Session142
TitleByzantine Border Warfare
Date/TimeMonday 4 July 2022: 11.15-12.45
 
SponsorDe Re Militari: Society for Medieval Military History
 
OrganiserGeorgios Theotokis, Department of History, Ibn-Haldun University, Istanbul
 
Moderator/ChairIlana Krug, Department of History & Political Science, York College of Pennsylvania
 
Paper 142-a Defending Byzantium's Southern Border: Selecting Cretan and Sicilian Campaigns' Commanders in the 9th and 10th Centuries
(Language: English)
Dimitrios Sidiropoulos, Department of History & Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Index Terms: Byzantine Studies; Military History
Paper 142-b Transcultural Warfare in 11th-Century Anatolia
(Language: English)
Georgios Theotokis, Department of History, Ibn-Haldun University, Istanbul
Index Terms: Byzantine Studies; Military History
Paper 142-c Borders in Transition, Warfare, and Cultural Exchange: The Case of Florios and Platziaflora
(Language: English)
Konstantinos Karatolios, Department of History, University of Crete
Index Terms: Byzantine Studies; Military History
 
AbstractThis session seeks to highlight the challenges and realities of border conflicts and struggles pertaining to the Byzantine world in the 9th-15th centuries. The papers in this panel cover a geographic spread, addressing the varying circumstances and realities that characterised diverse regions within the Byzantine Empire. Individual papers investigate respectively the role of imperial officials and the extent of their responsibility for military disasters along the Empire's borders; the degree to which the region of Anatolia, with interactions between Byzantines, Turks, and western Christians, can be said to reflect transcultural warfare; and the phenomenon of cultural exchange within Byzantine borders as a result of warfare, evidenced in the late medieval romance Florios and Platziaflora.