The empire that Manuel has inherited from…
1144 CE
The empire that Manuel has inherited from his father has undergone great changes since its foundation by Constantine, eight centuries before.
The most obvious change had occurred in the seventh century: the soldiers of Islam had taken Egypt, Palestine and much of Syria away from the empire irrevocably.
They had then swept on westwards into what in the time of Constantine had been the western provinces of the Roman Empire, in North Africa and Spain.
In the centuries since, the emperors had ruled over a realm that largely consisted of Asia Minor in the east, and the Balkans in the west.
Since the time of his predecessor Justinian I (527–565), the emperors had also ruled over parts of Italy, Africa and Spain.
Yet the empire that Manuel has inherited is a polity facing formidable challenges.
At the end of the eleventh century, the Normans of Sicily had removed Italy from imperial control.
The Seljuq Turks had done the same with central Anatolia.
And in the Levant, a new force had appeared—the Crusader states—who present the Empire with new challenges.
Now, more than at any time during the preceding centuries, the task facing the emperor is daunting indeed.
The first test of Manuel's reign comes in 1144, when he is faced with a demand by Raymond, Prince of Antioch, for the cession of Cilician territories controlled by the Baronry of Little Armenia.
However, later this year, the crusader County of Edessa is engulfed by the tide of a resurgent Islamic jihad under Imad ad-Din Atabeg Zengi.
Raymond realizes that immediate help from the west is out of the question.
With his eastern flank now dangerously exposed to this new threat, there seems little option but for him to prepare for a humiliating visit to Constantinople.
Swallowing his pride, he makes the journey north to ask for the protection of the Emperor.
After submitting to Manuel, he is promised the support that he has requested, and his allegiance to Constantinople is secured.