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  1. Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa. Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa ( Greek: Εύφροσύνη Κασταμονίτισσα) was a Byzantine noblewoman of the Kastamonites family, a wife of Andronikos Doukas Angelos (a cousin of the ruling Komnenos dynasty) and mother of the two future Byzantine emperors from the Angelos family: Isaac II Angelos and Alexios ...

  2. Meanwhile, Isaac took many other Romans into his service. He created an independent patriarch of Cyprus, who crowned him as emperor in 1185. After a popular uprising at Constantinople led to the death of Andronikos I on 12 September 1185, Isaac II Angelos succeeded to the Byzantine throne.

  3. Isaac II, drawn from his prison and robed once more in the imperial purple, received his son, Alexios IV, in state. Life in exile [ edit ] Alexios III attempted to organize resistance to the new regime from Adrianople and then Mosynopolis , where he was joined by the later usurper Alexios V Doukas in April 1204, after the definitive fall of Constantinople to the crusaders and the establishment ...

  4. Jan Angelos – Manuel. Moneta. Moneta Izaaka II Angelosa przedstawiająca Matkę Boską z popiersiem Dzieciątka Jezus. Multimedia w Wikimedia Commons. Izaak II Angelos (ur. ok. 1156, zm. 28 stycznia 1204 w Konstantynopolu) – cesarz bizantyjski w latach 1185 – 1195 oraz wspólnie z synem Aleksym IV od 1203 .

  5. Alexios IV Angelos ( Greek: Ἀλέξιος Ἄγγελος, romanized : Aléxios Ángelos; c. 1182 – February 1204), Latinized as Alexius IV Angelus, was Byzantine Emperor from August 1203 to January 1204. He was the son of Emperor Isaac II Angelos and his first wife, an unknown Palaiologina, who became a nun with the name Irene.

  6. Isaac II Angelo. El reinado de Isaac II siguió un patrón similar al de su predecesor. Heredó un imperio en crisis, los normandos en el oeste (principal motivo de esta crisis), a solo 200 millas (320 km) de Constantinopla, no desaparecieron con la rebelión.

  7. Modern scholars, beginning with Georg Juritsch in 1894, have offered different opinions on who that emperor was, with some considering Theodora the granddaughter of Isaac II Angelos (r. 1185–1195, 1203–1204), while others held that it was Alexios III Angelos (r. 1195–1203).