- 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...
- The
Trapezutine branch of the
Komnenos dynasty also held the name of
Axouchos as
descendants of John Axouch, a
Byzantine nobleman and
minister to the...
-
branch of the
Komenos dynasty which bore the name
Megas Komnenos Axouch (or
Axouchos or Afouxechos) as
early rulers intermarried with the
family of Axouch,...
-
concerning the
succession to the
Roman Empire John I used the
surname Komnenos Axouchos,
possibly to
stress matrilineal ancestry from the
prominent 12th-century...
-
Antioch David Komnenos Alexios I
Megas Komnenos 8th
generation John I
Axouchos Manuel I
Megas Komnenos 9th
generation Andronikos II
Megas Komnenos Theodora...
-
sequence re-appears
again with
Andronikos I
Gidos (r. 1222–1235),
Ioannes I
Axouchos (r. 1235–1238),
Manuel Megas Komnenos (r. 1238–1263), and
Andronikos II...
-
Antioch David Komnenos Alexios I
Megas Komnenos 8th
generation John I
Axouchos Manuel I
Megas Komnenos 9th
generation Andronikos II
Megas Komnenos Theodora...
-
known as
Komnenus or Comnenos,
including its
cadet branches of Axouch,
Axouchos or Afouxechos, from Trebizond,
Byzantine and
Trebizond emperors. Lambrinos...
-
preference to his
elder surviving brother Isaac.
Manuel dispatches John
Axouchos, his commander-in-chief (megas domestikos), to
Constantinople ahead of...