John I Tzimiskes (Greek: Ἰωάννης Α΄ Τζιμισκής, Iōánnēs I Tzimiskēs; c. 925 – 10 January 976) was the senior Eastern Roman Emperor from 11 December 969 to 10 January 976.
He was born into the Kourkouas clan, a family of Armenian origin.
Scholars have speculated that his nickname “Tzimiskes” was derived either from the Armenian Chmushkik (Չմշկիկ), meaning “red boot”, or from an Armenian word for “short stature”.
A more favourable explanation is offered by medieval Armenian historian Matthew of Edessa, who states that “Tzimiskes was from the region of Khozan, from the area which is now called Chmushkatzag.”
Khozan was located in the region of Paghnatun, in the Byzantine province of Fourth Armenia (Sophene).
Tzimiskes was born sometime around 925 to an unnamed member of the Kourkouas family and the sister of future Emperor Nikephoros II Phokas.
Both the Kourkouai and the Phokadai were distinguished Cappadocian families and among the most prominent of the emerging military aristocracy of Asia Minor.
Several of their members had served as prominent army generals, most notably the great John Kourkouas, who conquered Melitene and much of Armenia.
Tzimiskes was a rather short but well-built man, with reddish-blonde hair and beard and blue eyes who was attractive to women.
He seems to have joined the army at an early age, originally under the command of his maternal uncle Nikephoros Phokas.
The latter is also considered his instructor in the art of war.
Partly because of his familial connections and partly because of his personal abilities, Tzimiskes quickly rose through the ranks.
He was given the political and military command of the theme of Armenia before he turned twenty-five years old.
His marriage to Maria Skleraina, daughter of Pantherios Skleros and sister of Bardas Skleros, linked him to the influential family of the Skleroi.
Little is known about her; she died before his rise to the throne, and the marriage was apparently childless.
The contemporary historian Leo the Deacon remarks that she excelled in both beauty and wisdom.
The Byzantine Empire was at war with its eastern neighbours, the various autonomous and semi-autonomous emirates emerging from the break-up of the Abbasid Caliphate.
The most prominent among them was the Hamdanid Emirate of Aleppo, under Sayf al-Dawla.
Armenia served as the borderland between the two Empires, and Tzimiskes successfully defended his province.
He and his troops joined the main part of the army, which was campaigning under the command of Nikephoros Phokas.
Nikephoros (meaning “bearer of victory”) justified his name with a series of victories, moving the borders further east with the capture of about 60 border cities including Aleppo.
By 962, the Hamdanids had sued for peace with favourable terms for the Byzantines, securing the eastern border of the Empire for some years.
Tzimiskes distinguished himself during the war both at the side of his uncle and at leading parts of the army to battle under his personal command, as in the Battle of Raban in 958.
He was rather popular with his troops and gained a reputation for taking the initiative during battles, turning their course.
On the death of Emperor Romanos II in 963, Tzimiskes urged his uncle to seize the throne.
After helping Nikephoros to the throne and continuing to defend the Empire’s eastern provinces, Tzimiskes was deprived of his command by intrigue.
He retaliated by conspiring with Nikephoros’ wife Theophano and a number of disgruntled leading generals (Michael Bourtzes and Leo Balantes) to assassinate Nikephoros.
After his coronation in December 969, Tzimiskes dispatched his brother-in-law Bardas Skleros to subdue a rebellion by Bardas Phokas, a cousin of Tzimiskes who aspired to succeed their uncle as emperor.
To solidify his position, Tzimiskes married Theodora, a daughter of Emperor Constantine VII.
He proceeded to justify his usurpation by repelling the foreign invaders of the Empire.
The tributary of Aleppo was soon assured under the Treaty of Safar.
In a series of campaigns against the Kievan Rus’ encroachment on the Lower Danube in 970–971, he drove the enemy out of Thrace in the Battle of Arcadiopolis, crossed Mt. Haemus, and besieged the fortress of Dorostolon (Silistra) on the Danube for 65 days.
After several hard-fought battles, he defeated Great Prince Svyatoslav I of Rus’.
Tzimiskes and Svyatoslav ended up negotiating a truce, in which weaponry, armour and provisions were exchanged for the famished Rus’ departure.
On his return to Constantinople, Tzimiskes celebrated a triumph, built the Church of Christ of the Chalkè as thanksgiving, divested the captive Bulgarian Emperor Boris II of the Imperial symbols, and proclaimed Bulgaria annexed.
He further secured his northern frontier by transplanting to Thrace some colonies of the Paulicians, whom he suspected of sympathising with their Muslim neighbours in the east.
In 972, Tzimiskes turned against the Abbasid Empire and its vassals, beginning with an invasion of Upper Mesopotamia.
A second campaign, in 975, was aimed at Syria, where his forces took Emesa (Homs), Baalbek, Damascus, Tiberias, Nazareth, Caesarea, Sidon, Beirut, Byblos, and Tripoli, but they failed to take Jerusalem.
He died suddenly in 976 returning from his second campaign against the Abbasids and was buried in the Church of Christ Chalkites, which he had rebuilt.
Several sources state that the Imperial chamberlain Basil Lekapenos poisoned the Emperor to prevent him from stripping Lekapenos of his ill-gotten lands and riches.
Tzimiskes was succeeded by his ward and nephew, Basil II, who had been nominal co-emperor since 960.
Today, in Thessaloniki, his name was immortalized after the result of Greek-Bulgarian tensions during the Balkan Wars.
A street was dedicated to him after the Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917, which levelled downtown Thessaloniki.
French architect Ernest Hebrard who designed the new master plan for Thessaloniki was also the one that included the current design for Tsimiski Street.
The street in its current form was built in 1921.
https://greekcitytimes.com/2022/01/11/born-on-this-day-john-tzimiskes-2/
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