The Byzantine Empire: Rome That Refused to Die — Fexingo History
Emperor Basil II, known to history as the Bulgar-Slayer, ruled the Byzantine Empire at the height of its medieval power. But his brutal nickname comes from a single, shocking act of calculated violence. After a decades-long war against the First Bulgarian Empire, Basil defeated Tsar Samuel's army near the Belasitsa Mountains in 1014. Then he ordered 14,000 prisoners blinded, leaving every hundredth man with one eye to lead the rest back to their ruler. Samuel died of a heart attack at the sight. Basil's conquest brought Bulgaria under Byzantine rule for nearly two centuries, but the atrocity cast a long shadow. This episode explores Basil's long reign—from his early struggles against rebellious generals like Bardas Skleros and Bardas Phokas, to his military reforms, his expansion of the thematic system, and his shrewd diplomacy with the Kievan Rus'. It also asks: was Basil a necessary defender of the empire or a war criminal by any standard? We examine the sources—from the Byzantine historian John Skylitzes to the Bulgarian tradition—and what the Bulgar-Slayer's legacy means today. #BasilII #ByzantineEmpire #BulgarSlayer #MedievalBulgaria #TsarSamuel #BattleOfKleidion #ByzantineMilitary #JohnSkylitzes #MacedonianDynasty #BardasSkleros #BardasPhokas #KievanRus #ThematicSystem #Blinding #MedievalHistory #Byzantium #HistoryPodcast #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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