150:, King of the Vandals, called for negotiations with Basiliscus. Basiliscus agreed, unaware that Geiseric was actually preparing a surprise attack. The Vandal monarch sent
218:
Malchus criticizes
Heraclius as hasty and impetuous, lacking foresight and prudence. Theophanes praises him as an energetic general. There are surviving fragments of a
146:
Heraclius landed in
Tripolitania and defeated the Vandal forces. He occupied the local cities and continued overland to Carthage. However, the rest of the plan failed.
211:, he was murdered by some soldiers for the cruelties he had committed during his tenure. John of Antioch, however, mentions him being killed by Strabo in the
154:
against
Basiliscus' fleet, destroying most of his ships. The rest retreated. Marcellinus achieved his main goal of securing the two islands for the
478:
455:
423:
507:
120:
184:
131:
with the main army, transported by an armada of over 1,000 ships, and link up with
Heraclius, advancing from
397:
72:
64:
517:
502:
468:
512:
377:
68:
112:
208:
104:
31:
222:
honouring a military commander called
Heraclius, more likely than not, Heraclius of Edessa.
155:
44:
233:
has supported a theory which suggests that
Heraclius of Edessa was a namesake ancestor of
8:
497:
387:
234:
212:
204:
80:
464:
124:
93:
158:, but was assassinated in Sicily, probably at the instigation of his political rival,
474:
451:
419:
238:
193:
171:
162:. Heraclius, left to stand alone against the Vandals, returned to Constantinople.
96:, but his allies failed to adequately supply his troops, forcing him to withdraw.
445:
434:
166:
89:
430:
179:
115:. The overall plan called for a three-pronged attack led by commander in chief
100:
20:
491:
132:
230:
116:
85:
367:
320:
The Rome That Did Not Fall: Survival of the East in the fifth century
298:
The Rome That Did Not Fall: Survival of the East in the fifth century
219:
151:
36:
147:
140:
128:
470:
The
Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: Volume II, AD 395–527
357:
241:. There seems to be no primary source confirming the connection.
159:
108:
48:
197:
136:
60:
107:, where he gathered troops for a massive campaign against the
189:
175:
84:
of the
Eastern court. He was sent with troops to support the
24:
271:
269:
267:
265:
47:
general who took part in the failed campaign against the
262:
250:
200:. He was later freed when the emperor paid a ransom.
75:
and
Theophanes both identify him as a son of Florus.
429:
123:, and Heraclius. Basiliscus, the brother-in-law of
489:
207:, Zeno sent him home, but along the way, at
463:
275:
256:
473:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
182:, Heraclius had reached the position of
169:to get rid of the influential barbarian
225:
78:Before 468, Heraclius was probably the
490:
443:
408:
318:Stephen Williams and Gerard Friell,
296:Stephen Williams and Gerard Friell,
13:
351:
14:
529:
414:Gerard Friell; Stephen Williams,
188:. In that capacity, he faced the
165:In 471, Heraclius helped Emperor
127:, was to land at a distance from
447:Heraclius: emperor of Byzantium
346:
450:, Cambridge University Press,
436:The Cambridge medieval history
334:
325:
312:
303:
290:
281:
178:. In 474, during the reign of
1:
244:
185:magister militum per Thracias
439:, Cambridge University Press
135:. Marcellinus was to secure
54:
37:
7:
444:Kaegi, Walter Emil (2003),
10:
534:
416:The Rome That Did Not Fall
25:
99:In 468, he was sent from
378:Theophanes the Confessor
69:Theophanes the Confessor
237:and through him of the
196:, but was captured in
59:Heraclius was born in
508:Comites rei militaris
331:Hussey (1967), p. 426
309:Hussey (1967), p. 426
287:Hussey (1967), p. 426
226:Possible descendants
156:Western Roman Empire
45:Eastern Roman Empire
465:Martindale, John R.
431:Hussey, Joan Mervyn
418:, Routledge, 1998.
340:Kaegi (2003), p. 21
235:Heraclius the Elder
81:comes rei militaris
43:, died 474) was an
17:Heraclius of Edessa
518:People from Edessa
503:5th-century Romans
125:Leo I the Thracian
409:Secondary sources
402:Historia chronike
394:, fragments 4 e 5
239:Heraclian Dynasty
34:
525:
513:Magistri militum
484:
460:
440:
374:, xvi.9, xvi.25.
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194:Theodoric Strabo
172:magister militum
42:
30:
28:
27:
533:
532:
528:
527:
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523:
522:
488:
487:
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398:John of Antioch
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352:Primary sources
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339:
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330:
326:
317:
313:
308:
304:
295:
291:
286:
282:
276:Martindale 1980
274:
263:
257:Martindale 1980
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251:
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228:
73:John of Antioch
67:, according to
57:
12:
11:
5:
531:
521:
520:
515:
510:
505:
500:
486:
485:
479:
467:, ed. (1980).
461:
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441:
427:
410:
407:
406:
405:
404:, fragment 210
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365:
353:
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348:
345:
343:
342:
333:
324:
311:
302:
289:
280:
278:, p. 542.
261:
259:, p. 541.
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101:Constantinople
56:
53:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
530:
519:
516:
514:
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509:
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480:0-521-20159-4
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471:
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459:
457:0-521-81459-6
453:
449:
448:
442:
438:
437:
432:
428:
426:, p. 179
425:
424:0-415-15403-0
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364:, fragment 41
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203:According to
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177:
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46:
41:
40:
33:
22:
18:
469:
446:
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415:
401:
391:
381:
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361:
347:Bibliography
336:
327:
319:
314:
305:
297:
292:
283:
252:
229:
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209:Arcadiopolis
202:
183:
170:
164:
145:
133:Tripolitania
98:
88:against the
79:
77:
58:
38:
16:
15:
231:Cyril Mango
121:Marcellinus
65:Mesopotamia
498:474 deaths
492:Categories
372:Vandal War
245:References
213:Chersonese
152:fire ships
117:Basiliscus
39:Hērákleios
384:, AM 5963
382:Chronicle
368:Procopius
220:panegyric
90:Sassanids
55:Biography
32:translit.
26:Ἡράκλειος
433:(1967),
322:, pp 178
300:, pp 178
148:Geiseric
141:Sardinia
129:Carthage
94:Iberians
92:and the
51:in 468.
392:History
388:Malchus
362:History
358:Priscus
205:Malchus
160:Ricimer
109:Vandals
49:Vandals
477:
454:
422:
198:Thrace
137:Sicily
113:Africa
61:Edessa
35:
190:Goths
176:Aspar
167:Leo I
105:Egypt
21:Greek
475:ISBN
452:ISBN
420:ISBN
180:Zeno
139:and
86:Lazi
192:of
111:in
103:to
494::
400:,
390:,
380:,
370:,
360:,
264:^
215:.
143:.
119:,
71:.
63:,
29:,
23::
483:.
19:(
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