It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village War

This essay examines Byzantine military manuals created between the sixth to the tenth centuries for what they can reveal about Byzantine imperial attitudes toward the landscapes of war and those who inhabit them. Of foremost concern in these sources is the maintenance of ‘security&rsqu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jason Moralee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-08-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/3/86
id doaj-2df428d8eb3a4849b7913ade0265a6e8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2df428d8eb3a4849b7913ade0265a6e82020-11-24T23:54:58ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872018-08-01738610.3390/h7030086h7030086It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village WarJason Moralee0Department of History, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA 01003, USAThis essay examines Byzantine military manuals created between the sixth to the tenth centuries for what they can reveal about Byzantine imperial attitudes toward the landscapes of war and those who inhabit them. Of foremost concern in these sources is the maintenance of ‘security’ (Greek: asphaleia) by commanders with the necessary quality of ‘experience’ (Greek: peira). Experience meant knowing how to best exploit the land, including the villages under Byzantine authority, in the prosecution of war. Exploitation in the name of security involved destroying villages, using villages and their inhabitants in ambushes, poisoning and seizing crops, evacuating villages, and using villages for the billeting of, at times undisciplined, soldiers. Villages were thus central to a Byzantine military strategy that is identified here as the ‘village war,’ a strategy that is analogous to security strategies evident in more recent conflicts. Through the juxtaposition of premodern and modern modalities of war, this essay intends to be a pointed reminder that the village war has deep roots in imperialist thought, and that the consequences of the village war profoundly reshape the lives of those caught up in its midst, particularly the peasantry.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/3/86borderlandByzantine empireexperienceGothsimperialismIslamic StatepeasantPseudo-Joshua the StyliteruralsecurityTheophanes the Confessorvillagewarfare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jason Moralee
spellingShingle Jason Moralee
It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village War
Humanities
borderland
Byzantine empire
experience
Goths
imperialism
Islamic State
peasant
Pseudo-Joshua the Stylite
rural
security
Theophanes the Confessor
village
warfare
author_facet Jason Moralee
author_sort Jason Moralee
title It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village War
title_short It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village War
title_full It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village War
title_fullStr It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village War
title_full_unstemmed It’s in the Water: Byzantine Borderlands and the Village War
title_sort it’s in the water: byzantine borderlands and the village war
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2018-08-01
description This essay examines Byzantine military manuals created between the sixth to the tenth centuries for what they can reveal about Byzantine imperial attitudes toward the landscapes of war and those who inhabit them. Of foremost concern in these sources is the maintenance of ‘security’ (Greek: asphaleia) by commanders with the necessary quality of ‘experience’ (Greek: peira). Experience meant knowing how to best exploit the land, including the villages under Byzantine authority, in the prosecution of war. Exploitation in the name of security involved destroying villages, using villages and their inhabitants in ambushes, poisoning and seizing crops, evacuating villages, and using villages for the billeting of, at times undisciplined, soldiers. Villages were thus central to a Byzantine military strategy that is identified here as the ‘village war,’ a strategy that is analogous to security strategies evident in more recent conflicts. Through the juxtaposition of premodern and modern modalities of war, this essay intends to be a pointed reminder that the village war has deep roots in imperialist thought, and that the consequences of the village war profoundly reshape the lives of those caught up in its midst, particularly the peasantry.
topic borderland
Byzantine empire
experience
Goths
imperialism
Islamic State
peasant
Pseudo-Joshua the Stylite
rural
security
Theophanes the Confessor
village
warfare
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/3/86
work_keys_str_mv AT jasonmoralee itsinthewaterbyzantineborderlandsandthevillagewar
_version_ 1725464125224517632