The Battle of Dyrrhachium took place on October 18, 1081. It was fought between the Byzantine Empire and the Normans of southern Italy. The battle ended in a Norman victory, with Alexios I Komnenos routing the Norman left wing, which broke and fled.
About Battle of Dyrrhachium (1081) in brief

The army numbered about 1,300 men, including 15,300 Norman knights to fight against the Byzantine army. In 1059, the Pope made Robert GuISCard, of the Hauteville family, Dukeof Apulia, Calabrio, and Sicily. By 1071, Robert, together with his brother Roger, had taken over the last Byzantine stronghold in Italy, Bari. By the next year, they conquered all of Sicily, ending the Islamic Emirate of Sicily. After the Norman conquest of Byzantine Italy and Saracen Sicily, the Byzantine emperor, Michael VII Doukas, betrothed his son to Robert’s daughter Helena. However, in 1078, Michael was overthrown by Nicephorus Botaneiates, an event that destroyed any chances Helena had for the throne. This gave Robert a motive to invade the empire claiming his daughter had been mistreated. Robert conscripted all men of a fighting age into the army, which he refitted. He sent his son Bohemond with an advance force towards Greece and Bohemond landed at Aulon, with Robert following shortly after. He was initially successful, defeating Alexios in several battles, but was defeated by Alexios outside Larissa in 1083. Forced to retreat to Italy, Bohemond lost all the territory gained by the Norman in the campaign. Robert was then forced to leave Greece to deal with an attack on the Pope, by the Holy Roman Emperor, Henry IV.
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