1. Vasiliev, A. A., History of the Byzantine Empire (Madison 1952), p. 215. 2. al-Baladhuri, Kitab Futuh al-Buldan, Hitti, Ph. K. (ed.) The Origin of the Islamic State (Beirut 1966), pp. 246-247. 3. De Boor, C. (ed.), Theophanis Chronographia (Leipzig 1883), p. 363.3-20. 4. Treadgold, W. T., Byzantium and its Army (284-1081) (Stanford 1995), p. 72. 5. Ahrweiler, H., Byzance et la mer. La marine de guerre, la politique et les institutions maritimes de Byzance au VIIe-XVe siecles (Paris 1966), pp. 33, 44, 50, 52, 84-85, 100, 108, 399-400. 6. Treadgold, W. T., Byzantium and its Army (284-1081) (Stanford 1995), p. 26. 7. According to Treadgold, W. T., Byzantium and its Army (284-1081) (Stanford 1995), p. 72, the various sources of the 7th and 8th-9th cent. imply that the Mardaites of subsequent centuries were descendants of those removed from Asia Minor in the 7th cent. His belief is based on the assumption that the early Mardaites must have been granted military lands by the Emperor, which they later left to their descendants, or that their professions and privileges were hereditary. 8. al-Baladhuri, Kitab Futuh al-Buldan, Hitti, Ph. K. (ed.) The Origin of the Islamic State (Beirut 1966), p. 258. 9. De Boor, C. (ed.), Theophanis Chronographia (Leipzig 1883), p. 363.16-20: “πάσαι γαρ αι νυν οικούμεναι παρά των Αράβων εις τα άκρα πόλεια από Μοψουεστίας και έως τετάρτης Αρμενίας ανίσχυροι και αοίκητοι ετύγχανον δια την έφοδον των Μαρδαϊτών· ων παρασταλλέντων, πάνδεινα κακά πέπονθεν η Ρωμανία υπό των Αράβων μέχρι του νυν”. |