Battle of Cotyaeum
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Battle of Cotyaeum | |||||||
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Part of Isaurian War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Byzantine Empire | Isaurian rebels | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
John the Scythian, John the Hunchback | Longinus of Cardala | ||||||
The Battle of Cotyaeum (modern Kütahya) of 492 CE[1] was a major engagement is the Isaurian War fought in Phrygia Epictetus[2] between the rebel Isaurian army led by Longinus of Cardala (other commanders included Conon Phuscianus, an ex-bishop, and Longinus of Selinus), and the Eastern Roman army of Emperor Anastasius led by John the Scythian and John the Hunchback (subordinate commanders included the future emperor Justin I).
The rebel forces were decisively defeated and were forced to retreat to their fortresses in Isauria where Byzantine imperial forces slowly winkled them out over the next seven years.
In 2015 a mass grave containing around sixty skeletons was found in Kütahya, believed to be of Roman date. Investigations are ongoing as to whether these skeletons are victims of the Isaurian War or the Battle of Cotyaeum.[3]
References[]
- ^ Travel, communication, and geography in late antiquity: sacred and profane By Linda Ellis, Frank Kidner ISBN 0-7546-3535-X, 9780754635352 (Page 10)
- ^ Hazlitt, The Classical Gazetteer, p. 123.
- ^ Killgrove, Kristina (Aug 24, 2015). "Roman-Era Mass Grave Discovered In Farmer's Field In Turkey". Forbes. Retrieved Feb 21, 2021.
- 492
- 490s conflicts
- 5th century in the Byzantine Empire
- Battles involving the Byzantine Empire
- 5th century
- 490s in the Byzantine Empire
- Isaurians
- Battle stubs