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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:M.manuel_i_comnenus_1</requestUrn>
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                <urn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:M.manuel_i_comnenus_1</urn>
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="M"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="manuel-i-comnenus-bio-1" n="manuel_i_comnenus_1"><head><label><persName xml:lang="la"><addName full="yes">Ma'nuel</addName><genName full="yes">I.</genName></persName> or <persName xml:lang="la"><forename full="yes">Manuel</forename><surname full="yes">Comne'nus&gt;</surname></persName></label></head><p>(<label xml:lang="grc">Μανουὴλ ὁ Κομνηνός</label>), emperor of Constantinople <date when-custom="1143">A. D. 1143</date>-<date when-custom="1181">1181</date>, the fourth child and son of
      the emperor Calo-Joannes (Joannes II.), was born about A. D. 1120, and succeeded his father in
      1143. Of his three elder brothers, Alexis and Andronicus had both died before their father;
      but the third, Isaac Sebastocrator, was still alive, and would have had better claims to the
      crown than Manuel, but for a special declaration of the late emperor, who preferred the
      younger to the elder on account of his martial qualities. Manuel was with his father <pb n="922"/> when the latter lost his life through an accident in Cilicia; and fears were
      entertained that Isaac, who was then in Constantinople, would seize the supreme power. But no
      sooner had John expired than the faithful minister, Axuch, hastened to the capital, seized
      Isaac, confined him in a prison, and succeeded in causing Manuel to be recognized in
      Constantinople, where he met with a brilliant reception, on his arrival from Cilicia, a short
      time afterwards. Manuel was scarcely seated on his throne, when he was involved in an
      uninterrupted series of wars with the nations of the East as well as the West, in which,
      though not always successful, he distinguished himself so much by his undaunted courage and
      heroic deeds as to deserve the name of the greatest hero of a time when there was no lack of
      extraordinary achievements in the field. The discovery that his brother Isaac seemed not to
      entertain ambitious designs, and the re-establishment of a good understanding between the two
      brothers, allowed Manuel to devote himself entirely to the conduct of his wars and to those
      endless intrigues and negotiations in which he found himself involved. As early as 1144 his
      general, Demetrius Branas, forced Raymond, the Latin prince of Antioch, who had shaken off his
      allegiance towards the emperor, to submit to Greek valour, and to renew, in Constantinople,
      the bonds of his vassalship. In the following year Manuel set out against the Turks, who had
      invaded Isauria, defeated them in several pitched battles, and cast such a terror among the
      Turkish soldiers, that they would no longer keep the field; whereupon peace was concluded to
      the advantage of the victor. About this time Manuel found reason to distrust his brother
      Isaac, who was deprived of his title of Sebastocrator; but as there was no direct evidence of
      treason against him, he was allowed to live on condition of retiring into a convent, where he
      spent the rest of his life. In the same year, 1147, Manuel received information from king
      Louis VII. of France, that the Western princes, headed by the king and the emperor Conrad III.
      of Germany, had resolved upon a new crusade, and desired his alliance. Manuel promised it, but
      gave secret information of the approaching storm to the Turks. Nevertheless he allowed Conrad
      to pass through his dominions with a vast army, and subsequently the French king also.</p><p>While the Crusaders were fighting with the Turks, Manuel was involved in a war with Roger,
      the Norman king of Sicily, who possessed likewise a large portion of Southern Italy, and who,
      thinking that the new crusade would prevent the Greek emperor from maintaining great forces in
      Europe, prepared for an invasion of Greece. This war, which broke out in 1148, is by far the
      most remarkable in the history of Manuel, who, however, did not engage in it alone, but found
      an ally in the republic of Venice. Marching at the head of his veterans towards Macedonia, he
      was informed, while at Philippopolis, that the Patzenegnes had crossed the Danube, probably
      excited by king Roger. Without hesitating a moment, Manuel wheeled to the right, fell upon the
      barbarians, drove them back into the Dacian wildernesses; and after receiving hostages for
      their future good behaviour, returned with rapid marches towards Macedonia. embarked at
      Thessalonica, and landed his host in Corfu before the end of the year. There he was joined by
      a Venetian army. The fortress of Corfu yielded to him after an obstinate and protracted siege,
      signalised by the death of his brotherin-law, Stephanus Contostephanus, Magnus Dux, who was
      succeeded in the command by the faithful Axuch. The surrender of that important fortress was
      delayed by a bloody quarrel which broke out between the Greeks and the Venetians. In this
      siege Manuel was foremost among those who stormed the town; and his fleet having one day made
      several fruitless attempts to drive the Sicilians from some outworks near the sea, he put
      himself on the poop of a galley, and cheered his men on while showers of arrows and other
      missiles came down upon the spot where he stood. His boldness excited the admiration of the
      Sicilians, who ceased for a moment to make him the aim of their weapons. They would, however,
      soon have despatched him but for the voice of their commander, who cried out that it would be
      dishonourable to kill an hero like Manuel. The emperor intended to attack Roger within his own
      dominions, but the crafty Norman enticed the Servians and Hungarians to make a diversion on
      the Danube. The former were vanquished in two campaigns, when they begged for peace; and the
      Hungarian war lasted till 1152, when their king, Geisa, after having been beaten in many
      pitched battles, promised to desist from molesting the empire. The peace, however, was of
      short duration. In the same year, 1152, Manuel experienced a repulse in a war with the Turks
      in Cilicia; but in Italy his armies met with glorious success. The Greeks having landed in
      Italy, took Brundusium, Bari, and other places of importance; the fleet of the Sicilians was
      defeated in several decisive engagements; and it seemed that John Ducas, the gallant
      commander-in-chief of the Greeks, would find no more obstacles in re-uniting Southern Italy
      with the Byzantine empire. The sanguine hopes of Manuel were blighted by William, the
      successor of king Roger, who fell upon Alexis Comnenus, the successor of John Ducas; and after
      a severe struggle, routed the Greeks. At the same time the Greek fleet was defeated off
      Negropont; and Maius, the Sicilian admiral, sailed without loss of time for Constantinople,
      where he landed a considerable force. The inhabitants were thrown into the utmost
      consternation; but their fears soon ceased, since Maius was not strong enough to attempt any
      thing of importance, and consequently sailed home, satisfied with some booty and captives.
      These checks produced a great effect upon the mind of Manuel, who, having received a very
      noble letter from king William, with offers of an honourable peace, accepted the proposition,
      and thus this memorable war terminated in 1155. The conquests on both sides were given back,
      as well as all the captives, except those Greeks taken by the Sicilians who were silk-weavers,
      and who were to remain in Italy, where they laid the foundation of the flourishing state of
      Italian silk manufactures. The following years were signalised by hostilities with Raymond,
      prince of Antioch, who was soon brought to obedience; and Az-ed-din, the Turkish Sultan, who
      met with no better success, and went to Constantinople to sue for peace.</p><p>The tranquillity of Asia was no sooner settled, than a new and terrible war broke out in the
      north. King Geisa of Hungary fancied that the forces of the empire were exhausted by
      protracted warfare, and accordingly crossed the Danube. Manuel intended to lead his armies in
      person, but he <pb n="923"/> yielded to the entreaties of his subjects and his ministers, who
      wanted a firm head in the capital during the approaching storm; and the command of the army
      was consequently entrusted to Andronicus Contostephanus. Under Andronicus were Andronicus
      Lampados, Andronicus Comnenus, and Demetrius and Georgius Branas. The armies met not far from
      Zeugminum, the present Semlin; and after one of the most bloody and obstinate contests
      recorded in history, in which Demetrius Branas was slain, and the left wing of the Greeks
      completely routed, Andronicus Contostephanus at last carried the day. So terrible was the loss
      of the Hungarians, that king Geisa sued for immediate peace, which was granted to him; and
      during a considerable period the Byzantine influence was so great in Hungary as to cause to
      its inhabitants great uneasiness for their further independence. A few years afterwards Manuel
      set out for Asia, and in an interview with king Amalric, who had just come to the throne, and
      intended to persuade Manuel to send him some auxiliaries for an expedition into Egypt, Manuel
      accepted the proposition with joy; but instead of a subordinate force, he equipped a fleet of
      220 large ships, with a sufficient army on board, under the command of Andronicus
      Contostephanus (1169). When this powerful armament appeared off Ascalon it excited the
      jealousy of Amalric, who was justly afraid that his share in the projected conquests would not
      answer his expectation; and this jealousy gradually instilling itself into the minds of all
      the party, became the cause of the final failure of the whole undertaking. The combined Latin
      and Greek forces marched by land upon Damietta, where the fleet appeared soon afterwards. The
      siege was long; but the town was at last reduced to such extremity, that everybody expected
      its hourly surrender, when the treachery of either Amalric himself or one of his generals
      obliged the assailants to raise the siege and retreat into Palestine. In order to clear
      himself from any blame, Amalric went to Constantinople, where he met with a splendid reception
      from Manuel, who was ready to join him in a second expedition, when he was unexpectedly
      involved in two wars, with the Venetians and the Turks. In 1176 Manuel suffered a dreadful
      defeat near Myriocephalus from Sultan Az-ed-din, in spite of his almost incredible personal
      valour, and completely surrounded by superior forces, was comnpelled to make a dishonourable
      peace, promising, among other conditions, to raze the fortresses of Sableium and Dorylaeum
      (1176). <note anchored="true" place="margin">* Roger de Hoveden, the English historian, was present at this
       battle, serving as a volunteer in the Grtek army.</note> Anxious to revenge himself for such
      unexpected disgrace, Manuel broke the peace, and the war was renewed this time with better
      success for the Greeks, who routed Az-ed-din in Lydia, and finally obtained an honourable
      peace (1177). Manuel now proposed to the emperor Frederic an alliance against king Henry of
      Sicily, whom he intended to deprive of all his dominions; but the negotiations to that effect
      were carried on slowly; and it seemed that Manuel had lost his former energy. In fact, the
      defeat at Myriocephalus preyed upon his mind; his strength was undermined by a slow fever; and
      in the spring of 1180 he was compelled to keep to his bed, from which he never rose again.
      After a painful and long illness, he died on the 24th of September following, at the age of
      sixty. The reign of Manuel was glorious, yet presents nothing but an uninterrupted series of
      bloodshed and devastation. Manuel was perhaps the greatest warrior of his time, but he was far
      from being a great general. When young he was virtuous, but after he had ascended the throne
      he plunged into all those vices by which the Greeks, and especially the Comnenian family,
      disgraced themselves. He oppressed his subjects by heavy war-taxes, yet he did not pay his
      troops, though he gave large pensions to ministers or other men of influence at foreign
      courts, where he was constantly intriguing. He is said to have been deeply versed in theology,
      but was certainly rather a great talker than a great thinker on religion. His first wife was
      Bertha (Irene), niece of Conrad III., emperor of Germany; and his second Maria (Xene),
      daughter of Raymend, prince of Antioch. His concubinage with his niece, Theodora Comnena, was
      a great disgrace to him. He was succeeded by his only son, Alexis II. (Cinnam. lib. i. iv.;
      Nicet. lib. ii. iii.; Guill. Tyrensis, lib. xvi. We have more Latin or Western than Byzantine
      sources on the history of the time.) </p><byline>[<ref target="author.W.P">W.P</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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