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Family: Manuel Komnenos, I / Maria d' Antiochia (F4943)

m. 25 Dec 1161

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  • Manuel Komnenos, I
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    Male
    Manuel Komnenos, I

    Birth  1122   
    Death  24 Sep 1180   
    Burial     
    Marriage  25 Dec 1161   
    Other Spouse  Bertha von Sulzbach | F32906 
    Marriage  1146   
    Other Spouse  Theodora Batatzina | F152334 
    Marriage     
    Other Spouse  Maria Taronitissa | F294475 
    Marriage     
    Other Spouse  NN | F196276 
    Marriage     
    Father  Ioannes Komnenos, II | F31822 Group Sheet 
    Mother  Pyriska von Ungarn | F31822 Group Sheet 

    Maria d' Antiochia Female
    Maria d' Antiochia

    Birth  1145   
    Death  27 Aug 1182   
    Burial     
    Other Spouse  Alexios Komnenos | F294470 
    Marriage     
    Father  Raimund de Poitou | F5247 Group Sheet 
    Mother  Constance Guiscard | F5247 Group Sheet 

    Eudoxia Komnena Female
    + Eudoxia Komnena

    Birth  Abt 1162   
    Death  Yes, date unknown   
    Burial     
    Spouse  Guillaume VIII de Montpellier | F6369 
    Marriage     

    Alexios Komnenos, II Male
    Alexios Komnenos, II

    Birth  10 Sep 1167   
    Death  24 Sep 1183   
    Burial     
    Spouse  Agnès de France | F32904 
    Marriage  1180   

  • Notes  Married:
    • Manuel had two wives. His first marriage, in 1146, was to Bertha of Sulzbach, a sister-in-law of Conrad III of Germany. She died in 1159. Children:


      Manuel's second marriage was to Maria of Antioch (nicknamed Xene), a daughter of Raymond and Constance of Antioch, in 1161. By this marriage, Manuel had one son:

      Alexios II Komnenos, who succeeded as emperor in 1180.[69]
      Manuel had several illegitimate children:

      By Theodora Vatatzina:

      Alexios Komnenos (born in the early 1160s), who was recognised as the emperor's son, and indeed received a title (sebastokrator). He was briefly married to Eirene Komnene, illegitimate daughter of Andronikos I Komnenos, in 1183-1184, and was then blinded by his father-in-law. He lived until at least 1191 and was known personally to Choniates.[70]
      By Maria Taronitissa, the wife of protovestiarios John Komnenos, whose legitimate children included Maria Komnene, Queen consort of Jerusalem:

      Alexios Komnenos, a pinkernes ("cupbearer"), who fled Constantinople in 1184 and was a figurehead of the Norman invasion and the siege of Thessalonica in 1185.
      By other lovers:

      A daughter whose name is unknown. She was born around 1150 and married Theodore Maurozomes before 1170. Her son was Manuel Maurozomes, and some of her descendants ruled the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm.[71]
      A daughter whose name is unknown, born around 1155. She was the maternal grandmother of the author Demetrios Tornikes.[72]


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