Crossing
the
Dardanelles to Abydos, Henry traversed the passes of Ida, and estab-
lished his headquarters at Adramyttium.
Dardanelles to Abydos, Henry traversed the passes of Ida, and estab-
lished his headquarters at Adramyttium.
Cambridge Medieval History - v4 - Eastern Roman Empire
LORDS OF CORFÙ.
[Venice--1206-14. ]
Despots of Epirus 1214-59.
Manfred of Sicily 1259–66.
Chinardo 1266.
Charles I of Anjou 1267.
Charles II of Anjou 1285.
Philip I of Taranto 1294.
Catherine of Valois)
1331.
Robert of Taranto 1346.
Marie de Bourbon 1364.
Philip II of Taranto 1364.
Joanna I of Naples 1373.
Jacques de Baux 1380.
Charles III of Naples 1382–86.
[Venice—1386–1797. ]
Roberti of Te Malos)
VENETIAN COLONIES.
Cephalonia 1483–5; 1500-1797.
Zante 1482-1797.
Cerigo 1363–1797.
Coron"}
Crete. [Genoese occupation 1206-10]
1204–1669. (Two forts till 1715. )
Modon
1206-1500; 1685–1715.
Argos 1388–1463.
Nauplia 1388–1540; 1686–1715.
Monemvasía 1464–1540; 1690–1715.
Lepanto 1407-99; 1687-99.
Negropont 1209-1470.
Ptéleon 1323–1470.
Ægina 1451-1537; 1693–1715.
Tenos 1390-1715.
Myconus 1390–1537.
Northern Sporades 1453–1538.
Corfù 1206–1214; 1386-1797.
Sta. Mavra 1502-3; 1694-1797.
Athens 1394-1402 ; 1466 ; 1687-88.
Patras 1408-13; 1417-19; 1687-1715.
Naxos 1494-1500; 1511-17.
Andros 1437-40; 1507-14.
Paros 1518–20; 1531–36.
Maina 1467-79.
Vostitza 1470.
Amorgos 1370-1446.
Lemnos 1464-79.
Cyprus 1489–1571.
EPJROTE EMPERORS OF SALONICA.
Theodore Angelus. Emperor 1223.
Manuel. Emperor 1230.
John. Emperor 1240; Despot 1242.
Demetrius. Despot 1244–46.
[Annexed to Nicaea 1246. )
KINGS OF CYPRUS.
Guy de Lusignan. Lord of Cyprus 1192.
Amaury de Lusignan. Lord of Cyprus
1194; King 1197; King of Jerusalem
1198.
Hugh I de Lusignan. King of Cyprus
1205.
Henry I de Lusiguan 1218.
Hugh II de Lusignan 1253.
## p. 477 (#519) ############################################
Tables of Rulers
477
Hugh III de Lusignan 1267; Titular Johu II de Lusignan 1432; Titular King
King of Jerusalem 1269.
of Jerusalem; King of Armenia.
John I de Lusignan 1284; Titular King Charlotte de Lusiguan 1458; +1487;
of Jerusalem.
Titular Queen of Jerusalem; Queen of
Henry II de Lusignan 1285; Titular Armenia.
King of Jerusalem.
James II de Lusignan 1460; +6 July
[Amaury de Lusignan: Regent 1306-10. ) 1473; Titular King of Jerusalem; King
Hugh IV de Lusiguan 1324; Titular King of Armenia.
of Jerusalem.
(Caterina Cornaro Regent 1473-4. ]
Peter I de Lusignan 1359; Titular King
James III de Lusignan, b. 27 August
of Jerusalem; King of Armenia 1368. 1473; Titular King of Jerusalem; King
Peter II de Lusignan 1369; Titular King
of Armenia.
of Jerusalem.
Caterina Cornaro 1474-89; +1510; Titular
James I de Lusiguan 1382; Titular King
Queen of Jerusalem; Queen of Armenia.
of Jerusalem; King of Armenia 1393.
[Venice-1489-1571. ]
Janus de Lusignan 1398; Titular King of
Jerusalem; King of Armenia.
N. B. The Kings of Cyprus also bore the titles of King of Jerusalem 1198–1205,
and from 1269 onward, and of King of (Little) Armenia 1368-9, and from 1393
onward.
RHODES.
Leo Gabalâs 1204.
[Annexed to Nicaea 1256. ]
John Gabalâs. Between 1234 and 1248–56.
[Saracens c. 1282-1309. )
(Genoese 1248-50. ]
Knights of St John 1309–1523.
GENOESE COLONIES.
Smyrna 1261-c. 1300; 1344-1402.
Foglia (Phocaea) 1275–1340 ; 1346–48.
Vecchia 1358-1455.
Nuova 1351-1455.
Chios 1304–29 ; 1346–1566. [Venetian
1694-95. ]
Samos 1304-29; 1346–1475.
Icaria 1304-29; 1346–1481. [Knights of
St John 1481-1523; Venetian 1694-
95. ]
Psará 1346-1475.
Lesbos 1333-36; 1355-1462.
Thasos 1307-13; c. 1434 (or ? c. 1419)-
1455. [Papal 1456-59; Venetian
1464-79. ]
Lemnos 1453–56. [Papal 1456-58 ; Ve-
netian 1464-79; 1656–57. ]
Aenus c. 1384-1456.
Samothrace c. 1431–56. [Papal 1456–59;
Venetian 1466-79. ]
Imbros 1453–56. [Venetian 1466-79. ]
Famagosta 1374-1464.
CH. XV
## p. 478 (#520) ############################################
478
CHAPTER XVI.
THE EMPIRE OF NICAEA AND THE RECOVERY
OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
The capture of Constantinople, by the Latins did not for long leave
the Greeks without a centre round which to rally. At Trebizond on the
shores of the Black Sea, and at Nicaea, the city of the Nicene creed, two
Greek Empires rose out of the fragments of that which had fallen, while
a third Hellenic principality was founded in Epirus, which in its turn
became for a brief period the Empire of Salonica. It was reserved for
the second of these creations to reconquer Constantinople and thus to
become merged in the restored Byzantine Empire, while the first
survived by a little the Turkish conquest of Byzantium.
Theodore Lascaris, the founder of the Empire of Nicaea, was about
thirty years of age at the time of the sack of Constantinople. The scion
of a distinguished Byzantine family, he had been considered worthy of
the hand of the fair Anna, second daughter of the Emperor Alexius III;
he had given proof of his courage during the operations against the
Bulgarian traitor, Ivanko, in the mountains of Rhodope, and during the
siege of the capital; and, despite his rather insignificant personal appear-
ance, these qualities had led to his election in the great church of the
Divine Wisdom to the imperial throne, vacant by the flight of
Moúrtzouphlos. Without waiting to assume the imperial symbols, he
made a last effort to rally the defenders of the city, and then, seeing
that all was lost, fled with his wife and his three daughters across the
Sea of Marmora and called upon the people of Nicaea to receive him as
their lawful sovereign? .
The spot which was to be the refuge of fallen Hellenism was well
chosen. Nicaea was not then the feverish village which six centuries of
Turkish rule have made it, but a great and prosperous city. Situated
on the lake of Askania, neither too far from the sea for commerce nor
1 We may reject the unsupported statement of Albricus Trium Fontium
(M. G. H. Script. , xxr. 885) that he first approached Baldwin I with the offer
to subdue Asia Minor to the Latins.
## p. 479 (#521) ############################################
Description of Nicaea
479
too near it for corsairs, it “lacked,” in the phrase of a native writer',
“ neither safety, nor grace. ” The fertile plains of Bithynia provided it
with corn and wine; the lake abounded in fish, and the city in excellent
water, while cypresses and other trees rendered it a pleasant residence.
No wonder, then, that the Byzantine Emperors had chosen it as the chief
town of the Opsician province, that the Seljūq Sultans had made it
their capital. The natural defence afforded by the lake, which the
crusaders had found such a serious obstacle a century before this time,
had been further strengthened by art, and its defenders boasted that it
was impregnable. Splendid walls with projecting towers, still surviving
in their picturesque decay, then protected the circular city, whose fine
houses and richly decorated churches attested the wealth and piety of
the inhabitants. Two of these churches, that of the Divine Wisdom
and that of the Falling Asleep of the Virgin, still remain, and the
mosaics of the latter shew that the praises of the local panegyrist were
not exaggerated. Well-organised hospitals sheltered the leper, and it
was the boast of the citizens that their philanthropic foundations
excelled those of other towns. Such was Nicaea in the thirteenth
century.
The inhabitants at first declined to receive Lascaris within their
walls, and it was only with difficulty that he persuaded them to give
shelter to his wife. Doubtless in their eyes his father-in-law, Alexius III,
was still the lawful Emperor, and their loyalty may have been stimulated
by the remembrance of the siege which they had endured at the hands of
Andronicus I twenty years before, when they had committed the mistake
of taking the wrong side in a civil war. . For a time he wandered about
Bithynia, trying in vain to obtain recognition, till the aid of Theodore
Angelus? , brother and successor of the first Despot of Epirus, and an
alliance with the Seljūq Sultan, Kai-Khusrū I, enabled him to become
master of Prusa and the neighbouring country. He was greeted as
Despot by his new subjects, a title which policy and the absence of the
Patriarch suggested as wiser for the moment than the dignity of
Emperor.
The founder of this new Greek state had, indeed, many rivals to
propitiate or subdue. Asia Minor in 1204 was divided between ten
rulers of four different nationalities. While the greater part belonged
to the Seljūq Sultans of Iconium, the Cilician kingdom of Armenia
occupied the south, and a large colony of Armenians was settled in the
Troad. At Trebizond, in the same month in which Constantinople fell,
young Alexius, grandson of Andronicus I, established himself with the
aid of a Georgian contingent, provided by the care of his paternal
aunt Thamar. The family of Comnenus was popular on the Black
Sea coast, whence it had originally come, and where men still remem-
1 Theodore Metochítes, Nekaeus, apud Sáthas, Megalovik) B. BA100nxn, 1. 140 et 899.
2 Mustoxidi, Delle Cose Corciresi, lv.
CH. XVI.
## p. 480 (#522) ############################################
480
Partition of Asia Minor
bered the residence of the grandfather of Alexius among them, for a
tyrant in the capital may often be the idol of the provinces. Accor-
dingly, in the pompous style of that age, he called himself Grand-
Comnenus and Emperor, and his successors preserved both the adjective
and the imperial title for 250 years. While Oenaeum and Sinope, as well
as Trebizond, declared for the new Emperor, his brother David pushed
the fortunes of the family farther to the west ; a body of Georgians and
native mercenaries helped him to subdue Paphlagonia, the cradle of his
race, and he was soon able to proclaim Alexius at Heraclea and to
extend the Trapezuntine Empire to the banks of the Sangarius. But
the two brothers were not the only Greek competitors of Lascaris. In
the middle of the Black Sea coast their conquests were interrupted by
the petty sovereignty of Sábbas at Samsûn; the old rebel Mankaphas,
nicknamed “Mad Theodore,” who had assumed the imperial title in the
time of Isaac II, had once more made himself master of Philadelphia;
while Mavrozómes had secured a strong position on the Maeander by
giving his daughter's hand to the Seljūq Sultan. The Latin element
was already represented by two Venetian colonies at Lampsacus and at
Pegae on the Hellespont, the former a fief of the Quirini ; and by a
Levantine branch of the great Pisan family of Aldobrandini at Attalia? .
The partition treaty had assigned large portions of Asia Minor to
the Latin Emperor; among them “the provinces of Nicomedia, Tarsia,
Paphlagonia, Denaeum and Sinope, Laodicea and the Maeander with the
appurtenances of Samsûn "—in other words practically the whole of the
territory occupied by Lascaris and the Grand-Comnenus. In pursuance
of this arrangement, Baldwin I granted large territories beyond the Sea
of Marmora as fiefs to his faithful followers: Nicaea with the title of
Duke, then considered to be one of the greatest dignities of the East, to
Count Louis of Blois, a rich and redoubtable noble, who was nephew of
the King of England and had held the banner at the coronation of
the first Latin Emperor; Philadelphia, likewise coupled with a ducal
coronet, to Stephen of Perche. Of the two great religious orders, the
Knights of St John received a quarter of the so-called “Duchy of
Neokastra”—the "new forts” of Adramyttium, Pergamus, and Chliara;
the Templars Aldobrandino's city of Attalia'. It was clear from the
outset that Lascaris would have to fight for his new dominions against
the Latin invader as well as the native enemy.
On 1 November 1204 the French Duke of Nicaea sent two trusty
henchmen, Pierre de Bracheuil and Payen d'Orléans, with a force of
120 knights to take possession of his Asiatic fief. Landing at the Latin
1 Acropolita, 1. 12; Bessarion apud Fallmerayer, Geschichte des Kaiserthums
von Trapezunt, 78; Panarétos, in Néos ‘EXAnvouvnuwv, iv. 256.
2 Now Adalia. Fontes Rerum Austriacarum. Abt. II. , B. xiii. 208–10; Nicetas,
795, 842.
3 Pauli, Codice Diplomatico, 1. 93; Epistolarum Innocentii III, Lib. ix. 180.
## p. 481 (#523) ############################################
The Franks in Asia Minor
481
colony of Pegae, where they were sure of a welcome, they occupied the
now important town of Panderma, and on 6 December met the army of
Lascaris beneath the walls of Poimanenón, a strong castle to the south-
east. Despite the inequality of numbers, the superior prowess of the
armoured Frankish knights decided the fate of the battle; the Greeks
fled, and the neighbouring city of Lopadium, now the village of Ulubad,
but then one of the fairest towns in the country and the bulwark of
Prusa, opened its gates to the clemency of the victors. Prusa, however,
protected by its strong natural position and its high walls, resisted their
attack, and the abandonment of the siege encouraged the native popu-
lation to revolt against their rule, which, though admittedly humane,
was still that of a foreign race and an alien creed. A second detachment
of Franks, under the Latin Emperor's brother, Henry, now accepted the
invitation of the Armenians who dwelt in the Troad, and who probably
belonged to the Latin faith, to renew the exploits of the Trojan war,
one of the few classical memories known to the crusaders.
Crossing the
Dardanelles to Abydos, Henry traversed the passes of Ida, and estab-
lished his headquarters at Adramyttium. Thither a second Greek army,
under the command of Theodore's brother Constantine, marched to
attack him. But this second pitched battle, fought on 19 March 1205,
was even more disastrous to the Greeks than the first; they lost many
men and much booty, and the people of the country began to pay
tribute to the invaders. A third attempt, this time by the “mad”
tyrant of Philadelphia, was defeated by the personal courage of Henry
and the irresistible rush of the French cavalry. This success
completed by the occupation of Nicomedia by a third detachment of
Franks under Macaire de Ste. Menehould, the Lord High Steward. Five
brief months had sufficed for the conquest of the entire rich province of
Opsicium and more beside; the whole of north-west Asia Minor from
Adramyttium to Nicomedia recognised the Latin Empire ; Nicaea and
Prusa alone held out for Lascaris.
At this moment, however, the Greeks of Asia were saved by the
nation which they are wont to consider as their greatest enemy in
Europe. Their fellow-countrymen in Thrace had summoned Kalojan,
the Bulgarian Tsar, against the Franks, and Baldwin felt compelled to
recall his brother and the other French leaders from Asia Minor to his
aid against this new foe. Henry and the other two detachments
hastened to obey his command; of all their conquests they retained
only Pegae, as a military and naval base on the Hellespont; and with
them the Armenian colony of the Troad crossed over into Europe, for
fear of reprisals from the Greeks. Thus abruptly ended the first
attempt of the Franks to conquer Asia Minor. The first and last
French Duke of Nicaea fell in a Bulgarian ambuscade before Philippo-
polis, without ever having set foot in his Asiatic duchy?
1 Epistolarum Innocentii III, Lib. viii. 131. Cf. also supra, Chapter xiv, p. 424.
was
C. MED. H. VOL. IV. CH. XVI.
31
## p. 482 (#524) ############################################
482
Theodore I proclaimed Emperor
Lascaris availed himself of the departure of the Franks to occupy
the places which they had evacuated, and his perseverance seemed to
warrant the assumption of the imperial title. It was necessary, how-
ever, first to elect a Patriarch; for the Ecumenical throne was vacant.
But Nicaea had by this time become the home of all that was most
learned in the ecclesiastical world of Greece, so that the election of a
Patriarch caused no difficulty. The newly-elected Patriarch hastened
to crown Theodore Emperor, and the historian Nicetas composed an
address which the monarch was to deliver on this occasion, enforcing the
obedience of his subjects and setting forth the reunion of all the Greeks
under his sceptre and the recapture of Constantinople as the objects of
his reign. Thus, in the spring of 1206, two years after his flight from
the fallen city, Theodore Lascaris was crowned at Nicaea? .
No sooner was he invested with the imperial dignity, than he began to
carry out the programme which Nicetas had traced for him. A politic
truce with Henry, now Latin Emperor and fully occupied in Europe,
set him free to turn his undivided attention to his Greek rivals.
“Mad Theodore," Sábbas, and Mavrozómes were driven from their
respective possessions; the two former vanished from history; the third,
as the father-in-law of so influential a potentate as Kai-Khusrū, with
whom Lascaris wished to remain at peace, received back a strip of terri-
tory, including Chonae, the birthplace of Nicetas himself. The next
blow was dealt at the Empire of Trebizond. Alexius had offended the
Seljūq Sultan, who besieged his capital”; David, taking advantage of the
evacuation of Nicomedia by the French, had sent his young general,
Synadenós, to occupy that city. But this inexperienced strategist was
surprised by the abler Lascaris, who led his troops through a difficult
mountain
pass
and even wielded the axe himself to remove the trees
from his path. Such energy was bound to be successful; Synadenós was
taken prisoner; David was forced to restrict the Trapezuntine frontier
to Heraclea, and even from there the Emperor of Nicaea threatened to
drive him farther eastward. At this, in self-preservation, David called
in the Franks to his aid.
The Franks had been ready to ally themselves with the sole remaining
Greek rival of Lascaris, for they complained that he had broken his
truce with them, and they were anxious to prevent the growth of a
Greek naval power, of which he had laid the foundations under the
guidance of a Calabrian corsair? Accordingly, towards the end of 1206,
Henry sent Pierre de Bracheuil and Payen d'Orléans for the second
time to Asia Minor, with the promise that Bracheuil should have Pegae
and Cyzicus with the island of Marmora as a fief, while Thierri de Loos,
1 After March 20, the date of the Patriarch's election. Kállistos apud Migne,
P. G. cxlvii. 465.
Recueil des historiens des Croisades. Historiens Orientaux, 11. pt i. 101.
3 Μιχαήλ Ακομινάτου τα σωζόμενα, ΙΙ. 159.
## p. 483 (#525) ############################################
Second Frankish Invasion
483
the Seneschal of the Latin Empire, was invested with Nicomedia.
This second Frankish invasion repeated on a smaller scale the achieve-
ments of the first. From Pegae as a base Bracheuil occupied and re-
fortified the peninsula of Cyzicus, and the Seneschal, sailing direct from
Constantinople to Nicomedia, speedily converted its beautiful minster
of the Divine Wisdom into his castle. Two other French nobles,
Macaire de Ste. Menehould and Guillaume de Sains, established them-
selves at Hereke to the north of the Gulf of Izmid and at Gemlik, or
Civitot, as the crusaders called it, the port of Nicaea and Prusa, thus
cutting off both those cities from the sea. Thus hemmed in by the
Franks, Lascaris sent envoys to the Bulgarian Tsar, urging him to
attack Constantinople. Once again Kalojan created a welcome diversion
in Thrace, and once again it was necessary to recall the French to
Europe. Only small garrisons were left to hold the Frankish quadri-
lateral.
Theodore at once proceeded to attack these isolated fortresses. So
fierce was the fighting at Civitot, that only five of its brave defenders
remained unwounded when Henry arrived in haste from Constantinople
to its relief, and such was its condition that he decided to withdraw the
garrison and abandon it. Cyzicus was so closely invested by land and
sea that a second expedition was required to raise the siege ; Thierri de
Loos was captured outside the walls of Nicomedia, and its fortified
minster would have been taken, had not Henry returned to save it.
Then a truce for two years was concluded; the Greeks released their
prisoners, the French evacuated Cyzicus and Nicomedia, and their
fortifications were destroyed. Pegae seems already to have fallen; only
Hereke remained Frankish.
The truce, though equally beneficial to both parties, was soon
broken. David, ever on the watch for an opportunity of attacking the
rival Emperor of the East, wrote to Constantinople, begging that he
might be included among the subjects, and that his land might be
considered a part, of the Latin Empire. Thus sure of Henry's support,
he crossed the Sangarius, invaded the dominions of Lascaris with a
body of Frankish auxiliaries, and at first carried all before him. But
Theodore's general, Andronicus Gídos, suddenly fell upon the Franks
at a moment when they were isolated in the “Rough Passes” of
Nicomedia ; scarcely a man survived to tell the tale. Assistance sent
by Henry merely postponed the fall of Heraclea, which was annexed
with Amastris to the Empire of Nicaea. The only important Frankish
success was the recovery of Pegae by its feudal lord, Pierre de Bracheuil.
No wonder that Lascaris complained to the Pope of such breaches
of the truce, begged his Holiness to induce the Franks to conclude
a permanent peace with him, making the sea the boundary between him
and them, and threatened, if these terms were refused, to join the Bul-
garians against them. Innocent III replied bidding him render homage
CH. XVI.
31-2
## p. 484 (#526) ############################################
484
Defeat and death of Kai-Khusrū I
war.
to the Emperor Henry and obedience to the Holy Father, whose legate
might then intervene on his behalf at Constantinople. Theodore's
response was an attempt to recapture the imperial city, an enterprise
in which he was aided by the French lord of Pegae, turned traitor to his
lawful sovereign? . Thus early were the Latins divided against them-
selves, and even men of good family entered the service of the Greeks.
A new enemy,
and one of his own household, now arose to disturb
the career of Lascaris and the peace of Asia Minor. The fugitive
Emperor Alexius III, after wandering about Europe, arrived at the
court of Kai-Khusrū, whom, years before, he had sheltered, baptised, and
adopted at Constantinople. The dethroned monarch begged the Sultan
to obtain for him, as the rightful Emperor of the Greeks, the crown
which his son-in-law had usurped. Thinking that his guest might prove
a serviceable instrument of his own designs, the ambitious Sultan, who
had not forgotten that his predecessors had once ruled at Nicaea, sent
an ultimatum to Theodore, offering him the alternative of instant
abdication or Theodore's reply was to march against him to
Antioch on the Maeander, whither he had advanced with Alexius. The
battle was at first unfavourable to Lascaris; 800 Latin mercenaries, who,
despite the Papal excommunication, accompanied him, were annihilated,
and the Sultan struck him a tremendous blow on the head, which caused
him to fall from his horse. For a moment the Emperor seemed at the
mercy of his opponent; but with great presence of mind he drew his
sword, and severed the hind legs of the mare which the Sultan rode.
Kai-Khusrū fell ; in an instant his head was cut off, and stuck on a spear
in full sight of his army? Deprived of their leader, the Seljüqs were
glad to make peace; the victor took Alexius with him to Nicaea,
blinded himn (according to one accounts), and placed him in the
monastery of Hyakinthos, where he died. So dramatic a triumph
inspired the imagination, or rather the rhetoric, of the two chief living
men of letters. Nicetas composed a panegyric of the victor who had
routed the hitherto invincible Turks, and his brother, the ex-Metro-
politan of Athens, sent a letter of congratulation from his exile in Ceos,
in which he compared Lascaris to Hercules and Basil “the Bulgar-slayer.
Lascaris himself issued a manifesto to the Greek world, promising that,
if all his countrymen would but help him, he would“ soon free the land
from the Latin dogs”; and they offered their aid if he would attack
Constantinople.
The news had, however, a very different effect upon the Latin
Emperor. His comment on the victory was that “the victor had been
ܪ܂
2
1 Buchon, Recherches et Matériaux, 11. 211.
Acropolita (17) says that the Sultan was beheaded by an unknown hand;
Nicetas (Megawin Bißlco0vxn, 1. 132), in a rhetorical passage, and Abū 'l-Fidā
(Historiens Orientaux, 1. 86), attribute his death to the Emperor.
3 Sathas, Μεσαιωνική Βιβλιοθήκη, VΙΙ. 457.
## p. 485 (#527) ############################################
Third Frankish Invasion
485
vanquished,” for he reckoned the loss of the Latin mercenaries as more
than counterbalancing the defeat of the Turks. He knew, however,
that the Greeks were flushed with their success and meditated an assault
upon the imperial city, so he resolved to wait no longer, but attack
them first. Accordingly he crossed to Pegae, now the sole possession
of the Franks in Asia Minor, and held since Bracheuil's treachery
by Henri de Grangerin', whereupon Lascaris took to the mountains.
The murmurs of his own subjects, whose property was thus exposed to
the raids of the Frankish cavalry, forced the Greek Emperor, however, to
give battle. The two armies met at the river Rhyndakos on 15 October
1211, and although the Greek host was greatly superior in numbers and
was aided by a fresh band of Latin renegades, the victory rested with
Henry, who, according to the account which he has left us of this
campaign, did not lose a single man. At this the Greeks right up to
the Seljūq frontier submitted to the victor, whose kindness to the
vanquished was proverbial. A few castles alone held out for Theodore,
and Henry announced from Pergamus to all his friends his triumph over
the four enemies of his empire, of whom Lascaris was the first and fore-
most. Ere long his standards had reached as far south as Nymphaeum
near Smyrna, as far east as Poimanenón and Lentianá near Prusa. But
it was easier to overrun Asia Minor than to hold it, for the Franks were
but a handful of men, and Henry appealed in vain for military colonists
from the west. He therefore came to terms with his adversary: he was
to retain the Troad and north-west Asia Minor as far as Lopadium ; to
the east of that, and from Adramyttium southward to Smyrna, lay the
dominions of Lascaris; a neutral uninhabited zone was left between the
two Empires and a strong frontier guard prevented emigration from one
to the other. Even this restricted Frankish territory was perforce
entrusted to the charge of a Greek garrison under a Greek commander.
Theodore had made what proved to be a durable peace with the
Franks, broken only by a raid of the Duke of Naxos which he avenged
by the capture of his enemy; but the new Seljūq Sultan, Kai-Kā’ūs 1,
had not forgotten the death of his father. In 1214 or 1215, a fortunate
raid delivered the Greek Emperor into his hand ; his first impulse was to
kill his prisoner, but he contented himself with a ransom and the
cession of several castles and towns. Such sudden reverses of fortune
were characteristic of this period of Greek history. Kai-Kā'ús continued
his career of conquest, took Sinope from the Empire of Trebizond, slew
David, who commanded there, and compelled the Emperor Alexius to pay
tribute and to render him military service? .
For several years Theodore remained at peace with the Latin
Emperor, while the hand of his own sister secured him the friendship of
the Duke of Naxos. He had meanwhile been left a widower; and, after
i Recueil des historiens des Croisades. Lois, 11. 470.
2 Ibid. , Historiens Orientaux, 1. 87; Papadopoulos-Keraméus, Fontes, 131.
. XVI.
## p. 486 (#528) ############################################
486
Theodore's death. His character
an unfortunate alliance with an Armenian princess, he married the
daughter of the Latin Empress Yolande, Maria de Courtenay, a politic
match which might give him a claim to her brother's throne. In fact,
during the interregnum which elapsed before the arrival of the
Emperor Robert at Constantinople in 1221, he planned a second attack
upon that city. His plan was frustrated by a counter-attack; he made
peace with his brother-in-law, and was only prevented by death from
strengthening their relationship and therewith his own claims by giving
the hand of his daughter Eudocia to Robert. He died in 1222, and was
laid beside his first wife and her father Alexius III in the monastery of
Hyakinthos at Nicaea. He had living one son by his Armenian
consort, but as this child was only eight years old, he bequeathed his
empire to the second husband of his eldest daughter-John Ducas
Vatatzes.
The Greeks, as their historians acknowledged, owed a great debt to
Theodore Lascaris as the re-founder of the fallen empire. In the face of
great difficulties he obtained recognition as the leader of Hellenism in
Asia, and even the Franks admired his courage and his military skill.
He was generous to his friends, and if he once, as was said, flayed an
enemy alive, the man was a double-dyed traitor and a disgrace to French
chivalry. As a diplomatist, he shewed the audacity which the times
demanded, and availed himself of those opportunities for playing off one
race against another which the Eastern question has always afforded ;
while he displayed the talent of a constructive statesman in making his
new capital the centre of all that was best in the Greek world. From
Euboea and Thrace, as well as from Byzantium, the local aristocracy
flocked to his court; he and his family were addressed by the begging-
letter writers of the Bosphorus; he sheltered the historian Nicetas, who
repaid him by three panegyrics, and he tried to attract the historian's
brother from his lonely island. Under his auspices, Nicaea became a
learned city, where rhetoric and poetry could be studied, while at
Smyrna Demetrius Karykes, called “ the chief of philosophers,” gave
lectures on logic. But the patriotism and common-sense of the
sovereign made him discourage those nice theological discussions which
were the delight of Byzantine divines, and which might have been
expected to find a congenial atmosphere in the city which had witnessed
two great Councils of the Church. Theodore was, however, fully alive to
the value of the hierarchy as a national and political force. He had
established the Patriarchate in his capital, and he supported the efforts
of the Patriarch for the Union of the Churches at a synod to be held
there. But this scheme failed ; both the Greeks of Epirus and the
Greeks of Trebizond declined to acknowledge the authority of the
Patriarch of Nicaea, whose actual jurisdiction was further restricted by
1 Blemmýdes, 4.
## p. 487 (#529) ############################################
John III Vatatzes succeeds
487
the creation of an autocephalous Serbian Church and of two Latin
bishoprics, one at Nicomedia, the other at Troy'.
During the later and more peaceful years of his reign, Theodore
encouraged trade with the Venetians, to whom he granted freedom from
customs dues throughout his empire, and for this a proper system of
coinage was required. Five issues of gold coins bear his image and
superscription, while inscriptions on towers at Prusa, at Nicaea, and at
Bender-Eregli still preserve his name and serve as an example of the
many buildings which he erected.
In the same year as Theodore, died his rival, the first Emperor of
Trebizond. Cut off by the Turkish occupation of Sinope from all hope of
expansion to the west, he seems to have turned his attention to the
northern coast of the Black Sea, and to have made the Crimea tributary
to Trebizond. His Asiatic Empire now extended no farther westward
than Oenaeum and the river Thermodon, while Savastopoli 18 hours
beyond Trebizond was its eastern boundary? But his capital was
deemed impregnable, alike by nature and art. Its mild climate, its
vineyards and oliveyards, its excellent water, and its abundant supply of
wood combined to make it, in the phrase of an enthusiastic panegyrist,
“ the apple of the eye of all Asia. ” It had long been under the special
protection of St Eugenius, whose monastery, and that of “the Golden-
headed Virgin,” were already features of the city.
John III Vatatzes, the second Emperor of Nicaea, was not long
allowed to occupy the throne unopposed. Two of Theodore's brothers
could not brook the succession of this Thracian nobleman, who, if he
belonged to a good family and had held high office at Court, was only
connected by marriage with the founder of the Empire. By money and
promises they raised a Frankish force at Constantinople, and returned at
its head to Asia Minor. Vatatzes met them near Poimanenón, the scene
of the battle twenty years before, and by his personal courage won a
decisive victory. Four neighbouring Frankish fortresses fell into his
hands, and in 1225 the Latin Emperor was glad to obtain peace by the
cession of Pegae, The Franks, in the words of one of their own
chroniclers, lost “nearly all the land which had been won beyond the
Hellespont”; they abandoned the Troad, and retained nothing but the
territory near Constantinople and Nicomedia. Well might the enthusi-
astic Patriarch bid them begone to their own countryEven beyond
the coasts of Asia Minor the long arm of the Greek Emperor smote
them. His fleet not only watched the Dardanelles from the former
factory of the Quirini at Lampsacus and intercepted vessels coming from
the west to Constantinople, but captured the four islands of Lesbos,
Chios, Samos, and Icaria, which had been assigned to the Latin
1 VV, 11. 275; Epistolarum Innocentii III, Lib. xiv. 90.
2 Papadopoulos-Keraméus, Fontes, 117-8.
3 Revue des études grecques, vii. 76.
CH. XVI.
## p. 488 (#530) ############################################
488
Conspirucies against Vatatzes
Empire by the partition treaty. An expedition in 1233 against Leo
Gabalâs, the “ Lord of Rhodes and the Cyclades,” who bore the proud
title of “ Caesar," and asserted his independence of the Greek Emperor,
failed, however, to take his famous fortress. Another naval under-
taking in aid of the Cretans, who had risen against Venice, was equally
unsuccessful. The Emperor's troops did, indeed, capture several Cretan
fortresses, and a detachment of them held out for some years in the
island. But the expedition cost him nearly the whole of his fleet,
shipwrecked in a storm off the island of Cerigo.
Vatatzes had defeated the Franks; but he still had enemies to fear
within his own court. The capture of the late sovereign's brothers at the
battle of Poimanenón, and the loss of their eyesight as the penalty of
their treason, had rendered them harmless ; but a fresh conspiracy,
organised by his first cousin Nestóngos and several other magnates, was
discovered at the very moment when he was fighting against his
country's foes.
The Emperor's clemency towards the principal con-
spirator, who was merely imprisoned and then allowed to escape,
surprised his contemporaries. But from that moment he surrounded
himself with guards, and listened to the prayers of his wife that he
would be careful of a life so valuable to his country. It was probably
about this time that he moved the capital to Nymphaeum, his favourite
winter residence, which thenceforth continued to be the seat of govern-
ment till the recapture of Constantinople, while the fertile plain near
Clazomenae was chosen as the imperial villeggiatura in spring. Nicaea
remained, however, the seat of the Patriarch, and it was there that the
Emperors were crowned.
The election of the old warrior John of Brienne as Latin Emperor
inspired the Franks with the hope of recovering the territory which they
had lost in Asia Minor by the last peace. One of the conditions of his
election was that he should have “the Duchy of Nicomedia," and that
“the Kingdom of Nicaea with all its appurtenances and all the land that
the Latins ever possessed beyond the Hellespont, comprising the Duchy
of Neokastra,"2 should become the domain of Baldwin II. John waited
patiently till he had made adequate preparations for the re-conquest of
these hypothetical “kingdoms" and "duchies” and till a favourable
moment for attack should arrive. The exhaustion of the Greek forces
after their unsuccessful expedition against Rhodes in 1233 seemed to be
a suitable opportunity, and the Latin Emperor landed at Lampsacus.
But Vatatzes, though his forces were diminished in numbers, proved
himself so clever a strategist that he compelled his adversaries to hug
the shore where their fleet was constantly at hand. One important suc-
cess, the recapture of Pegae, was the sole result of this long-planned
1 Blemmýdes, 61-2; Schlumberger, Numismatique de l'Orient latin, 215;
Pl. viii. 17, 18.
2 Fontes Rerum Austriacarum, Abt. 11. xiii. 265.
יל
## p. 489 (#531) ############################################
Greco-Bulgarian Alliance
489
campaign? . John returned to Constantinople, nor did the Franks
re-attempt the invasion of Asia Minor. Henceforth it was not they but
the rejuvenated Greek Empire which could take the offensive, and it
became the object of Vatatzes to carry out the aspirations of his
predecessor and drive them from their diminished dominions alike in
Europe and in Asia.
With this policy in view, he sought an alliance with the hereditary
enemy of his race, the Bulgarian Tsar, John Asên II, whose signal
victory over the victorious Greeks of Epirus on the field of Klokotinitza
had made him the dominant factor in Balkan politics. The engagement
of their children, both still in the schoolroom, seemed to guarantee their
co-operation against the Franks, and Vatatzes celebrated the capture of
the Venetian colony of Gallipoli and the betrothal of his son Theodore
in rapid succession. Thrace was soon almost entirely freed from the
Latins, and the Empire of Nicaea for the first time extended into
Europe, where the river Maritza became the frontier between the Greek
and the Slavonic states. The allies even laid siege to Constantinople
“with infinite thousands of armed men," till the approaching winter of
1235 compelled them to return to their homes.
