Rus'-Byzantine War of 1024
1024 CE
The penultimate Russo-Byzantine War, as documented by medieval Greek sources, takes place in 1024, when a relative of the Kievan prince with 800 men and 20 ships penetrates into the Bosporus and, defeating a unit of the Greek coast guard, sails into the Aegean Sea.
The Kievans reach the island of Lemnos, where they are annihilated by a much stronger Byzantine fleet.
The conflict is not documented in Kievan sources and its motivation is obscure.
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The Komnenian restoration describes the military, financial and territorial recovery of the East Roman, or Byzantine, Empire under the Komnenian dynasty, from the accession in 1081 of Alexios I Komnenos, to the death in 1180 of Manuel I Komnenos.
The Komnenian restoration is also closely linked to the establishment of the Komnenian imperial army.
The penultimate Russo-Byzantine War, as documented by medieval Greek sources, takes place in 1024, when a relative of the Kievan prince, with eight hundred men and twenty ships, penetrates into the Bosporus and, defeating a unit of the imperial coast guard, sails into the Aegean Sea.
The Kievans reach the island of Lemnos, where they are annihilated by a much stronger imperial fleet.
The conflict is not documented in Kievan sources and its motivation is obscure.
Nestor the Chronicler and later Russian historians, leaving aside the legitimacy of the claims Yarolsav of I the Wise to the Kievan throne and his postulated guilt in the murder of his brothers, often present him as a model of virtue, styling him "the Wise".
A less appealing side of his personality is revealed by his having imprisoned his younger brother Sudislav for life.
Yet another brother, Mstislav of Tmutarakan, whose distant realm borders the Northern Caucasus and the Black Sea, hastens to Kiev and, despite reinforcements led by Yaroslav's brother-in-law King Anund Jacob of Sweden (as Jakun—"blind and dressed in a gold suit") inflicts a heavy defeat on Yaroslav in 1024.
Yaroslav and Mstislav then divide Kievan Rus' between them: the area stretching left from the Dnieper, with the capital at Chernihiv, is ceded to Mstislav until his death in 1036.
The civil war among the Rus', which had begun in 1015, results in 1024 in the breakup of Russia into three principalities.
Most of Russia falls under the control of Novgorod-Kiev; ...
...the other two principalities are Chernigov (with Tmutarakan) in the southeast, and …
…Polatsk in the northeast.