Battle of Melantias

The Battle of Melantias or Battle of Melanthius, which took place in 559, was a battle between the armies of the Kutrigurs, commanded by Zabergan, and the Byzantine Empire, under the command of general Belisarius. In spite of its numerical inferiority, the Byzantine army won the battle and forced the Kutrigurs to withdraw. This was the last time that Belisarius commanded a force in battle.

Background
During the winter of 558, Zabergan led a large Kutrigur army who crossed the frozen Danube. This army invaded Moesia and Thrace, threatening Constantinople itself. Terrified, Emperor Justinian I recalled Belisarius from retirement. Belisarius led a small force of 300 veterans, together with locally raised levies, to drive the Kutrigurs from the walls of Constantinople.

Battle
Belisarius decided to meet the Kutrigurs and set up his camp a few kilometers from his opponent in Melantias, a settlement about 20 miles from Constantinople.

Zabergan wanted to take the Byzantines by surprise and left his camp with 2,000 horsemen, but he was in turn taken by surprise by Belisarius, who ambushed him. According to the Byzantine historian Agathias, Belisarius used a stratagem to make the Kutrigurs believe that they were facing a sizeable force. He asked local peasants to scatter in the forest and hit the trees to make a lot of dust in order to scare the horses of the Kutrigurs. The unit of Kutrigurs who approached the area panicked and many were killed.

Aftermath
Defeated, the Kutrigurs and their Slav allies retreated. They continued shortly to plunder Thrace before crossing the Danube and returning to their homeland.