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19 - Raiders and Neighbours: The Turks (1040–1304)

from Part II - The Middle Empire c. 700–1204

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2010

D. A. Korobeinikov
Affiliation:
Wolfson College, University of Oxford
Jonathan Shepard
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

I, Gregory, the priest over the enfeebled people of the Armenians, at the time of our persecutions by the nation of the Ishmaelites who had appeared from eastern lands [wrote this colophon on the Gospels]. We came from Mount Ararat, from the village, which is called Arkuri, following our God-loving king Sennacherim, to dwell in this city of Sebasteia where the Forty Martyrs shed their blood in the battle with bitter-blowing wind and ice-cold water. And there, after five years my many talented and greatly honoured father, the priest Anania passed away, in the royal city of Constantinople … And [so] we remained [in Sebasteia], two brothers, George and Gregory …’

This colophon, written in 1066, offers us insight into an Armenian monastery on Byzantine territory. Gregory, the copyist of the Gospel Book, moved to Sebasteia after 1021, when Basil II (976–1025) granted the city to Sennacherim-John Artsruni, in exchange for his native kingdom of Vaspurakan (see above, p. 360). Gregory’s colophon is his testament, bequeathing his most valuable possession, the Gospels, to his spiritual son.

The colophon was written at a difficult period for Byzantine Asia Minor. Although primarily concerned with spiritual themes, Gregory mentions ‘our persecutions by the nation of the Ishmaelites’. The question arises: who were these ‘Ishmaelites’?

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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References

Balivet, M. (1994), Romanie byzantine et pays de Rum turc: histoire d’un espace d’imbrication gréco-turque, Istanbul
Kennedy, H. (ed.) (2002), An historical atlas of Islam, 2nd edn., Leiden
Lilie, R.-J. (1993a), Byzantium and the Crusader States, 1096–1204, tr. J. C. Morris and J. E. Ridings, Oxford
Turan, O. (1953), ‘Les Souverains seldjoukides et leurs sujets non-musulmans’, Studia Islamica 1 Google Scholar
Vasiliev, A. A. (1929–30), ‘Manuel Comnenus and Henry Plantagenet’, BZ 29 Google Scholar
Yarnley, C. J. (1972), ‘Philaretos: Armenian bandit or Byzantine general?’, REA n.s. 9 Google Scholar

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