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Heraclius Caucasus campaign

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405:.Immediately before the campaign itself, the emperor of Byzantium made attempts to conclude peace with Khosrow, but nothing came of it.Heraclius, together with his new second wife and niece Martina and two of the children from his first marriage (with Fabia/Eudokia), departed from Constantinople on 25 March 624. He crossed to Chalcedon, then followed the route along the Sea of Marmara. His daughters Epiphania and Eudokia by his first marriage (but apparently not his son Heraclius Constantine) accompanied him as far as the vicinity of Nikomedia where they celebrated Easter on 15 April. 132: 22: 261: 415:
Heraclius encamped near Bathys Rhyax, passed through Satala (Sadak, north of Erzincan), Theodosiopolis (Erzurum), Ayrarat, descended the Araxes River route to Horosan, and destroyed Dvin and Nakhchawan.After defeating Khosrow in the
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Having won a victory over the Persians in Anatolia and concluded a peace treaty with the Avars, Heraclius began to prepare for a new campaign.On March 25, 624, he left
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After a while, he arrived in Caucasian Albania along with 50,000 captured Persians and spent the winter there.
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Sebeos states that the Byzantine army numbered 120,000 soldiers, but the figure is clearly exaggerated.
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Unwilling to endure such humiliations, Khosrow sent three armies under the command of three generals:
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Heraclius could easily spend the winter in the Caucasus, and then move deeper into the
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Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628

Transcaucasia
Byzantines
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Byzantine–Sasanian
War of 602–628

Caesarea
Antioch (613)
Jewish revolt

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