Heraclius sails from Constantinople with an expeditionary…
622 CE
Heraclius sails from Constantinople with an expeditionary force (probably fifty thousand men) and starts a counteroffensive against the Persian Empire.
He leaves behind his young son, Constantine III, as regent under the charge of Sergius I, patriarch of Constantinople, and the patrician Bonus.
During Heraclius's absence on campaign for the next years, Bonus will act as the effective regent of the Empire.
When Heraclius goes “out into the lands of the themes” in 622, hereby undertaking a struggle of what will prove to be seven years' duration against the Persians, he utilizes the third of his sources of strength: religion.
Clad as a penitent and bearing a sacred image of the Virgin, Heraclius leaves Constantinople, as prayers rise from its many sanctuaries for victory over the Persian Zoroastrians, the recovery of the Cross, and the reconquest of Jerusalem.
He is, in effect, leading the first crusade.
The warfare that ensues is nothing less than a holy war: it is partly financed by the treasure placed by the church at the disposal of the state; the Emperor's soldiers call upon God to aid them as they charge into battle; and they take comfort in the miraculous image of Christ that precedes them in their line of march.
Indeed, in the ensuing hostilities, a pious poet will contrast the dancing girls in the Persian general's tent with the psalm singers in the Emperor's.