


Byzantine Rule
By the time Constantine
accepted Christianity for himself, the new religion was probably
already predominant on Cyprus, owing basically to the early
missionary work of Paul, Barnabas, and Mark. Earthquakes in the
early fourth century created havoc on the island, and drought
seriously damaged the economy. However, the most significant event
of the century was the struggle of the Church of Cyprus to maintain
its independence from the patriarchs of Antioch. Three bishops
represented Cyprus at the first Ecumenical Council of Nicaea in 325.
At the second council (Sardica, 343), there were twelve Cypriot
bishops, indicating a great increase in the number of communicants
in the intervening years.
A major struggle
concerning the status of the Church of Cyprus occurred at the third
council, at Ephesus, in 431. The powerful patriarch of Antioch
argued forcefully that the small Cypriot church belonged in his
jurisdiction, but the Cypriot bishops held their ground, and the
council decided in their favor. Antioch still did not relinquish its
claim, however, and it was not until after the discovery of the tomb
of Saint Barnabas containing a copy of the Gospel of St. Matthew
allegedly placed there by the apostle Mark that Emperor Zeno
intervened and settled the issue. The Church of Cyprus was confirmed
as being auto cephalous, that is, ecclesiastically autonomous,
enjoying the privilege of electing and consecrating its own bishops
and archbishops and ranking equally with the churches of Antioch,
Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Constantinople.
Except for the religious
disputes, a period of calm prevailed on Cyprus during the early
Byzantine centuries. The social structure was rigid and codified in
law. Under a law issued by Constantine, tenant farmers were made
serfs and forbidden to leave the land on which they were born. A
later law allowed runaways to be returned in chains and punished.
Administration was highly centralized, with government officials
responsible directly to the emperor. The wealthy landlord and
merchant classes retained their age-old privileges. The connection
between church and state grew closer. The pervasive organization and
authority of the church, however, sometimes benefited the common man
by interceding in cases of abuse of power by public officials or
wealthy persons. During the fifth and sixth centuries, the level of
prosperity permitted the construction of major cathedrals in several
of the island's cities and towns. Salamis, renamed Constantia, again
became the capital and witnessed another era of greatness.
Archaeologists have uncovered an enormous fourth century basilica at
the site.
The peace that many
generations of Cypriots enjoyed during the middle centuries of the
first millennium A.D. was shattered by Arab attacks during the reign
of Byzantine emperor Constans II (641-68). Sometime between 647 and
649, Muawiyah, the amir of Syria (later caliph of the Muslim
empire), led a 1,700-ship invasion fleet against Cyprus. Constantia
was sacked and most of its population massacred. Muawiyah's
destructive raid was only the first of a long series of attacks over
the next 300 years. Many were merely quick piratical raids, but
others were large-scale attacks in which many Cypriots were
slaughtered and great wealth carried off or destroyed. No Byzantine
churches survived the Muslim attacks. In A.D. 965, General
Nicephorus Phocas (later emperor), leading the Byzantine imperial
forces, drove the Arabs out of Crete and Cilicia and scored a series
of victories on land and sea that led to the liberation of Cyprus
after more than three centuries of constant turmoil.
The pitiable condition of
the Cypriots during the three centuries of the Arab wars can only be
imagined. Thousands upon thousands were killed, and other thousands
were carried off into slavery. Death and destruction, rape and
rampage were the heritage of unnumbered generations. Many cities and
towns were destroyed, never to be rebuilt.
In the twelfth century
Isaac Comnenos, a Byzantine governor, set himself up in the capital
as the emperor of Cyprus, and the authorities in Constantinople were
either too weak or too busy to do anything about the usurper. When
an imperial fleet was eventually sent against Cyprus, Comnenos was
prepared and, in league with Sicilian pirates, defeated the fleet
and retained control of the island. Comnenos, a tyrant and murderer,
was unlamented when swept from power by the king of England, Richard
I the Lion-Heart.
After wintering in
Sicily, Richard set sail en route to the Holy Land as a leader of
the Third Crusade. But in April 1191 his fleet was scattered by
storms off Cyprus. Two ships were wrecked off the southern coast,
and a third, carrying Richard's fiancée Berengaria of Navarre,
sought shelter in Lemesos (Limassol). The wrecked ships were
plundered and the survivors robbed by the forces of Comnenos, and
the party of the bride-to-be was prevented from obtaining provisions
and fresh water. When Richard arrived and learned of these affronts,
he took time out from crusading, first to marry Berengaria in the
chapel of the fortress at Lemesos and then to capture Cyprus and
depose Comnenos. The capture of Cyprus, seemingly a footnote to
history, actually proved beneficial to the crusaders whose foothold
in the Holy Land had almost been eliminated by the Muslim commander
Saladin. Cyprus became a strategically important logistic base and
was used as such for the next 100 years.
When Richard defeated
Comnenos, he extracted a huge bounty from the Cypriots. He then
appointed officials to administer Cyprus, left a small garrison to
enforce his rule, and sailed on to the Holy Land. A short time
later, the Cypriots revolted against their new overlords. Although
the revolt was quickly put down, Richard decided that the island was
too much of a burden, so he sold it to the Knights Templars, a
Frankish military order whose grand master was a member of Richard's
coterie. Their oppressive, tyrannical rule made that of the
avaricious Comnenos seem mild in comparison. The people again
rebelled and suffered a massacre, but their persistence led the
Templars, convinced that they would have no peace on Cyprus, to
depart. Control of the island was turned over to Guy de Lusignan,
the controversial ruler of the Latin
(see Glossary) kingdom of Jerusalem, who evidently agreed to pay
Richard the amount still owed him by the Templars. More than 800
years of Byzantine rule ended as the Frankish Lusignan dynasty
established a Western feudal system on
Cyprus.