Battle of Dyrrhachium (1018)

Battle of Dyrrhachium (1018)

Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Dyrrhachium


caption=
partof=the Byzantine-Bulgarian Wars
date=February, 1018
place=near Dyrrhachium, modern Albania
result=Byzantine victory
combatant1=First Bulgarian Empire
combatant2=Byzantine Empire
commander1=Ivan VladislavKIA
commander2=Nicetas Pegonites| strength1=Unknown
strength2=Unknown
casualties1=Unknown
casualties2=Unknown

The Battle of Dyrrhachium in February 1018 was a part of the Byzantine-Bulgarian Wars. It happened as the Bulgarian tsar Ivan Vladislav tried to establish his power on the southeastern coast of the Adriatic Sea. He led an army against Dyrrhachium (present-day Durrës, in Albania) and besieged it, but was killed during a counterattack of the city’s defenders.

This was the final battle of the centuries long struggle between the First Bulgarian Empire and Byzantium. Within months after Vladislav’s death most of his realm was subjugated by the Byzantine emperor Basil II, with the last independent region (Sirmium) subdued in 1019.

Historical background

After the battle of Kleidion and the death of tsar Samuil in 1014 the Bulgarian state was destabilized by internal turmoil. In the year that followed, tsar Gavril Radomir, Samuel’s son and heir, was killed by his cousin, John Vladislav, at Basil’s instigation. The new Bulgarian ruler negotiated a brief peace as he promised to submit to the Byzantine emperor in return for the control over Dyrrhachium. Neither side kept its promises and the war broke out again in the autumn of 1015. While Vladislav attacked Dyrrhachium, Basil II captured his capital Ohrid, but was later forced to abandon it.

The war continued for two more years without a decisive outcome. In 1017 Basil inflicted defeat on the Bulgarians at Setina, near Edessa, but failed to exploit his victory and returned to Constantinople. Vladislav used this to launch another assault against Dyrrhachium, which was defended by the strategus Nicetas Pegonites. In the battle that ensued after a sortie of the garisson the Bulgarian tsar was killed and his troops were forced to retreat.

This event prompted the majority of the Bulgarian nobles (boyars) to surrender to Basil. The isolated resistance was suppressed and Bulgaria became a Byzantine province.

Sources

Primary

* John Skylitzes, "Synopsis Historion", [http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/en/ban/ma1.html#18 Excerpt describing the conquest of Bulgaria in 1014-1018] (Bozhinov, V. and L. Panayotov: "Macedonia. Documents and Materials", Sofia 1978; online edition [http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/ Books about Macedonia] , retrieved on September 20, 2008)
* "Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja" (partial translation by Paul Stephenson), [http://homepage.mac.com/paulstephenson/trans/lpd2.html part 2, chapter XXXVI, p. 341] - an alternative account, according to which Vladislav was killed by Saint John Vladimir (retrieved on September 20, 2008)

Secondary

* Fine, John V. A.: "The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century", University of Michigan Press, 1991, ISBN 0472081497, pp. 198-199
* Runciman, Steven: [http://www.promacedonia.com/en/sr/index.html "A history of the First Bulgarian Empire"] , G. Bell & Sons, London 1930, pp. 247-252 (retrieved on September 20, 2008)
* Stephenson, Paul: "Byzantium's Balkan Frontier: A Political Study of the Northern Balkans, 900-1204", Cambridge University Press, 2000, ISBN 0521770173, p. 74
* Treadgold, Warren T.: "A History of the Byzantine State and Society", Stanford University Press, 1997, ISBN 0804726302, pp. 527-528
* in Bulgarian: Zlatarski, Vasil: "History of the Bulgarian State during the Middle Ages" (Златарски, Васил: "История на българската държава през средните векове"), Volume I, Part II, Sofia 1971, [http://www.promacedonia.org/vz1b/vz1b_6_4.html pp. 728-729] (retrieved on September 20, 2008)


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