Ellie Wood Keith Genealogy

Alexios III Komnenos Angelos, Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire 1195-1203

Alexios III Komnenos Angelos, Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire 1195-1203[1]

Male Aft 1155 - Aft 1211  (~ 56 years)

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    Alexios III Angelos, Emperor Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine)
    Alexios III Angelos, Emperor Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine)

  • Name Alexios III Komnenos Angelos 
    Suffix Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire 1195-1203 
    Born Aft 1155 
    Gender Male 
    History Alexios III Komnenos Angelos was born after 1155, the second son of Andronikos Doukas Angelos and Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa. Andronikos himself was a son of Theodora Komnene, the youngest daughter of Emperor Alexios I Komnenos and Eirene Doukaina. Thus Alexios Angelos was a member of the extended imperial family.

    Alexios and his wife Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamaterina, daughter of Andronikos Doukas Kamateros, had three daughters, of whom two would have progeny.

    Together with his father and brothers, Alexios had conspired against Emperor Andronikos I Komnenos in about 1183, because of which he spent several years in exile in Muslim courts, including that of Saladin. On 11 September 1185 his younger brother Isaac II Angelos was threatened with execution under orders of Andronikos I Komnenos, who was their first cousin once removed. Isaac made a desperate attack on the imperial agents and killed their leader Stephanos Hagiochristoporites. He then took refuge in the church of Hagia Sophia and from there appealed to the populace. His actions provoked a riot, which resulted in the deposition of Andronikos I and the proclamation of Isaac II Angelos as emperor. Alexios was now closer to the imperial throne than ever before.

    By 1190 Alexios Angelos had returned to the court of his younger brother, from whom he received the elevated title of _sebastokrator._ In 1195, while Isaac II was away hunting in Thrace, Alexios was acclaimed as emperor by the troops with the conniving of his wife Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamaterina. Alexios captured Isaac at Stagira in Macedonia, put out his eyes, and kept him henceforth a close prisoner, though he had been redeemed by him from captivity at Antioch and loaded with honours.

    To compensate for this crime and so solidify his position as emperor, Alexios had to scatter money so lavishly as to empty his treasury, and to allow such licence to the officers of the army as to leave the Empire practically defenceless and financially ruined. The able and forceful Empress Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamaterina tried in vain to sustain his credit and his court; Vatatzes, the favourite instrument of her attempts at reform, was assassinated at the emperor\'s orders.

    In the east the empire was overrun by the Seljuk Turks; from the north Bulgarians and Vlachs descended unchecked to ravage the plains of Macedonia and Thrace, and Kaloyan of Bulgaria annexed several important cities, while Alexios squandered the public treasure on his palaces and gardens and attempted to deal with the crisis through diplomatic means. The emperor\'s attempts to bolster the empire\'s defences by special concessions to Byzantine and Bulgarian notables in the frontier zone backfired, as the latter built up regional autonomy. Byzantine authority survived, but in a much weakened state.

    Soon Alexios was threatened by a new and yet more formidable danger. In 1202 the western princes assembled at Venice launched the Fourth Crusade. Alexios Angelos, the son of the deposed Isaac II, had recently escaped from Constantinople and now appealed to the Crusaders, promising to end the schism of East and West, to pay for their transport, and to provide military support to the Crusaders if they helped him to depose his uncle and sit on his father\'s throne. The Crusaders, whose objective had been Egypt, were persuaded to set their course for Constantinople before which they appeared in June 1203, proclaiming Alexios as emperor and inviting the populace of the capital to depose his uncle. Alexios III took no efficient measures to resist, and his attempts to bribe the Crusaders failed. His son-in-law Theodore Laskaris, who was the only one to attempt anything significant, was defeated at Scutari, and the siege of Constantinople began.

    On 17/18 July the Crusaders, led by the aged Doge Enrico Dandolo, scaled the walls and took the city by storm. During the fighting and carnage that followed Alexios III hid in the palace, and finally, with one of his daughters, Eirene, and such treasures as he could collect, escaped by boat to Develton in Thrace, leaving his wife and other daughters behind. Isaac II, drawn from his prison and robed once more in the imperial purple, received his son in state.

    Alexios III attempted to organise a resistance to the new regime from Adrianople and then Mosynopolis, where he was joined by the later usurper Alexios V Doukas Mourtzouphlos in April 1204, after the definitive fall of Constantinople to the Crusaders and the establishment of the Latin Empire.

    At first Alexios III received Alexios V well, even allowing him to marry his daughter Eudokia. Later Alexios V was blinded and deserted by his father-in-law, who fled from the Crusaders into Thessaly. Here Alexios III eventually surrendered, with Euphrosyne, to Boniface I, marchese de Monferrato, who was establishing himself as ruler of the kingdom of Thessalonica.

    Trying to escape Boniface\'s \'protection\', Alexios III attempted to seek shelter with Michael I Doukas, the ruler of Epirus, in 1205. Captured by Boniface, Alexios III and his retinue were sent to Monferrato, before being brought back to Thessalonica about 1209. At that point the deposed emperor was ransomed by Michael I of Epirus, who sent him to Asia Minor, where Alexios\' son-in-law Theodore I Laskaris of the empire of Nicaea was holding his own against the Latins.

    Here Alexios conspired against his son-in-law after the latter refused to recognise Alexios\' authority, and received the support of Kay Khusrau I, the sultan of Rüm. In the battle of Antioch on the Maeander River in 1211, the sultan was defeated and killed, and Alexios III was captured by Theodore Lascaris. Alexios III was relegated to a monastery at Nicaea, where he died later in 1211.  [2
    Died Aft 1211  Nicea Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I1828  Ellie Wood Keith
    Last Modified 26 Feb 2018 

    Father Andronikos Doukas Angelos,   d. yes 
    Mother Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa,   d. 1185/1195 
    Married Bef 1155 
    Family ID F1145  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamaterina, Empress of Byzantine Empire,   b. Abt 1155,   d. Abt 1210/1211, Arta Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 56 years) 
    Married 1169 
    Children 
    +1. Anna Komnene Angelina, Empress in Nicaea,   b. Abt 1174,   d. 1212  (Age ~ 38 years)  [putative]
    Last Modified 26 Feb 2018 
    Family ID F1143  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Sources 
    1. [S12] Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexios_III_Angelos.

    2. [S64] Genealogics, Leo Van de Pas, http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00049870&tree=LEO.