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Logistical considerations for the arms production industry in the Middle Byzantine Empire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 October 2020

Jordan M. Dills*
Affiliation:
jordan.dills@outlook.com

Abstract

Utilizing the information recorded in the mid-tenth century Byzantine document known as De Ceremoniis, this paper will examine labour requirements for armament production in the context of a naval expedition to Crete launched by the Byzantines in AD 949. A series of interviews was conducted with experienced blacksmiths with the intention of exploring time requirements for equipment manufacture. The information provided by the De Ceremoniis, as well as that produced through the interviews, has allowed for the assessment of overall trends in the tenth century arms production industry, including labour investments, thematic and imperial production capabilities, and transportation logistics.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press and Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies

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References

1 For more on De Ceremoniis, and specifically chapters 44 and 45, see Haldon, J. F., ‘Theory and practice in tenth-century military administration: Chapters II, 44 and 45 of the Book of Ceremonies’, Travaux et mémoires 13 (2000) 201352Google Scholar, and Zuckerman, C., ‘On the Byzantine Dromon (with a special regard to De Cerim. ii, 44–5)’, Revue des Études Byzantines 73 (2015) 5798Google Scholar. Also see Moffat, A. and Tall, M., Constantine Porphyrogennetos: The Book of Ceremonies Vol.1 and 2 (Canberra 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 Haldon, Theory, 291–4 briefly discusses thematic and imperial production.

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11 D. Sim, The Roman Iron Industry in Britain (Gloucestershire 2012) 46. This five-man operation appears in a tenth-century early Bukhara style illumination stored in the Bodleian Library (MS.Elliott 340, fol. 80a). A similar operation appears again in a Roman bas-relief of unknown date held at the Pinacoteca Capitolina, Palazzo Conservatori in Rome (although no fire-tender is depicted).

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38 Porphyrogennetos, De Ceremoniis II 44, 208–9.

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40 Haldon, Warfare, 169.

41 Porphyrogennetos, De Ceremoniis II 44, 234.

42 Porphyrogennetos, De Ceremoniis II 44, 208–9: ἰστέον, ὅτι ἐδέξατο ὁ κριτὴς Ἑλλάδος καμɛῖν μɛναύλια ͵α, ἅπɛρ καὶ ἐτɛλɛίωσɛν. ἐδέξατο δὲ καμɛῖν καὶ ἕτɛρα καὶ καταγωγιάσαι αὐτὰ ἐν οἷς ἂν δέξηται.

43 Porphyrogennetos, De Ceremoniis II 44, 208–9.

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49 Haldon, Warfare, 167–9.