The Chronicle of Theophanes Confessor (AM 6165), in its entry for 672/673, attributes the Byzantine victory in the first Arab siege of Constantinople to the intercession of *Mary (Mother of Christ, S00033). Chronicle compiled in the Byzantine Empire in the early 9th c., using extracts from earlier Greek texts
E08048
Literary - Other narrative texts (including Histories)
Theophanes
Chronicle of Theophanes, AM 6165 [AD 672/3]
Τούτῳ τῳ ἔτει ὁ προλεχθεὶς τῶν θεομάχων στόλος ἀναβάλας προσώρμισεν ἐν τοῖς Θρακῴοις μέρεσιν ἀπὸ τῆς πρὸς δύσιν ἀκρότητος τοῦ Ἑβδόμου, ἤτοι τῆς λεγομένης Μαγναύρας, μέχρι πάλιν τοῦ πρὸς ἀνατολὴν ἀκρωτηρίου τοῦ λεγομένου Κυκλοβίου. κατὰ πᾶσαν οὖν ἡμέραν συμβολὴ πολέμου ἐκροτεῖτο [...] ἐν τούτοις οὖν διετέλεσαν ἀπὸ τοῦ Ἀπριλλίου μηνὸς μέχρι τοῦ Σεπτεμβρίου. καὶ ὑποστρέψαντες ἀπέρχονται ἐν Κυζίκῳ, καὶ ταύτην παραλαβόντες ἐκεῖσε παρεχείμαζον. καὶ κατὰ τὸ ἔαρ ἀναβάλλων ὁμοίως πόλεμον διὰ θαλάσσης συνῆπτε μετὰ τῶν Χριστιανών. ἐπὶ ἑπτὰ δὲ ἔτη τὰ αὐτὰ τελέσαντες, καὶ αἰσχυνθέντες τῇ τοῦ θεοῦ βοηθείᾳ καὶ τῆς θεομήτορος, πλῆθός τε ἀποβαλόντες ἀνδρῶν μαχίμων, καὶ τραυματίας μεγίστης εἰς αὐτοὺς γενομένης, ἀνθυπέστρεψαν μετὰ μεγάλης λύπης.
'In this year the aforementioned fleet of God's enemies set sail and came to anchor in the region of Thrace, between the western point of the Hebdomon, that is the Magnaura, as it is called, and the eastern promontory, named Kyklobion. Every day there was a military engagement [...] The enemy kept this up from the month of April until September. Then, turning back, they went to Kyzikos, which they captured and wintered there. And in the spring they set out and, in similar fashion, made war on sea against the Christians. After doing the same for seven years and being put to shame with the help of God and His Mother; having, furthermore, lost a multitude of warriors and had a great many wounded, they turned back with much sorrow.'
Text: de Boor 1883, 353-4.
Translation: Mango and Scott 1997, 494.
Saint as patron - of a community
MiraclesMiraculous interventions in war
Miraculous protection - of communities, towns, armies
Source
Theophanes (759/60-818) came from a wealthy and politically prominent family from Constantinople. After marriage and a brief career as a secular official, he became a monk, living in the monastic communities centred around Mount Sigriane in Bithynia, and eventually abbot of the community known as Megas Agros. He acquired the epithet 'Confessor' (Homologetes) through his resistance to the renewal of Iconoclasm by the emperor Leo V (813-820), which led to Theophanes' imprisonment and then exile to the island of Samothrace, where he died. For full discussion of the evidence for Theophanes' life, see Mango and Scott 1997, xliv-lii, and, for a briefer summary, his entry ('Theophanes 18') in the Prosopography of the Byzantine Empire (http://www.pbe.kcl.ac.uk).The Chronicle of Theophanes covers the period from 284/5 to 812/813. It was a continuation of the Chronicle of George Synkellos (ob. c. 810) which ran from the creation of the world to 284. George had apparently intended to continue his chronicle down to his own time but died before he could do so; the extent to which Theophanes, in producing his chronicle, was simply editing and polishing material already collected by George remains uncertain (see Mango and Scott 1997, liv-lv). The Chronicle of George Synkellos contains some material relevant to the cult of saints, up to its stopping point in 284; however, this is not included in the CSLA database because the sources for all George's information (chiefly Eusebius) survive and have database entries in their own right.
Theophanes and his sources
The key characteristic of Theophanes’ Chronicle is that it is not a composition of Theophanes’ own, but a patchwork of extracts from earlier sources, collected and arranged in chronicle form, in other words under an entry for each year. Theophanes’ role was confined to piecing the patchwork together (i.e. removing pieces from their original context and placing them under individual years), and to some extent condensing and abbreviating material. As he put it in his preface: 'I did not set down anything of my own composition, but have made a selection from the ancient historians and prose-writers and have consigned to their proper places the events of every year, assigned without confusion' (trans. Mango and Scott 1997, 2). Since many of Theophanes’ sources are still extant, the extracts in his chronicle can often be compared with the original, which shows that that this was indeed his method of compilation, though he makes occasional editorial interventions, and sometimes misunderstands source material (Mango and Scott 1997, lxxii, xci-xcv; Howard-Johnston 2010, 272-3, 276-84).
It is because Theophanes' Chronicle is essentially a compilation of earlier sources that a number of extracts from the Chronicle are included in the CSLA database, even though the work itself dates from more than a century after AD 700, our usual cut-off point for evidence. We have not included material which reproduces sources that have their own entries in our database (such as Eusebius, John Malalas, Theodore Lector, Procopius, and Theophylact Simocatta), but have included entries (for the period up to 700) for items in Theophanes whose original source is lost.
For discussion of Theophanes' work as a whole, see the introduction to Mango and Scott's translation (Mango and Scott 1997, xliii-c); Howard-Johnston 2010, 268-312; and the essays in Jankowiak and Montinaro 2015.
Chronology
Theophanes' chronology is based primarily on the annus mundi (year since Creation). There was more than one system of calculating AM dates: the one used by Theophanes, following George Synkellos, was the Alexandrian era, which started from the equivalent of 5492 BC, thus making the first year of the chronicle, AD 284/5, the AM year 5777. The first day of the year under the Alexandrian system was 25 March, and this was used by George Synkellos; however, it is evident that Theophanes (without ever stating his practice explicitly) used 1 September as the first day of his chronicle years, thus matching the standard secular dating system in the Byzantine empire (indictions): see Mango and Scott 1997, lxvi. While the year-by-year chronology is based on the annus mundi, Theophanes includes considerable other information in the heading for each entry (not given here): the year from the Incarnation (the same principle as AD dating, but the system used by Theophanes dated the Incarnation to AD 8/9), and the regnal years of the Roman emperor (Theophanes only ever lists one emperor here, normally the one ruling in Constantinople), the king of Persia (the Caliph in later entries), and the bishops of Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem. The accuracy and mutual consistency of these different forms of dating varies considerably across different entries. In the body of each entry, Theophanes often preserves the form of dating used by his source, such as consular years or indictions. For a full overview, see Mango and Scott 1997, lxiii-lxxiv.
Discussion
As with the siege of the city by the Persians and Avars in 626, the failure of the attack on Constantinople by the Arabs in the 670s is attributed to the protection of the Mother of God. The siege – actually, as this extract shows, more a series of annually renewed naval blockades – is traditionally dated to 674-678, though there is some uncertainty as to its exact dates (see Mango and Scott 1997, 494, n. 3).Bibliography
Edition:de Boor, C., Theophanis Chronographia (Leipzig: Teubner, 1883).
English translation and commentary:
Mango, C., and Scott, R., The Chronicle of Theophanes Confessor: Byzantine and Near Eastern History AD 284-813 (Oxford: OUP, 1997).
On Theophanes:
Howard-Johnston, J., Witnesses to a World Crisis: Historians and Histories of the Middle East in the Seventh Century (Oxford: OUP, 2010).
Jankowiak, M., and Montinaro, P. (eds.), Studies in Theophanes (Travaux et mémoires 19; Paris: Centre d'Histoire et Civilisation de Byzance, 2015).
David Lambert
15/11/2020
ID | Name | Name in Source | Identity | S00033 | Mary, Mother of Christ | ἡ θεομἠτωρ | Certain |
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