,
c. 1081. After Manzikert, a partial recovery was made possible due to the efforts of the Komnenian dynasty. This is sometimes referred to as the
Komnenian restoration. The first emperor of this royal line was
Alexios I Komnenos (whose life and policies would be described by his daughter
Anna Komnene in the
Alexiad). Alexios's long reign of nearly 37 years was full of struggle. At his accession in 1081, the Byzantine Empire was in chaos after a prolonged period of civil war resulting from the defeat at Manzikert. At the very outset of his reign, Alexios had to meet the formidable threat of the
Normans under
Robert Guiscard and his son
Bohemond of Taranto, who took
Dyrrhachium and
Corfu, and laid siege to
Larissa in
Thessaly (see
Battle of Dyrrhachium). Alexios led his forces in person against the Normans, yet despite his best efforts his army was destroyed in the field. Alexios himself was wounded, but the death of Robert Guiscard in 1085 led to the Norman danger receding for a time.
histamenon was struck by Alexios during his war against
Robert Guiscard. The catastrophic financial situation of the Empire after 1071 had led to large-scale debasement of its coinage. In 1087, Alexios faced a new invasion. This time the invaders consisted of a horde of 80,000
Pechenegs from north of the
Danube, and they were heading for Constantinople. Without enough troops to repel this new threat, Alexios used diplomacy to achieve a victory against the odds. Having bribed the
Cumans, another barbarian tribe, to come to his aid, he advanced against the Pechenegs, who were caught by surprise and annihilated at the
Battle of Levounion on 28 April 1091. Despite his improvements, Alexios did not have enough manpower to recover the lost territories in Asia Minor. Having been impressed by the abilities of the Norman cavalry at Dyrrhachium, he sent ambassadors west to ask for reinforcements from Europe. This mission was deftly accomplished – at the
Council of Piacenza in 1095,
Pope Urban II was impressed by Alexios's appeal for help, which spoke of the suffering of the Christians of the east and hinted at a possible union of the eastern and western churches. Pope Urban was concerned with increasing restlessness of the martial nobility in Western Europe, who, currently deprived of major enemies, were causing chaos throughout the countryside. Alexios's appeal offered a means not only to redirect the energy of the knights to benefit the Church, but also to consolidate the authority of the Pope over all
Christendom and to gain the east for the
See of Rome.
First Crusade On 27 November 1095, Urban II called together the
Council of Clermont in France. There, amid a crowd of thousands who had come to hear his words, he urged all present to take up arms under the banner of the Cross and launch a holy war to recover Jerusalem and the east from the 'infidel'
Muslims. Indulgences were to be granted to all those who took part in the great enterprise. Many promised to carry out the Pope's command, and word of the
Crusade soon spread across western Europe. Alexios had anticipated help in the form of mercenary forces from the West, and was totally unprepared for the immense and undisciplined hosts which soon arrived, to his consternation and embarrassment. The first group, under
Peter the Hermit, he sent to Asia Minor, ordering them to stay close to the coast and await reinforcements. However, the unruly crusaders refused to listen and began looting and pillaging the local Christian inhabitants. As they marched on
Nicaea in 1096, they were caught by the Turks and massacred almost to the man. The second, "official" host of knights, led by
Godfrey of Bouillon, Alexios also sent into Asia, promising to supply them with provisions in return for an oath of loyalty. They were accompanied by the Byzantine general
Tatikios. By their victories, Alexios was able to recover for the Byzantine Empire a number of important cities and islands: Nicaea,
Chios,
Rhodes,
Smyrna,
Ephesus,
Philadelphia,
Sardis, and in fact much of western
Asia Minor (1097–1099). This is ascribed by his daughter Anna to his policy and diplomacy, but good relations were not to last. The crusaders believed their oaths were made invalid when Alexios did not help them during the siege of Antioch (he had in fact set out on the road to
Antioch, but had been persuaded to turn back by
Stephen of Blois, who assured him that all was lost and that the expedition had already failed). Bohemund, who had set himself up as Prince of Antioch, briefly went to war with Alexios, but agreed to become Alexios's vassal under the
Treaty of Devol in 1108.
Recovery Despite his many successes, during the last twenty years of his life Alexios lost much of his popularity. This was largely due to the harsh measures he was forced to take in order to save the embattled empire.
Conscription was introduced, causing resentment among the peasantry, despite the pressing need for new recruits to the imperial army. In order to restore the imperial treasury, Alexios took measures to tax the aristocracy heavily; he also cancelled many of the exemptions from taxation that the church had previously enjoyed. In order to ensure that all taxes were paid in full, and to halt the cycle of debasement and inflation, he completely reformed the
coinage, issuing a new gold
hyperpyron (highly refined) coin for the purpose. By 1109, he had managed to restore order by working out a proper rate of exchange for the whole coinage. His new hyperpyron would be the standard Byzantine coin for the next two hundred years. Alexios delegated his son, John, as his heir whereas his wife Irene threw her full influence on the side of Anna. The final years of Alexios's reign were marked by persecution of the followers of the
Paulician and
Bogomil heresies—one of his last acts was to
burn at the stake the Bogomil leader,
Basil the Physician, with whom he had engaged in a theological controversy; by renewed struggles with the Turks (1110–1117); and by anxieties as to the succession, which his wife Irene wished to alter in favour of her daughter Anna's husband
Nikephorus Bryennios, for whose benefit the special title
panhypersebastos ("honored above all") was created; Alexios, who struggled with rheumatism, got to the point where he could not manage the empire and therefore delegated the responsibilities to his wife who in turn directed all affairs to Anna's husband instead of John. This intrigue disturbed even his dying hours. Nevertheless, despite the unpopularity of some of his measures, Alexios's efforts had been vital to the survival of the empire. Financially and militarily bankrupt, and facing wave after wave of foreign invasion, the empire he inherited had been on the point of collapse. His long struggle to protect and restore the strength of the empire had been exhausting, but Alexios's successors inherited a viable state with both the internal stability and the military restoration but also a lot of financial resources, to expand in the future. ==Restoration under John II Komnenos==