The Battle of Amioun[1] took place in Amioun, El-Koura, in 694[2] between Byzantine troops and Maronite and Mardaite Christians.[3][4][5] The battle of Amioun devotes the independence of the first Maronite state, with Baskinta as its capital.[6][7]

Background

The seat of the Chalcedonian Christian Patriarch of Antioch had been vacant since 609 when the last residing patriarch was killed and after this titular patriarchs instead resided in Constantinople. This bothered the Christians of the Levant as they felt isolated without a spiritual leader among them. This led to the monastery of Maron electing John Maron, a Maronite monk and the bishop of Batroun, as the Patriarch of Antioch in 685.[8][9]

This move was done without approval of the Byzantine emperor Justinian II and in retaliation for what he viewed as an act against his authority, in the year 694, he sent troops to pillage St. Maron’s monastery in Apamea which resulted in the death of 500 monks. John Maron however escaped to the citadel of Smar Jbeil before being caught.[8][10]

Battle

The Byzantine troops, led by generals Maurikios and Markianos, were then sent to Lebanon to capture John Maron. John Maron’s nephew, prince Ibrahim, alongside prince Masud of the Mardaites routed the Byzantines at Amioun and defeated them. Both generals were killed with Maurikios being buried in Amioun and Markianos in Shoueti.[11][12]

Aftermath

Following the battle, John Maron established the new headquarters of the Maronite Patriarchate in Kfarhay where he enshrined the relic of Saint Maron’s skull. Kfarhay remained the patriarch’s residence until 938 and still exists along with the relic.[13][14]

The battle also led to improved relations between the Umayyads and Maronites. According to Ibn Asakir’s History of Damascus the Arab caliph Omar bin Abdul Aziz was buried in the Maronite Church of Saint Simeon Stylites. Abd al Malik visited the monastery and his son Al-Walid died and was buried in it and his grave is still in the monastery of Saint Simon Stylites today. Several Umayyad princes celebrated their weddings in Saint Maroun’s monastery in Damascus.[14][15]

Legacy

After the death of the last titular patriarch of Antioch in 702, John Maron became the only Chalcedonian patriarch holding the title[1] until the Eastern Orthodox Church reestablished the seat in 742. John Maron died in 707 and was buried in Kfarhay. He is seen as a Saint and the founder of the Maronite Church and his feast day is celebrated on March 2nd.[13][16]

Lebanese researcher Chedid al-Azar writes:

Although we are not trying to deal in warfare, a unique battle we shall mention for the impact it has left, this is the battle of south East Amyun, in the year 694, precipitated by mountain dwellers of Maronite Christian faith, as a revenge against the army of Justinian II of Byzantium, for the destruction of a monastery sheltering 350, monks adherents of Marūn, in northern Syria, near Apamea (Afamiyaħ), 350 km (217 mi) from Amyun. The battle was fought by a group of Marūn adherents who had sought refuge formerly in the mountains facing Amyun, from the east and made a surprise attack, under the leadership of Yuhanna Marūn, against a contingent of the Byzantine army, which was defeated and the Marūn adherents returned to their mountainous sites, to stay in a state of isolation, which marked and stamped the history of the Maronites as dwellers of the mountains of Lebanon, by isolationism, that persisted among the mountainous adherents up to our present days and had touched their performances and deliberations in modern Lebanon.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ghossein, Tony. "The Lebanese". Archived from the original on 3 November 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-10.
  2. ^ Ghossein, Tony. "The Lebanese". Archived from the original on 26 September 2006. Retrieved 2006-11-10.
  3. ^ Hitti, Philip (1957). Lebanon in History. Macmillan and Co Ltd. p. 249. When in 694 the troops of Justinian II destroyed the monastery on the Orontes and proceeded against the Maronites in Lebanon, they were routed by Yuhanna at Amyun.
  4. ^ Abi Abdullah 1997, p. 233-239.
  5. ^
  6. ^ Sandrussi, Michael (January 2017). "The Origins of the Maronites: People, Church, Doctrine" (PDF). sjmaronite.org. St. Joseph Maronite Catholic Church. p. 9.
  7. ^ Hassan Hichi, Selim (1974). Sijill muḥarrarāt al-qāʼim-maqāmīyah al-Naṣrānīyah fī Jabal Lubnān: Volume 2. al-Mudīrīyah al-ʻĀmmah li-Āthār, Qism al-Dirāsāt al-Tārīkhīyah. p. 31. المردة في لبنان واسسوا امارة لهم جعلوا عاصمتها بسكنتا [The Marada in Lebanon established an emirate and made its capital Baskinta.]
  8. ^ a b El-Hayek 1990, p. 413-416.
  9. ^ Beggiani 2003, p. 8.
  10. ^ Beggiani, Chorbishop Seely (25 March 2003). Aspects of Maronite History (PDF). Maronite Voice. p. 8-9.
  11. ^ El-Hayek, Elias (1990). Struggle for Survival: The Maronites of the Middle Ages. Diocese of St. Maro. p. 416. ISBN 978-0-88844-809-5.
  12. ^ Sandrussi 2017, p. 9.
  13. ^ a b Hitti 1957, p. 249.
  14. ^ a b El-Hayek 1990, p. 416.
  15. ^ Abi Abdullah, Abdullah (1997). تاريخ الموارنة ومسيحيي الشرق عبر العصور [The history of the Maronites and Eastern Christians through the ages]. دار ملفات. p. 186-187.
  16. ^ Dau, Butros (1984). Religious, Cultural, and Political History of the Maronites. The University of Michigan: B. Dau. p. 223-224.

Notes

1.^ Not counting the Non-Chalcedonian Syriac Orthodox patriarch
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