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Michael IX Palaiologos

Michael IX Palaiologos or Palaeologus (Greek: Μιχαήλ Δούκας Ἄγγελος Κομνηνός Παλαιολόγος, Mikhaēl Doukas Angelos Komnēnos Palaiologos;[1] 17 April 1277 – 12 October 1320) was Byzantine emperor together with his father, Andronikos II Palaiologos, from 1294 until his death. Andronikos II and Michael IX ruled as equal co-rulers, both using the title autokrator.[2]

Michael IX Palaiologos
Emperor and Autocrat of the Romans
15th-century portrait from a 15th-century codex containing a copy of the Extracts of History by Joannes Zonaras
Byzantine emperor
Reign21 May 1294 –
12 October 1320
Coronation21 May 1294, Hagia Sophia
PredecessorAndronikos II (alone)
SuccessorAndronikos II (alone)
Andronikos III (in Macedonia)
Co-emperorAndronikos II
Proclamation1281 (as co-emperor)
Born17 April 1277
Constantinople
(now Istanbul, Turkey)
Died12 October 1320(1320-10-12) (aged 43)
Thessaloniki, Greece
Spouse
(m. 1294)
Issue
Names
Michael Doukas Angelos Komnenos Palaiologos
Greek: Μιχαήλ Δούκας Ἄγγελος Κομνηνός Παλαιολόγος
DynastyPalaiologos
FatherAndronikos II Palaiologos
MotherAnna of Hungary

A man of impeccable morals and a good helper to his father, he was also known as a brave and energetic soldier, willing to make personal sacrifices to pay or encourage his troops; the Catalan military chronicler Ramon Muntaner said about him: "Emperor Michael was one of the bravest knights in the world".[3] Despite his military prestige, he suffered several defeats, for unclear reasons: his inability as a commander, the deplorable state of the Byzantine army or just simply bad luck.

His premature death at age 43 was attributed in part to grief over the accidental murder of his younger son Manuel Palaiologos by retainers of his older son and later co-emperor Andronikos III Palaiologos.[4]

In the memory of the Byzantines, Michael IX remained "the most pious lord"[5] and "a true emperor in name and deeds".[6]

Birth and early years edit

 
Michael IX and Andronikos II (Silver basilikon).

Michael IX was the eldest son of the Byzantine Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos and his first wife Anna, daughter of King Stephen V of Hungary.[7] He was born at noon on Easter Sunday (17 April) of 1277, which was recognized by the people as a miracle.[5][8][9] The Emperor doted on his firstborn son, which became a great consolation for him after the untimely death of his beloved wife Anna in 1281.[8] Michael IX had only one younger full-brother, Constantine, who was born sometime between 1278 and 1281.[10][11]

Andronikos II declared Michael IX an emperor shortly before the death of Michael VIII in 1282,[12] and after his son became an adult, he confirmed his authority. On 21 May 1294 at Hagia Sophia, Michael IX was crowned by Patriarch John XII of Constantinople.[5] In subsequent years, Andronikos II entrusted his son with the conduct of wars against internal and external enemies.

Military activity edit

Clash at Magnesia (1302) edit

In early spring of 1302, Michael IX made his first campaign against the Ottoman Empire, which he was very proud of in advance, for he had long wanted (as the historian George Pachymeres reports) to get a chance to prove himself in battle.[13] Under his command, up to 16,000 soldiers were collected,[3] 10,000 of whom were a detachment of mercenary Alans;[14][15] the latter, however, performed their duty badly and plundered both the Turkish population and the Greek with equal zeal. Michael IX camped at the fortress of Magnesia ad Sipylum in Asia Minor (modern day Manisa, Turkey), not far from Smyrna, where in ancient times a great battle between the Roman Republic and the Seleucid Empire had taken place. Seeing the low morale of his people, Michael IX didn't dare to start the battle first, since the Turks managed to take all advantageous positions —the peaks of the surrounding mountains and shelters in the forests— and at the very first collision he would have easily repulsed the onslaught of Greek militia and light Alanian cavalry. Another reason why the young emperor gave his enemies the opportunity to attack first was the problems in his own army. Wayward mercenaries didn't want to carry out his orders, and, according to Nicephorus Gregoras

...often without any order they went out to prey and themselves devastated Roman possessions even more than obvious enemies.[14]

Meanwhile, the Turks chose the moment and descended from the mountains. Michael IX ordered to prepare for battle, but no one listened to him — the timid soldiers didn't want to start the battle and thought only about flight, as was recalled by Nicephorus Gregoras:

Ours did not wait for the first attack of the enemies and, having withdrawn from there, walked with a quiet step, having barbarians in their rear, who followed them and camped in the closest distance from them. Ours did not even see how great the number of enemies; cowardice happened to them, what happens to drunkards: drunkards see not what it really is, but imagine that it is something else ... Before the enemies have time to attack them, they themselves are already running away from their cowardice ... The Emperor, seeing that the Massagets (that is, the Alans) fled and unable to resist the barbarians with a small number of soldiers, locked himself in the hardest fortress, Magnesia, and limited himself to just observing how it would end. The Massagetae reach the Hellespont itself, devastating all the fields of Christians, and from there they move to Europe.[14]

After defeat and a short stay in the fortress of Magnesia, Michael IX retreated to Pergamum[3] and then went to Adramyttium, where he met the New Year of 1303, and by the summer he was in the city of Cyzicus.[16] He still didn't give up his attempts to gather a new army to replace the disintegrated old one and to improve the situation. But by that time the Turks had already seized the area along the lower reaches of the Sangarios River and defeated another Greek army in the town of Bapheus, near Nicomedia (27 July 1302). It was becoming clear to everyone that the Byzantines had lost the war. To top it all off, Michael IX fell seriously ill;[16] having reached the Pegai fortress, he could not continue and went to bed. Many felt that his days were numbered; dying, he sadly watched as the conquerors divided the Byzantine lands that they had captured to the very coast of the Aegean Sea. A year later, the Turkish commander Aydin captured the city of Ephesus (24 October 1304)[17] and, briefly, the island of Rhodes.

Michael IX was ill during the last months of 1303. His health recovered only by January 1304, so that he was finally able to leave the fortress and return to Constantinople with his wife Rita, who, after learning about his illness, hurried to Pegai and was devotedly at the side of her husband during all his illness.[16]

Battle of Skafida (1304) edit

 
Battle of Skafida.

During 1303–1304 Tsar Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria invaded Eastern Thrace. Michael IX at this time was engaged in a war with the rebellious Catalan Company (see below), whose leader, Roger de Flor, refused to fight the Bulgarians if Michael IX and his father didn't pay him the agreed sum of money. In order to prevent the unification of the Catalans and Bulgarians, Michael IX had to oppose the latter, sharing authority over the army with the experienced commander Michael Glaber, who, however, fell seriously ill by the decisive battle and was removed from military affairs. By that time, the Bulgarians had already managed to conquer the fortresses of Kopsis, Kryn, Meglij, Vereya, Diavena, Ichera, Mokren, Sliven, Sotir, Pyrgitsion, Diampol, Ktenia, Debelt, Rusokastro, Lardea, Markeli, Aytos, Mesembria, Anchialos, Pyrgos, Apolonia and Ahtopol, all along the southern Black Sea coast. However, subsequent events were initially favorable for the Byzantine Empire.

Michael IX defeated the enemies in several skirmishes, after which many fortresses captured by the Bulgarians surrendered to him without a fight. His successes made an impression in Constantinople, where Patriarch Athanasius I, during a sermon, said a word of praise about Michael IX and his victories.[18] There is also a panegyric in which an unknown poet extols the victories of the Byzantine army at that time.[19]

In early autumn 1304 the Byzantines counter-attacked and the two armies met near Skafida river. At the beginning of the battle, Michael IX, who fought bravely in the forefront, had an advantage over the enemy. He forced the Bulgarians to retreat along the road to Apolonia, but he was unable to keep his own soldiers heated up in pursuit. Between the Byzantines and the fleeing Bulgarians, there was the deep and very turbulent Skafida river, with the only bridge across which was damaged by the Bulgarians before the battle. When the Byzantine soldiers in a large crowd tried to cross the bridge, it collapsed. Many of the soldiers drowned, the rest began to panic. At that moment, the Bulgarians returned to the bridge and decided the outcome of the battle, snatching victory from the enemies.

Several hundred Byzantines were captured. To ransom the captives and recruit a new army, Emperor Andronikos II and his son were forced to sell their own jewelry. With varying degrees of success, hostilities continued for several more years until 1307, when a peace that was clearly unfavorable for the Byzantine Empire was concluded, which remained for the next 15 years; as part of the agreement, Michael IX had to give his daughter Theodora in marriage to the Bulgarian Tsar Theodore Svetoslav, his successful enemy.[17]

Battle of Apros (1305) edit

 
Entry of Roger de Flor in Constantinople by José Moreno Carbonero, 1888. Palacio del Senado, Spain.

In the spring of 1305 Michael IX, on his father's instructions, conducted negotiations in Adrianople with the rebellious Catalan condottieri Roger de Flor. According to Nicephorus Gregoras, Roger tried to play a dishonest game: he plundered Greek settlements, made sure that he was given ownership of all of Anatolia with the islands and incomes with the right to distribute fiefs to his vassals and maintain a personal army, and demanded from the Byzantine emperors a salary for his soldiers in the amount of 100,000 gold and extorted another 300,000.[3][20][21] (For comparison: during the "War of the Two Andronikos" Andronikos the Younger needed only 45,000 gold to maintain his army[3][22]):

...leaving the other soldiers in the fortress of Gallipoli, with 200 others, chosen ones, [he decided] to go to Emperor Michael, who was then with an army in Thrace, and demand from him the annual salary due to him with his retinue, and if necessary, then and threaten him. When he did this, the Emperor flared up with anger, which, however, had long been hiding in Roger's soul for a long time, and the soldiers who surrounded the Emperor in large numbers, drawing their swords, immediately hacked Roger and, along with him, some of his companions, near the Imperial headquarters. But most of them fled and hastened to notify the Catalans who were in Gallipoli about the incident.[23]

According to other sources,[24] the Catalan condottieri was insidiously killed in a palace in Adrianople during a night drinking with the Byzantine commanders by an Alan teenager named Hyrkon, whose father had been killed by Roger de Flor a few weeks earlier. Ramon Muntaner, unlike Nicephorus Gregoras, speaks only of the three Catalans who survived and names them by name,[24] adding that before the massacre, Michael IX envied Roger de Flor because of his impressive victories over the Turks.[3] It's also known that Michael IX and Roger de Flor were in conflict with each other: so, back in 1303, de Flor with his people arrived in Pegai, where the sick Michael IX was, but he ordered not to let the Catalans into the fortress and refused to accept their leader.[25] It is unclear, however, whether Michael IX was guilty of the murder, or whether everything happened spontaneously and without preparation. In favor of the latter, was the fact that the Catalans and Byzantines drank almost the entire week before the fatal incident happened (30 April 1305). However, for the several thousand angry Catalans who remained in Gallipoli, the details of the massacre didn't matter. Their new leaders, the "megadux" Berenguer VI de Entenza and the brave warrior Bernat de Rocafort, like monarchs of an independent power, sent a proud embassy to Constantinople declaring war, as demanded by knightly etiquette.[3][20] Andronikos II, who did not want war, had to make excuses before two seekers of glory and asking him to believe that de Flor was not killed by his order. But his opponents didn't want to listen to anything. 5,000 Catalans, angry with the Byzantines, united with a Turkish detachment of 500 warriors, fortified in Gallipoli, instantly cutting off all the Greek townspeople, and began to raid Thrace, plundering it day and night. Rocafort took the fortresses of Rodosto and Panido: their population was killed or sold into slavery.[3] Other leaders of the mercenaries settled in Gallipoli — Ramon Muntaner, the future historiographer of the "great campaign", and Fernando Jimenez, who later went over with his detachment to the Byzantines.[21] Since their insolence at that time seemed completely unbearable, Michael IX, taking all the Thracian and Macedonian regiments, the Alan auxiliary cavalry and also adding to them about 1,000 Turcopoles (baptized Turks), led by their commander Melekh, approached the Apros fortress (ancient Theodosiopolis), the plain east of which was occupied by the enemy.[3][23] In total, under his leadership, about 14,000 soldiers were collected (according to other sources 40,000[3]) against 5 or 6,000 Catalans and several hundred Turks:

Several days later, some of the inspectors came with the news that the enemies were close. The Emperor stood up and ordered the army to arm itself, and the leaders and commanders to line up and prepare for battle phalanxes with their closest commanders. Seeing that the enemies lined up in three phalanxes, they themselves did the same. The Turcopoles with the Massagets (Alans) made up the left wing, on the right were selected horsemen from the Thracians and Macedonians, and in the middle the rest, a very large part of the cavalry, together with the infantry. The Emperor, circling the ranks, encouraged the soldiers to courageously attack. With sunrise, the enemies came up and lined up opposite, having Turks on both wings, and Catalan heavily armed phalanxes in the middle because of their sluggishness.[23]

But as soon as the signal for battle was given, the Catalans rushed into battle with the cry "Aragon! Aragon! Saint George!",[26] as the memorable defeat at Magnesia was repeated. The Turcopoles and Alans suddenly left the battlefield. Such a surprise took all the courage from the Byzantines. Michael IX, seeing that the ranks of his soldiers were mingled, with tears turned to them, begging them to stand firm. But they didn't listen to him at all and rushed to run without looking back. Only about a hundred knights remained with the emperor. Most of the infantry was badly battered by the Catalans, who rushed to pursue the Byzantines.[27]

In the middle of such desperate situation, Michael IX carried himself with great courage:

Seeing that things had come to a desperate situation, and that most of the infantry had been mercilessly hacked and trampled, the Emperor found it quite decent at this time not to spare himself for his subjects and, having rushed into obvious danger, thereby shaming the treacherous soldiers. Therefore, turning to those around him (there were very few of them), he said: Gentlemen! Now is the time when death is better than life, and life is worse than death. Having said this and summoning divine help, he rushes with them to the enemies and kills some of them who came to hand, tears the phalanx and thereby causes considerable confusion in the enemy army. The arrows rained down on him as on the horse, but he remained intact. When his horse fell, he found himself in danger of being surrounded by enemies, and perhaps it would have come to such a misfortune if one of those who were with him, out of love for his sovereign, he did not sacrifice his life for him, giving him his horse. Through this, the Emperor was saved from the danger that was already hanging over him; and the one who gave him his horse fell under the enemy's horses and lost his life.[23]

Michael IX retreated to Didymoteicho, where he met Andronikos II, who gave his son a long and severe reprimand, since he unnecessarily exposed himself to mortal risk.[20][23] At the same time, the co-Emperor became the object of brutal attacks from his stepmother the Empress Irene (born Yolanda of Montferrato), who hated him, since he was the heir in detriment of her sons. As for the victorious Catalans, for the next two years they freely plundered Thrace, then devastated Macedonia and, finally, left to seek glory in Thessaly and central Greece.

The state of affairs in Asia, where the Turks managed to cut the line of communication between Nicomedia and Nicaea (1307),[17] was not the best either.

Turkish fortress (1314) edit

After the Catalans left in 1314 Thrace, in turn, began to be devastated by the Ottoman Turks. At one time, they accompanied the Catalans, who ravaged Macedonia and Central Greece with fire and sword, and now with their share of the booty were returning home. The Turks asked permission to pass through the Byzantine regions, which they were allowed, but Andronikos II, amazed by the amount of booty and the small number of Turks, decided, without stopping to talk about friendship and alliance, to suddenly hit them and take away all the booty. The plan failed due to the negligence of the Byzantine generals, who acted too slowly and openly. The Turks, once were revealed the intentions of the Byzantines, without hesitation, attacked the nearest fortress, fortified it and, having received help from Asia, began to plunder the country.[28]

Michael IX had to gather an army (they collected everyone they could, including ordinary peasants who made up most of the Byzantine army) and lay siege to the fortress. The Byzantines were confident of their success, since they far outnumbered their enemies: the Turks were only 1,300 cavalry and 800 infantry,[28] but as soon as the Turkish horsemen appeared, led by their chief named Halil, the peasants suddenly fled. Then, little by little, the rest of the Byzantine soldiers began to scatter. When Michael IX tried to put the army in order, there was absolutely no one who could listen to him. In despair, he himself, in tears, took to flight, trembling with impotent rage and thinking that all this was God's clear punishment for old and new sins. The adversaries captured many Byzantine nobles, the imperial treasury, crown (the so-called calipra) and tent; sneering at the defeated Emperor, the Turkish chief Halil placed the crown of the Byzantine Basileus on his own head.

The young talented military leader Philes Palaeologus saved the situation, asking the Emperors for permission to independently recruit troops and commanders to fight the Turks. Having selected a small detachment of the most combat-ready and brave, Philes, a warrior weak in body but strong in spirit, near the river Xirogypsus successfully destroyed 1,200 Ottomans who were returning to the fortress with booty and Greek captives, and after the arrival of reinforcements from the Genoese allied to Constantinople with small losses forced the fortress to surrender.[29]

Michael IX as unsuccessful commander edit

Alanian, Turkish, Catalan, Serbian mercenary detachments and at times simple peasant militias were the only warriors at the head of which Michael IX had to repulse the enemy. The fact is that the military organization of the Byzantine Empire by that time was actually destroyed after the initiatives carried out by Andronikos II.

Andronikos II, a purely civilian man, considered it unreasonably expensive (taking into account the impoverishment of the treasury) and inexpedient (taking into account the greatly reduced empire within the borders) the maintenance of a regular national army.[30][31][32] In theory, her role could be handled by a professional detachment of mercenaries, which (again in theory) was much cheaper to maintain. Andronikos II and his advisers didn't confine themselves to mere arguments. Their own armed forces were soon disbanded, and instead of them, mercenaries were entrusted to guard the borders of the Byzantine Empire. But the commanders were unable to curb cowardice, greed and rebelliousness in their new soldiers, turning into open rebellion and disobedience in a number of cases, which strongly questioned the empire's ability to repel enemies and ultimately led to its destruction.[33]

Obedient to his father, Michael IX turned out to be not the person who could radically change the existing system and win victories, commanding the peasant militia and the multi-tribal mercenary rabble, with whom even an outstanding commander could hardly cope and achieve much. It is curious that Philes Palaeologus, the only Byzantine military leader who achieved victory under Michael IX, began by completely refusing to deal with mercenaries and peasant "warriors".[20][28] Therefore, Michael IX was hardly to blame for his own military failures: they seem to be a natural consequence of the suicidal military transformations carried out in the Byzantine Empire at that time.

Private life edit

Betrothals and marriage. Issue edit

 
Andronikos III Palaiologos, 14th-century miniature.

In 1288 Michael IX was betrothed with Catherine of Courtenay, titular Latin Empress of Constantinople.[3][21] The marriage was proposed by Andronikos II in the hope of reducing the threat of restoring the power of the Latins in the Byzantine Empire and reconciling with both the Holy See and the European monarchs, who frightened Constantinople with a new Crusade; however, after several years of fruitless negotiations and the decisive objection from the French king, the purposed union was abandoned by 1295, when Michael IX was already married.

In addition to Catherine of Courtenay, Andronikos II considered a number of other possibles brides for his eldest son: marriage proposals from Constantinople went to the Sicilian and Cypriot courts.[34] At one time everyone thought that Michael IX would become the husband of Yolande of Aragon (sister of King Frederick III of Sicily), but this was also not destined to come true. In addition, Nikephoros I Komnenos Doukas, Despot of Epirus proposed his daughter Thamar as a bride for Michael IX, but the matter did not go beyond words.

Finally, Andronikos II sent an embassy to Levon II, King of Armenia; although the ambassadors were captured by pirates, the Emperor was not deterred, and very soon he sent a new embassy mission, led by Theodore Metochites and Patriarch John XII,[34] to ask the hand of the Armenian princess Rita. The ambassadors returned with the young princess, and on their return to Constantinople, on 16 January 1294 at Hagia Sophia,[35] the marriage between Michael IX and Rita (renamed Maria upon her wedding[5][16][34]) took place. At that time, both groom and bride are 16-years-old. They had four children, two sons and two daughters:[36]

Relationship with stepmother edit

After the death of his first wife Anna of Hungary in 1281, Andronikos II entered into a new marriage in 1284, choosing as his wife the 10-year-old Yolanda of Montferrato, who was renamed Irene [Eirene] upon her wedding (as was customary for foreign princess with strange names in the Byzantine fashion); Michael IX and his brother Constantine were only a few years younger than their stepmother. As it turned out later, this girl became in an ambitious and intriguing woman. From her marriage with Andronikos II, Irene had seven children, of whom only survive four, three sons —John Palaiologos (born in 1286), Theodore Palaiologos (born in 1291) and Demetrios Palaiologos (born in 1297)— and a daughter —Simonis Palaiologina (born in 1294), later wife of King Stefan Uroš II Milutin of Serbia—,[10][11] so she didn't like the prospect that her stepson Michael IX, to the detriment of the interests of her own children, would inherit the entire Empire after his father's death. Over time, Irene was possessed by a deep hatred against her stepson and an obsessive desire to bring her children to the throne:

The Empress...didn't cease, day and night alone, to bother him [that is, Andronikos II], so that he did one of two things: either deprived Emperor Michael of the royal power and divided it between her sons, or gave each of them a special part and allocated a special share of their power. When the Emperor said that it was impossible to violate the laws of the state bequeathed and approved by many centuries, the Empress was angry and annoyed her husband in different ways: she was yearning and said that she didn't want to live if she did not see the royal signs on her sons during her lifetime; then she pretended not to think about her children, and kept herself unapproachable, as if enticing her spouse to buy her charms at the cost of fulfilling her views relative to her sons. Since this happened often...the Emperor finally lost his patience...in conclusion, he hated her very bed...[42]

After one of the quarrels with her husband, Irene, along with her sons, had to leave Constantinople and retire to Thessaloniki. The conflict between Irene and Michael IX ended only after the death of the Empress in 1317, who, however, before her death had time to disgrace herself and become famous for her unworthy behavior, like her attempts to "wash dirty linen in public" and tell everyone intimate and shameful details of her married life to everyone she met.[43][44]

Death edit

In October 1319, Michael IX was appointed by his father to govern Thessalonica, where, according to Nicephorus Gregoras, he had to try to put an end to the enmity between the Thessalians and the Pelasgians, which had lasted for many years.[45] He humbly accepted his father's will and, together with his wife Rita-Maria, went to live in this city, despite the well-known prophecy at that time, according to which Michael IX was destined to die in Thessalonica, and which, as they say, worried him greatly.

Michael IX died on 12 October 1320 in the city of Thessalonica;[5][46] reportedly, the cause of his death was because he couldn't stand the news of the successive deaths of his daughter Anna and son Manuel, who was mistakenly killed by soldiers of his older brother Andronikos III:

When the Despot Manuel died of the wound he had received, and the rumor of this reached Emperor Michael, who was living in Thessaloniki ; then —what to say?— it struck his heart deeper than any arrow, so that, suppressed by obsessive thoughts of an unfortunate adventure, he underwent a terrible illness, which, after a little, brought him to the grave.[36]

According to a Byzantine chronicler whose name has not reached today, Michael IX was buried in the same place where he died — in Thessalonica.[5]

Michael and the Church edit

 
Hagios Demetrios at Thessalonica, destroyed in 1185 and rebuilt by Michael IX.

Michael IX was also known for his piety and devotion to the Church. In the last period of his life in Thessalonica, he ordered the restoration of the Hagios Demetrios (church dedicated to Saint Demetrius, the patron saint of Thessaloniki) after being almost completely destroyed by the Normans in 1185. In particular, under his leadership, the vaults were re-painted, the roof made and the temple columns renovated.

Over the years, he issued a large number of church decrees —known as chrysobull (Golden seal)—. Of greatest interest are his chrysobull of Iviron (1310) and Hilandar (March 1305) monasteries —by that time plundered by the Catalans after the memorable defeat at Apros— and the Brontochion Monastery (November 1318).[47] According to these documents, the monks of these monasteries were exempted from many duties and taxes, including the delivery of food and drinks to the state.[48] In the chrysobull of Iviron Monastery, Michael IX defined his role in the country and society as "Patron saint of subjects in the interests of the common good".[49]

Notes edit

  1. ^ PLP, 21436. Παλαιολόγος, Ἀνδρόνικος II. Δούκας Ἄγγελος Κομνηνός
  2. ^ Grierson, Philip (1999). Catalogue of the Byzantine Coins in the Dumbarton Oaks Collection and in the Whittemore Collection: Michael VIII to Constantine XI, 1258-1453. Dumbarton Oaks. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-88402-261-9.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k F. Uspensky. "История Византийской империи в 5 томах. Гл. 6. Андроник II Старший [History of the Byzantine Empire in 5 volumes — Ch. 6. Andronicus II the Elder]" (in Russian).
  4. ^ a b Nicol 1993, p. 153.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Малые византийские хроники. Хроника № 8 (9, 10, 11c) [Small Byzantine Chronicles. Chronicle number 8 (9, 10, 11c)]" (in Russian).
  6. ^ "Малые византийские хроники. Хроника № 14 (99) [Small Byzantine Chronicles. Chronicle № 14 (99)]" (in Russian).
  7. ^ Giannouli 2013, p. 206.
  8. ^ a b Georges Pachymérès relations historiques, p. 99.
  9. ^ A. Failler. "Sur un passage mutile de la Chronique breve de 1352" (PDF) (in French). pp. 61–62. 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ a b Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 6.2.
  11. ^ a b G.M. Shafrov (2011). "Генеалогические таблицы по истории европейских государств. Издание 5 исправленное и дополненное (340 таблиц) [Genealogical tables on the history of European states. Edition 5 revised and supplemented (340 tables)]" (in Russian). Moscow-Yekaterinburg.
  12. ^ Hilsdale 2014, p. 193.
  13. ^ G.I. Bratianu, Notes sur le projet de mariage entre l’empereur Michel IX Paleologue et Catherine de Courtenay. (in French) — Revue Historique du Sud-Est Européen 1 (1924), pp. 59–62.
  14. ^ a b c Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 6.10.
  15. ^ Korobeĭnikov 2014, p. 273.
  16. ^ a b c d Georges Pachymérès relations historiques, p. 427.
  17. ^ a b c J. Norwich. "История Византии [History of Byzantium]" (in Russian). p. 478. 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ A. Talbot, ed. (1975). The Correspondence of Athanasius I, Patriarch of Constantinople: Letters to the Emperor Andronicus II, Members of the Imperial Family, and Officials. Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies. pp. 30–32. ISBN 978-0-884-02040-0.
  19. ^ P. Lamma (1955). Pubblicazioni dell’Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore (ed.). "Un discorso inedito per l'incoronacione di Michele IX Paleologo". Aevum (in Italian). 29 (1). Vita e Pensiero: 55–56. JSTOR 25820636.
  20. ^ a b c d A.M. Velichko. "История византийских императоров в 5 томах [History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes]" (PDF) (in Russian). pp. 176–177.
  21. ^ a b c S.D. Skazkin. "История Византии в 3 томах. Гл. 5 [History of Byzantium in 3 volumes — Ch. 5]" (in Russian).
  22. ^ S.B. Dashkov. "Императоры Византии // Андроник III Палеолог [Emperors of Byzantium // Andronicus III Palaeologus]". Церковно-Научный Центр "Православная Энциклопедия" (in Russian).
  23. ^ a b c d e Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 7.3.
  24. ^ a b "The Chronicle of Ramon Muntaner" (PDF). Translated by Lady Anna Kinsky Goodenough. Cambridge: Catalan Series. 2000. p. 428.
  25. ^ J. Norwich. "История Византии [History of Byzantium]" (in Russian). p. 475. 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ "The Chronicle of Ramon Muntaner" (PDF). Translated by Lady Anna Kinsky Goodenough. Cambridge: Catalan Series. 2000. p. 436.
  27. ^ Bartusis 1992, p. 80.
  28. ^ a b c Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 7.8.
  29. ^ A.M. Velichko. "История византийских императоров в 5 томах [History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes]" (PDF) (in Russian). pp. 180–181.
  30. ^ K. V. Ryzhov (2002). Все монархи мира // Андроник II Палеолог // Михаил IX Палеолог [All the monarchs of the world // Andronicus II Palaeologus // Michael IX Palaeologus] (in Russian). Moscow: Veche. ISBN 5-7838-0528-9.
  31. ^ J. Norwich. "История Византии [History of Byzantium]" (in Russian). p. 472. 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ S.B. Dashkov. "Императоры Византии // Андроник II Палеолог [Emperors of Byzantium // Andronicus II Palaeologus ]". Церковно-Научный Центр "Православная Энциклопедия" (in Russian).
  33. ^ A.M. Velichko. "История византийских императоров в 5 томах [History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes]" (PDF) (in Russian). pp. 167–168.
  34. ^ a b c Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 6.8.
  35. ^ Geanakoplos 1975, p. 43.
  36. ^ a b c d Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 8.1.
  37. ^ Russell 2013, p. 159.
  38. ^ Nicol 1993, p. 161.
  39. ^ Fine 1994, p. 237.
  40. ^ Nicol 1993, p. 170.
  41. ^ Fine 1994, pp. 269–270.
  42. ^ Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 7.5.
  43. ^ A.M. Velichko. "История византийских императоров в 5 томах [History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes]" (PDF) (in Russian). pp. 184–185.
  44. ^ J. Norwich. "История Византии [History of Byzantium]" (in Russian). pp. 478–479. 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantine History, Book 7.15.
  46. ^ "Малые византийские хроники. Хроника № 49 (2) [Small Byzantine Chronicles. Chronicle № 49 (2)]" (in Russian).
  47. ^ I.P. Medvedev (1971). Мистра. Очерки истории и культуры поздневизантийского города [Mystras. Essays on the history and culture of late Byzantine city] (in Russian). Leningrad. ASIN B071SD4M94.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  48. ^ V.A. Smetanin. "Турецкое нашествие и военные издержки Византии (1282—1453) [Turkish invasion and military costs of Byzantium (1282-1453)]" (PDF) (in Russian).
  49. ^ K.V. Khvostova. "Общие особенности византийской цивилизации [General features of the Byzantine civilization]" (PDF) (in Russian). 27 October 2005 at the Wayback Machine

References edit

  • Failler, A., ed. (1999). Georges Pachymérès relations historiques. Vol. 3. Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Bartusis, Mark C. (1992). The Late Byzantine Army: Arms and Society, 1204-1453. University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472082604.
  • Geanakoplos, Deno (1975). "Byzantium and the Crusades, 1261-1354". In Hazard, Harry W. (ed.). A History of the Crusades: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries. Vol. III. The University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Gregoire de Chypre. Eloge d'Andronic II Palaiologos: PG 142. pp. 413–416.
  • Giannouli, Antonia (2013). "Coronation Speeches in the Palaiologan Period". In Beihammer, Alexander; Constantinou, Stavroula; Parani, Maria (eds.). Court Ceremonies and Rituals of Power in Byzantium and the Medieval Mediterranean. Brill.
  • Hilsdale, Cecily J. (2014). Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline. Cambridge University Press.
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  • Russell, Eugenia (2013). Literature and Culture in Late Byzantine Thessalonica. Bloomsbury Academic.
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  • Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, Oxford University Press, 1991.
Michael IX Palaiologos
Palaiologos dynasty
Born: 17 April 1277 Died: 12 October 1320[aged 43]
Preceded by Byzantine Emperor
1294–1320
with Andronikos II Palaiologos (1272–1328)
Succeeded by

michael, palaiologos, palaeologus, greek, Μιχαήλ, Δούκας, Ἄγγελος, Κομνηνός, Παλαιολόγος, mikhaēl, doukas, angelos, komnēnos, palaiologos, april, 1277, october, 1320, byzantine, emperor, together, with, father, andronikos, palaiologos, from, 1294, until, death. Michael IX Palaiologos or Palaeologus Greek Mixahl Doykas Ἄggelos Komnhnos Palaiologos Mikhael Doukas Angelos Komnenos Palaiologos 1 17 April 1277 12 October 1320 was Byzantine emperor together with his father Andronikos II Palaiologos from 1294 until his death Andronikos II and Michael IX ruled as equal co rulers both using the title autokrator 2 Michael IX PalaiologosEmperor and Autocrat of the Romans15th century portrait from a 15th century codex containing a copy of the Extracts of History by Joannes ZonarasByzantine emperorReign21 May 1294 12 October 1320Coronation21 May 1294 Hagia SophiaPredecessorAndronikos II alone SuccessorAndronikos II alone Andronikos III in Macedonia Co emperorAndronikos IIProclamation1281 as co emperor Born17 April 1277Constantinople now Istanbul Turkey Died12 October 1320 1320 10 12 aged 43 Thessaloniki GreeceSpouseRita of Armenia m 1294 wbr IssueAndronikos III Palaiologos Manuel Palaiologos Despotes Anna Palaiologina Despoina of Epirus and Countess of Cephalonia Theodora Palaiologina Empress of BulgariaNamesMichael Doukas Angelos Komnenos PalaiologosGreek Mixahl Doykas Ἄggelos Komnhnos PalaiologosDynastyPalaiologosFatherAndronikos II PalaiologosMotherAnna of Hungary A man of impeccable morals and a good helper to his father he was also known as a brave and energetic soldier willing to make personal sacrifices to pay or encourage his troops the Catalan military chronicler Ramon Muntaner said about him Emperor Michael was one of the bravest knights in the world 3 Despite his military prestige he suffered several defeats for unclear reasons his inability as a commander the deplorable state of the Byzantine army or just simply bad luck His premature death at age 43 was attributed in part to grief over the accidental murder of his younger son Manuel Palaiologos by retainers of his older son and later co emperor Andronikos III Palaiologos 4 In the memory of the Byzantines Michael IX remained the most pious lord 5 and a true emperor in name and deeds 6 Contents 1 Birth and early years 2 Military activity 2 1 Clash at Magnesia 1302 2 2 Battle of Skafida 1304 2 3 Battle of Apros 1305 2 4 Turkish fortress 1314 2 5 Michael IX as unsuccessful commander 3 Private life 3 1 Betrothals and marriage Issue 3 2 Relationship with stepmother 4 Death 5 Michael and the Church 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBirth and early years edit nbsp Michael IX and Andronikos II Silver basilikon Michael IX was the eldest son of the Byzantine Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos and his first wife Anna daughter of King Stephen V of Hungary 7 He was born at noon on Easter Sunday 17 April of 1277 which was recognized by the people as a miracle 5 8 9 The Emperor doted on his firstborn son which became a great consolation for him after the untimely death of his beloved wife Anna in 1281 8 Michael IX had only one younger full brother Constantine who was born sometime between 1278 and 1281 10 11 Andronikos II declared Michael IX an emperor shortly before the death of Michael VIII in 1282 12 and after his son became an adult he confirmed his authority On 21 May 1294 at Hagia Sophia Michael IX was crowned by Patriarch John XII of Constantinople 5 In subsequent years Andronikos II entrusted his son with the conduct of wars against internal and external enemies Military activity editClash at Magnesia 1302 edit In early spring of 1302 Michael IX made his first campaign against the Ottoman Empire which he was very proud of in advance for he had long wanted as the historian George Pachymeres reports to get a chance to prove himself in battle 13 Under his command up to 16 000 soldiers were collected 3 10 000 of whom were a detachment of mercenary Alans 14 15 the latter however performed their duty badly and plundered both the Turkish population and the Greek with equal zeal Michael IX camped at the fortress of Magnesia ad Sipylum in Asia Minor modern day Manisa Turkey not far from Smyrna where in ancient times a great battle between the Roman Republic and the Seleucid Empire had taken place Seeing the low morale of his people Michael IX didn t dare to start the battle first since the Turks managed to take all advantageous positions the peaks of the surrounding mountains and shelters in the forests and at the very first collision he would have easily repulsed the onslaught of Greek militia and light Alanian cavalry Another reason why the young emperor gave his enemies the opportunity to attack first was the problems in his own army Wayward mercenaries didn t want to carry out his orders and according to Nicephorus Gregoras often without any order they went out to prey and themselves devastated Roman possessions even more than obvious enemies 14 Meanwhile the Turks chose the moment and descended from the mountains Michael IX ordered to prepare for battle but no one listened to him the timid soldiers didn t want to start the battle and thought only about flight as was recalled by Nicephorus Gregoras Ours did not wait for the first attack of the enemies and having withdrawn from there walked with a quiet step having barbarians in their rear who followed them and camped in the closest distance from them Ours did not even see how great the number of enemies cowardice happened to them what happens to drunkards drunkards see not what it really is but imagine that it is something else Before the enemies have time to attack them they themselves are already running away from their cowardice The Emperor seeing that the Massagets that is the Alans fled and unable to resist the barbarians with a small number of soldiers locked himself in the hardest fortress Magnesia and limited himself to just observing how it would end The Massagetae reach the Hellespont itself devastating all the fields of Christians and from there they move to Europe 14 After defeat and a short stay in the fortress of Magnesia Michael IX retreated to Pergamum 3 and then went to Adramyttium where he met the New Year of 1303 and by the summer he was in the city of Cyzicus 16 He still didn t give up his attempts to gather a new army to replace the disintegrated old one and to improve the situation But by that time the Turks had already seized the area along the lower reaches of the Sangarios River and defeated another Greek army in the town of Bapheus near Nicomedia 27 July 1302 It was becoming clear to everyone that the Byzantines had lost the war To top it all off Michael IX fell seriously ill 16 having reached the Pegai fortress he could not continue and went to bed Many felt that his days were numbered dying he sadly watched as the conquerors divided the Byzantine lands that they had captured to the very coast of the Aegean Sea A year later the Turkish commander Aydin captured the city of Ephesus 24 October 1304 17 and briefly the island of Rhodes Michael IX was ill during the last months of 1303 His health recovered only by January 1304 so that he was finally able to leave the fortress and return to Constantinople with his wife Rita who after learning about his illness hurried to Pegai and was devotedly at the side of her husband during all his illness 16 Battle of Skafida 1304 edit Main article Battle of Skafida nbsp Battle of Skafida During 1303 1304 Tsar Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria invaded Eastern Thrace Michael IX at this time was engaged in a war with the rebellious Catalan Company see below whose leader Roger de Flor refused to fight the Bulgarians if Michael IX and his father didn t pay him the agreed sum of money In order to prevent the unification of the Catalans and Bulgarians Michael IX had to oppose the latter sharing authority over the army with the experienced commander Michael Glaber who however fell seriously ill by the decisive battle and was removed from military affairs By that time the Bulgarians had already managed to conquer the fortresses of Kopsis Kryn Meglij Vereya Diavena Ichera Mokren Sliven Sotir Pyrgitsion Diampol Ktenia Debelt Rusokastro Lardea Markeli Aytos Mesembria Anchialos Pyrgos Apolonia and Ahtopol all along the southern Black Sea coast However subsequent events were initially favorable for the Byzantine Empire Michael IX defeated the enemies in several skirmishes after which many fortresses captured by the Bulgarians surrendered to him without a fight His successes made an impression in Constantinople where Patriarch Athanasius I during a sermon said a word of praise about Michael IX and his victories 18 There is also a panegyric in which an unknown poet extols the victories of the Byzantine army at that time 19 In early autumn 1304 the Byzantines counter attacked and the two armies met near Skafida river At the beginning of the battle Michael IX who fought bravely in the forefront had an advantage over the enemy He forced the Bulgarians to retreat along the road to Apolonia but he was unable to keep his own soldiers heated up in pursuit Between the Byzantines and the fleeing Bulgarians there was the deep and very turbulent Skafida river with the only bridge across which was damaged by the Bulgarians before the battle When the Byzantine soldiers in a large crowd tried to cross the bridge it collapsed Many of the soldiers drowned the rest began to panic At that moment the Bulgarians returned to the bridge and decided the outcome of the battle snatching victory from the enemies Several hundred Byzantines were captured To ransom the captives and recruit a new army Emperor Andronikos II and his son were forced to sell their own jewelry With varying degrees of success hostilities continued for several more years until 1307 when a peace that was clearly unfavorable for the Byzantine Empire was concluded which remained for the next 15 years as part of the agreement Michael IX had to give his daughter Theodora in marriage to the Bulgarian Tsar Theodore Svetoslav his successful enemy 17 Battle of Apros 1305 edit Main article Battle of Apros nbsp Entry of Roger de Flor in Constantinople by Jose Moreno Carbonero 1888 Palacio del Senado Spain In the spring of 1305 Michael IX on his father s instructions conducted negotiations in Adrianople with the rebellious Catalan condottieri Roger de Flor According to Nicephorus Gregoras Roger tried to play a dishonest game he plundered Greek settlements made sure that he was given ownership of all of Anatolia with the islands and incomes with the right to distribute fiefs to his vassals and maintain a personal army and demanded from the Byzantine emperors a salary for his soldiers in the amount of 100 000 gold and extorted another 300 000 3 20 21 For comparison during the War of the Two Andronikos Andronikos the Younger needed only 45 000 gold to maintain his army 3 22 leaving the other soldiers in the fortress of Gallipoli with 200 others chosen ones he decided to go to Emperor Michael who was then with an army in Thrace and demand from him the annual salary due to him with his retinue and if necessary then and threaten him When he did this the Emperor flared up with anger which however had long been hiding in Roger s soul for a long time and the soldiers who surrounded the Emperor in large numbers drawing their swords immediately hacked Roger and along with him some of his companions near the Imperial headquarters But most of them fled and hastened to notify the Catalans who were in Gallipoli about the incident 23 According to other sources 24 the Catalan condottieri was insidiously killed in a palace in Adrianople during a night drinking with the Byzantine commanders by an Alan teenager named Hyrkon whose father had been killed by Roger de Flor a few weeks earlier Ramon Muntaner unlike Nicephorus Gregoras speaks only of the three Catalans who survived and names them by name 24 adding that before the massacre Michael IX envied Roger de Flor because of his impressive victories over the Turks 3 It s also known that Michael IX and Roger de Flor were in conflict with each other so back in 1303 de Flor with his people arrived in Pegai where the sick Michael IX was but he ordered not to let the Catalans into the fortress and refused to accept their leader 25 It is unclear however whether Michael IX was guilty of the murder or whether everything happened spontaneously and without preparation In favor of the latter was the fact that the Catalans and Byzantines drank almost the entire week before the fatal incident happened 30 April 1305 However for the several thousand angry Catalans who remained in Gallipoli the details of the massacre didn t matter Their new leaders the megadux Berenguer VI de Entenza and the brave warrior Bernat de Rocafort like monarchs of an independent power sent a proud embassy to Constantinople declaring war as demanded by knightly etiquette 3 20 Andronikos II who did not want war had to make excuses before two seekers of glory and asking him to believe that de Flor was not killed by his order But his opponents didn t want to listen to anything 5 000 Catalans angry with the Byzantines united with a Turkish detachment of 500 warriors fortified in Gallipoli instantly cutting off all the Greek townspeople and began to raid Thrace plundering it day and night Rocafort took the fortresses of Rodosto and Panido their population was killed or sold into slavery 3 Other leaders of the mercenaries settled in Gallipoli Ramon Muntaner the future historiographer of the great campaign and Fernando Jimenez who later went over with his detachment to the Byzantines 21 Since their insolence at that time seemed completely unbearable Michael IX taking all the Thracian and Macedonian regiments the Alan auxiliary cavalry and also adding to them about 1 000 Turcopoles baptized Turks led by their commander Melekh approached the Apros fortress ancient Theodosiopolis the plain east of which was occupied by the enemy 3 23 In total under his leadership about 14 000 soldiers were collected according to other sources 40 000 3 against 5 or 6 000 Catalans and several hundred Turks Several days later some of the inspectors came with the news that the enemies were close The Emperor stood up and ordered the army to arm itself and the leaders and commanders to line up and prepare for battle phalanxes with their closest commanders Seeing that the enemies lined up in three phalanxes they themselves did the same The Turcopoles with the Massagets Alans made up the left wing on the right were selected horsemen from the Thracians and Macedonians and in the middle the rest a very large part of the cavalry together with the infantry The Emperor circling the ranks encouraged the soldiers to courageously attack With sunrise the enemies came up and lined up opposite having Turks on both wings and Catalan heavily armed phalanxes in the middle because of their sluggishness 23 But as soon as the signal for battle was given the Catalans rushed into battle with the cry Aragon Aragon Saint George 26 as the memorable defeat at Magnesia was repeated The Turcopoles and Alans suddenly left the battlefield Such a surprise took all the courage from the Byzantines Michael IX seeing that the ranks of his soldiers were mingled with tears turned to them begging them to stand firm But they didn t listen to him at all and rushed to run without looking back Only about a hundred knights remained with the emperor Most of the infantry was badly battered by the Catalans who rushed to pursue the Byzantines 27 In the middle of such desperate situation Michael IX carried himself with great courage Seeing that things had come to a desperate situation and that most of the infantry had been mercilessly hacked and trampled the Emperor found it quite decent at this time not to spare himself for his subjects and having rushed into obvious danger thereby shaming the treacherous soldiers Therefore turning to those around him there were very few of them he said Gentlemen Now is the time when death is better than life and life is worse than death Having said this and summoning divine help he rushes with them to the enemies and kills some of them who came to hand tears the phalanx and thereby causes considerable confusion in the enemy army The arrows rained down on him as on the horse but he remained intact When his horse fell he found himself in danger of being surrounded by enemies and perhaps it would have come to such a misfortune if one of those who were with him out of love for his sovereign he did not sacrifice his life for him giving him his horse Through this the Emperor was saved from the danger that was already hanging over him and the one who gave him his horse fell under the enemy s horses and lost his life 23 Michael IX retreated to Didymoteicho where he met Andronikos II who gave his son a long and severe reprimand since he unnecessarily exposed himself to mortal risk 20 23 At the same time the co Emperor became the object of brutal attacks from his stepmother the Empress Irene born Yolanda of Montferrato who hated him since he was the heir in detriment of her sons As for the victorious Catalans for the next two years they freely plundered Thrace then devastated Macedonia and finally left to seek glory in Thessaly and central Greece The state of affairs in Asia where the Turks managed to cut the line of communication between Nicomedia and Nicaea 1307 17 was not the best either Turkish fortress 1314 edit After the Catalans left in 1314 Thrace in turn began to be devastated by the Ottoman Turks At one time they accompanied the Catalans who ravaged Macedonia and Central Greece with fire and sword and now with their share of the booty were returning home The Turks asked permission to pass through the Byzantine regions which they were allowed but Andronikos II amazed by the amount of booty and the small number of Turks decided without stopping to talk about friendship and alliance to suddenly hit them and take away all the booty The plan failed due to the negligence of the Byzantine generals who acted too slowly and openly The Turks once were revealed the intentions of the Byzantines without hesitation attacked the nearest fortress fortified it and having received help from Asia began to plunder the country 28 Michael IX had to gather an army they collected everyone they could including ordinary peasants who made up most of the Byzantine army and lay siege to the fortress The Byzantines were confident of their success since they far outnumbered their enemies the Turks were only 1 300 cavalry and 800 infantry 28 but as soon as the Turkish horsemen appeared led by their chief named Halil the peasants suddenly fled Then little by little the rest of the Byzantine soldiers began to scatter When Michael IX tried to put the army in order there was absolutely no one who could listen to him In despair he himself in tears took to flight trembling with impotent rage and thinking that all this was God s clear punishment for old and new sins The adversaries captured many Byzantine nobles the imperial treasury crown the so called calipra and tent sneering at the defeated Emperor the Turkish chief Halil placed the crown of the Byzantine Basileus on his own head The young talented military leader Philes Palaeologus saved the situation asking the Emperors for permission to independently recruit troops and commanders to fight the Turks Having selected a small detachment of the most combat ready and brave Philes a warrior weak in body but strong in spirit near the river Xirogypsus successfully destroyed 1 200 Ottomans who were returning to the fortress with booty and Greek captives and after the arrival of reinforcements from the Genoese allied to Constantinople with small losses forced the fortress to surrender 29 Michael IX as unsuccessful commander edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Alanian Turkish Catalan Serbian mercenary detachments and at times simple peasant militias were the only warriors at the head of which Michael IX had to repulse the enemy The fact is that the military organization of the Byzantine Empire by that time was actually destroyed after the initiatives carried out by Andronikos II Andronikos II a purely civilian man considered it unreasonably expensive taking into account the impoverishment of the treasury and inexpedient taking into account the greatly reduced empire within the borders the maintenance of a regular national army 30 31 32 In theory her role could be handled by a professional detachment of mercenaries which again in theory was much cheaper to maintain Andronikos II and his advisers didn t confine themselves to mere arguments Their own armed forces were soon disbanded and instead of them mercenaries were entrusted to guard the borders of the Byzantine Empire But the commanders were unable to curb cowardice greed and rebelliousness in their new soldiers turning into open rebellion and disobedience in a number of cases which strongly questioned the empire s ability to repel enemies and ultimately led to its destruction 33 Obedient to his father Michael IX turned out to be not the person who could radically change the existing system and win victories commanding the peasant militia and the multi tribal mercenary rabble with whom even an outstanding commander could hardly cope and achieve much It is curious that Philes Palaeologus the only Byzantine military leader who achieved victory under Michael IX began by completely refusing to deal with mercenaries and peasant warriors 20 28 Therefore Michael IX was hardly to blame for his own military failures they seem to be a natural consequence of the suicidal military transformations carried out in the Byzantine Empire at that time Private life editBetrothals and marriage Issue edit nbsp Andronikos III Palaiologos 14th century miniature In 1288 Michael IX was betrothed with Catherine of Courtenay titular Latin Empress of Constantinople 3 21 The marriage was proposed by Andronikos II in the hope of reducing the threat of restoring the power of the Latins in the Byzantine Empire and reconciling with both the Holy See and the European monarchs who frightened Constantinople with a new Crusade however after several years of fruitless negotiations and the decisive objection from the French king the purposed union was abandoned by 1295 when Michael IX was already married In addition to Catherine of Courtenay Andronikos II considered a number of other possibles brides for his eldest son marriage proposals from Constantinople went to the Sicilian and Cypriot courts 34 At one time everyone thought that Michael IX would become the husband of Yolande of Aragon sister of King Frederick III of Sicily but this was also not destined to come true In addition Nikephoros I Komnenos Doukas Despot of Epirus proposed his daughter Thamar as a bride for Michael IX but the matter did not go beyond words Finally Andronikos II sent an embassy to Levon II King of Armenia although the ambassadors were captured by pirates the Emperor was not deterred and very soon he sent a new embassy mission led by Theodore Metochites and Patriarch John XII 34 to ask the hand of the Armenian princess Rita The ambassadors returned with the young princess and on their return to Constantinople on 16 January 1294 at Hagia Sophia 35 the marriage between Michael IX and Rita renamed Maria upon her wedding 5 16 34 took place At that time both groom and bride are 16 years old They had four children two sons and two daughters 36 Andronikos III Palaiologos 25 March 1297 15 June 1341 who became Emperor after dethroning his grandfather in 1328 37 Manuel Palaiologos died 1320 He was killed by soldiers of his older brother who had allegedly mistaken him as a rival for the affections of a girl whom young Andronikos III was courting 4 38 Anna Palaiologina died 1320 who married firstly in 1307 with Thomas I Komnenos Doukas Despot of Epirus 39 and secondly in 1318 with Nicholas Orsini Count Palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos and Despot of Epirus 36 40 Theodora Palaiologina died aft 1330 who married firstly in 1308 with Tsar Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria and secondly in 1324 with Tsar Michael Asen III of Bulgaria 36 41 Relationship with stepmother edit After the death of his first wife Anna of Hungary in 1281 Andronikos II entered into a new marriage in 1284 choosing as his wife the 10 year old Yolanda of Montferrato who was renamed Irene Eirene upon her wedding as was customary for foreign princess with strange names in the Byzantine fashion Michael IX and his brother Constantine were only a few years younger than their stepmother As it turned out later this girl became in an ambitious and intriguing woman From her marriage with Andronikos II Irene had seven children of whom only survive four three sons John Palaiologos born in 1286 Theodore Palaiologos born in 1291 and Demetrios Palaiologos born in 1297 and a daughter Simonis Palaiologina born in 1294 later wife of King Stefan Uros II Milutin of Serbia 10 11 so she didn t like the prospect that her stepson Michael IX to the detriment of the interests of her own children would inherit the entire Empire after his father s death Over time Irene was possessed by a deep hatred against her stepson and an obsessive desire to bring her children to the throne The Empress didn t cease day and night alone to bother him that is Andronikos II so that he did one of two things either deprived Emperor Michael of the royal power and divided it between her sons or gave each of them a special part and allocated a special share of their power When the Emperor said that it was impossible to violate the laws of the state bequeathed and approved by many centuries the Empress was angry and annoyed her husband in different ways she was yearning and said that she didn t want to live if she did not see the royal signs on her sons during her lifetime then she pretended not to think about her children and kept herself unapproachable as if enticing her spouse to buy her charms at the cost of fulfilling her views relative to her sons Since this happened often the Emperor finally lost his patience in conclusion he hated her very bed 42 After one of the quarrels with her husband Irene along with her sons had to leave Constantinople and retire to Thessaloniki The conflict between Irene and Michael IX ended only after the death of the Empress in 1317 who however before her death had time to disgrace herself and become famous for her unworthy behavior like her attempts to wash dirty linen in public and tell everyone intimate and shameful details of her married life to everyone she met 43 44 Death editIn October 1319 Michael IX was appointed by his father to govern Thessalonica where according to Nicephorus Gregoras he had to try to put an end to the enmity between the Thessalians and the Pelasgians which had lasted for many years 45 He humbly accepted his father s will and together with his wife Rita Maria went to live in this city despite the well known prophecy at that time according to which Michael IX was destined to die in Thessalonica and which as they say worried him greatly Michael IX died on 12 October 1320 in the city of Thessalonica 5 46 reportedly the cause of his death was because he couldn t stand the news of the successive deaths of his daughter Anna and son Manuel who was mistakenly killed by soldiers of his older brother Andronikos III When the Despot Manuel died of the wound he had received and the rumor of this reached Emperor Michael who was living in Thessaloniki then what to say it struck his heart deeper than any arrow so that suppressed by obsessive thoughts of an unfortunate adventure he underwent a terrible illness which after a little brought him to the grave 36 According to a Byzantine chronicler whose name has not reached today Michael IX was buried in the same place where he died in Thessalonica 5 Michael and the Church edit nbsp Hagios Demetrios at Thessalonica destroyed in 1185 and rebuilt by Michael IX Michael IX was also known for his piety and devotion to the Church In the last period of his life in Thessalonica he ordered the restoration of the Hagios Demetrios church dedicated to Saint Demetrius the patron saint of Thessaloniki after being almost completely destroyed by the Normans in 1185 In particular under his leadership the vaults were re painted the roof made and the temple columns renovated Over the years he issued a large number of church decrees known as chrysobull Golden seal Of greatest interest are his chrysobull of Iviron 1310 and Hilandar March 1305 monasteries by that time plundered by the Catalans after the memorable defeat at Apros and the Brontochion Monastery November 1318 47 According to these documents the monks of these monasteries were exempted from many duties and taxes including the delivery of food and drinks to the state 48 In the chrysobull of Iviron Monastery Michael IX defined his role in the country and society as Patron saint of subjects in the interests of the common good 49 Notes edit PLP 21436 Palaiologos Ἀndronikos II Doykas Ἄggelos Komnhnos Grierson Philip 1999 Catalogue of the Byzantine Coins in the Dumbarton Oaks Collection and in the Whittemore Collection Michael VIII to Constantine XI 1258 1453 Dumbarton Oaks p 95 ISBN 978 0 88402 261 9 a b c d e f g h i j k F Uspensky Istoriya Vizantijskoj imperii v 5 tomah Gl 6 Andronik II Starshij History of the Byzantine Empire in 5 volumes Ch 6 Andronicus II the Elder in Russian a b Nicol 1993 p 153 a b c d e f Malye vizantijskie hroniki Hronika 8 9 10 11c Small Byzantine Chronicles Chronicle number 8 9 10 11c in Russian Malye vizantijskie hroniki Hronika 14 99 Small Byzantine Chronicles Chronicle 14 99 in Russian Giannouli 2013 p 206 a b Georges Pachymeres relations historiques p 99 A Failler Sur un passage mutile de la Chronique breve de 1352 PDF in French pp 61 62 Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 6 2 a b G M Shafrov 2011 Genealogicheskie tablicy po istorii evropejskih gosudarstv Izdanie 5 ispravlennoe i dopolnennoe 340 tablic Genealogical tables on the history of European states Edition 5 revised and supplemented 340 tables in Russian Moscow Yekaterinburg Hilsdale 2014 p 193 G I Bratianu Notes sur le projet de mariage entre l empereur Michel IX Paleologue et Catherine de Courtenay in French Revue Historique du Sud Est Europeen 1 1924 pp 59 62 a b c Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 6 10 Korobeĭnikov 2014 p 273 a b c d Georges Pachymeres relations historiques p 427 a b c J Norwich Istoriya Vizantii History of Byzantium in Russian p 478 Archived 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine A Talbot ed 1975 The Correspondence of Athanasius I Patriarch of Constantinople Letters to the Emperor Andronicus II Members of the Imperial Family and Officials Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies pp 30 32 ISBN 978 0 884 02040 0 P Lamma 1955 Pubblicazioni dell Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore ed Un discorso inedito per l incoronacione di Michele IX Paleologo Aevum in Italian 29 1 Vita e Pensiero 55 56 JSTOR 25820636 a b c d A M Velichko Istoriya vizantijskih imperatorov v 5 tomah History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes PDF in Russian pp 176 177 a b c S D Skazkin Istoriya Vizantii v 3 tomah Gl 5 History of Byzantium in 3 volumes Ch 5 in Russian S B Dashkov Imperatory Vizantii Andronik III Paleolog Emperors of Byzantium Andronicus III Palaeologus Cerkovno Nauchnyj Centr Pravoslavnaya Enciklopediya in Russian a b c d e Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 7 3 a b The Chronicle of Ramon Muntaner PDF Translated by Lady Anna Kinsky Goodenough Cambridge Catalan Series 2000 p 428 J Norwich Istoriya Vizantii History of Byzantium in Russian p 475 Archived 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Chronicle of Ramon Muntaner PDF Translated by Lady Anna Kinsky Goodenough Cambridge Catalan Series 2000 p 436 Bartusis 1992 p 80 a b c Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 7 8 A M Velichko Istoriya vizantijskih imperatorov v 5 tomah History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes PDF in Russian pp 180 181 K V Ryzhov 2002 Vse monarhi mira Andronik II Paleolog Mihail IX Paleolog All the monarchs of the world Andronicus II Palaeologus Michael IX Palaeologus in Russian Moscow Veche ISBN 5 7838 0528 9 J Norwich Istoriya Vizantii History of Byzantium in Russian p 472 Archived 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine S B Dashkov Imperatory Vizantii Andronik II Paleolog Emperors of Byzantium Andronicus II Palaeologus Cerkovno Nauchnyj Centr Pravoslavnaya Enciklopediya in Russian A M Velichko Istoriya vizantijskih imperatorov v 5 tomah History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes PDF in Russian pp 167 168 a b c Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 6 8 Geanakoplos 1975 p 43 a b c d Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 8 1 Russell 2013 p 159 Nicol 1993 p 161 Fine 1994 p 237 Nicol 1993 p 170 Fine 1994 pp 269 270 Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 7 5 A M Velichko Istoriya vizantijskih imperatorov v 5 tomah History of the Byzantine emperors in 5 volumes PDF in Russian pp 184 185 J Norwich Istoriya Vizantii History of Byzantium in Russian pp 478 479 Archived 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Book 7 15 Malye vizantijskie hroniki Hronika 49 2 Small Byzantine Chronicles Chronicle 49 2 in Russian I P Medvedev 1971 Mistra Ocherki istorii i kultury pozdnevizantijskogo goroda Mystras Essays on the history and culture of late Byzantine city in Russian Leningrad ASIN B071SD4M94 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link V A Smetanin Tureckoe nashestvie i voennye izderzhki Vizantii 1282 1453 Turkish invasion and military costs of Byzantium 1282 1453 PDF in Russian K V Khvostova Obshie osobennosti vizantijskoj civilizacii General features of the Byzantine civilization PDF in Russian Archived 27 October 2005 at the Wayback MachineReferences editFailler A ed 1999 Georges Pachymeres relations historiques Vol 3 Paris a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bartusis Mark C 1992 The Late Byzantine Army Arms and Society 1204 1453 University of Pennsylvania Press Fine John Van Antwerp 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472082604 Geanakoplos Deno 1975 Byzantium and the Crusades 1261 1354 In Hazard Harry W ed A History of the Crusades The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries Vol III The University of Wisconsin Press Gregoire de Chypre Eloge d Andronic II Palaiologos PG 142 pp 413 416 Giannouli Antonia 2013 Coronation Speeches in the Palaiologan Period In Beihammer Alexander Constantinou Stavroula Parani Maria eds Court Ceremonies and Rituals of Power in Byzantium and the Medieval Mediterranean Brill Hilsdale Cecily J 2014 Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline Cambridge University Press Korobeĭnikov Dimitri 2014 Byzantium and the Turks in the Thirteenth Century Oxford University Press Nicol Donald M 1993 The Last Centuries of Byzantium 1261 1453 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521439916 Nicephorus Gregoras Byzantine History Vol 1 Saint Petersburg 1862 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Russell Eugenia 2013 Literature and Culture in Late Byzantine Thessalonica Bloomsbury Academic Schopeni L ed 1828 Ioannis Cantacuzeni eximperatoris historiarum Vol 1 4 Bonn Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press 1991 Michael IX PalaiologosPalaiologos dynastyBorn 17 April 1277 Died 12 October 1320 aged 43 Preceded byAndronikos II Palaiologos Byzantine Emperor1294 1320with Andronikos II Palaiologos 1272 1328 Succeeded byAndronikos II Palaiologos andAndronikos III Palaiologos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael IX Palaiologos amp oldid 1180812163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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