- John
Axouch or
Axouchos (Gr****: Ἰωάννης Ἀξούχ or Ἀξοῦχος, romanized: Iōánnēs Axoûchos, (fl. 1087 – c. 1150), also
transliterated as Axuch, was the commander-in-chief...
-
Alexios Axouch or Axouchos,
sometimes found as
Axuch (Gr****: Ἀλέξιος Ἀξούχ or Ἀξοῦχος), was a 12th-century
Byzantine nobleman and
military leader of Turkish...
-
Komnenos dynasty also held the name of
Axouchos as
descendants of John
Axouch, a
Byzantine nobleman and
minister to the
Byzantine Komnenian Dynasty. A...
-
According to
Niketas Choniates,
Manuel sent
Axouch in all
haste to ****ume
control in Constantinople. Indeed,
Axouch managed to
arrive in the
capital before...
-
stripped of her property,
which was
offered to the emperor's
friend John
Axouch.
Axouch wisely declined and his
influence ensured that Anna's
property was eventually...
- John I
Komnenos Axouch (Gr****: Ιωάννης Κομνηνός Ἀξούχος, romanized: Iōannēs Komnēnos
Axouch) was the
Emperor of
Trebizond from 1235 to 1238. One editor...
-
where his
father died. Swiftly, he
dispatched the
megas domestikos John
Axouch ahead of him, with
orders to
arrest his most
dangerous potential rival,...
-
attempt at reconquest.
Following the defeat, the
Byzantine diplomat Alexios Axouch arrived at the
Byzantine base of
Ancona in
order to
negotiate a favorable...
- In 1119,
Emperor John II
Komnenos and his
chief military commander, John
Axouch,
captured Laodicea from the
Seljuk Turks in the
first major military victory...
- Chrysoberges. In the
spring of 1166, Béla-Alexios
accompanied protostrator Alexios Axouch, who led a
Byzantine army
against Hungary in
retaliation for a new Hungarian...