the time of the occupation by Persian troops.[99] In addition, there is no record of a retreat by Byzantine troops along the Libyan coast in the 640s.[100] The Exarchate was unprepared for defense against a land attack from the east. No forts were built on the border of Tripolitania, part of Byzantine Egypt, comparable to the Mareth Line used in the African campaign of World War II.[101] An operative concept for a successful fight against the Arabs was still being sought throughout the empire.[102]

The first Arab expeditions were led by the Emir ʿAmr ibn al-ʿĀs and his nephew ʿUqba ibn Nafiʿ in 642/43 from the newly conquered Egypt to the west. Advances into Cyrenaica and Tripolitania met little resistance,[103] anyway, the Byzantine control was limited to a few coastal bases, from which Oea (today Tripoli) and Sabratha were plundered, the siege of Oea seems to have taken a long time.[104] After the Arabs conquered Alexandria for the second time in 646, the Byzantine Empire's weakness in the southern Mediterranean became apparent. The resulting domino effect seems to have been misunderstood in Carthage as an exclusive problem for Egypt and the old empire in general, despite a significant number of refugees from Egypt, which had also included Tripolitania for around 50 years. This was probably still favored by the greater attention paid to previous enemies, here the Lombards and their conquest of Liguria from 643,[105] and by the need for the Arab troops to reorganize themselves after the storming of Tripolitania, especially from a logistical point of view.

In 646 an exarch again rebelled against the emperor, also against the background of the monothelite disputes in Byzantium[106] and in the alleged misconception that fighting between Arabs and Byzantines in Egypt would deter either side from attacking Africa.[107] Gregory of Carthage, a relative of Heraclius' cousin Nicetas, renounced the empire and moved the capital to Sufetula/Sbeitla. According to Arabic sources, his power was so great that he was able to summon around 100,000 Berbers, which is hardly realistic.

The Arabs, meanwhile, had probably learned of Heraclius' failed plan in 633 to detach troops from Africa to defend Egypt, and probably wanted to avoid such a plan being carried out in the future. They bypassed Oea, which had once again braced itself against an Arab siege, and invaded the exarchate from Tripolitania, which had been spared major fighting for almost 100 years. The rebellious exarch Gregory rallied his own troops and allies to the new capital of Sufetula, but without support from the Byzantine motherland. According to Arabic sources, when he faced the Arabs led by ʿAbdallāh ibn Saʿd for battle, he was able to mobilize 120,000 to 200,000 men (which, like many such high figures, is probably clearly exaggerated for logistical reasons alone),[108] but lost the battle and possibly his life.[109] The Arabs then ravaged Byzacena within the next 12 to 15 months.[110]

Tribute payments and renewed attacks[edit]

Possible boundaries of the Byzantine empire (orange) around 650 B.C.

The Arabs retreated to Tripolitania in 648 after receiving a large ransom, which increased their desires for this rich province and thus, in the long run, served the opposite purpose.[111] Under the new exarch Gennadios II, Byzantine supremacy was restored and the capital of the exarchate was moved back to Carthage, especially since Gregory had only moved the administrative seat inland to Sufetula out of fear of a punitive Byzantine expedition. Nevertheless, due to the temporary secession, there remained a longer-term loss of confidence in Africa that went beyond the general distrust of the emperor.[112] Byzantine rule was restored in the areas of the Exarchate overrun by the Arabs, but the extent of this repossession is debatable.[113] Meanwhile, the Byzantine fleet was attacking Muslim areas on the Mediterranean coast and even recapturing the Barka region in Cyrenaica, these activities coming to an end at the latest after the Battle of Phoenix in 654 and 655 respectively.[114]

The new exarch attempted to pacify the Arabs by paying tribute, presumably under the mistaken belief that the Arabs, like the Berbers, were not interested in permanent conquests.[115] However, the corresponding tax burden led to growing resentment among the population and also among Emperor Constantine II.[116] In addition, there may have been a wave of flight or emigration out of fear of another Arab attack.[117]

The real reason for the exarchate's 15-year respite was not due to the tribute payments, but to internal Islamic disputes over the office of caliph. With a failed invasion of Sicily and a minor raid on Byzacena in the 650s, it was clear that the Arabs had not forgotten the West. Under Caliph Muʿāwiya I and his general ʿUqba ibn Nafiʿ, major attacks were resumed in 661, albeit initially only as raids.[118][119] Around 668, Arabs attacked the island of Djerba and the city of Gigthis on the mainland, among other things.[120] These events revealed the Byzantine emperor's inability to organize an effective defense for Africa. The subsequent assassination of Constantine II triggered 669 multi-year uprisings in Sicily, which not only prevented the intervention of further Byzantine troops in Africa,[121] but even bound troops from Africa,[122] which made it impossible to counter the new Arab invasion at an early stage.[123] ʿUqba ibn Nafiʿ took advantage of this situation and launched the actual attack in 669. In the meantime, he set up an advanced army camp, which went down in history as the founding of Kairouan and now made it possible for the Arab armies to remain there all year round.[124] While Byzantine troops kept sight of fortresses north of Kairouan, they sat idle,[118] whereby the regions south of it were defenseless against the attacks of the Arabs, especially the Byzacena,[125] although this was probably not always the case for the coastal towns of the province.[124]

While ʿUqba ibn Nāfiʿ had successes and (temporary) mass conversions of the Berbers to Islam, he failed to conquer the Byzantine strongholds in the north. Meanwhile, the caliph had to sign a truce with Emperor Constantine IV due to the failed siege of Constantinople, which enabled Byzantine reinforcements to be sent to Africa.[126] At the same time, due to the (same?) Armistice, it was determined that Byzacena would be ceded to the Arabs and the Arabs would in return vacate the region of Zeugitana.[127] However, neither this nor renewed inner-Islamic conflicts prevented the Arabs from invading Numidia from 679, the region that had given Africa strategic depth and recruitment potential since Salomon Africa and must therefore have been a thorn in the side of the general ʿUqba in particular.[128] In the Lamasba area (today Mérouana),[129] Lambaesis and Thamugadi he won 682 Pyrrhic victories, which did not prevent him from his advance to the Atlantic. [130] The Exarch was able to achieve a considerable defensive success in 683 when ʿUqba ibn Nafiʿ lost the Battle of Vescera on the way back from the Atlantic against the Berber tribes under their king Kusaila, Byzantine troops and allied units and died in the process. The victors were even able to take Kairouan.[131]

The Fall of the Exarchate of Carthage[edit]

Clupea, allegedly the last fortress held by the Byzantines after the Arab conquest of Carthage, modified during Ottoman rule.

The defeated Arabs retreated to Egypt without their fallen general, giving the Exarchate and the Berbers some respite. But between 686 and 688 Arab armies defeated the Berber ruler Kusaila near Kairouan[132] and, after his tribal alliance broke up, resumed their attacks against the Exarchate. This had been weakened by previous conflicts and had made insufficient use of the recovery phase.[133] The military activities of the Arabs first required a renewed conquest of Barka, but before 688 it was again taken by sea-based Byzantine troops.[134]

In the first half of the 690s, the attacks on Carthage and its environs resumed, but were hampered by the Berber leader Kāhina, who only lost battle and life at Taharqa in Aures in 701. The assertion that the exarchate also received reinforcements from the Visigoths, whose king also feared an attack by the Arabs, is not proven. In 697/98 the Arab general Hassān ibn an-Nuʿmān conquered Carthage for the first time with 40,000 men and was defeated by Kāhina.[135]

On the news of the conquest of Carthage, Emperor Leontios dispatched the Byzantine fleet under the later Emperor Tiberios II. The fleet recaptured Carthage in the same year and fought the Arab fleet with varying success, but then went to Crete to pick up reinforcements. As a result, the Arab besiegers - who had initially retreated to Cyrenaica after their double defeat - succeeded in taking and destroying the city in cooperation with their fleet. Individual Byzantine towns and fortresses on the coast further west were probably only gradually conquered after the victory over Kāhina, such as Vaga.[136] In addition, according to Arab sources, Clupea (today Kelibia) near Cape Bon was the last city in Byzantine hands.[137] The remote Septem withstood an Arab siege by Mūsā ibn Nusair in 706, but is said to have fallen to the Arabs at the latest when the Byzantine governor Julian defected, who is said to have supported their attack on the Visigothic kingdom in 711.[138] However, it is uncertain whether this was actually the case and whether Julian was a historical person at all.

Known Exarchs[edit]

Tenure Name Remarks
591–598 Gennadios Last magister militum per Africam, already defeated the Roman-Berber Empire of Altava in this office..
598 or 602–611 Herakleios Father of the future emperor and founder of the Heraclean dynasty
619(?)–628/629 Niketas Said to have assumed office shortly after the occupation of Egypt by Persian troops
before 636–637 Peter Said to have defied an order from the emperor to come to the aid of the beleaguered Byzantine troops in Egypt
641(?)–647/648 Gregor Seceeded from the Byzantine Empire and lost battle and presumably life at Sufetula
after 647/648 Gennadios (II.) Existence or function as an exarch is disputed
Eleutherios Probably Exarch of Carthage. He is only mentioned in the Arabic sources. The local name al-At'riyūn is generally resolved into Eleutherios. He is said to have overthrown Gennadios II. Nothing is known about his official position.
until 711? Julian Possibly last exarch of Africa. Alleged Byzantine commander of Septem, the last Byzantine possession in Africa. He is said to have helped the Arabs in their attack on Visigothic Spain in 711. His historicity is disputed.

Consequences of the Arab conquest[edit]

Effects on the power structure in the Mediterranean region[edit]

The Mediterranean area after the end of the Byzantine rule in Northern Africa.

The loss of Africa was a severe blow to the Byzantine Empire. In 698, after Egypt, the second large granary and a significant source of taxes went here[139] was lost, which in retrospect did not detract from the empire's ability to survive, but significantly impaired the decades-long defensive struggles against the caliphate. Financially, the lost tax revenue for Eastern Rome/Byzantium could not be compensated for for a long time.

The fall of Carthage brought Tiberios the imperial throne, for his officers, afraid of being held responsible for the defeat, elevated him to the position of anti-emperor and overthrew Leontios, who had his nose cut off. Another effect was that there were no longer any major Latin or Romansh-speaking provinces in the Byzantine Empire and Greek finally prevailed.

With the conquest of Carthage, the Arabs laid the basis for domination of the western Mediterranean, since they could now use the African ports there as a springboard for operations against the Balearic Islands, Sardinia and Sicily. They also prepared for the invasion of Spain 13 years later by eliminating the flank threat. The capture of Septem, in turn, removed the last immediate obstacle.

Prayer hall of the main mosque of Kairouan, with columns taken from former churches – arguably from Carthage.

Islamization and partial Arabization of the Maghreb[edit]

On the territory of the Exarchate of Carthage, after the conquest, a rather gradual but ultimately complete Arabization of the Latin and Punic speaking population began. Contrary to widespread opinion, the Latin language did not disappear promptly or completely from the Maghreb, which can be read both from Latin grave inscriptions dating back to the eleventh century and from the numerous and conspicuous Latin foreign words in today's Berber languages ​​on site.[140] But the special features of the dialects of Maghrebi Arabic that developed after the conquest were also shaped primarily in the lexis of Latin. The same applies to Christianity in the Maghreb, which did not end with the Arab conquest, but is also documented afterwards by sporadic sources.[141]

In what is now Tunisia, for example, Muslims were probably in the majority towards the end of the ninth century. The decline of Christian institutions only accelerated towards the end of the eleventh century; individual communities survived until the 14th century, when no trace of them was lost.[142] The only thing that is certain is that at the beginning of French colonial rule in the Maghreb there were no longer any Romansh-speaking or Christian communities.[143] This ultimately complete Islamization of the entire population brought about the separation of the Mediterranean region into northern and southern halves, which continues to this day.

The full Islamization of the Maghreb along with the full Arabization of the non-Berber population may have been favored by the following factors:

  • the still Neo-Punic and thus also Semitic mother tongue of parts of the population,
  • possibly remaining Donatist ideas in Christian communities, whose martyristic, theocratic and Greco-Roman civilization-rejecting demands were fulfilled by Islam[144],
  • possibly remaining Arian ideas in Christian communities, whose anti-Trinitarian demands were fulfilled by Islam

Christus Jesus, der Sohn Marias, ist doch nur der Gesandte Gottes und sein Wort, das Er zu Maria hinüberbrachte, und ein Geist von ihm. So glaubt an Gott und seine Gesandten. Und sagt nicht: Drei.

— Koran 4:171, Übersetzung von Adel Theodor Khoury

Er [Gott] hat nicht gezeugt, und Er ist nicht gezeugt worden.

— Koran 112:3, Übersetzung von Adel Theodor Khoury
  • the fragmentation of the Church in Africa, which was also partly visible to the outside world[145]
  • Promotion of Arabization and Islamization given the exposed location of the Maghreb during the Spanish Reconquista and the conquests of the Norman ruler Roger II.

Evaluation[edit]

The lady of Carthage (likely Theodora I.), a mosaic portrait and one of the most important preserved artefacts of late antiquity in Tunisia.
Byzantine Africa around 600
The Almohad empire around 1160 had a similiar extend.

In the older literature, the Byzantine rule in the Maghreb is often portrayed as a failed project which, despite the high economic power of the province of Africa, is said to have brought no real benefit to the Eastern Roman Empire, but only constant wars and thus a wear and tear of troops.[146] In fact, the epoch was at times marked by several uprisings against the imperial central authority, by alliances with and battles against Berbers, and later by a joint defensive struggle against the Arabs.

Overall, the region and its Latin-speaking and partly probably also Neo-Punic-speaking population [147] experienced at this time, however, a late antique aftergrowth, which also produced the last important Latin poet of antiquity, Gorippus.[148] Under Byzantine rule, civil building projects were also carried out, for example at the port of Carthage,[149] and a number of older buildings restored or put into operation.[150] Overall, the dissolution of the Roman settlement and administrative structures in the region, which became apparent in the late phase of the Western Roman Empire and accelerated in the phase of the Kingdom of the Vandals, was halted by Eastern Roman/Byzantine rule[151] and sometimes even reversed.[152] In addition, East Roman Africa remained politically, economically and culturally closely linked to the Mediterranean world.[153] Overall, the Eastern Roman/Byzantine period was the last epoch of around 850 years of Roman rule in the Maghreb, the outstanding testimony of which is a large number of Byzantine fortresses or fortresses stylistically modeled on them from the earliest epoch of Arab rule.

The historical significance of the Eastern Roman/Byzantine rule, some of which has continued to the present day, was that it played a key role in stopping the orientalization of the Eastern Roman Empire (and thus the later orthodox faith of Christianity) until the time when in which the eastern provinces broke away from the empire in the Arab storm.[154] Equally significant was the fact that the assumption of the imperial throne from Carthage in 610 saved the empire from collapse[155] and thus set the course for the next 843 years. In addition, the reorganization of late antique administration into exarchates both in Italy and in Africa created the prototype for the theme administration,[156] with which the structure of the exarchate was broken down so far that secessions could be ruled out. Overall, according to Conant, the reconquest of Africa is a unique success.[157]

Another aspect is the extensive preservation and partial restoration of related Roman administrative structures and economic power, which the Arabs found in the course of Islamic expansion and which they may have served as the basis for establishing their own connected sphere of power from the 8th century onwards.[158] This circumstance continued to have an effect until the 13th century and decisively shaped the development of today's Maghreb as a region.

Literature[edit]

general literature to be found in articles Late Antiquity, Maurice, Heraclius and Early Muslim conquests.

  • Ralf Bockmann: Africa. In: The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity. Volume 1. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2018, ISBN 978-0-19-881624-9, pages 29–31.
  • Michael Brett, Elizabeth Fentress: The Berbers. Blackwell Publishing, Oxford 1996, ISBN 0-631-20767-8.
  • Averil Cameron: Byzantine Africa: The Literary Evidence. In: Excavations at Carthage conducted by the University of Michigan. Band 7: 1978. Cérès, Tunis 1982, S. 29–62.
  • Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, pages 552–569.
  • Gabriele Crespi: Die Araber in Europa. Special Edition, Belser, Stuttgart 1992, ISBN 3-7630-1730-5, S. 21–36 (First print of the German translation 1983).
  • Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700 (= Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought. Series 4, 82). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0.
  • Jadran Ferluga: Exarch/Exarchat. In: Lexikon des Mittelalters. Volume 4, Artemis-Verlag, München u. a. 1989, ISBN 3-7608-8904-2, column 454 f.
  • Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4.
  • Hugh Kennedy: The Great Arab Conquests. How the Spread of Islam changed the World we live in. Da Capo, Philadelphia PA 2007, ISBN 978-0-306-81585-0.
  • Andy H. Merrills (Hrsg.): Vandals, Romans and Berbers. New Perspectives on Late Antique North Africa. Ashgate, Aldershot 2004, ISBN 0-7546-4145-7.
  • Yves Moderan: Les Maures et l’Afrique romaine, IV–VII siècle (= Bibliothèque des Écoles françaises d’Athènes et de Rome. Band 314). École Française de Rome, Rom 2003, ISBN 2-7283-0640-0.
  • Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. An Account of the Military History and Archaeology of the African Provinces in the Sixth and Seventh Century (= British Archaeological Reports. International Series. 99). British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (Reprint 2001).
  • Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3. Auflage. Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, pages 209–230.
  • Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam (Dumbarton Oaks Byzantine symposia and colloquia). Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8.
  • Elizabeth W.B. Fentress: Numidia and the Roman Army. Social, Military and Economic Aspects of the Frontier Zone(= British Archaeological Reports. International Series. 53). British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 978-0-86054-044-1

Weblinks[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The time of Arab conquest of the last Byzantine outpost is uncertain, compare only Walter Kaegi: The Islamic conquest and the defense of Byzantine Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 65–86, escpecially S. 70–71, who assumes 711; but also Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3. Auflage. Routledge, London u. a. 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, S. 229, who puts the conquest '10 years after the fall of Carthage and emphasises that only Arab and Visigothic sources are available for this subject. This concurs with Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, page 155, who states that Ceuta is referred to in Byzantine sources for the last time in 641.
  2. ^ For the Vandal kingdom see Helmut Castritius: Die Vandalen. Etappen einer Spurensuche. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart, 2007, ISBN 978-3-17-018870-9; Andy Merrills, Richard Miles: The Vandals. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford/Malden (MA) 2010, ISBN 978-1-4051-6068-1; Roland Steinacher: Die Vandalen. Aufstieg und Fall eines Barbarenreichs. Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 2016, ISBN 978-3-608-94851-6; Konrad Vössing: Das Königreich der Vandalen. Geiserichs Herrschaft und das Imperium Romanum. Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 2014, ISBN 978-3-8053-4761-7.
  3. ^ Comprehensive Ralf Bockmann: Africa. In: The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity. Volume 1. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2018, ISBN 978-0-19-881624-9, p. 29–31, here p. 29.
  4. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 275.
  5. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 97.
  6. ^ Compare Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 556.
  7. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 552.
  8. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 557.
  9. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 284.
  10. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 275.
  11. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 252.
  12. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 273–284.
  13. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 289.
  14. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 102
  15. ^ Detailed description of the situation in the Vandal kingdom at the eve of Byzantine conquest by Andy Merrills: Gelimer’s slaughter. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 23–39.
  16. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 559.
  17. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 63, mentions a certain Tattimuth leading the Byzantine expeditionary force dispatched for Tripolitania.
  18. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 254, who specifically mentions that Belisar was 'mostly successful' in repossessing remote areas.
  19. ^ Andy Merrills: Gelimer’s slaughter. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 38.
  20. ^ Leslie Dossey: Exegesis and Dissent in Byzantine North Africa In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 251–267, here p. 266.
  21. ^ Leslie Dossey: Exegesis and Dissent in Byzantine North Africa In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 251–267, here p. 267.
  22. ^ Leslie Dossey: Exegesis and Dissent in Byzantine North Africa In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 251–267, here p. 252.
  23. ^ Georg Schöllgen: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, Kanon I – Kleidung I. Anton Hiersemann Verlag, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 978-3-7772-5006-9, p. 268,270.
  24. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 306.
  25. ^ Theodor Klauser: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, Dogma II – Empore. Anton Hiersemann Verlag, Stuttgart 1959, ISBN 3-7772-7014-8, p. 133, 134
  26. ^ Vgl. Theodor Klauser: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, Dogma II – Empore. Anton Hiersemann Verlag, Stuttgart 1959, ISBN 3-7772-7014-8, p. 136, specifying the exclusive Berber style of Donatist art in Numidia and the same on p.134, highlighting the insignificance Donatism within the highly romanized cities.
  27. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 321.
  28. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 354.
  29. ^ Compare. Elli Kohen: History of the Byzantine Jews. A Microcosmos in the Thousand Year Empire, University Press of America, 2007, p. 39.
  30. ^ Compare Nikolas Hächler: Anordnungen zu jüdischen Zwangstaufen unter Kaiser Herakleios (610-641) als Folgen staatlicher Resilienzstrategien. In: Byzantion 91, 2021, p. 155–195.
  31. ^ Georg Schöllgen: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, Kanon I – Kleidung I. Anton Hiersemann Verlag, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 978-3-7772-5006-9, p. 269.
  32. ^ Franz Georg Maier: Einleitung: Byzanz als historisches Problem. In: Franz Georg Maier (Hrsg.): Byzanz (= Fischer Weltgeschichte. Band 13). Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1973, p. 12–45, here p. 16; the same: Grundlagen und Anfänge der byzantinischen Geschichte: Das Zeitalter des Justinian und Heraklios. In: Franz Georg Maier (Hrsg.): Byzanz. Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1973, p. 46–89, here p. 71, emphasising the exceptional character of Africa in comparison with the other provinces of the Western Roman empire.
  33. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 97; Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 254.
  34. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 252, explaining that after the assassination of the Western Roman emperor Valentinian III., imperial territories in Numidia and Mauretantia declared themselves independent.
  35. ^ Andy Merrills: Gelimer’s slaughter. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 23–39, here p. 34.
  36. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 252.
  37. ^ Andy Merrills: Gelimer’s slaughter. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 23–39, here p. 34.
  38. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (Nachdruck 2001), p. 113–114; Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 336.
  39. ^ Cecile Morrison: Regio dives in omnibus bonis ornata. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 173–199, here p. 195–197.
  40. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 114; also Cecile Morrison: Regio dives in omnibus bonis ornata. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 173–199, here p. 194, showing a very detailed map of coin hoards.
  41. ^ Probably exaggerating: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, due to a detailed description of this episode and the defence against the Arabs on one side and nearly entirely leaving out the entire time period of 548 to 647 on the other.
  42. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 560.
  43. ^ Andy Merrills: Gelimer’s slaughter. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 23–39, here p. 38.
  44. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 26.
  45. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 213.
  46. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 25; Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 213; Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 241–242, who on the other hand states that the soldiers had perceived both the domiciles and the women as spoils of war.
  47. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 25.
  48. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 560.
  49. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 213–215, also mentioning the usage of Roman ruins as construction material and concluding the destruction of Roman cultural property under Byzantine rule.
  50. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 106.
  51. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 560.
  52. ^ Francisco Aguado Blázquez: El África bizantina: reconquista y ocaso. p. 43.
  53. ^ very detailed: Elizabeth Fentress: Numidia and the Roman Army British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1979, ISBN 978-0-86054-044-1, starting off from the introduction on page 1.
  54. ^ Andy Merrills: Gelimer’s slaughter. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 23–39, here p. 34.
  55. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 158,highlighting the Byzantine revitalization of the city and the fact that it had a significant Christian population at the eve of the Arab conquest over a century later.
  56. ^ Elizabeth Fentress, Andrew Wilson: The Saharan Berber Diaspora and the Southern frontiers of Byzantine North Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 41–63, here p. 54.
  57. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 214.
  58. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 27–28.
  59. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 560.
  60. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 117.
  61. ^ Compare Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 560, emphasizing the fact that the Byzantine North Africa did not cover the entire area of the former Roman North Africa.
  62. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 28 f.
  63. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition, Routledge, London u. a. 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, S. 214 f.; also compare Gabriele Crespi: Die Araber in Europa. Sonderausgabe, Belser, Stuttgart 1992, ISBN 3-7630-1730-5, p. 27 referring to the reasons.
  64. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 42.
  65. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 29–30.
  66. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 560.
  67. ^ About Ghirsa: Walter Kaegi: The Islamic conquest and the defense of Byzantine Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 65–86, here p. 59.
  68. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 559.
  69. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 38–39.
  70. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 40.
  71. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 39.
  72. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge u. a. 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 216–217.
  73. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 40.
  74. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 41, referfing to 578, and Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition. Routledge, London, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 220, mentioning 579.
  75. ^ bejahend Francisco Aguado Blázquez: El África bizantina: reconquista y ocaso. p. 47.
  76. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Band 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 561.
  77. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 41.
  78. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 114.
  79. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 198.
  80. ^ Theophylaktos Simokates, Historiae VII,6 f.
  81. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 561.
  82. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 43 and above all p.114, where this Epidemic is merely mentioned next to the Justinian plague of 543 and at the same time the devastating dimensions of the Justinian plague 543 is addressed.
  83. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 63.
  84. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 43–44, who derives this from the last mention of Gennadius in 598.
  85. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Editor): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 561.
  86. ^ See James Howard-Johnston: The Last Great War of Antiquity. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2021, ISBN 978-0-19-883019-1.
  87. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 44 f.
  88. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 112.
  89. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Hrsg.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 561.
  90. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Editor): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 568.
  91. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Editor): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 569.
  92. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Editor): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 563.
  93. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 213.
  94. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 274.
  95. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 106.
  96. ^ Compare Walter E. Kaegi: Heraclius. Emperor of Byzantium. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2003, ISBN 0-521-81459-6, p. 221 f.
  97. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 11, who does not see Peter's status as exarch as certain at this time, but his refusal.
  98. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 45.
  99. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Editor): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 563.
  100. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 111 f.
  101. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 111, 175.
  102. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 101.
  103. ^ Walter Kaegi: The Islamic conquest and the defense of Byzantine Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Editor): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 65–86, hier p. 65.
  104. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 221.
  105. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 119–120.
  106. ^ For instance Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 223–225; Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 355.
  107. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 114.
  108. ^ For example Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 46–47; also Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 99, who estimates the total strength of Byzantine soldiers including the frontier garrisons and internal garrisons in the year 641 at a maximum of 100,000, but considers 50,000 to be much more realistic.
  109. ^ For example Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 46–47; Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 225.
  110. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 143.
  111. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition. Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 225–226, here mentioning that the Arabs had not planned sieges of cities; also compare Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 143.
  112. ^ For example Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 159.
  113. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition, Routledge, London,1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 226 addresses, among other things, that the South has been abandoned, whereas Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 147, 153, mentioned that the remains or coastal cities of Tripolitania were administered in the 650s by an Armenian-born governor named Narseh Kamsarakan.
  114. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 150.
  115. ^ Assessment of the Berber interests in this regard by Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 218.
  116. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 192.
  117. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (editor): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 563.
  118. ^ a b Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition Routledge, London,1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 226.
  119. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 183.
  120. ^ Walter Kaegi: The Islamic conquest and the defense of Byzantine Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (editor): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 65–86, here p. 74, where the period of the event is named as "before the assassination of Constantius II".; Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 179.
  121. ^ Gabriele Crespi: Die Araber in Europa. Sonderausgabe, Belser, Stuttgart 1992, ISBN 3-7630-1730-5, p. 27.
  122. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 148, where this is seen as evidence of the loyalty of Byzantine troops in Africa to Constantinople.
  123. ^ Walter Kaegi: The Islamic conquest and the defense of Byzantine Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (editor): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 65–86, here p. 73, 77.
  124. ^ a b Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 358.
  125. ^ Walter Kaegi: The Islamic conquest and the defense of Byzantine Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 65–86, here p. 77; Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 226.
  126. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 226.
  127. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 13.
  128. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 235–239.
  129. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 12–13.
  130. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa, 3rd edition, Routledge, London,1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 226–227; also dealing with the push to the Atlantic Gabriele Crespi: Die Araber in Europa. Sonderausgabe, Belser, Stuttgart 1992, ISBN 3-7630-1730-5, p. 28; Hugh Kennedy: The Great Arab Conquests. How the Spread of Islam changed the World we live in. Da Capo, Philadelphia PA 2007, ISBN 978-0-306-81585-0, p. 200 ff.; doubting the actual reaching of the Atlantic Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 48.
  131. ^ For example Gabriele Crespi: Die Araber in Europa. Special edition, Belser, Stuttgart 1992, ISBN 3-7630-1730-5, p. 28.
  132. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 49.
  133. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 227, which points to the failure to take possession of the Byzacena; and Gabriele Crespi: Die Araber in Europa. Special edition, Belser, Stuttgart 1992, ISBN 3-7630-1730-5, p. 28, which mentions a consolidation of the Byzantine sphere of power only between Hippo Regius, Hadrumetum and the interior.
  134. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 14.
  135. ^ Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 227.
  136. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 49, 250.
  137. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 281.
  138. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 50.
  139. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 155.
  140. ^ Compare Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3rd edition, Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 229,which even refers to a Latin/Romance-speaking community in Capsa said to have existed in the 12th century according to al-Idrisi, and Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge u. a. 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 363, who confirmed this language, referred to by al-Idrisi as "African Latin", at least until the 12th century.
  141. ^ Georg Schöllgen: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, Kanon I – Kleidung I. Anton Hiersemann Verlag, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 978-3-7772-5006-9, p. 270.
  142. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 363–370.
  143. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge u. a. 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 370.
  144. ^ Vgl. Theodor Klauser: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, Dogma II – Empore. Anton Hiersemann Verlag, Stuttgart 1959, ISBN 3-7772-7014-8, p. 146.
  145. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 367.
  146. ^ For example Franz Georg Maier: Grundlagen und Anfänge der byzantinischen Geschichte: Das Zeitalter des Justinian und Heraklios. In: Franz Georg Maier (Hrsg.): Byzanz. Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1973, p. 46–89, here p. 71–73; Gabriele Crespi: Die Araber in Europa. Special edition, Belser, Stuttgart 1992, ISBN 3-7630-1730-5, p. 27.
  147. ^ Elizabeth Fentress, Andrew Wilson: The Saharan Berber Diaspora and the Southern frontiers of Byzantine North Africa. In: Susan T. Stevens, Jonathan P. Conant (Hrsg.): North Africa under Byzantium and Early Islam. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, Washington (D. C.) 2016, ISBN 978-0-88402-408-8, p. 41–63, here p. 50–51, where the existence of the Punic language in North Africa in late antiquity is discussed.
  148. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 117.
  149. ^ Averil Cameron: Vandal and Byzantine Africa. In: Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Michael Whitby (Editor): The Cambridge Ancient History. Volume 14: Late Antiquity. Empire and Successors. AD 425–600. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2000, ISBN 0-521-32591-9, p. 568.
  150. ^ Georg Schöllgen: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, Kanon I – Kleidung I. Anton Hiersemann Verlag, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 978-3-7772-5006-9, p. 266.
  151. ^ Denys Pringle: The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford 1981, ISBN 0-86054-119-3 (reprint 2001), p. 113; also compare Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 39.
  152. ^ Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, who mentions the Byzantine revival of Timgad on p. 158 and Byzantine settlers in Numidia and the Sitifensis on p. 241.
  153. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 330 ff.
  154. ^ For instance Franz Georg Maier: Grundlagen und Anfänge der byzantinischen Geschichte: Das Zeitalter des Justinian und Heraklios. In: Franz Georg Maier (editor): Byzanz. Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1973, S. 46–89, hier p. 74, who sees this aspect for the entire restauratio imperii.
  155. ^ Franz Georg Maier: Grundlagen und Anfänge der byzantinischen Geschichte: Das Zeitalter des Justinian und Heraklios. In: Franz Georg Maier (Hrsg.): Byzanz. Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1973, p. 46–89, here p. 76.
  156. ^ But als see Walter E. Kaegi: Muslim Expansion and Byzantine Collapse in North Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010, ISBN 978-1-107-63680-4, p. 199, who denies the prevailing structures in Africa as a blueprint for the issues.
  157. ^ Jonathan Conant: Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–700. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2012, ISBN 978-0-521-19697-0, p. 359.
  158. ^ Compare Susan Raven: Rome in Africa. 3. Edition. Routledge, London, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08150-5, p. 230, who suggests this as "taking over the Roman heritage".

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