Pseudo-Alexios II

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Pseudo-Alexios II Komnenos
Isaac II
SuccessorAlexius III
Born?
Died?1192

Pseudo-Alexios II was the most famous among several pretenders to the throne of the Byzantine Empire who appeared in the early reign of Isaac II Angelos (r. 1185-1195 and 1203–1204). He claimed to be the Emperor Alexios II Komnenos, who had been murdered in 1183.

Career of the false Alexios II

Pseudo-Alexios II was a young man from

Iconium and sought an audience with Sultan Kilij Arslan II. The sultan, struck by the resemblance to Manuel, allowed him to enroll troops, but he refused to break the treaty he had concluded with Isaac II, and thus lose the tribute he was receiving from the Byzantine Empire
.

The pretender assembled an army of 8,000 men and ravaged the valley of the

Chonae in order to appease his troops with plunder. Isaac sent his brother Alexios
to deal with the pretender, but the imperial troops had very little success.

The false Alexios' career came to a sudden stop when he was assassinated by a priest, who was infuriated with Alexios' alliance with the

sebastocrator
Alexios, who was so taken aback by the similarities of its features to those of Manuel I, that he exclaimed "Those who followed him may be innocent after all."

Other pretenders

After the death of Pseudo-Alexios, several others also assumed the name of Alexios II. One was taken in Paphlagonia and put to death. Another rose up at Nicomedia in 1195/1196, but he was captured and blinded.

References

  • George Finlay, History of the Byzantine and Greek Empires from 1057 - 1453, Volume 2, William Blackwood & Sons, 1854
  • .