Leo I, Prince of Armenia

Leo I, Prince of Armenia

Leo I or Leon I ( _hy. Լեիոն Ա, "Levon I"; died 14 February 1140) was prince of Armenian Cilicia from 1129 until his death in 1140. He was the first king of the Rubenid dynasty.

Leo, like his predecessors, continued to push the Armenian borders outward, expanding onto the Mediterranean littoral. He captured Korikos during the 1130s, and in 1132 he seized Tarsus, Adana, and Mamistra. This brought him into conflict with the Crusaders, particularly in 1135 when he seized Saravantikar, against the opposition of the Antiochenes. Raymond, the prince of Antioch coveted Saravantikar, and in 1136 he seized Leo by treachery and held him for a ransom: 60,000 gold pieces, the surrender of Saravantikar, Mamistra, and Adana, and the promise of help against Byzantine emperor John II Comnenus. Leo agreed to the terms, but quickly returned to the offensive. He recaptured those cities and attacked the Principality of Antioch and its allies from the Kingdom of Jerusalem, but Joscelin II of Edessa mediated a peace and alliance against the Emperor in 1137.

The invasion of John II Comnenus in that year resulted in the fall of Seleucia, Korikos, Tarsus, Mamistra, Adana, Til Hamdoun, and Anazarbe. Leo retreated into the Taurus Mountains with his second wife and their children, but Gaban and Vahka fell in 1138, and he was captured. (His sons by his first marriage had taken refuge in Edessa.) His wife and children were taken off with him to Constantinople, where he died in captivity in 1140.

Despite the loss of their ruler, the Armenian army was still active and retook Vahka in 1139. On his death he was succeeded by his son Stephen I.

He had four children by his first wife Beatrice de Rethel:
# a daughter, married Vasil Dgha
# Constantine (bef. 1109 – bef. 1144, Edessa)
# Stephen (bef. 1110–1165)
# Mleh (bef. 1120–1175)

By his second wife, unknown but probably Armenian:
# a daughter, mother of the Regent Thomas (tenure 1168–1169)
# a daughter, married John Tzelepes Komnenos
# Thoros II
# Roupen (aft. 1120–1141, Constantinople), murdered in captivity
# a daughter, mother of Fulk of Bullion, Lord of Bagras

References

*cite book|last=Boase|first=T. S. R.|title=The Cilician Kingdom of Armenia|year=1978|publisher=Scottish Academic Press|location=Edinburgh|id=ISBN 0-7073-0145-9

External links

* [http://rbedrosian.com/cssint.htm Smbat Sparapet's Chronicle]
* [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Asia/Armenia/_Texts/KURARM/27*.html The Barony of Cilician Armenia] (Kurkjian's History of Armenia, Ch. 27)


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Leo I, King of Armenia — Infobox Monarch name =Leo I the MagnificentԼեիոն Ա Մեծագործ title =Prince, then King predecessor =Roupen III successor =Isabella dynasty =House of Roupen|Leo I or Leon I (Lang hy|Լեիոն Ա Մեծագործ, Eastern tansliteration: Levon Metsagorts ,… …   Wikipedia

  • Leo II, King of Armenia — Infobox Monarch name =Leo IIԼեիոն Բ title =King Toros Roslin, 1250] predecessor =Hetoum I successor =Hetoum II dynasty =House of Lambron|Leo II or Leon II (occasionally numbered Leo III; Lang hy|Լեիոն Բ, Levon II ; c. 1236 ndash; 1289) was king… …   Wikipedia

  • Leo V, King of Armenia — Infobox Monarch | name=Leo V title= King of the Armenians reign= September 14,1374 1375 coronation= September 14, 1374 queen= Marguerite de Soissons royal house= Lusignan father= John of Lusignan mother= Soldane of Georgia issue= Last King of… …   Wikipedia

  • Constantine II, Prince of Armenia — For other uses, see Constantine of Armenia (disambiguation). Constantine II Lord of Cilicia / “Lord of the Mountains” Reign 1129/1130 Born (unknown) Birthplace (unknown) Died …   Wikipedia

  • Constantine I, Prince of Armenia — For other uses, see Constantine of Armenia (disambiguation). Constantine I Lord of Cilicia / “Lord of the Mountains” Reign 1095 – c. 1100/1102/1103 Born 1035 1040/1050 1055 Birthplace (unknown) …   Wikipedia

  • Mleh, Prince of Armenia — Mleh I Lord of Cilicia / “Lord of the Mountains” Reign 1170–1175 Born before 1120 Birthplace (unknown) Died May 15, 1175 …   Wikipedia

  • Ruben III, Prince of Armenia — Infobox Monarch name =Roupen III title =Prince predecessor =Mleh successor =Levon I dynasty =Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia|Roupen III ( hy. Ռուբեն Գ) (1145 1186) was prince of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, ruling from 1174 to 1186. He was the… …   Wikipedia

  • Stephen of Armenia — (died February 7, 1165) was the Marshal of Armenia, the son of Leo I, Prince of Armenia and Beatrice de Rethel.His father made him Marshal in 1138, due to the invasion of John II Comnenus, and escaped capture by sheltering in Edessa. In 1157, he… …   Wikipedia

  • Leo II — (or Leon II) may refer to:*Leo II (emperor), a Byzantine emperor who served from January 18 to November 17, 474 *Pope Leo II, pope from August 682 to July 683. *Levon II of Armenia *Occasionally Levon I of Armenia (1150 1219), initially known as… …   Wikipedia

  • Prince Claus Awards — The Prince Claus Fund was inaugurated in 1996, named in honor of Prince Claus of The Netherlands. It receives an annual subsidy from the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs.The Fund has presented the international Prince Claus Awards annually since …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”