(Redirected from Andronicus II Palaeologus)'Andronikos II Palaiologos' or 'Andronicus II Palaeologus' (
Greek: '') (
25 March 1259,
Constantinople –
February 13,
1332,
Constantinople), reigned as
Byzantine emperor 1282–
1328. Andronikos II Palaiologos was the eldest surviving son of
Michael VIII Palaiologos and Theodora Doukaina Vatatzina, grandniece of
John III Doukas Vatatzes.
Life

Emperor Andronikos II on a wall fresco in a monastery in
Serres
Andronikos II Palaiologos was acclaimed co-emperor in
1261, after his father Michael VIII recovered
Constantinople from the
Latin Empire, but he was crowned only in 1272. Sole emperor from 1282, Andronikos II immediately repudiated his father's unpopular Church union with the
Papacy (which he had been forced to support while his father was still alive), but was unable to resolve the related schism within the Orthodox clergy until 1310. Andronikos II was also plagued by economic difficulties and during his reign the value of the Byzantine ''
hyperpyron'' depreciated precipitously while the state treasury accumulated more than seven times less revenue (in nominal coins) than it had done previously. Seeking to increase revenue and reduce expenses, Andronikos II raised taxes and reduced tax exemptions, and dismantled the Byzantine fleet in 1285, thereby making the Empire increasingly dependent on the rival republics of
Venice and
Genoa.
Andronikos II Palaiologos sought to resolve some of the problems facing the
Byzantine Empire through diplomacy. After the death of his first wife, he married
Yolanda (renamed Eirene) of Montferrat, putting an end to the Montferrat claim to the
Kingdom of Thessalonica. Andronikos II also attempted to marry off his son and co-emperor
Michael IX Palaiologos to the Latin Empress
Catherine I of Courtenay, thus seeking to eliminate Western agitation for a restoration of the
Latin Empire. Another marriage alliance attempted to resolve the potential conflict with
Serbia in
Macedonia, as Andronikos II married off his five-year old daughter
Simonis to King
Stefan Milutin in 1298.
In spite of the resolution of problems in
Europe, Andronikos II was faced with the collapse of the Byzantine frontier in
Asia Minor. After the failure of the co-emperor Michael IX to stem the Turkish advance in Asia Minor in 1300, the Byzantine government hired the
Catalan Company of
Almogavars (adventurers from
Aragon and
Catalonia) led by
Roger de Flor to clear Byzantine Asia Minor of the enemy. In spite of some successes, the Catalans were unable to secure lasting gains. They quarreled with Michael IX, and eventually turned on their Byzantine employers after the murder of Roger de Flor in 1305, devastating
Thrace, Macedonia, and
Thessaly on their road to Latin Greece. There they conquered the
Duchy of Athens and
Thebes. The Turks continued to pentrate the Byzantine possessions, and
Bursa fell in 1326. By the end of Andronikos II's reign, much of Bithynia was in the hands of the
Ottoman Turks of Osman I and his son and heir
Orhan.
The Empire's problems were exploited by
Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria, who defeated Michael IX and conquered much of northeastern Thrace in c. 1305-1307. The conflict ended with yet another dynastic marriage, between Michael IX's daughter Theodora and the Bulgarian emperor. The dissolute behavior of Michael IX's son
Andronikos III Palaiologos led to a rift in the family, and after Michael IX's death in 1320, Andronikos II disowned his grandson, prompting a civil war that raged, with interruptions, until 1328. The conflict precipitated Bulgarian involvement, and
Michael Asen III of Bulgaria attempted to capture Andronikos II under the guise of sending him military support. In 1328 Andronikos III entered Constantinople in triumph and Andronikos II was forced to abdicate. He died as a monk in 1332.
Family
In 1274 Andronikos II married as his first wife Anna a daughter of King
Stephen V of Hungary, with whom he had two sons:
★
Michael IX Palaiologos
★ Constantine Palaiologos, ''
despotes''
After Anna died in 1281, in 1284 Andronikos II then married
Yolanda (renamed Eirene), a daughter of Marquis William IX of Montferrat, with whom he had:
★ John Palaiologos (c. 1286-1308), ''despotes''
★
Theodore I, Marquis of Montferrat (1291-1338)
★ Demetrios Palaiologos (d. after 1343), ''despotes''
★
Simonis Palaiologina (1294-after 1336), who married King
Stefan Milutin of Serbia
Andronikos II also had at least two illegitimate daughters:
★ Eirene, who married John II Doukas, ruler of
Thessaly
★ Maria, who married
Toqta, khan of the
Golden Horde
References
★ A.E. Laiou, ''Constantinople and the Latins: The Foreign Policy of Andronicus II, 1282-1328'', Harvard University Press, 1972
★ Donald M. Nicol, ''The Last Centuries of Byzantium, 12061-1453'', Cambridge University Press, 1993, 2nd edition, pp. 93-147
★ ''
Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium'', Oxford University Press, 1991.
★