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and accepted his surrender in May 1026. This was to be his last major campaign. In 1027, he was recalled. His replacements hardly lived up to the standard of military effectiveness he set. During the next century, Byzantine influence in Italy steadily declined to nil.
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200:, was garrisoned by Boioannes' own contingent of Norman troops in 1019. Soon, all the Mezzogiorno had submitted to Byzantine authority, with the exception of the
122:(1017 – 1027) and one of the greatest Byzantine generals of his time. His accomplishments enabled the Empire to reestablish itself as a major force in
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Boioannes protected his gains by immediately building a great fortress at the
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was named catapan, but he did not last a year in that post.
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Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicile
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adventurers introduced into the power structure of the
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321:Catherine Holmes, University College, Oxford -
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365:The Reign of Basil II
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422:Generals of Basil II
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272:Norwich, John Julius
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112:[buˈdʒaːno]
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305:"Catapanus"
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388:1017–1027
287:References
260:Exaugustus
237:Garigliano
198:Asia Minor
117:Byzantine
51:translit.
18:Boioannes
303:(1678).
225:Henry II
186:Apennine
175:Hannibal
157:general
147:Basil II
108:Italian:
345:, 1907.
282:, 1967.
266:Sources
217:Bamberg
192:plain.
190:Apulian
155:Lombard
144:Emperor
102:Bugiano
98:called
96:Italian
280:London
252:Naples
233:Dattus
206:Papacy
171:Cannae
167:Ofanto
128:Norman
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169:near
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138:Life
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