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John V Palaiologos

John V Palaiologos or Palaeologus (Greek: Ἰωάννης Παλαιολόγος, Iōánnēs Palaiológos; 18 June 1332 – 16 February 1391) was Byzantine emperor from 1341 to 1391, with interruptions. His long reign was marked by constant civil war, the spread of the Black Death and several military defeats to the Ottoman Turks, who rose as the dominant power of the region.

John V Palaiologos

19 November 1341[2]
12 August 1376

1 July 1379 – 14 April 1390

17 September 1390 –
16 February 1391

16 February 1391 (aged 58)
Constantinople

John V became emperor at age eight, which resulted in a civil war between his regent John VI Kantakouzenos and a rival council led by his mother Anna of Savoy, who pawned the crown jewels to Venice in order to raise funds. Kantakouzenos was recognized as emperor in 1347, coinciding with the arrival of the Black Death. Shortly after, another civil war erupted in 1352, with John V seeking help from Serbia against John VI's son Matthew and his enlisted Ottoman Turks. The Turks used the ensuing chaos to gain their first European territory on former Byzantine soil.


John V assumed real power in 1354, removing John VI and his son Matthew. He attempted to gain Western support for the war against the Turks, resulting in his conversion to Catholicism in 1369 in presence of the Pope. These efforts were useless, as he was imprisoned in Venice due to his debts and was eventually forced to recognize Ottoman suzerainty. Political intriguing continued to plague his late reign; John was twice usurped from the throne, first by his son Andronikos IV in 1376 and then by his grandson John VII in 1390. He died in 1391 and was succeeded by his son Manuel, while his younger son Theodore ruled the Despotate of the Morea.

Biography[edit]

John V was the son of Emperor Andronikos III and his wife Anna,[4] the daughter of Count Amadeus V of Savoy by his wife Maria of Brabant. His long reign was marked by the gradual dissolution of imperial power amid numerous civil wars and the continuing ascendancy of the Ottoman Turks.

Early rule and first civil war[edit]

John V came to the throne at age eight. His reign began with an immediate civil war between his self-proclaimed regent, his father's friend John VI Kantakouzenos, and a self-proclaimed council of regency composed of his mother Anna, the patriarch John XIV Kalekas, and the megas doux Alexios Apokaukos. During this civil war in 1343 Anna pawned the Byzantine crown jewels for 30,000 Venetian ducats. From 1346 to 1349, the Black Death devastated Constantinople.

Second civil war[edit]

Victorious in 1347, John VI Kantakouzenos ruled as co-emperor until his son Matthew Kantakouzenos was attacked by John V in 1352, leading to a second civil war. John V asked the ruler of Serbia, Stefan Dušan for help, and Dušan obliged by sending 4,000 Serbian horsemen to his aid. Matthew Kantakouzenos asked his father for help, and 10,000 Ottoman Turks showed up at Demotika (Didymoteicho) in October 1352 and engaged the forces of John V's Serbian allies in an open field battle that resulted in the destruction of the allies and a victory for the more numerous Turks in the service of the Byzantines. The Ottoman Empire thus acquired its first European territory, at Çimpe and Gallipoli. Able to retake Constantinople in 1354, John V removed and tonsured John VI Kantakouzenos; by 1357, he had deposed Matthew as well, who had been captured by the Serbs and was ransomed to John V.

Deposition and second rule[edit]

In 1390, his grandson John VII briefly usurped the throne, but was quickly overthrown. The same year, John V ordered the strengthening of the Golden Gate in Constantinople, utilizing marble from the decayed churches in and around the city. Upon completion of this construction, Bayezid I demanded that John raze these new works, threatening war and the blinding of his son Manuel, whom he held in captivity. John V carried out the Sultan's order but is said to have suffered from this humiliation and died soon thereafter on 16 February 1391, and was buried in the Hodegon Monastery in Constantinople.[8]


John V was finally succeeded to the imperial throne by his son Manuel. His younger son Theodore had already acceded to the Despotate of Morea in 1383.

(2 April 1348 – 28 June 1385);

Andronikos IV Palaiologos

Irene Palaiologina (c. 1349 – after 1362), who married her first cousin , son of Orhan I and Helena's sister Theodora Kantakouzene. The couple had two sons, Gündüz Bey and Ömer Bey.

Halil Bey

(27 June 1350 – 21 July 1425);

Manuel II Palaiologos

(c. 1355 – 24 June 1407). In 1404 his daughter married Süleyman Çelebi, son of Bayezid I;

Theodore I Palaiologos, Lord of Morea

(d. 1376/1377), who claimed the throne of the Empire of Trebizond from Alexios III;

Michael Palaiologos

Maria Palaiologina, married , son of Orhan;

Murad I

One daughter betrothed to ;

Peter II of Cyprus

A daughter (name unknown) reported to have entered a monastery in 1373;

A daughter (name unknown) who married , son of Murad I;

Bayezid I

A daughter (name unknown) who married , son of Murad I;

Yakub Çelebi

illegitimate daughter who married the official Hilario Doria

Zampia Palaiologina

John V married Helena Kantakouzene, daughter of his co-emperor John VI Kantakouzenos and Irene Asanina, on 28 May 1347. They had at least eleven children – five sons and at least six daughters.[9] Their known children include:

List of Byzantine emperors

Harris, Jonathan, The End of Byzantium. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2010.  978-0-300-11786-8

ISBN

Alexander Vasiliev, History of the Byzantine Empire 324–1453. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1952.  0299809269

ISBN

Nicol, Donald M. (1996a). The Byzantine Lady: Ten Portraits, 1250–1500. Cambridge University Press.

(1993) [1972]. The Last Centuries of Byzantium, 1261–1453. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521439916.

Nicol, Donald M.

(1993). Vreme Jovana V Paleologa (1332–1391) [The Time of John V Palaiologos (1332–1391)] (in Serbian and English). Belgrade: Institute for Byzantine Studies SANU. ISSN 0584-9888.

Radić, Radivoj