War with the Byzantine Empire, 540–562 Background In 539 Khosrow had originally attempted to gain a
casus belli against the Byzantines by trying to take advantage of a disagreement between his
Lakhmid clients and the Byzantine clients
Ghassanids, who both claimed ownership of the lands south of
Palmyra, near the old
Strata Diocletiana. His attempt was, however, thwarted when the Byzantines successfully equivocated the problem. Subsequently, Khosrow accused Justinian of trying to bribe the Lakhmid ruler
al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nu'man () through his diplomat Summus, and also that he had emboldened some
Huns to make incursions into Iran. The Ghassanid ruler
al-Harith ibn Jabalah () invaded Mundhir's territory and carried off rich booty. Khosrow complained to Justinian about this incident, and requested that the stolen riches be returned to him, including payment for the Arabs that had been killed during the attack. His request was, however, ignored. This incident, along with the support by an emissary from the
Ostrogoth king
Vitiges, and the Armenians living in Byzantine territory being dissatisfied with their rule, encouraged Khosrow to renew the war against the Byzantines. Justinian's ceaseless wars in
North Africa and
Italy must have contributed to Khosrow's aspirations as well. Justinian, informed of Khosrow's intention for war, tried to dissuade him, but to no avail.
Sasanian invasion of Syria In May 540, Khosrow invaded the domains of the Byzantines; he avoided the fortress of
Circesium, and instead approached
Zenobia, where he made a lukewarm attempt to persuade the fortress to surrender, which proved unsuccessful. He then proceeded to
Sura and killed its commander Arsaces in battle. Demoralized by the death of their commander, the residents sent their bishop to parley with Khosrow. Feigning to accept the plea of the bishop, Khosrow took advantage of the occasion and captured the city, which was shortly sacked.
Germanus, the cousin of Justinian, sent the bishop of
Beroea, Megas, to negotiate with Khosrow. Regardless, Khosrow continued his expedition, threatening the city of
Hierapolis, whose custodians swiftly paid him of silver to leave the city untouched. After receiving additional pleas by Megas, Khosrow agreed to end his expedition in return for ten
centenaria. While Megas went back to
Antioch to inform Germanus of Khosrow's demands, the latter approached Beroea, which he had sacked. In June, Khosrow reached Antioch, where he offered its citizens to not attack the city in return for ten
centenaria. His offer was rejected, and as a result he captured and sacked the city. Justinian sued for peace, and made a treaty with Khosrow that the Iranians would withdraw back to their domains in return for a payment of 50
centenaria plus 5
centenaria extra each year. Part of treaty also included that the Byzantine envoys were to be hostages of Khosrow as an assurance that the Byzantines would honor the agreement. However, before departing, Khosrow went to the port of Antioch,
Seleucia Pieria, where he bathed in the
Mediterranean Sea. He then told the envoys that he wished to visit the city of
Apamea out of interest, which they reluctantly allowed him, with the condition that he would leave for his domains afterwards. There he held chariot races, where he made the
Blue Faction—which was supported by Justinian—lose against the rival
Greens. At the same time,
Belisarius arrived in Mesopotamia and
began besieging the city of
Nisibis. Although Belisarius had greatly outnumbered the city garrison, the city was too well fortified and he was forced to
ravage the country around the Nisibis, subsequently getting recalled back west. After
successful campaigns in Armenia, Khosrow was encouraged once again to attack Syria. Khosrow turned south towards
Edessa and
besieged the city. Edessa was now a much more important city than Antioch was, and the garrison which occupied the city was able to resist the siege. The Iranians were forced to retreat from Edessa, but were able to forge a five-year truce with the Byzantine Empire in 545. During the negotiations for the peace treaty, Khosrow requested both financial compensation and that the Roman physician
Tribunus be sent to live with him for a year. Justinian agreed to both demands. Three years into the five-year truce (548), rebellion against Sasanian control broke out in Lazica. In response, a Byzantine army was sent to support the people of Lazica, effectively ending the established truce and thus continuing the Lazic Wars. Sometime later, Khosrow, who was keen to wrest Dara from Byzantine control, and would do so even if he risked to break the truce they had made regarding Mesopotamia, tried to capture it by tricking them; he sent one of highest officials,
Izadgushasp, as a diplomat to
Constantinople, but in reality the latter would stop by Dara, and with the aid of his large crew, he would seize the city. However, this plan was prevented by a former adviser of Belisarius named George, who demanded that if Izadgushasp should enter the city he should have only twenty members of his crew with him. Izadgushasp then left the city and continued his journey to Constantinople, where he was amicably welcomed by Justinian, who gave him some gifts. In 549 the previous truce between Justinian and Khosrow was disregarded and full war broke out once again between Iranians and Romans. The last major decisive battle of the Lazic wars came in 556 when Byzantine general Martin defeated a massive Sasanian force led by an Iranian
nakhvaegan (field marshal). Negotiations between Khosrow and Justinian opened in 556, leading to the
Fifty-Year Peace Treaty in 562 in which Iranians would leave Lazica in return for an annual payment of gold. According to ancient historian Menander Protector, a minor official in Justinian's court, there were 12 points to the treaty, stated in the following passage:
War in the East With a stable peace agreement with the Byzantines in the west, Khosrow was now able to focus his attention on the eastern Hephthalites and end their domination over
Central Asia. Even with the growth of Iranian military power under Khosrow's reforms, the Sasanians were still uneasy at the prospect of attacking the
Hephthalite on their own and began to seek allies. Their answer came in the form of
Turkic incursions into Central Asia. The movement of Turkic people into Central Asia very quickly made them natural enemies and competitors to the Hephthalites. The Hephthalites were a strong military power but they lacked the organization to fight on multiple fronts. The Sasanians and the
First Turkic Khaganate made an alliance and in 557 launched a two pronged attack on the Hephthalites, taking advantage of their disorganization and disunity. The Hephthalite Empire was destroyed after the
battle of Gol-Zarriun, and broke into several minor kingdoms around the Oxus. The Hephthalite king Ghadfar and what was left of his men fled southward to Sasanian territory, where they took refuge. Meanwhile, the Turkic
Khagan Sinjibu reached an agreement with the Hephthalite nobility, and appointed
Faghanish, the ruler of
Chaghaniyan, as the new Hephthalite king. valley,
Tokharistan, a region that was lost during the reign of
Peroz I, but was later reconquered by Khosrow I This was much to the dislike of Khosrow, who considered the Turkic collaboration with the Hephthalites to pose a danger for his rule in the east, and thus marched towards the Sasanian-Turkic border in
Gurgan. When he reached the place, he was met by a Turkic delegate of Sinjibu that presented him gifts. There Khosrow asserted his authority and military potency, and persuaded the Turks to make an alliance with him. The alliance contained a treaty that made it obligatory for Faghanish to be sent to the Sasanian court in
Ctesiphon and gain the approval of Khosrow for his status as Hephthalite king. Faghanish and his kingdom of Chaghaniyan thus became a vassal of the Sasanian Empire, which set the
Oxus as the eastern frontier the Sasanians and Turks. However, friendly relations between Turks and Sasanians quickly deteriorated after that. Both Turks and Iranians wanted to dominate the
Silk Road and the trade industry between the west and the far east. In 562 Khosrow I defeated the
Hephthalites once again, and then stopped the threat of the Turks. In 568 a Turkic embassy was sent to Byzantine to propose an alliance and two pronged attack on the Sasanian Empire. Fortunately for the Sasanians, nothing ever came from this proposal. Later in 569/570, Sinjibu attacked and pillaged Sasanian border lands, but a treaty was soon signed. Khosrow then sent a
Mihranid named
Mihransitad, to estimate the quality of the daughter of the Turkic Khagan. According to Armenian sources her name was Kayen, while Persian sources states that her name was Qaqim-khaqan. After Mihransitad's visit in
Central Asia, Khosrow married Qaqim-khaqan. According to some sources,
Hormizd IV, the successor of Khosrow, was the son of the Turkic princess. However,
Encyclopædia Iranica states that the "marriage with the daughter of the Turkic khaqan is chronologically impossible", and says that Hormizd was born in 540, thirty years before Khosrow's marriage.
Campaign in Yemen against Abyssinia In 522, before Khosrow's reign, a group of miaphysite
Ethiopians led an attack on the dominant
Himyarites of southern Arabia. The local Arab leader blunted the attack, and appealed to the Sasanians for aid, while the Ethiopians subsequently turned towards the Byzantines for help. The Ethiopians sent another force across the
Red Sea, killed the Arab leader, and crowned an Ethiopian king of the region. In 531, Justinian suggested that the Ethiopians of
Yemen end the Sasanians maritime trade with the Indians. The Ethiopians never met this request because an Ethiopian general named
Abraha took control of the Yemenite throne and created an independent nation. After Abraha's death one of his sons, Ma'd-Karib, went into exile while his half-brother took the throne. After being denied by Justinian, Ma'd-Karib sought help from Khosrow, who sent a small fleet and army under commander
Vahrez to depose the current king of Yemen. After capturing the capital city San'a'l, Ma'd-Karib's son, Saif enthroned. Justinian was ultimately responsible for Sasanian maritime presence in Yemen. By not providing the Yemenite Arabs support, Khosrow was able to help Ma'd-Karib and subsequently established Yemen as a principality of the Sasanian Empire.
War with the Byzantine Empire, 572–591 Justinian died in 565 and left
Justin II to succeed the throne. In 555, the Sasanian governor of Armenia and a relative of Khosrow,
Chihor-Vishnasp (also known as Suren), built a fire temple at the Armenian capital
Dvin and put to death a popular and influential member of the
Mamikonian family. This execution created tremendous civil unrest and led to a revolt and massacre of the governor including the capture of Dvin in 572. Justin II took advantage of this revolt and used it as an excuse to stop paying annual payments to Khosrow, effectively putting an end to the 51 year peace treaty that was established ten years earlier. Khosrow, who tried to avoid another war, sent a Christian diplomat named Sebokht to Constantinople in order to try to persuade Justin to change his mind. Justin, however, refused to listen to the diplomat, and prepared to help the Armenians, whom he considered his allies, in their war against Khosrow. A Byzantine army was sent into Sasanian territory and besieged Nisibis in the same year. Meanwhile, Khosrow sent an army under
Golon Mihran to Armenia, but the latter was defeated in
Taron by the Armenian rebel leader Vardan III Mamikonian, who captured his war elephants as war booty. Sometime later, however, Golon Mihran managed to seize
Angl. During the same time, the
Siunian prince Vahan asked for Khosrow's permission that he could move his court from Dvin to the capital of
Paytakaran, a region in eastern Armenia. Furthermore, Vahan also requested that Paytakaran should be merged with the
Adurbadagan province. Khosrow accepted, and did what he asked. In 573, Khosrow sent an army under
Adarmahan to invade
Syria, while he himself along with the three
Mihranid military officers
Izadgushasp,
Fariburz and
Bahram Chobin led an army towards
Dara, where they captured the city after four months, while Adarmahan sacked several cities in Syria, which included
Apamea. Justin reportedly lost his mind after these Byzantine disasters, and abdicated. Justin II was succeeded by
Tiberius, a high-ranking military officer in 578. Khosrow invaded Armenia once again feeling that he had the upper hand, and was initially successful. Soon after, the tables turned and the Byzantines gained a lot of local support. This made the Sasanians attempt another truce. However, sometime later, Khosrow, with an army consisting of 12,000 Iranian soldiers including a combined of
Sabir-
Arab soldiers numbering 8,000 sent by his allies, ravaged the places around
Resaina and
Constantia in Syria, thus turning the tables once more. During the same time, one of Khosrow's chief generals,
Tamkhosrau, managed to trick Maurice by faking an invasion of Theodosiopolis, and then plundered the countryside of
Martyropolis and
Amida. However, the tables of the war quickly turned again when the newly appointed Byzantine supreme-commander
Maurice initiated a
series of Campaigns and captured many Sasanian settlements. The revolt came to an end when Khosrow gave amnesty to Armenia and brought them back into the Sasanian empire. Peace negotiations were once again brought back up, but abruptly ended with the death of Khosrow in 579, who was succeeded by his son
Hormizd IV. == Religious policy ==