Deconstructing the passage, I argue that the image of a mentally frail Heraclius is an instance of political satire that exposed the emperor’s weak position and ridiculed his attempts to cope with the destabilizing consequences of Roman defeat. In scholarship this tale is often reproduced uncritically. A passage in Nicephorus’ Breviarium covers what happened in Constantinople in the aftermath of the battle: It tells a seemingly strange tale of Heraclius being so afraid of water that he would not enter the capital until a bridge of boats was built over the Bosporus. The emperor Heraclius (610–641), who had coordinated the defense in person, left Syria in haste. The provinces of Palestine and Syria, which had been reconquered from Persian occupation only a few years prior, were again lost to enemy forces. After days of fighting, the Roman army suffered a disastrous defeat. In 636 CE, Roman and Arab contingents met at the river Yarmouk.
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