Bardas Phokas the Elder

Bardas Phokas
Domestic of the Schools of the East
Magistros
In office
945–954/955
MonarchConstantine VII
Succeeded byNikephoros Phokas
Strategos of Anatolikon
Patrikios
In office
after 910 – before 919
MonarchsLeo VI
Alexander
Strategos of Cappadocia
Patrikios
In office
c. 910 – c.910
MonarchLeo VI
Personal details
Bornc. 878
Diedc. 968
ChildrenNikephoros II Phokas
Leo Phokas the Younger
Constantine Phokas
ParentNikephoros Phokas the Elder
Military service
AllegianceByzantine Empire
Years of service910s–955
Battles/warsByzantine–Bulgarian war of 913–927

Rus'-Byzantine War (941–944)
Arab–Byzantine wars

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Bardas Phokas (Greek: Βάρδας Φωκᾶς; c. 878 – c. 968) was a notable Byzantine general in the first half of the 10th century. He was the father of emperor Nikephoros II Phokas and the kouropalates Leo Phokas the Younger, and was also the maternal grandfather of the emperor John I Tzimiskes. His wife, daughter of Eudokimos Maleinos and a daughter of patrikios Adralestos, belonged to the Maleinoi, a powerful Anatolian Greek family which had settled in Cappadocia.

Bardas was the scion of the Phokas family, one of the great houses of military aristocracy, his father was Nikephoros Phokas the Elder, an eminent Byzantine general with a distinguished record of service in Italy. In 917, he participated under the orders of his elder brother Leo in the disastrous Battle of Acheloos.

In 941, he was governor of the Theme of Armeniakon, in the area previously known as Paphlagonia. In this year the Rus' navy under the leadership of Igor I of Kiev attacked the Empire. Driven off from Constantinople, the Rus' landed in Bithynia and ravaged it. Bardas kept the attackers from doing too much damage with his local militia levies until the larger Byzantine army under John Kourkouas came and drove the Rus' out.

In 945 he was appointed supreme commander of the Byzantine armies of the East by Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus. In this command he did not make much progress against the Arab forces, being repeatedly defeated by Sayf al-Daula, emir of Aleppo. In 953, he was defeated and severely wounded by Sayf and after further defeats, he was replaced by his son Nikephoros in 954/955.

When Nikephoros came to the throne he made his father Caesar, only a step below the imperial title. He died about 968 at the age of 90.