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Enemy invasions - Civil wars
But the civil wars also contributed to the adverse effect on the composition of the population in the late Byzantine state. John Kantakouzenos, in describing the condition of the peasant population, says that such turmoil prevailed that the farmers abandoned their villages and did not pay their taxes. The civil wars thus created a climate of political, social and economic insecurity, which facilitated or called for the migration of the rural population to safer areas. To the negative consequences of enemy invasions and civil wars must be added the disastrous results of bandit raids. Most of the bandits were armed and experienced in warfare. They generally appeared when anarchy reigned in the countryside, when production had stopped and the migration of the population had increased, and their raids were intensified in times of enemy invasions and political instability.
Demetrios Kydones Nikephoros Gregoras |
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