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Origins
- The
Avar Empire
Origins
The Avars were a Mongolian peoples, known to the Chinese as the Juan-Juan.
In the Fourth Century they were one of many Mongol and Turkic groupings
to trouble the northern borders of the Chinese Empire. At this time there
was political chaos in China, the north of which fragmented into numerous
local states. The restlessness and upheaval, on both sides of the Great
Wall, mirrored what was happening in Europe at the same time.
It was also at this time that the Huns, another of the peoples who had
troubled China's northern borders, began to migrate westwards, driving
back the Goths and other Germanic peoples and thus setting off the
chain-reaction that led to the fall of the Western Roman Empire. But their
movements affected events in Eastern Asia as much as in Western Europe.
The migration of the Huns paved the way for the Kök Türük (the Blue or
Celestial Turks) to succeed them. It was the Celestial Turks who first
drove the Juan-Juan (together with many of their fellow Turks) westwards.
The Juan-Juan migrated through northern Iran to the Russian steppes.
Here, they mingled with other Turkic and Hunnic peoples, primarily the
Uighurs, finally emerging into Eastern Europe in the middle of the Sixth
Century. This new confederacy, now known as the Avars, were to threaten
Constantinople and much of western Europe for over three centuries.
The Avar Empire
Little is known about the Avars in the period of their greatest power.
Their base was situated somewhere near present-day Belgrade. By the end
of the Sixth Century, their empire stretched from the River Volga to the
Baltic Sea and archaeological evidence suggests that they remained a powerful
presence until well into the Eighth Century. They succeeded in driving
out both the Gepids (567) and the Lombards from the Danube Basin. They
also drove the Western Slavs into the areas they have occupied ever since.
During this early period they were ruled by the khagan (khan),
Baian.
When a new Emperor, Justin II, was crowned in Constantinople, the Avars
requested the payment of tribute, which had been promised them by his
uncle and predecessor, the great Justinian. Typically, Justin refused.
In 568, in pursuit of this tribute, the Avars invaded Dalmatia and indulged
in a frenzy of destruction. Justin, sent a large force under his 'Count
of the Excubitors', Tiberius. The resulting war lasted for three years,
after which the Byzantines were forced to seek a truce. The ensuing treaty
cost Justin 80,000 pieces of silver - far greater than the original sum
promised.
In 581, by use of trickery, they captured Sirmium, on the River Sava,
which they used as a base from which to mop up a number of poorly-defended
Byzantine fortresses along the Danube. Their demands for tribute grew
ever greater. After rejecting such exotic gifts as an elephant and a golden
bed, the khagan forced the Emperor Maurice to agree to a tribute of no
less than 100,000 silver pieces. Such was the drain on Imperial resources
that when, in 599, the Avars captured 12,000 Byzantine prisoners, Maurice
had to refuse to pay their ransom and every one of them was put to death.
Maurice's successor, Phocas, preoccupied with wars against the Persians,
was forced to agree a truce with the Avars at the expense of inevitably
huge tribute. With the Byzantine army in the east, however - treaties
notwithstanding - the Avars continued to expand into the Balkan Peninsula.
After narrowly failing to capture the Emperor Heraclius by
more underhand trickery, the Avars reached Constantinople itself. Faced
with the huge fortifications of the Theodosian Walls, however, they contented
themselves with destroying a few churches and departed.

Avar Horsemen by Angus McBride
In 626, conspiring with the Persians, and leading a barbarian host of 80,000
Avars, Huns, Gepids and Bulgars, the khagan laid more formal siege
to the city from the European side of the Bosphorus, while the Persians
did likewise from the Asiatic side. True to form, the Avars made one last
offer to spare the city - in return for a ransom - but the Emperor rejected
it magnificently. Like so many sieges of Constantinople, the attack came
to nothing. The Persian fleet was defeated and by the following morning,
the khagan's cosmopolitan army had struck camp and left.
After the death of their khagan, the Avars began to decline in the face
of Slavic and Bulgar expansion. Charlemagne inflicted crushing defeats
on them, destroying their massive military fortifications, the "Avar Ring",
in 791. Their power was ended once and for all by the resurgent Bulgars,
under their great king, Krum, early in the Ninth Century.
Source : Mark Furnival
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