The Fourth Crusade and the establishment of the Latin Empire
In 1195 Isaac II was deposed and blinded by his brother Alexius
III. The Westerners, who had again blamed the failure of their crusade
on the Byzantines, saw ways of exploiting the situation. The emperor
Henry VI had united the Norman Kingdom of Sicily with the Holy Roman
Empire. He inherited the ambitions of both to master Constantinople,
and his brother, Philip of Swabia, was married to a daughter of
the dethroned Isaac II. Alexius bought off the danger by paying
tribute to Henry, but Henry died in 1197. The idea had now gained
ground in the West that the conquest of Constantinople would solve
a number of problems and would be of benefit not only to trade but
also to the future of the crusade and the church. In 1198 Innocent
III was elected pope. The new rulers of Hungary, Serbia, and Bulgaria
all turned to him for the recognition of the sovereignty that Byzantium
would not give them.
It was under Innocent's inspiration that the Fourth Crusade was
launched, and it was by the diversion of that crusade from its purpose
and objective that the conquest and colonization of the Byzantine
Empire by the West was realized. A multiplicity of causes and coincidences
led up to the event, but the ambition of Venice, which supplied
the ships, must rank high among them. A plausible excuse was offered
by the cause of restoring Isaac II, whose son Alexius IV had escaped
to the West to seek help, and who made lavish promises of reward
to his benefactors. But when, in 1203, the crusaders drove Alexius
III out of Constantinople, Isaac II and his son proved incapable
either of fulfilling the promises or of stifling the anti-Latin
prejudice of their people, who proclaimed an emperor of their own
in the person of Alexius V. The Venetians and crusaders therefore
felt justified in taking their own reward by conquering and dividing
Constantinople and the Byzantine provinces among themselves. The
city fell to them in April 1204. They worked off their resentment
against the inhabitants in an unparalleled orgy of looting and destruction,
which did irreparable damage to the city and immeasurable harm to
East - West understanding.
The Venetians, led by their doge, Enrico Dandolo, gained most from
the enterprise by appropriating the principal harbours and islands
on the trade routes. The crusaders set about the conquest of the
European and Asiatic provinces. The first Latin emperor, Baldwin
I, was the suzerain of the feudal principalities that they established
in Thrace, Thessalonica, Athens, and the Morea (Peloponnese). He
soon came into conflict with the ruler of Bulgaria. Still more serious
was the opposition offered by the three provincial centres of Byzantine
resistance. At Trebizond (Trabzon) on the Black Sea, two brothers
of the Comnenian family laid claim to the imperial title. In Epirus
in northwestern Greece Michael Angelus Ducas, a relative of Alexius
III, made his capital at Arta and harassed the crusader states in
Thessaly. The third centre of resistance was based on the city of
Nicaea in Anatolia, where Theodore I Lascaris, another relative
of Alexius III, was crowned as emperor in 1208 by a patriarch of
his own making. Of the three, Nicaea lay nearest to Constantinople,
between the Latin Empire and the Seljuq sultanate of Rum; and its
emperors proved worthy of the Byzantine traditions of fighting on
two fronts at once and of skillful diplomacy. Theodore Lascaris
and his son-in-law John III Vatatzes built up at Nicaea a microcosm
of the Byzantine Empire and church in exile. The Latins were thus
never able to gain a permanent foothold in Anatolia; and even in
Europe their position was constantly threatened by the Byzantine
rulers of northern Greece, though in the centre and south of the
country their conquests were more lasting.
The most successful of the Latin emperors was Baldwin's brother,
Henry of Flanders, after whose death in 1216 the Latin Empire lost
the initiative and the recovery of Constantinople became a foreseeable
goal for the Byzantines in exile. The Latin regime was prolonged
less by its own vitality than by the inability of the successor
states of Epirus and Nicaea to cooperate. In 1224 Theodore Ducas
of Epirus, who had extended his territories across the north of
Greece and far into Bulgaria, wrested Thessalonica from the Latins
and was crowned emperor there in defiance of the Emperor in Nicaea.
In 1230, however, he was defeated in battle against the Bulgars
before reaching Constantinople; and his defeat gave John III Ducas
Vatatzes the chance to extend his own empire into Europe, to ally
with the Bulgars, and so to encircle Constantinople. Theodore's
successor was made to renounce his imperial title, and Thessalonica
surrendered to the empire of Nicaea in 1246. The Mongol invasion
of Anatolia, which had meanwhile thrown the East into confusion,
was of great benefit to Nicaea, for it weakened the Seljuq sultanate
and isolated the rival empire of Trebizond.
John Vatatzes might well have crowned his achievements by taking
Constantinople had he not died in 1254. When his son Theodore II
Lascaris (1254 - 58) died in 1258, leaving an infant son, John IV,
the regency and then the throne in Nicaea were taken over by Michael
VIII Palaeologus (reigned 1259 - 82). Michael came from one of the
aristocratic families of Nicaea whom Theodore II had mistrusted.
But it was he who carried the work of the Lascarid emperors to its
logical conclusion. The Byzantine state in Epirus had revived under
Michael II Ducas, who set his sights on Thessalonica. Despite several
efforts to reach a diplomatic settlement, the issue between the
rival contenders had finally to be resolved in battle at Pelagonia
in Macedonia in 1259. Michael II was supported by William of Villehardouin,
the French prince of the Morea, and by Manfred, the Hohenstaufen
king of Sicily. The victory went to the army of Nicaea. Two years
later a general of that army entered Constantinople. The last of
the Latin emperors, Baldwin II, fled to Italy; and the Venetians
were dispossessed of their lucrative commercial centre. In August
1261 Michael VIII was crowned as emperor in Constantinople; the
boy heir to the throne of Nicaea, John IV Lascaris, was blinded
and imprisoned. In this way, the dynasty of Palaeologus, the last
to reign in Constantinople, was inaugurated.
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