Battle of Ongal

Battle of Ongal
Part of the Byzantine-Bulgarian Wars

The foundation of the First Bulgarian Empire. The army of Asparukh is in red. The army of Constantine IV is in blue.
DateSummer, 680
LocationThe Ongal area probably in Danube delta (present-day Tulcea County, Romania)
Result Decisive Bulgar victory, formation of Bulgaria
Belligerents
Bulgars Byzantine Empire
Commanders and leaders
Asparukh Constantine IV
Strength
unknown "all the themata"[1]50,000[2]
Casualties and losses
Light Almost the whole army

The Battle of Ongal took place in the summer of 680 in the Ongal area, an unspecified location in around the Danube delta near the Peuce Island, present-day Tulcea County, Romania. The battle had an enormous significance and influence not only for Balkan but also for European history with the creation of the First Bulgarian Empire.

Plan of the battle

Origins of the conflict

In 632, Khan Kubrat united the Hunno-Bulgars into the nation-state of Old Great Bulgaria in Patria Onoguria along the coasts of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea. After his death in the 660s his sons divided his kingdom amongst themselves. Batbayan, the eldest son, inherited the throne in Poltava but was defeated by and submitted to the rule of his ambitious relative Cozarig (Kotrag) who had undermined the state's unity by leading his Don-Volga Khazars (Kutrigs) in expansion campaigns extending his empire to the north where Volga Bulgaria would eventually remain. The third and fourth sons Isperih and Kuber marched westward and settled in the Ongal area on the eastern banks of the Danube, Kuber evicting the Avars north into the Carpathians. Eventually the Avars fought back and after Isperih consolidated his rule they launched an attack against the Byzantine lands to the south.

During that time Byzantium was at war with the Arabs who had recently besieged the capital Constantinople. However, in 680 the Byzantines defeated the Arabs and concluded a peace treaty. After this success the emperor Constantine IV was free to move against the Bulgars and led an army against Isperih. In the meantime the Bulgarian leader made an alliance with the Seven Slavic tribes for mutual protection against the Byzantines and formed a federation.

The battle

The Bulgars had built wooden ramparts in the swampy area near the Peuce Island. The marshes forced the Byzantines to attack from a weakened position and in smaller groups, which reduced the strength of their attack. With continuing attacks from the ramparts, the Bulgar defense eventually forced the Byzantines into a rout, followed up by the Bulgar cavalry. Many of the Byzantine soldiers perished. According to popular belief, the emperor had leg pain and went to Nessebar to seek treatment. The troops thought that he fled the battlefield and in turn began fleeing. When the Bulgars realised what was happening, they attacked and defeated their discouraged enemy.

Aftermath

After the victory, the Bulgars advanced south and seized the lands to the north of Stara Planina. In 681 they invaded Thrace defeating the Byzantines again. Constantine IV found himself in a dead-lock and asked for peace. With the treaty of 681 the Byzantines recognised the creation of the new Bulgarian state and were obliged to pay annual tribute to the Bulgarian rulers, which was greatly humiliating for the empire which managed to defeat the Sassanid Persians and the Ummayads.

Significance

This battle was a significant moment in European history, as it led to the creation of a powerful state, which was to become a European superpower in the 9th and 10th century along with the Byzantine and Frankish Empires. It became a cultural and spiritual centre of Slavic Europe through most of the Middle Ages.

Honour

Ongal Peak in Tangra Mountains on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named for the historical Ongal area.

Footnotes

  1. The Chronicle of Theophanes Confessor. Byzantine and Near Eastern History, AD 284-813. Oxford, 1997, p. 498
  2. Чолпанов, Б., и др, История на Българите: Военна история, 2007, стр. 73 // Cholpanov, B. and others. History of the Bulgarians: Military history, 2007, p. 73

References

External links

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