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A Tenth-Century Byzantine Military Manual: The Sylloge Tacticorum (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,204
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A Tenth-Century Byzantine Military Manual: The Sylloge Tacticorum (Paperback)
Series: Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Studies
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The Sylloge Tacticorum is a mid-Byzantine example of the literary
genre of military manuals or Taktika which stretches back to
antiquity. It was one of a number produced during the tenth century
CE, a period when the Byzantine empire enjoyed a large measure of
success in its wars against its traditional enemy, the Arabs.
Compiled to record and preserve military strategies, know-how, and
tactics, the manual discusses a wide variety of matters: battle
formations, raids, sieges, ambushes, surprise attacks, the
treatment of prisoners of war and defectors, distribution of booty,
punishment of military offences, how to mount effective espionage,
and how to send and receive envoys. There is even advice on the
personal qualities required by generals, on how to neutralize enemy
horses, and on how to protect the troops against poisoned food. The
work culminates in an account of the stratagems employed by great
Greek and Roman military commanders of the past. While, like so
much of Byzantine literature, the Sylloge often simply reproduces
material found in earlier texts, it also preserves a great deal of
information about the military tactics being developed by the
Byzantine army during the tenth century. It is the first Byzantine
source to record the reappearance of a specialized heavy cavalry
(the kataphraktoi) and of a specialized infantry (the menavlatoi)
used to repel the attacks of the opposing heavy cavalry. There is
also a great deal of information on new infantry and cavalry
formations and on the new tactics that required them. This is the
first complete translation of the Sylloge into English. It is
accompanied by a glossary of the specialised Greek military
vocabulary used in the work and by footnotes which explain obscure
references and identify the author's classical and Byzantine
sources. An introduction places the work in its historical and
literary context and considers some of the questions that
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