- Andronikos Kontostephanos
Andronikos Kontostephanos,
latinized Andronicus Contostephanus ( _el. Polytonic|Ἀνδρόνικος Κοντοστέφανος) was a major figure in the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire during the reign ofManuel I Komnenos ; he was a general, admiral, politician and a leading aristocrat. He was born sometime after 1125, when his parents married, and died sometime after 1182, when he is last mentioned in the sources.Background and family
Andronikos Kontostephanos was the youngest son of Stephanos Kontostephanos, [
John Kinnamos , 217.9; 97.18.] who held the title "panhypersebastos" and the rank of "megas doux ", and theporphyrogenita princess Anna Komnene, daughter of the emperorJohn II Komnenos and his empress Eirene of Hungary, and thus the nephew of emperorManuel I Komnenos . [John Kinnamos , 270.4.] Andronikos had two brothers, John and Alexios, and a sister, Eirene. The Kontostephanoi were an old Byzantine family and were at the heart of Byzantine politics and power through their intermarrying with the imperial house of theKomnenoi for generations. [Angold, pp. 211-212.] Andronikos himself is believed to have married a member of the Doukas family, another clan with imperial connections. He had four sons.Military career
Andronikos was the leading Byzantine military figure during the reign of his uncle the emperor
Manuel I Komnenos . Like his father he was appointed to the office of "megas doux " (grand duke), the commander-in-chief of theByzantine navy and governor of the provinces of Hellas, thePeloponnese andCrete . [Angold, p. 128-129] However, his greatest success was as a general rather than as an admiral. At some point, Andronikos was also appointed commander of theVarangian Guard . [John Kinnamos , 97.19.]The earliest mention of Andronikos in high command was in 1145 when he was given a command, jointly with his brother John and a general named Prosuch, of a force sent to defend
Cilicia from the depredations ofRaymond of Antioch . [Choniates, p. 31.] As his parents married in 1125 he must have been under twenty years old at the time.Andronikos’ father was killed at the siege of Corfu in 1149, when he commanded the Byzantine forces attempting to expel the
Normans of theKingdom of Sicily . Andronikos too was present at the siege and assumed his father's command, but failed to defeat the Normans. [John Kinnamos , 96.22-98.4; Angold, p. 170.]In 1165, the Hungarians had defeated the Byzantines on the Danube frontier, and later in the same year Byzantine armies had ravaged eastern Hungary in retaliation. In 1167 Manuel collected a very large army with the intention of ending the Hungarian threat to the empire’s Balkan possessions. Bad health prevented Manuel from taking to the field in person, and he entrusted his army to the command of Andronikos. The Byzantine army met the Hungarians in a pitched battle on the 8th of July near the fortified city of
Zemun . Andronikos’ skillful dispositions and the discipline of his troops gave the Byzantines a decisive victory at theBattle of Sirmium . [John Kinnamos , 270-274; Angold, pp. 177-211.] The Hungarians sued for peace on Byzantine terms and recognised the empire’s control over the region around Sirmium,Bosnia , andDalmatia . [Treadgold, p. 646.] Following the victory Manuel celebrated a triumphal entry into Constantinople with Andronikos Kontostephanos riding by his side. [Finlay, p.179.]In 1169, Andronikos was appointed commander of a fleet of 230 ships carrying a Byzantine army to invade Egypt in alliance with the forces of Amalric, King of Jerusalem, in what was to be the last of a series of
Crusader invasions of Egypt . [Phillips, p. 158.] The combined armies laid siege toDamietta in the Nile delta. [John Kinnamos , 279.6.] The Byzantines prosecuted the siege with vigour, but as they were about to assault the city Amalric undermined them by arranging a negotiated surrender of Damietta. Andronikos, disgusted with Amalric’s double-dealing and with his soldiers in state of starvation, evacuated Egypt. He returned with his army by land through the crusader states of Palestine and Syria. Half of the Byzantine fleet was lost in a series of storms on its return journey. [Harris, p. 109.]In 1171, Manuel imprisoned all 20,000 Venetians in the empire and confiscated all of their property. The
Republic of Venice retaliated by sending a fleet of 120 ships to capture and occupyChios . Andronikos commanded a fleet of 150 ships dispatched to drive off the Venetians, a task he accomplished. [Heath, p. 4.]Manuel attacked the
Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm in 1176, with the intention of taking its capital, Konya, and destroying Turkish power in Anatolia. The Seljuk sultanKilij Arslan II ambushed Manuel’s impressively large army as it moved through the pass of Tivritze in mountainous border region between the two states. In the ensuingBattle of Myriokephalon parts of the Byzantine force were very badly mauled; however, Andronikos Kontostephanos managed to get his division, bringing up the rear, through the pass with few casualties. He is credited with having persuaded his uncle the emperor, whose confidence had been severely shaken, to remain with his troops following the defeat. Through his influence with the emperor he was instrumental in facilitating the peaceful withdrawal of the Byzantine forces. [Choniates, pp. 105-106; Angold, pp. 192-193; Finlay, pp. 192-195.]In the following year (1177), Andronikos led a fleet of 150 ships in another attempt to conquer Egypt, but he returned home after landing at Acre. He was disuaded from continuing with the expedition by the refusal of Count Philip of Flanders, and many important nobles of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, to actively co-operate with the Byzantine force. [Harris p. 109]
Political intrigues and an unfortunate fate
Following the death of Manuel in 1180 the succession fell on his son
Alexios II Komnenos . As Alexios was a child, power devolved on his mother, the empressMaria of Antioch . Her rule proved very unpopular, especially with the aristocracy who resented her Latin (Western) origins. When Manuel’s cousin Andronikos Komnenos made a bid for power in 1182, the Grand Duke Andronikos Kontostephanos, together with the general Andronikos Angelos played a key role in allowing his forces to enter Constantinople. However, once in power, Andronikos Komnenos proved that he had a tyrannical nature and had a vehement desire to break the power and influence of the Byzantine aristocratic families. Kontostephanos and Angelos reacted by plotting to overthrow Andronikos. The plot was discovered and Andronikos Kontostephanos was captured, whilst Angelos escaped. The Grand Duke Andronikos and his four sons were punished with blinding. [Angold, p. 267; Finlay p. 209.]Legacy
Due to his exploits, Andronikos is one of the few figures given heroic status in the works of the Byzantine historian
Niketas Choniates . [Magdalino, p. 13.]Footnotes
References
Primary
*cite book|last=Choniates |first=Niketas |authorlink=Niketas Choniates |others=transl. by H. Magoulias |title=O City of Byzantium: Annals of Niketas Choniates |year=1984 |location=Detroit |isbn=0-814-31764-2
*cite book|last=Kinammos |first=John |authorlink=John Kinnamos |others=transl. by Charles M. Brand |title=Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus |year=1976 |publisher=Columbia University Press |isbn=Secondary
*cite book|last=Angold |first=Michael |authorlink=Michael Angold |title=The Byzantine Empire, 1025–1204: A Political History |year=1997 |publisher=Longman |isbn=0-582-29468-1
*cite book|last=Finlay |first=George |authorlink=George Finlay |title=A History of Greece, Vol. III |origyear=1877 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |isbn=
*cite book|last=Magdalino |first=Paul |title=The Empire of Manuel I Komnenos, 1143-1180 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=0cWZvqp7q18C |year=2002 |publisher=Cambridge University Press | isbn = 978-0521526531
*cite book|last=Heath |first=Ian |title=Byzantine Armies AD 1118-1461 |year=1995 |publisher=Osprey Publishing | isbn = 978-1855323476
*cite book|last=Harris |first=Jonathan |title=Byzantium and The Crusades |year=2006 |publisher=Hambledon & London |isbn=
*cite book|last=Phillips |first=Jonathan |title=The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople |year=2004 |publisher=Penguin Group |isbn=978-0143035909
*cite book|last=Treadgold |first=Warren |title=A History of the Byzantine State and Society |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=nYbnr5XVbzUC |year=1997 |publisher=Stanford University Press |isbn=0804726302
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