178:, the Sasanian army (or part of it) was driven back or feigned retreat back into the village, but Narses was caught in an ambush by the Sasanians who were hiding in the houses. He was hit in the temple in close combat and his and other Byzantine forces were routed. His brother Isaacius carried him away from the battlefield, but he died of his wound soon afterward.
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Both Narses and
Aratius, accompanied by their mother, deserted to the Byzantine Empire in summer of 530 and were welcomed with a large sum of money by the imperial
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that followed, there are sources that cite Narses and his forces were the first to engage. In this account, which drew from the records of
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Narses was not given any military command until 543, when he was assigned a force of
Armenians and
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he was active in Italy and the East. He was among the commanders sent by the sea against the
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Battles and
Generals: Combat, Culture, and Didacticism in Procopius' Wars
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He is first recorded in 527 in service of the
Sasanian military in the
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An
Universal History: From the Earliest Accounts to the Present Time
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The
Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: Volume III, AD 527–641
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215:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 928–930.
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in 539. In 540, Narses was sent away from
Ravenna by
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family (a noble
Armenian family of Parthian origin).
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166:. During the hasty invasion of 543 against
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239:. London: C. Bathurst. 1780. p. 455.
108:, he was the commander of the troops in
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16:For the Byzantine eunuch general, see
30:military commander in service of the
310:Byzantine people of Armenian descent
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320:People of the Gothic War (535–554)
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325:People of the Roman–Sasanian Wars
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54:control. He was the brother of
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62:and possibly a member of the
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350:Byzantines killed in battle
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290:6th-century Iranian people
124:. His office was probably
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300:Generals of Justinian I
253:Whately, Conor (2016).
145:Siege of Ariminum (538)
46:Narses was a native of
335:Comites rei militaris
295:Generals of Kavad I
207:Martindale, John R.
136:comes rei militaris
133:at this point. As
345:Persian Armenians
305:Kamsarakan family
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92:sacellarius
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48:Persarmenia
315:543 deaths
279:Categories
182:References
153:Belisarius
141:Ostrogoths
106: 535
84:Belisarius
64:Kamsarakan
340:Defectors
176:Procopius
164:Sasanians
130:Thebaidis
118:Blemmyes
60:Isaacius
28:Armenian
160:Herules
114:Nobades
56:Aratius
26:was an
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110:Philae
96:Narses
80:Sittas
70:Career
42:Family
24:Narses
18:Narses
259:ISBN
217:ISBN
168:Dvin
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127:dux
101:In
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