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Theodore Laskaris. Furthermore, one of the two brothers had already had considerable contact with the Latin court, having spent time at Constantinople as a prisoner ca. 1220–21. This act soured relations between Nicaea and the Latins, and in 1224 the two brothers Alexios and Isaac found themselves
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in 1224, however, Vatatzes secured a decisive success: in a hard-fought battle, the Latin army was defeated, the brothers were captured, and
Vatatzes proceeded to reduce most of the fortresses the Latins held in northwestern
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and Manuel, also sought exile during John III's reign, perhaps in connection with the defection of
Alexios and Isaac, but later returned to Nicaea and were active in the reign of John III's son,
64:, a title habitually bestowed on brothers of the emperor. When Theodore I died in November 1221, he had no male heirs, and was succeeded by the husband of his eldest daughter,
80:, taking along with them Theodore's daughter Eudokia, Shortly before his death, Theodore had tried to arrange a marriage between Eudokia and the Latin Emperor,
84:, and the brothers evidently hoped to use her to secure Latin assistance against Vatatzes. In the end, the marriage did not come to pass. Two other brothers,
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Robert did, however, provide refuge and an appropriate place in his court to the two brothers, with whom he was related through the marriage of his sister
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Akropolites: The History - Introduction, translation and commentary
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at the head of the Latin army sent to confront
Vatatzes. In the resulting
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and unsuccessfully tried to topple
Theodore's successor,
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of
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271:Van Tricht, Filip (2011).
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44:John III Doukas Vatatzes
252:Macrides, Ruth (2007).
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179:, p. 168 (note 2).
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203:, pp. 174, 296.
102:Battle of Poimanenon
90:Theodore II Laskaris
336:13th-century deaths
326:Byzantine defectors
321:Latin Empire people
239:, pp. 165–167.
167:, pp. 157–158.
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82:Robert of Courtenay
56:Theodore I Laskaris
32:Theodore I Laskaris
27:) was a brother of
341:Nicaean–Latin wars
288:978-90-04-20323-5
281:. Leiden: Brill.
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276:Renovatio
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