Battle of Constantinople (1147)

Battle of Constantinople (1147)
DateSeptember 1147
Location
Result Byzantine victory
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire German crusaders (Holy Roman Empire)
Commanders and leaders
Prosouch, Basil Tzikandyles (Manuel I in overall command) Unknown (Conrad III in overall command)
Strength
Unknown – described as smaller than the German force by Byzantine historian John Kinnamos[1] Unknown – Only part was involved, the entire German army had 20,000 combatants [2]
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown (possibly heavy according to Michael Angold)[3]

The Battle of Constantinople in 1147 was a large-scale clash between the forces of the Byzantine Empire and the German crusaders of the Second Crusade, led by Conrad III of Germany, fought on the outskirts of the Byzantine capital, Constantinople. The Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos was deeply concerned by the presence of a large and unruly army in the immediate vicinity of his capital and of the unfriendly attitude of its leaders. A similarly sized French crusader army was also approaching Constantinople, and the possibility of the two armies combining at the city was viewed with great alarm by Manuel. Following earlier armed clashes with the crusaders, and perceived insults from Conrad, Manuel arrayed some of his forces outside the walls of Constantinople. Part of the German army then attacked and was defeated; according to British historian Michael Angold, they suffered heavy losses.[4] Following this defeat the crusaders agreed to be quickly ferried across the Bosporus to Asia Minor.

Though limited in its strategic importance, the battle is significant in being a rare instance where Byzantine tactical dispositions are described in detail in the primary sources of the period.

  1. ^ Kinnamos, p. 62
  2. ^ Norwich (1995), pp. 94–95
  3. ^ Angold, p. 165
  4. ^ Angold, p. 165