Battle of Katasyrtai

Battle between Byzantines and Bulgarians
41°01′50″N 28°53′25″E / 41.030556°N 28.890278°E / 41.030556; 28.890278Result Bulgarian victoryBelligerents Bulgarian Empire Byzantine EmpireCommanders and leaders Simeon I of Bulgaria Leo PhokasStrength Unknown UnknownCasualties and losses Unknown Heavy
  • v
  • t
  • e
Byzantine–Bulgarian wars
Early wars
  • Ongal
  • 1st Anchialus
  • 1st Marcellae
  • Rishki Pass
  • 2nd Anchialus
  • Litosoria
  • 2nd Marcellae

Krum's campaigns

  • Serdica
  • Pliska
  • Debeltos
  • Versinikia
  • 1st Adrianople
  • Burdizon

Simeon I's campaigns

Sviatoslav's invasion of Bulgaria

  • 1st Arcadiopolis
  • Dorostolon

Byzantine conquest of Bulgaria

Uprising of Peter Delyan

  • 4th Thessalonica
  • 5th Thessalonica
  • Ostrovo

Second Bulgarian Empire

The battle of Katasyrtai (Kατασυρται) occurred in the fall of 917, shortly after the striking Bulgarian triumph at Achelous near the village of the same name close to the Byzantine capital Constantinople, (now Istanbul). The result was a Bulgarian victory.

Origins of the conflict

From the beginning of 917 both sides prepared for decisive actions. The Byzantines tried to forge a coalition against Bulgaria but their attempts failed due to the fast reaction of the Bulgarian ruler Simeon I. Nonetheless, the Byzantines gathered an enormous army, but they were decisively defeated at Achelous.

The battle

While the victorious Bulgarian army was marching southwards, the Byzantine commander Leo Phokas, who survived at Achelous, reached Constantinople by sea and gathered the last Byzantine troops to intercept his enemy before reaching the capital. The two armies clashed near the village of Katasyrtai just outside the city and after a night fight, the Byzantines were completely routed from the battlefield.[1]

Aftermath

The last Byzantine military forces were literally destroyed and the way to Constantinople was opened, but the Serbs rebelled to the west and the Bulgarians decided to secure their rear before the final assault of the Byzantine capital which gave the enemy precious time to recover.

Citations

  1. ^ Garland (2002), p. 122.

References

  • Garland, Lynda (2002). Byzantine Empresses: Women and Power in Byzantium AD 527-1204. Routledge. ISBN 9780203024812.
  • Scylitzes, Ioannes. Historia, Part 2. p. 88.


Stub icon

This article about a battle is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e
Stub icon

This Byzantine Empire–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e