Siege of Kamacha

Siege of Kamacha
Part of the Arab–Byzantine Wars

The Arab–Byzantine frontier zone along the eastern fringes of Asia Minor
DateAutumn 766
Location
Kamacha and eastern Cappadocia
Result Byzantine victory
Belligerents
Abbasid Caliphate Byzantine Empire
Commanders and leaders
al-Abbas ibn Muhammad
al-Hasan ibn Qahtaba
Unknown

The siege of Kamacha by the Abbasid Caliphate took place in autumn 766, and involved the siege of the strategically important Byzantine fortress of Kamacha on the eastern bank of the Euphrates River, as well as a large-scale raid across eastern Cappadocia by a part of the Abbasid invasion army. Both enterprises failed, with the siege dragging on into winter before being abandoned and the raiding force being surrounded and heavily defeated by the Byzantines. The campaign was one of the first large-scale Abbasid operations against Byzantium, and is one of the few campaigns of the Arab–Byzantine wars for which detailed information survives, although it is barely mentioned in Arabic or in Byzantine sources.