The Arabs have by 698 taken most …
Years: 698 - 698
The Arabs have by 698 taken most of North Africa from the Empire.
The area is divided into three provinces: Egypt with its governor at al-Fustat, Ifriqiya with its governor at Kairouan, and the Maghreb (modern Morocco) with its governor at Tangiers.
The constant minor warfare between Damascus and the Constatinople, endemic since the peace of 679, breaks out into full scale war in spring 698, when the Muslim commander Hasan ibn al-Nu'man and a force of forty thousand men crushes Roman Carthage.
Many of its defenders are Visigoths sent to defend the Exarchate by their king, who also fears Muslim expansion.
Many Visigoths fight to the death; in the ensuing battle Roman Carthage is again reduced to rubble, as it had been centuries earlier by the Romans.
The loss of the mainland African Exarchate is an enormous blow to the Empire in the Western Mediterranean because both Carthage and Egypt have been Constantinople's main sources of manpower and grain.
It is also an enormous blow because it permanently ends the Roman presence in Africa.
Locations
People
Groups
- Arab people
- Goths (East Germanic tribe)
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Visigothic Kingdom of Spain
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Africa, or Carthage, Exarchate of
- Islam
- Egypt in the Middle Ages
- Umayyad Caliphate (Damascus)
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Non-dynastic
Topics
- Migration Period
- Migration Period Pessimum
- Arab-Byzantine Wars
- Muslim conquest of the Maghreb
- Byzantine-Muslim War of 692-718
