Manuel I Komnenos launches his second assault …

Years: 1158 - 1158

Manuel I Komnenos launches his second assault on Thoros in the summer of 1158, marching at the head of an army down the usual routes leading to Seleucia.

There, with a small rapid deployment force of horsemen and Seleucian troops, he launches a surprise attack on Thoros.

Thoros is at Tarsus, suspecting nothing, when one day in late October, a Latin pilgrim whom he had entertained came suddenly rushing back to his Court to tell him that he had seen Imperial troops only a day’s march away.

Thoros collects his family, his intimate friends and his treasure and flees at once to the mountains.

Next day the Emperor enters the Cilician plain; within a fortnight all the Cilician cities as far as Anazarbus are in his power, but Thoros himself still eludes him.

Imperial detachments scour the valleys as he flees from hilltop to hilltop and at last finds refuge on a crag called Dadjog, near the sources of the river Cydnus; only his two most trusted servants know where he lies hidden.

Thus, much of Cilicia is restored to imperial control, but Thoros still holds the mountainous regions in the north.

Thoros survives by sheltering alone under rocks on a hillside, where an old shepherd brings him food to keep him alive.

Eventually, King Baldwin III of Jerusalem intervenes and successfully brokers a peace treaty between the Emperor and Thoros: Thoros has to walk barefoot and bareheaded to the camp of the emperor, where he prostrates himself in the dust before the imperial platform.

A pardon is then accorded to him for his transgressions both in Cilicia and Cyprus.

He is still allowed to hold partial possession in Cilicia.

Related Events

Filter results