Armeniac Theme

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Theme of the Armeniacs
Άρμενιακόν, θέμα Άρμενιάκων, Άρμενιακόν θέμα
Seljuks
.
c. 1073
Today part ofTurkey

The Armeniac Theme (

Asia Minor (modern Turkey
).

History

The Armeniac Theme was one of the four original themes, established sometime in the mid-7th century out of the territory of

East Roman army following the disastrous defeats suffered during the first wave of the Muslim conquests, a process probably complete by the late 640s.[4] Thus, the army of the magister militum per Armeniae (the "Armeniacs") was withdrawn and settled in the areas of Pontus, Paphlagonia and Cappadocia, giving its name to the region.[5]

The Byzantine themes of Asia Minor in circa 842, showing the fragmentation of the large original themes into smaller circumscriptions.

The theme's capital was at Amaseia, and it was governed by a stratēgos, who ranked, together with the stratēgoi of the Anatolic and Thracesian themes, in the first tier of stratēgoi, drawing an annual salary of 40 gold pounds.[2] In the 9th century, it fielded some 9,000 men and encompassed 17 fortresses. Its size and strategic importance on the Byzantine Empire's north-eastern frontier with the Muslims made its governor a powerful figure, and the theme's forces participated in several revolts in the 8th century.[2] Consequently, in the 9th century it was broken up: the smaller provinces of Charsianon and Cappadocia were formed, first as kleisourai and later as full themes, along the border in the south and east, while in circa 819, the coastal themes of Paphlagonia and Chaldia were split off, followed later by the area of Koloneia (first under a doux, by 863 under a full strategos), leaving a rump Armeniac theme encompassing the western Pontus.[6]

The theme remained in Byzantine hands until the late 11th century. In 1073, however, following the disastrous

Seljuk Turks, with only a few coastal forts holding out. The Komnenian
emperors managed to recover the coastal regions for the Empire, but the Armeniac theme was not restored.

References

  1. ^ Haldon 1999, p. 315.
  2. ^ a b c ODB, "Armeniakoi" (C. Foss), p. 177.
  3. ^ Ragia 2009, p. 217: "The inscriptions on the seals of the warehouses in the beginning of the 8th c. took the following forms: "the warehouse of Koloneia and Kamacha" (702-704), "of Koloneia, Kamacha and Armenia IV" (713-715), which finally became "of Koloneia and all the provinces of the Christ-loving Armeniakoi" (717/8)." [Ragia, in footnote #78, is citing McGeer, Nesbitt & Oikonomides 2001, No. 65.1, 74.4, 22.27.]
  4. ^ Haldon 1997, pp. 214–216.
  5. ^ Haldon 1999, pp. 73, 112.
  6. ^ ODB, "Armeniakoi" (C. Foss), p. 177; "Koloneia 1. Koloneia on the Lykos in interior Pontos" (C. Foss), p. 1138, "Paphlagonia" (C. Foss), p. 1579; Treadgold 1995, p. 31.
  7. ^ Haldon 1999, pp. 91–92, 269
  8. ^ Beihammer 2017, pp. 212.

Sources