John Doukas has over the course of…
September 1071 CE
John Doukas has over the course of the past three years become the emperor’s bitterest enemy, but his intriguing means that the Caesar has spent much of Romanos' reign in retirement on his estates in Bithynia.
It was here that he had learned that his son Andronikos Doukas had joined and then deserted the emperor in the disastrous campaign ending with the Battle of Manzikert in 107.
The disasters at Manzikert and at Bari, in the same year, at opposite extremes of the empire, graphically illustrate the decline of imperial power.
The final loss of Italy seems to underline the fact of the permanent division between the Greek East and the Latin West, which is now not only geographical and political but also increasingly cultural and ecclesiastical.
The imperial generals, riven by internal dissent, recruit large numbers of European mercenaries to fill their depleted ranks and succeed in checking the Seljuq advance.