Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
Individuals: 97,713 Families: 61,838
Gedcom Last Modified: December 14, 2025 00:59:10
III.Alexios Angelos-dinasztia Komnenos-házi Bizánci császár
- Preferred Name: III.Alexios Angelos-dinasztia Komnenos-házi Bizánci császár[1] [2] [3] [4]
- Alternate Name: Alexios Byzantine Emperor III
- Alternate Name: Alexios Byzantine Empire Emperor
- Alternate Name: Alexius Angelus Emperor of The Byzantine Empire III
- Alternate Name: Alexios Byzantine Empire Emperor III
- Alternate Name: Alexius Angelus Emperor III
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Angelus
- Alternate Name: Alexios Angelos
- Alternate Name: Byzantine Empire Alexios III, EMPEROR
- Alternate Name: Alexius Angelus Emp East Roman III
- Alternate Name: ALEXIOS III 5th Emperor Byzantium
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Emperor Byzantine Empire
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Angelos Emperor Of The East
- Alternate Name: Alexius Emperor Of Constantinople
- Alternate Name: Alexios Byzantine Empire III
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Emperor Byzantine Empire
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Angelus
- Alternate Name: Alexios or Alexius Angelos Emperor of the East III
- Alternate Name: Alexios Emperor Of Byzantine Empire III
- Alternate Name: Alexios Iii Komnenos Angelus
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Angelus Byzantine Empire
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Emperor Byzantine **
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Angelos
- Alternate Name: Alexios III E Empire BYZANTINE
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Angelos
- Alternate Name: Alexios Of BYZANTIUM
- Alternate Name: Alexius Angelos Emperor of The East III
- Alternate Name: Alexios Byzantine Empire III
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Emperor of Byzantine
- Alternate Name: Alexios II Komnenos Emperor of Byzan Angelos
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Byzantine
- Alternate Name: Alexios Emperor Byzantine Empire III
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Angelus Byzance Emperor
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Emperor Of Emperor Byzantine Empire
- Alternate Name: Alexios III
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Angelus Byzantine Emp
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Angelos Byzantium Emperor of
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Emperor Of Byzantine Empire
- Alternate Name: Alexios Angelos
- Alternate Name: Alexius III Angelos Of Byzantium
- Alternate Name: Alexios Emperor of The Byzantine Empire III
- Alternate Name: Alexius Angelus III III
- Alternate Name: ALEXIOS III 5th Emperor Byzantium
- Alternate Name: Alexios of Byzantine III
- Alternate Name: Alexius Angelus the Third
- Alternate Name: Alexios Byzantine Empire III
- Alternate Name: Alexios III Emperor Of The Byzantine Empire
- Alternate Name: Alexius III of the Byzantine Empire Emperor
- Gender: M
- WebAddress: with note: Description: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexios_III_Angelos
Ancestory.com
- Surname: with note: Description: Angelos
- Angelos+Dynasty: with note: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_Komnenos_Angelos
- Emperor: in East
- Death: 1211 in Nicaea,Nicaean Empire Now Iznik,Tur, (prisoner in Nicaea, now, Iznik, Turkey) at LATI: N0.4736 LONG: E9.7077
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Emperor
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Emperor
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Emperor
- Birth: 1143 in Constantinople, İstanbul, Turkey at LATI: N1.0136 LONG: E8.955
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Emperor of Byzan
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Emperor
- Burial: in Church Of Koimesis, Bursa, Turkey at LATI: N0.1667 LONG: E9.0833 with note: Find A Grave.
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Emp./Byzantine
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Byzantine Emperor
- Christening: in (Byzantine), (Comnenus), (& Angelus) at LATI: N1.15 LONG: E8.75
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Emp Roman Empire
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: (Emperor)
- Occupation: Ks. v. Byzanz
- Occupation: Emperor of the Byzantine Empire
- Occupation: deposed in 1210
- FSID: LZ58-RX3
- Occupation: Emperor of Constantinople in Contantinople, actual Turquía at LATI: N9 LONG: E5
- AFN: in B1BB-9C
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
Alexios III Angelos, c.?1153-1211 was Byzantine Emperor from March 1195 to July 17/18, 1203. A member of the extended imperial family, Alexios came to throne after deposing, blinding, and imprisoning his younger brother Isaac II Angelos. The most significant event of his reign was the attack of the Fourth Crusade on Constantinople in 1203, on behalf of Alexios IV Angelos. Alexios III took over the defense of the city, which he mismanaged, then fled the city at night with one of his three daughters. From Adrianople, and then Mosynopolis, he unsuccessfully attempted to rally his supporters, only to end up a captive of Marquis Boniface of Montferrat. He was ransomed, sent to Asia Minor where he plotted against his son-in-law Theodore Laskaris, but was eventually arrested and spent his last days confined to the Monastery of Hyakinthos in Nicaea, where he died.
«b»Early life«/b»
Alexios III Angelos was the second son of Andronikos Doukas Angelos and Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa. Andronikos was himself a son of Theodora Komnene, the youngest daughter of Emperor Alexios I Komnenos and Irene Doukaina. Thus Alexios Angelos was a member of the extended imperial family. Together with his father and brothers, Alexios had conspired against Emperor Andronikos I Komnenos (c.?1183), and thus he spent several years in exile in Muslim courts, including that of Saladin.
His younger brother Isaac was threatened with execution under orders of Andronikos I, their first-cousin once-removed, on September 11, 1185. Isaac made a desperate attack on the imperial agents and soon killed their leader Stephen Hagiochristophorites. He then took refuge in the church of Hagia Sophia and from there appealed to the populace. His actions provoked a riot, which resulted in the deposition of Andronikos I and the proclamation of Isaac as Emperor. Alexios was now closer to the imperial throne than ever before.
«b»Reign
«/b»By 1190 Alexios had returned to the court of his younger brother, from whom he received the elevated title of sebastokrator. In March 1195 while Isaac II was away hunting in Thrace, Alexios was acclaimed as emperor by the troops with the covert support of Alexios' wife Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamatera. Alexios captured Isaac at Stagira in Macedonia, put out his eyes, and thenceforth kept him a close prisoner, despite having previously been redeemed by Alexios from captivity at Antioch and showered with honours.
To compensate for this crime and to solidify his position as emperor, Alexios had to scatter money so lavishly as to empty his treasury, and to allow such licence to the officers of the army as to leave the Empire practically defenceless. These actions inevitably led to the financial ruin of the state. At Christmas 1196, Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI attempted to force Alexios to pay him a tribute of 5,000 pounds (later negotiated down to 1,600 pounds) of gold or face invasion. Alexios gathered the money by plundering imperial tombs at the church of the Holy Apostles and taxing the people heavily, though Henry's death in September 1197 meant the gold was never dispatched. The able and forceful empress Euphrosyne tried in vain to sustain his credit and his court; Vatatzes, the favourite instrument in her attempts at reform, was assassinated by the emperor's orders.
In the east the Empire was overrun by the Seljuk Turks; from the north, the Kingdom of Hungary and the rebellious Bulgarians and Vlachs descended unchecked to ravage the Balkan provinces of the Empire, sometimes penetrating as far as Greece, while Alexios squandered the public treasure on his palaces and gardens and attempted to deal with the crisis through diplomatic means. The Emperor's attempts to bolster the empire's defences by special concessions to pronoiars (notables) in the frontier zone backfired, as the latter increased their regional autonomy. Byzantine authority survived, but in a much weakened state.
«b»Fourth Crusade«/b»
Soon Alexios was threatened by a new and more formidable danger. In 1202, soldiers assembled at Venice to launch the Fourth Crusade. Alexios IV Angelos, the son of the deposed Isaac II, had recently escaped from Constantinople and now appealed for support to the crusaders, promising to end the schism of East and West, to pay for their transport, and to provide military support if they would help him depose his uncle and ascend to his father's throne.
The crusaders, whose objective had been Egypt, were persuaded to set their course for Constantinople, arriving there in June 1203, proclaiming Alexios IV as Emperor, and inviting the populace of the capital to depose his uncle. Alexios III took no effective measures to resist, and his attempts to bribe the crusaders failed. His son-in-law, Theodore Laskaris, who was the only one to attempt anything significant, was defeated at Scutari, and the siege of Constantinople began. Unfortunately for the city, misgovernment by Alexios III had left the Byzantine navy with only 20 worm-eaten hulks by the time the crusaders arrived.
In July, the crusaders, led by the aged Doge Enrico Dandolo, scaled the walls and took control of a major section of the city. In the ensuing fighting, the crusaders set the city on fire, ultimately leaving 20,000 people homeless. On 17 July Alexios III finally took action and led 17 divisions from the St. Romanus Gate, vastly outnumbering the crusaders. His courage failed, however, and the Byzantine army returned to the city without a fight. His courtiers demanded action, and Alexios III promised to fight. Instead, that night (July 17/18), Alexios III hid in the palace, and finally, with one of his daughters, Eirene, and as much treasure (1,000 pounds of gold) as he could collect, got into a boat and escaped to Debeltos in Thrace, leaving his wife and his other daughters behind. Isaac II, drawn from his prison and robed once more in the imperial purple, received his son, Alexios IV, in state.
«b»Life in exile«/b»
Alexios III attempted to organize resistance to the new regime from Adrianople and then Mosynopolis, where he was joined by the later usurper Alexios V Doukas Mourtzouphlos in April 1204, after the definitive fall of Constantinople to the crusaders and the establishment of the Latin Empire. At first Alexios III received Alexios V well, even allowing him to marry his daughter Eudokia Angelina. Later Alexios V was blinded and deserted by his father-in-law, who fled from the crusaders into Thessaly. Here Alexios III eventually surrendered, with Euphrosyne, to Marquis Boniface of Montferrat, who was establishing himself as ruler of the Kingdom of Thessalonica.
Alexios III attempted to escape Boniface's "protection" in 1205, seeking shelter with Michael I Komnenos Doukas, the ruler of Epirus. Captured by Boniface, Alexios and his retinue were sent to Montferrat before being brought back to Thessalonica in c.?1209. At that point the deposed emperor was ransomed by Michael I, who sent him to Asia Minor, where Alexios' son-in-law Theodore Laskaris - now emperor of Nicaea - was holding his own against the Latins. Here Alexios conspired against his son-in-law after the latter refused to recognize Alexios' authority, receiving the support of Kaykhusraw I, the sultan of Rûm. In the Battle of Antioch on the Meander in 1211, the sultan was defeated and killed, and Alexios was captured by Theodore Laskaris. Alexios was then confined to a monastery at Nicaea, where he died later in 1211.
«b»Family«/b»
By his marriage to Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamatera, Alexios had three daughters:
1.) Eirene Angelina, who married (1) Andronikos Kontostephanos, and (2) Alexios Palaiologos, by whom she was the grandmother of Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos.
2.) Anna Angelina, who married (1) the sebastokrator Isaac Komnenos, great-nephew of emperor Manuel I Komnenos, and (2) Theodore Laskaris, emperor of Nicaea.
3.) Eudokia Angelina, who married (1) Serbian King Stefan Nemanjic, then (2) Emperor Alexios V Doukas, and (3) Leo Sgouros, ruler of Corinth.
=== Ancestral File Number: B1BB-9C ===
Ancestral File Number: B1BB-9C
=== Ks. v. Byzanz 1195-1203 (abgesetzt), flo ===
Ks. v. Byzanz 1195-1203 (abgesetzt), floh 1203 mit der Staatskasse vor den Kreuzfahrern, später von seinem Schwiegersohn Theodor Laskaris ins Kloster verbannt, dort gestorben als Mönch
=== !BIRTH-SPOUSE-CHILDREN: Ancestral File; ===
!BIRTH-SPOUSE-CHILDREN: Ancestral File; ; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, CD-ROM dated 21 Aug 1992, Information submitted by...; St George Regional Family History Center/FamilySearch Home Field Trial, searched Jan 1995; according to notes, Alexios was 'Emperor of the Byzantine Empire'
=== Reigned from 1195 to 1203 ===
Reigned from 1195 to 1203
=== Line 13835 from GEDCOM File not recogniz ===
Line 13835 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 23739 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== Can*. 7206 Standford Avenue,La Mesa Cali ===
Can*. 7206 Standford Avenue,La Mesa California.91941. George Washington Tinnell had a brother John Tinnell who married a sister of Mary(Polly) Pace.Youngest brother Hale H. was believed to have moved to Tennesee. The brothers had an argument and some
=== SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 S ===
SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.23; BETHAMIS GENEALOGICAL TABLES (GS NUMBER Q929.2 B465C) TAB 540; ANDERSON'S ROYAL GENEALOGIES (GS NUMBER Q929.2 AN23R) TAB 145, 572; GENEALOGISHE TABELLIN (GS NUMBER ESQ940 D2V) TAB 6;
=== ?? Line 66421: (New PAF RIN=7653) 1 NAME ===
?? Line 66421: (New PAF RIN=7653) 1 NAME Alexios III, Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ ?? Line 133328: (New PAF MRIN=5121) 1 MARR 2 PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey ?? Line 12471: (New PAF RIN=19408) 1 NAME Alexios III, Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ ?? Line 50874: (New PAF MRIN=7650) 1 MARR 2 PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== Line 246 from GEDCOM File not recognizab ===
Line 246 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 513 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== Alexius drove his brother Isaac II from ===
Alexius drove his brother Isaac II from the throne of the Eastern Empire, and was in turn deposed by the Crusaders in 1210. Alexius' son-in-law, Theodore I, succeeded him. Alexius m. about 1155 Euphrosyne Dukaina Kamaterina of Constantinople.
=== 1 _UID 4C426B7E9103D611828100606E3BD45C ===
1 _UID 4C426B7E9103D611828100606E3BD45C2EA4
=== ?? Line 6466: (New PAF RIN=4895) 1 NAME ===
?? Line 6466: (New PAF RIN=4895) 1 NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ ?? Line 13960: (New PAF MRIN=2185) 1 MARR 2 PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== Line 12083 from GEDCOM File not recogniz ===
Line 12083 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 27139 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey Line 13955 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 32091 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey Line 251 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 7711 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey Line 20032 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 41576 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey Line 481 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 544 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== !REIGNED: Emperor of the Byzantine Empir ===
!REIGNED: Emperor of the Byzantine Empire (1195 - 1203) Alexius III (Angelus), d. after 1210 (r.1195-1203), deposed hisbrotherISAAC II, but the act served as pretext for the leaders of the FourthCrusade to attack (1203) Constantinople and to restore Isaac, with his sonAlexiusIV. SOURCE: Concise Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright 1994,Columbia University Press.
=== Seal to Parents: aft 1210 Alt Name: Ale ===
Seal to Parents: aft 1210 Alt Name: Alexios III Byzantine Empire Emperor !GENERAL:Pedigree Resource File CD 4, Pedigree Resource File CD 4, (Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 1999)
=== !Source: History of The Byzantine State; ===
!Source: History of The Byzantine State; by George Ostrogorsky, revised edition, 1969; Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ; pp 401, 408, 416. The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa; by George Andrews Moriarty; Mormon Pioneer Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, UT, 1965; pp 174 Royal Ancesters of Some American Families; by Michel L. Call, Salt Lake City, 1989; Chart 11319. Basileus of The East 1195-1203, died in captivity in a monastery.
=== Emperor (Basilius) of the East, 1195-120 ===
Emperor (Basilius) of the East, 1195-1203; imprisoned by his son-in-law, Theodoros Laskaris This is a monster with a lot of fantasy and many. I am continually correcting them, but it is an undoubtedly endless task. Due to data loss, some sources are not cited. If it appears to you that I have failed to properly attribute information that I got from someone else's data, please let me know. I have never intended to plagarize anyone's material. Good hunting! The Bob !NAME:Book, Royalty for Commoners, Royalty for Commoners, Stuart, Roderick W., Genealogical Publishing Co. , , Repository: Manning Family Library
=== Line 379 from GEDCOM File not recognizab ===
Line 379 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 1927 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey LDS Ordinances found in IGI.
=== ! ! RELATIONSHIP: Patron, H. Reed Black ===
! ! RELATIONSHIP: Patron, H. Reed Black, is 24th G G Son.
=== !Spouse: Euphrosyne Dukains KAMATERINA, ===
!Spouse: Euphrosyne Dukains KAMATERINA, Mar. Abt 1155, Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== ?? Line 21447: (New PAF RIN=1680) 1 NAME ===
?? Line 21447: (New PAF RIN=1680) 1 NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ ?? Line 36675: (New PAF MRIN=1318) 1 MARR 2 PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey Line 80 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: !AFN:G6SZ-PT
=== Line 1803 from GEDCOM File not recogniza ===
Line 1803 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 4624 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== Died in captivity (in a Monastery) ===
Died in captivity (in a Monastery)
=== Line 631 from GEDCOM File not recognizab ===
Line 631 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ Line 1592 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: MARR PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== --Other Fields ®64 ===
--Other Fields ®64
=== !Byzantium, The Decline and Fall, John J ===
!Byzantium, The Decline and Fall, John Julius Norwich, gen. tables; !Chronicles of the Crusades, Joinville and Villehardouin, p73; Emperor Alexius collected as much of his money and his valuables as he could carry away, and taking with him those of his people who wished to go, fled and abandoned the city. First Siege of Constantinople, Jul 1203; He had previously blinded and imprisoned his brother Isaac;
=== ! Europaische Stammtafeln neue folge Vol ===
! Europaische Stammtafeln neue folge Vol 2 tafel 179;
=== ?? Line 7150: (New PAF RIN=525) 1 NAME A ===
?? Line 7150: (New PAF RIN=525) 1 NAME Alexios III Emperor Of The/BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ ?? Line 24508: (New PAF MRIN=439) 1 MARR 2 PLAC Of Constantinople,Constantinople, Turkey
=== Byzantine emperor from 1195 to 1203. He ===
Byzantine emperor from 1195 to 1203. He was the second son of Andronicus Angelus, grandson of Alexius I. In 1195 he was proclaimed emperor by the troops; he captured his brother, the emperor Isaac II, at Stagira in Macedonia and had him blinded and imprisoned. Crowned in April 1195, Alexius III was a weak and greedy emperor, and his coup d'état had disastrous results. Byzantine prestige declined in the Balkans, where his failure to aid his son-in-law Stephen Prvovencani (Stephen the First-Crowned) caused the latter to turn to the Bulgars for help. Campaigns against the Bulgars ended in defeat (1195 and 1196), and intrigues and diplomacy were equally unsuccessful because the new Bulgarian ruler, Kalojan, acknowledged the pope's supremacy instead of that of Constantinople. In 1203 the crusaders restored Isaac II and his son (crowned Alexius IV). Alexius III fled the capital with what treasure he could collect and escaped to Thrace. After an unsuccessful attempt to recover the throne, he wandered about Greece and surrendered to Boniface of Montferrat, then master of a great part of the Balkan Peninsula, but left his protection and sought shelter with Michael I, despot of Epirus. Finally, he went to Asia Minor, where his son-in-law Theodore Lascaris was holding his own against the Latins. Alexius, joined by the Sultan of Iconium (modern Konya, Tur.), demanded Theodore's crown and, when it was refused, marched against him. Taken prisoner by Theodore in 1211, Alexius was sent to a monastery at Nicaea, where he died.
=== ?? Line 7005: (New PAF RIN=8466) 1 NAME ===
?? Line 7005: (New PAF RIN=8466) 1 NAME Alexios III, Emperor Of The /BYZANTINE EMPIRE/ ?? Line 18945: (New PAF MRIN=3875) 1 MARR 2 PLAC Of Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey
=== M E Sorley: The Sorley Pedigrees P. 23 ===
M E Sorley: The Sorley Pedigrees P. 23
=== !HIS SON-IN-LAW IS THEODORE LASCARIS, AL ===
!HIS SON-IN-LAW IS THEODORE LASCARIS, ALEXIUS V DUCAS MURTZUPHLUS IS
S0N-IN-LAW, DIED 1204 IN CONSTANTINOPLE, BYZANTINE, GREECE, ALEXIUS V IS
BYZANTINE EMPEROR IN 1204
Preferred Parents:
Father: Andronikos Doukas Angelos, b. 1123 in Constantinople, Constantinople, Turkey d. 12 SEP 1185 in Holy Roman Empire
Mother: Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa, b. 1125 in Constantinople, Byzantine Empire d. 1195
Family 1: Euphrosyne Kamatera Doukas-házi, b. 1150 in Constatinople, Constantinople, Turkey d. 1211 in Arta, Epir, Grecja (Greece)
- Anna Komnene Angelos-házi Bizánci hercegnő, b. 1176 in Istanbul, Turkey d. 1212 in Nicaea, Anatolia, Turkey
Sources:
- Title: Angelos Dynasty/Family Tree
Publication: Name: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelos;
- Title: Andronikos Doukas Angelos
Author: Wikipedia
Publication: Name: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andronikos_Doukas_Angelos;
Page: Person was not previously registered.
- Title: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexios_III_Angelos
Author: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexios_III_Angelos
Publication: Name: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexios_III_Angelos;
Note: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bury, John Bagnell (1911). "Alexius III.". In Chisholm, Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica.1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 577–578.Michael Angold, The Byzantine Empire, 1025–1204: A Political History, second edition (London and New York, 1997)C.M. Brand, Byzantium Confronts the West (Cambridge, MA, 1968)Finley, Jr., John H. (1932). "Corinth in the Middle Ages". Speculum. 7 (No. 4).Jonathan Harris, Byzantium and the Crusades, (2nd ed. London and New York, 2014). ISBN 978-1-78093-767-0Jonathan Harris, Constantinople: Capital of Byzantium (London and New York, 2007)Kazhdan, Alexander, ed. (1991). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.Savignac, David. "The Medieval Russian Account of the Fourth Crusade - A New Annotated Translation".K. Varzos, Ē genealogia tōn Komnēnōn (Thessalonica, 1984)Plate, William (1867). "Alexios III Angelos". In William Smith. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. 1. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. p. 130.Treadgold, Warren T. (1997). A History of the Byzantine State and Society. Stanford University Press.
- Title: Alexios III Angelos
Author: Wikipedia
Publication: Name: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexios_III_Angelos;
Note: His life story
Page: Information
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