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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Ancient History, Late Roman And Byzantine > Constantinople, Latin Empire of
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Constantinople, Latin Empire of, Ancient History, Late Roman And Byzantine

Related Category: Ancient History, Late Roman And Byzantine

Constantinople, Latin Empire of, 1204–61, feudal empire established in the S Balkan Peninsula and the Greek archipelago by the leaders of the Fourth Crusade (see Crusades) after they had sacked (1204) Constantinople; also known as the empire of Romania (not to be confused with the modern nation Romania). Its secular and ecclesiastic governments were carefully divided among the Crusaders and their Venetian creditors. It was on both sides of the Dardanelles; its rulers were also suzerains of the kingdom of Thessalonica, the principality of Achaia, and other fiefs. Baldwin I, Henry of Flanders, Peter of Courtenay and his wife, Yolande, Robert of Courtenay, John of Brienne, and Baldwin II were rulers. The empire declined immediately after its creation, being beset by the Greek emperors of Nicaea (see Nicaea, empire of) and despots of Epirus (see Epirus, despotate of), by the Bulgars under Ivan II (Ivan Asen), by the Turks, by discord among the Westerners, and by Greek resistance. In 1222, Thessalonica fell to the despot of Epirus. By 1224 the Nicaean Emperor John III had recovered Asia Minor. Constantinople, nearly captured by Ivan Asen in 1234, fell to Emperor Michael VIII in 1261. Venice, however, retained possession of most of the Greek isles, the duchy of Athens passed under Catalan rule, and Achaia stayed in the hands of the Villehardouin family until 1278.

See W. Miller, The Latins in the Levant (1908, repr. 1964); D. E. Queller, ed., The Latin Conquest of Constantinople (1971).



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Athens, city, Greece
Baldwin I, Latin emperor of Constantinople
Baldwin II, Latin emperor of Constantinople
Byzantine Empire
Crusades
Epirus, despotate of
Flanders
Greece
Hainaut
Henry of Flanders
Ivan II
John III, Byzantine emperor of Nicaea
John of Brienne
Michael VIII, Byzantine emperor
Nicaea, empire of
Peloponnesus
Robert of Courtenay
ThessalonIki
Villehardouin

Related Categories:

History > Ancient Greece and Rome
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