The Socio-Economic Impact of Raiding on the Eastern and Balkan Borderlands of the Eastern Roman Empire, 502 – 602

Q4 Social Sciences
Alexander Sarantis
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Abstract

Abstract This paper compares the socio-economic impact of warfare on two frontier zones of the sixth-century eastern Roman empire: the central and northern Balkans; and the northern Syrian-Mesopotamian and Armenian borderlands in the East. The theme of war damage is central to historical and archaeological work on the Balkans but plays a comparatively marginal role in research on the East. And yet the eastern provinces were affected by more intensive raiding by larger armies, and at least as regularly as the Balkans. Much of the difference in perception is related to contemporary sources’ exaggerated coverage of ‘barbarian’ raiding on the Balkans, a region traditionally viewed as a neglected backwater by authors such as Procopius. Conversely, such sources portray warfare with the Sassanid Persians in the East through a ‘classicising’ lens, describing at greater length generals’ speeches, battles, campaigns and sieges. Another reason for the disparity in modern discussions of the two regions is the socio-economic recession in the northern Balkans toward the end of the sixth century. This can be at least indirectly linked to the effects of warfare between the empire and the Avar Khaganate and Slavic groups. Recovery from the devastation caused by these groups’ invasions could no longer be funded by the imperial authorities, who, by this stage, were struggling to finance wars on multiple fronts and were feeling the fiscal effects of repeated bouts of bubonic plague. Despite also suffering from this absence of central investment, eastern societies and economies enjoyed a greater degree of continuity in the final decades of the sixth century. This was because non-imperial sources of agricultural and commercial wealth in these areas encouraged elites to invest in recovery projects. Local elites’ and wider populations’ deep-rooted feelings of cultural, linguistic and religious attachment also played a role in their survival. These economic and cultural ties can in part be explained by the fact that, unlike the Balkans, these eastern provinces had enjoyed a long period of peace and stability in the fourth and fifth centuries.
对东罗马帝国东部和巴尔干边境地区的袭击的社会经济影响,502 - 602
本文比较了战争对6世纪东罗马帝国两个边境地区的社会经济影响:巴尔干半岛中部和北部;以及东部的叙利亚-美索不达米亚北部和亚美尼亚边境。战争破坏的主题是巴尔干半岛的历史和考古工作的核心,但在东方的研究中却起着相对次要的作用。然而,东部省份受到更大规模军队更密集的袭击,至少和巴尔干半岛一样频繁。观念上的差异很大程度上与当代文献对“野蛮人”袭击巴尔干地区的夸大报道有关,巴尔干地区传统上被普罗科匹乌斯等作家视为被忽视的闭塞地区。相反,这些资料通过“经典化”的视角描绘了东方与萨珊波斯人的战争,更详细地描述了将军们的演讲、战斗、战役和围攻。对这两个地区的现代讨论存在差异的另一个原因是,六世纪末巴尔干半岛北部的社会经济衰退。这至少可以间接地与帝国与阿瓦尔可汗国和斯拉夫集团之间战争的影响联系起来。帝国当局无法再资助从这些团体入侵造成的破坏中恢复过来,在这个阶段,帝国当局正努力为多条战线的战争提供资金,并感受到反复爆发的黑死病所带来的财政影响。尽管也受到缺乏中央投资的影响,东方社会和经济在六世纪最后几十年仍享有更大程度的连续性。这是因为这些地区的非帝国农业和商业财富来源鼓励精英们投资于复苏项目。当地精英和广大民众对文化、语言和宗教的根深蒂固的依恋也在他们的生存中发挥了作用。这些经济和文化联系的部分原因是,与巴尔干半岛不同,这些东部省份在四世纪和五世纪享有长期的和平与稳定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Millennium DIPr
Millennium DIPr Social Sciences-Law
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