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Constantine XI

Constantine XI Paleologos, Constantine XIII or Constantine Drageses, (February 9, 1409 - May 29, 1453) was the last reigning emperor of the Byzantine Empire from 1449 to his death. Constantine was born in Constantinople the eighth of ten children of Manuel II and Irene. He spent most of his childhood in Constantinople under the supervision of his parents. Constantine became the despot of Morea (an older name for the Peloponnesus) in 1443 which he ruled from the palace in Mistra[?]. He married twice: the first time on July 1, 1428 to Maddelena Tocco, the niece of the Italian ruler of Epirus, who however died in November 1429; the second time to Caterina Gattilusio, daughter of the Genoese lord of Lesbos, who also died (1442). He had no children by either marriage.

When his brother Emperor John VIII Palaeologus died, a dispute erupted between Constantine and his brother Demetrius[?] over the throne. They appealed to the Ottoman sultan Murad II to arbitrate the disagreement. He chose Constantine, who was crowned in Mistra on January 6, 1449. He attempted to marry a distant cousin, the widow of Murad II, but the courtship failed. Soon afterwards, Sultan Mehmed II began agitating for ownership of Constantinople. Desperate for any type of military assistance, Constantine appealed to the West, but he was refused help unless he united the Orthodox Church with the Roman Catholic Church, which was a policy pursued by his predecessors. He declared the churches united in 1452, but the union was overwhelmingly rejected by his subjects and it dangerously estranged him from his chief minister and military commander Grand Duke Lucas Notaras[?].

Mehmed II offered Constantine the chance to rule unmolested in Mistra before the siege of Constantinople, but he refused, preferring to fight and die defending his Empire. His wish would come true, as he was killed while defending the walls of Constantinople on May 29, 1453. His head was severed and displayed for days on a pike before he was buried with full honors in the city. Some Orthodox Christians consider him a saint but he has not been officially recognized as such. Thus the Roman Empire came to an end, whose origins could be traced back to the founding of Rome in 756 BC.

Bibliography

  • Steven Runciman, The Fall of Constantinople, 1453; Cambridge University Press, 1965; ISBN 0-521-09573-5
  • Donald M. Nicol, The Immortal Emperor; Cambridge University Press, 1992; ISBN 0-521-46717-9

Preceded by:
John VIII
Byzantine emperors (Empire ends)



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