The Cumans proceed to ravage the entire …
Years: 1089 - 1089
The Cumans proceed to ravage the entire eastern Balkan region as far as Constantinople until Alexios buys them off also and takes them into imperial service.
At home, the emperor's policy of strengthening the central authority and building up professional military and naval forces results in increased imperial strength in western and southern Anatolia and eastern Mediterranean waters.
However, he is unable or unwilling to limit the considerable powers of the landed magnates who have threatened the unity of the empire in the past.
Indeed, he strengthens their position by further concessions, and he has to reward services, military and otherwise, by granting fiscal rights over specified areas.
This method, which is to be increasingly employed by his successors, will inevitably weaken central revenues and imperial authority.
He represses heresy and maintains the traditional imperial role of protecting the Eastern Orthodox church, but he does not hesitate to seize ecclesiastical treasure when in financial need.
The church will subsequently call him to account for this.
Locations
People
Groups
- Oghuz Turks
- Thrace, Theme of
- Pechenegs, or Patzinaks
- Turkmen people
- Paristrion (Paradounabon), Theme of
- Cuman people, or Western Kipchaks, also called Polovtsy, Polovtsians)
- Christians, Eastern Orthodox
- Rum, Sultanate of
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Komnenos dynasty, restored
