the bizarre battle at Manzikert.........anybody wanna expalin to me what happend in that battle since some call it bizarre....
Contact began, predictably enough, with trickery. When a party of Turkish scouts was seen reconnoitering the Byzantines, Basilakes, commander of the Theodosipolitan theme, or military commandery, charged and hotly pursued the handful of Turks until his troop was ambushed, then killed or taken prisoner. Romanus sent a column in support, but they only found corpses. He prepared for a battle.
Romanus drew up his army in two lines. The front was of cavalry from the various themes. He himself rode in the middle with his guards and metropolitan provincial troops. The second line consisted of foreign mercenary cavalry such as Germans, Normans from Italy and troops from the eastern borders belonging to the marcher lords whose territories lay along the frontier. The horsemen were probably largely armored as the Byzantine cavalry had been from the fifth century onward, and they were equipped with lances and broadswords. It seems, however, that fewer of them carried bows or fought as mounted archers than had been previously the case; because of internal political wrangling at Constantinople the army had declined in quality and the bow appears to have fallen out of favor as a horseman's weapon.
The mercenary horsemen fought, of course, as conventional Western armored knights. This second line, meant to function as a reserve, was under the command of Andronicus Ducas, a relation of Romanus's predecessor, Constantine Xl. Unknown to the new emperor, Ducas was his enemy.
Alp Arslan offered to withdraw instead of fight, but the emperor refused the offer, which he probably did not regard as legitimate; and he may have been right to doubt the offer. Negotiations for the purpose of delay or confusion were a common steppe device: the Magyars had gulled the Italians two hundred years before with such offers, only to attack them when they were unprepared.
The Battle of Manzikert began as numbers of Turks rode about the Byzantine line shooting arrows but never closing. After some time Romanus ordered an advance along the line with the reserves in the second line following. The Turks fell back before the advance and declined to come to grips with the Byzantines, so that the advance went on for several hours without much harm to the Turks. As the evening came on, Romanus commanded his tired army to turn about and return to camp. The army's center obeyed, but the wings did not receive the order timely and, when they did, failed to keep formation. Breaks appeared in the line. The Turks closed back in and began to harass the retreating Byzantines, so much so that Romanus ordered the line to turn about, threaten the Turks and drive them away. Andronicus Ducas, in charge of the second line, now saw his chance at betrayal. Instead of stopping and facing the enemy as ordered, he led the second line back to the camp, abandoning the emperor and half of the army to its fate.
The Turks took full advantage of the reserve's disappearance to surround those who remained. Enveloped by the SeIjuk horse archers, the emperor's right wing tried to face both ways, fell apartand then ran. The Turks then concentrated on the center, where the emperor fought hard but was finally captured. The left wing was chased off the battlefield.
With this one battle a great army was destroyed and all of Anatolia lost forever. Byzantium was weakened, and, while it would last another four centuries, it would never recover its earlier strength.
Originally posted by Jens Z
Never forget to quote the source of such information like above![]()