- The
House of
Angelos (/ˈænɡəloʊs/; pl.
Angeloi; Gr****: Ἄγγελος, pl. Ἄγγελοι,
female version Angelina, Ἀγγελίνα),
Latinised as Angelus, was a Byzantine...
- The
Angeloi rose to the
throne following the
deposition of
Andronikos I Komnenos, the last male-line
Komnenos to rise to the throne. The
Angeloi were...
-
feudalism in the Empire. The
Komnenian successes were
undone by the
subsequent Angeloi dynasty,
leading to the
dissolution of the
Empire at the
hands of the Fourth...
-
Byzantine Anatolia refers to the
peninsula of
Anatolia (located in present-day Turkey)
during the rule of the
Byzantine Empire.
Anatolia was of
vital importance...
- Iconium,
Isaac failed to
seize the initiative. The
internal policy of the
Angeloi was
characterized by the
squandering of the
public treasure, and the fiscal...
- the
formation of the
Second Bulgarian Empire. The
internal policy of the
Angeloi was
characterised by the
squandering of the
public treasure and fiscal...
- From 1224 to 1242, the
Komnenos Doukas family, also
connected to the
Angeloi,
challenged Latin authority from Thessalonica. The
Latin Empire failed...
-
Isaac II who was
dethroned and
blinded by his own
brother Alexios III. The
Angeloi were
overthrown during the
Fourth Crusade in 1204, by
Alexios V Doukas...
- campaigns.
After the
Ottoman conquest of
Thessaly in 1394, the
ruling Angeloi Philanthropenoi family took refuge. The
grandchildren of
either Alexios...
-
divine principle."
Rangar Cline (2011).
Ancient Angels:
Conceptualizing Angeloi in the
Roman Empire.
Brill Academic. pp. 40–41. ISBN 978-90-04-19453-3...