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Alexios II Komnenos

Byzantine emperor from 1180 to 1183

Alexios II Komnenos

Summary

Byzantine emperor from 1180 to 1183

FieldValue
nameAlexios II Komnenos
successionByzantine emperor
imageSeal of Alexios II Komnenos.png
captionSeal of Alexios Komnenos.
reign24 September 1180September 1183
coronation1171 as co-emperor
cor-typeCoronation
predecessorManuel I Komnenos
successorAndronikos I Komnenos
spouse
houseKomnenos
house-typeDynasty
fatherManuel I Komnenos
motherMaria of Antioch
birth_date
birth_placeConstantinople
(now Istanbul, Turkey)
death_dateSeptember 1183 (aged 14)
death_placeConstantinople
titleEmperor and Autocrat of the Romans

| cor-type = Coronation | house-type = Dynasty (now Istanbul, Turkey)

Alexios II Komnenos (; 14 September 1169September 1183), Latinized Alexius II Comnenus, was Byzantine emperor from 1180 to 1183. He ascended to the throne as a minor. For the duration of his short reign, the imperial power was de facto held by regents.

Biography

Early years

Born in the purple at Constantinople, Alexios was the long-awaited son of Emperor Manuel I Komnenos (who gave him a name that began with the letter alpha as a fulfillment of the AIMA prophecy) and Maria of Antioch. In 1171 he was crowned co-emperor, and in 1175 he accompanied his father at Dorylaion in Asia Minor in order to have the city rebuilt. On 2 March 1180, at the age of ten, he was married to Agnes of France aged eight, daughter of King Louis VII of France. She was thereafter known as Anna, and after Alexios' murder three years later, Anna would be remarried to the person responsible, Andronikos, then aged 65.

Regency of Maria and Alexios

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The regents depleted the imperial treasury by granting privileges to Italian merchants and to the Byzantine aristocracy. When Béla III of Hungary and Kilij Arslan II of Rum began raiding within the Byzantine western and eastern borders respectively, the regents were forced to ask for help to the pope and to Saladin. Furthermore, a party supporting Alexios II's right to reign, led by his half-sister Maria Komnene and her husband the caesar John, stirred up riots in the streets of the capital.

The regents managed to defeat the party on April 1182, but Andronikos Komnenos, a first cousin of Manuel I, took advantage of the disorder to aim at the crown. He entered Constantinople, received with almost divine honours, and overthrew the government. His arrival was celebrated by a massacre of the Latins in Constantinople, especially the Venetian merchants, which he made no attempt to stop.

Regency of Andronikos and death

On 16 May 1182 Andronikos, posing as Alexios' protector, officially restored him on the throne. As for 1180, the young emperor was uninterested in ruling matters, and Andronikos effectively acted as the power behind the throne, not allowing Alexios any voice in public affairs. One after another, Andronikos suppressed most of Alexios' defenders and supporters: his half-sister Maria Komnene, the caesar John, his loyal generals Andronikos Doukas Angelos, Andronikos Kontostephanos and John Komnenos Vatatzes, while Empress Dowager Maria was put in prison.

In 1183, Alexios was compelled to condemn his own mother to death. In September 1183, Andronikos was formally proclaimed emperor before the crowd on the terrace of the Church of Christ of the Chalkè. Probably by the end of the same month,

In the years following Alexios' mysterious disappearance, many young men resembling him tried to claim the throne. In the end, none of those pseudo-Alexioi managed to become emperor.

Portrayal in fiction

Alexios is a character in the historical novel Agnes of France (1980) by Greek writer Kostas Kyriazis. The novel describes the events of the reigns of Manuel I, Alexios II, and Andronikos I through the eyes of Agnes.

Ancestry

Notes

References

References

  1. Wirth, Peter. (1956). "Wann wurde Kaiser Alexios II. geboren? [When was Emperor Alexios II born?]". [[Byzantinische Zeitschrift]].
  2. (1984). "O city of Byzantium: annals of Niketas Choniates". Wayne State University Press.
  3. {{Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium
  4. (1975). "Nicetae Choniatae historia". De Gruyter.
  5. Spatharakis, Ioannis. (1976). "The Portrait in Byzantine Illuminated Manuscripts". [[Brill Publishers.
  6. Hennessy, Cecily. (2006). "A child bride and her representation in the Vatican Epithalamion, cod. gr. 1851". [[Brill Publishers.
  7. Iacobini, Antonio. (1995). "Arte profana e arte sacra a Bisanzio". Argos.
  8. {{EB1911. John Bagnell. Bury
  9. Magdalino, Paul. (2008). "[[The New Cambridge Medieval History]], volume IV, c. 1024–c. 1198, Part II". Cambridge University Press.
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