- The
Battle of
Poimanenon or
Poemanenum was
fought in
early 1224 (or
possibly late 1223)
between the
forces of the two main
successor states of the Byzantine...
-
Poemanenum or
Poimanenon (Ancient Gr****: Ποιμάνινον) was a Gr**** town of
ancient Mysia,
south of
Cyzicus and on the
southwest of Lake Aphnitis. It belonged...
- was not
immediately successful, as
Henry of
Flanders defeated him at
Poimanenon and
Prusa (now Bursa) in 1204. But
Theodore was able to
capture much of...
-
weakened by
constant warfare in its
European provinces. At the
battle of
Poimanenon in 1224, the
Latin army was defeated, and by the next year
Emperor Robert...
- Mongols.
Battle of
Viljandi Estonians defeat Livonians. 1224
Battle of
Poimanenon The
Nicaean emperor John III
Vatatzes defeats a
joint army of the Latin...
- most
probably concluded in 1212. Adramyttium, Achyraous,
Lentiana and
Poimanenon were
among the
fortresses seized by the Latins.
Angelov 2019, p. 18. Angelov...
- 1205
Battle of
Adramyttium 1205
Battle of the
Rhyndacus 1211
Battle of
Poimanenon 1223 or 1224
Siege of
Constantinople 1235
Siege of
Rhodes 1248–1249 or...
- Laskaris' brothers,
Alexios and Isaac. The
struggle ended with the
Battle of
Poimanenon in 1224, in
which his
opponents were
defeated in
spite of
support from...
- Nicaea.
Vatatzes defeated the
forces sent
against him at the
Battle of
Poimanenon, a
victory which allowed him to push the
Latins out of most of Anatolia...
- the area of Amorion. Soon
after he
managed to
recapture the
fortress of
Poimanenon. His
career under Alexios'
successor John II
Komnenos (r. 1118–1143) is...