Sunday, March 17, 2013

PETRONAS the Patrician


Petronas
Died865
AllegianceByzantine Empire
Years of service830s–865
RankDomestic of the Schools
Battles/warsArab–Byzantine frontier wars

Petronas the Patrician (GreekΠετρωνᾶς; died November 11, 865) was a notable Byzantine general and leading aristocrat during the mid-9th century. The uncle of Emperor Michael III (r. 842–867), by the time of his death, he held the titles of magistros and patrikios, and had commanded the eliteScholai and Vigla regiments.

[edit]Biography

Petronas was born to the droungarios Marinos and Theoktiste, and was the younger brother of Bardas and Empress Theodora, the wife of Emperor Theophilos.[1] Three other sisters, Kalomaria, Sophia, and Irene, are recorded by the historian Theophanes Continuatus.[1]

Under Theophilos, he was appointed droungarios of the guard regiment (tagma) of the Vigla, and raised to the rank of patrikios. In 840 or 842, Theophilos ordered him to decapitate the patrician Theophobos,[2] a former Khurramite convert and general, whose troops had proclaimed him emperor at Sinope some years before.[3] Despite his kinship with Theophilos, however, the tale is told that the Emperor once had Petronas stripped naked and flogged in public because he had built a palace that overshadowed the house of a widow. The palace itself was then torn down, and both the building materials and the plot were left to the widow.[1][2]

Michael III with Theodora and Theoktistos, from the Madrid Skylitzes

When Emperor Theophilos died in 842, Theodora was left as regent to her infant son,Michael III, and Petronas is said to have urged Theodora to rescind Theophilos'siconoclastic policies.[1] Under the regency of Theodora and the logothetesTheoktistos, Petronas was sidelined along with his brother Bardas.[2] When Emperor Michael III came of age in 855, however, he began resenting the dominance of his mother and of Theoktistos, as well as the latter's overbearing behavior.[4] Supported by his uncles Bardas and Petronas, Emperor Michael had Theoktistos seized and killed in late 855, while Petronas undertook the confinement of the Byzantine empress and her daughters into a monastery.[1]

Bardas was now raised to the rank of Caesar and became the effective governor of the Byzantine Empire. In this position, he displayed remarkable energy and ability, and amongst the most important of his policies was a more aggressive stance against the Arabs in the East.[5] Consequently, Petronas was appointed strategos of the powerful Thracesian Theme. On his first campaign, against the Paulicians of Tephrike in 856, he plundered his way through the Emirate of Melitene and the Paulician lands to Samosata and Amida in Upper Mesopotamia.[2][6]Having penetrated deeper into Arab territory than any Byzantine commander since the Muslim conquests, he returned victorious with many captives.[6]

Petronas (far left) with John, the monk who foretold his victory at Lalakaon. Miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes

In 863, another Arab army, led by the emir of Melitene, Umar al-Aqta (r. 830s–863), penetrated deep into Byzantine territory, reaching the Black Sea coast at Amisos. Petronas was placed in charge of all Byzantine troops assembling to confront the invasion, and through a brilliant coordination effort, three separate forces managed to converge on the Arab army, encircle it, and destroy it at the Battle of Lalakaon on September 3, 863.[7] Petronas carried his defeated enemy's head to Constantinople, where he was honored with a triumphal entrance by his nephew. Soon after, he was raised to the rank of magistros and the position of Domestic of the Schools(commander-in-chief of the army).[2]

The defeat of the Arabs and their Paulician allies became a turning point in the Arab–Byzantine Wars. With this victory, Petronas and Bardas were able to secure their eastern borders, strengthen the Byzantine state, and set the stage for the conquests of the 10th century. The Byzantine chroniclers add that the victorious general did not survive for long after the glorious Battle of Lalakaon. A hagiography, written by a contemporary, claims that Petronas died on the same day as his spiritual father Saint Anthony the Younger, two years and two months after routing the Arab armies. He was buried in the Gastria Monastery, where his stone sarcophagus was placed opposite those of his sister, the Empress Theodora, and his nieces.[1]

[edit]References

  1. a b c d e f Winkelmann et al. 2000, p. 564.
  2. a b c d e Kazhdan 1991, pp. 1644–1645.
  3. ^ Kazhdan 1991, pp. 2067–2068.
  4. ^ Jenkins 1987, p. 160.
  5. ^ Jenkins 1987, pp. 160–161.
  6. a b Treadgold 1997, pp. 450–451.
  7. ^ Jenkins 1987, p. 162.

[edit]Sources


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