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Battle of Pelekanon
Battle of Pelekanon
Part of the ByzantineOttoman Wars
Location Near Nicomedia, Bithynia [1][2] (present day: Maltepe, Turkey) Result Ottoman victory
[3]
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire Ottoman Beylik
Strength
~ 8,000 ~4,000 or less: [4] ~2,000 soldiers from Constantinople, and something less than this number from Thrace.
The Battle of Pelekanon also known by its Latinised form Battle of Pelecanum occurred on June 1011, 1329 between an expeditionary force by the Byzantines led by Andronicus III and an Ottoman army led by Orhan I. The Byzantine army was defeated, with no further attempt made at relieving the cities in Anatolia under Ottoman siege.
Battle of Pelekanon lure the Byzantines unto the hills, but these were driven off by the Byzantines, who were unwilling to advance further. Then belligerent armies engaged in a couple of indecisive clashes until nightfall and the Byzantine army prepared to retreat, but the Turks gave them no chance. Both Andronicus and Cantacuzene were lightly wounded, while rumors spread that the Emperor had either been killed or mortally wounded, resulting in panic. Eventually the retreat turned into a rout with heavy casualties on the Byzantine side. Cantacuzene led the remaining Byzantine soldiers back to Constantinople by sea.
Consequences
The Battle of Pelekanon was the first engagement in which a Byzantine Emperor encountered an Ottoman Bey. The battle's moral effect was more important than the battle itself; the heavy-armed and disciplined Greeks had fled before the light-armed and irregular Turks; the spirit of the Greek Emperor and of the Greek nation was broken. A campaign of restoration was aborted. Never again did a Byzantine army attempt to regain territory in Asia. The former imperial capitals of Nicomedia and Nicaea were not relieved and the maintenance of Imperial control across the Bosphorus was no longer tenable. The Ottomans conquered Nicaea in 1331 and Nicomedia in 1337, thus building up a strong base from which they eventually swept away the Byzantine Empire as a whole. The inhabitants of Nicaea and Nicomedia were quickly and willingly incorporated into the growing Ottoman nation, and many of them had already embraced Islam in 1340. With the capture of these cities and the annexation of the Beylik of Karasi in 1336, the Ottomans had completed their conquest of Bythinia and the north-western corner of Anatolia.
Notes
[1] Pitcher, Donald Edgar. An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire from Earliest Times to the End of the Sixteenth Century (http:/ / books. google. gr/ books?id=8gs4AAAAIAAJ& lpg=PP1& dq=^ An Historical Geography of the Ottoman Empire from Earliest Times to the End of the Sixteenth Century& hl=el& pg=PA38#v=onepage& q& f=false), Brill Archive, 1972, p.38. [2] Shaw, Stanford J. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, vol 1 (http:/ / books. google. gr/ books?id=Xd422lS6ezgC& lpg=PA15& dq=pelekanon ESKHSAR& hl=el& pg=PA15#v=onepage& q& f=false), Cambridge University Press, 1976, p.15. [3] Heath, Ian and Angus McBride, Byzantine Armies 1118-1461 AD, (Osprey Publishing, 1995), 8. [4] Bartusis, The Late Byzantine Army, p. 91 "In June 1329 he [Andronicus III] and Kantakouzenos led a major expedition into Asia with 2,000 soldiers from Constantinople, and something less than this number from Thrace. At Pelekanos their army encountered the forces of Orhan, Osman's son and successor, encamped with about 8,000 men."
References
Bartusis, Marc C. The Late Byzantine Army: Arms and Society, 1204-1453, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997. Treadgold, W. "A History of the BYzantine State and Society", Stanford University Press, 1997.
License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 //creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/