Siege of Edessa (544)

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DateMarch – April 544 AD
Location
Edessa, Mesopotamia, Byzantine Empire
(modern-day Şanlıurfa, Turkey)
37°09′N 38°48′E / 37.15°N 38.8°E / 37.15; 38.8
Result

Byzantine victory[1]

Siege abandoned; Edessanes pay 5 centenaria of gold to the Sasanians
Siege of Edessa (544)
DateMarch – April 544 AD
Location
Edessa, Mesopotamia, Byzantine Empire
(modern-day Şanlıurfa, Turkey)
37°09′N 38°48′E / 37.15°N 38.8°E / 37.15; 38.8
Result

Byzantine victory[1]

Siege abandoned; Edessanes pay 5 centenaria of gold to the Sasanians
Belligerents
Sasanian Empire
Huns[citation needed]
Lakhmids (not engaged)
Byzantine Empire
Huns[citation needed]
Commanders and leaders
Siege of Edessa (544) is located in West and Central Asia
Siege of Edessa (544)
Location within West and Central Asia
Siege of Edessa (544) is located in Turkey
Siege of Edessa (544)
Siege of Edessa (544) (Turkey)

The siege of Edessa (then known as Justinopolis) occurred in 544 AD during an invasion of the Byzantine Empire ruled by Justinian I by the Sasanian Empire under Khosrow I in the midst of the ongoing Lazic War in the north. The city withstood the fierce siege. Due to the religious nature of the city, some Christian traditions have attributed the result of the conflict to divine intervention.

In the midst of the initial phase of the Lazic War, Khosrow I was encouraged to invade via the Mesopotamian front. It was the fourth invasion of the Byzantine territory by Khosrow I. Edessa and Dara were the main strongholds of Roman Mesopotamia at the time.[2] The Byzantine historian Procopius has provided an especially detailed account of the siege.[2]

Siege

Aftermath

References

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