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Constantine Bodin
'Constantine Bodin' (
Serbian: ''Konstantin Bodin'', Константин Бодин;
Bulgarian: Константин Бодин), was a king of
Duklja (
1081–
1101), and for a short time in
1072 he was emperor (
tsar) of
Bulgaria by name 'Peter III' (Bulgarian: Пeтьр I, ''Petăr III''). The date of his birth is unknown; that of his death is uncertain, and may be as late as
1108.
Origin
Constantine Bodin was a son of King
Michael I (Mihajlo I) of Duklja (or Zeta) and Neda. His father Michael was the son of Prince
Stefan Vojislav by an unnamed granddaughter of Emperor
Samuel of Bulgaria.
Emperor of Bulgaria as Peter III
In
1072 the Bulgarian noblemen in
Skopje raised a revolt against
Byzantine rule under the leadership of
George Voitekh (Georgi Vojteh), a descendant of the former Bulgarian court nobility. The rebels asked King
Michael I of Zeta to provide one of his sons, as descendants of the
House of the Kometopouloi, to assume the Bulgarian throne.
In the fall of
1072 Constantine Bodin, Michael's seventh son, arrived in
Prizren with a small retinue of Zetan troops and met with George Voitekh and other representatives of the Bulgarian nobility. They escorted him to Skopje and crowned him emperor of the Bulgarians under the name Peter III, recalling the names of the sainted Emperor
Peter I (Petăr I, who had died in
970) and of
Peter II Delyan (Petăr II Deljan, who had led the first major revolt against Byzantine rule in
1040–
1041).
The troops of the newly-crowned Peter III took
Niš and
Ohrid, but suffered a crippling defeat in front of
Kastoria. The Byzantine counter-attack took
Skopje with the help of George Voitekh, who betrayed first Peter III, and then attempted to betray the Byzantines, but in vain. In another battle Peter III was taken captive by the Byzantines and sent, together with George Voitekh, as prisoner to
Constantinople. George Voitekh died ''en route'', while the former Peter III languished in prison first at Constantinople and then at
Antioch.
King of Zeta
In about
1078 Venetian sailors rescued Constantine Bodin from captivity and returned him to his father Michael I of Zeta. Shortly afterwards, in
1081, Michael died, and Constantine Bodin succeeded his father as king.
By
1085, he and his brothers had suppressed a revolt by their cousins, the sons of Michael's brother Radoslav in the ''župa'' of Zeta, and Constantine Bodin ruled unchallenged. In spite of his earlier opposition to the
Byzantine Empire, Constantine Bodin at first supported the Byzantines against the attack of
Robert Guiscard and his
Norman on
Durazzo in
1081, but then stood idle, allowing the Normans to take the city.
At about this time, Constantine Bodin married the daughter of a pro-Norman nobleman from
Bari. Constantine Bodin's relations with the west included his support for
Pope Urban II in
1089, which secured him a major concession, the upgrading of his Bishop of Bar to the rank of an Archbishop.
Constantine Bodin attempted to maintain the englarged realm left him by his father. To do so, he campaigned in
Bosnia and
Raška, installing his nephews Marko and Vukan as ''župans'' in the latter. The two princes were sons of Constantine Bodin's half-brother Petrislav, who had governed Raška in about
1060–
1074. However, after the death of Robert Guiscard in
1085, Constantine Bodin was faced by the hostility of the Byzantine Empire, which recovered Durazzo and prepared to punish the king of Duklja for siding with the Normans.
The Byzantine campaign against Duklja is dated between
1089 and
1091 and may have succeeded in taking Constantine Bodin captive for the second time. Although the kingdom survived, outlying territories including Bosnia, Raška, and Hum (Zahumlje) seceded under their own governors. Exactly what happened in Duklja is unknown, and there may have been a civil war during Constantine Bodin's possible captivity. Queen Jakvinta ruthlessly persecuted possible claimants to the throne, including Constantine Bodin's cousin Branislav and his family. After a number of these persons were killed or exiled by Constantine Bodin and his wife, the church managed to keep the impending blood feud from sparking off a full-blown civil war.
On Constantine Bodin's death in
1101 or possibly
1108, Duklja was engulfed in the conflict caused by the dynastic strife that had begun to develop during his reign.
Family
By his wife Jakvinta of Bari, Constantine Bodin had several children, including:
# Michael II (Mihajlo II), king of Duklja c. 1101-1102
# George (Juraj), king of Duklja c. 1118 and 1125-1127
External links
★
Serbian Unity Congress - Rulers of the Land
★
Detailed List of Bulgarian Rulers (pdf)
References
★ John V.A. Fine Jr., ''The Early Medieval Balkans'', Ann Arbor, 1983.
See also
★
Duklja
★
List of Serbian monarchs
★
List of Bulgarian monarchs
★
List of rulers of Montenegro