III. The Postclassical Period, 500–1500 > F. Europe, 461–1500 > 7. Eastern Europe, 1300–1500 > f. The Byzantine Empire > 1329
  PREVIOUS NEXT  
CONTENTS · SUBJECT INDEX · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
  The Encyclopedia of World History.  2001.
 
 
1329
 
The Greeks managed to take the important island of Chios from the Genoese.  1
 
1330
 
The Serbs defeated the Bulgars in a decisive battle and put an end to the Bulgar power.  2
 
1334–35
 
Andronicus conquered Thessaly and part of Epirus from the despot John II Orsini.  3
 
1336
 
The Greeks reconquered Lesbos.  4
 
1340
 
Stefan Uro IV Duan, Serbian ruler, having conquered the Albanian coastal territory (as far as Valona) from the Angevins, drove the Greeks out of the interior and took Janina. His conquest intensified the political and cultural hellenization of Serbia.  5
 
1341–76
 
JOHN V, the son of Andronicus III, ascended the throne as a child, under the regency of his mother, Anna of Savoy.  6
 
1341–47
 
Civil war in the empire. John Cantacuzene, supported by the aristocratic elements, set himself up as a rival emperor. John V was supported by the popular elements. In the ensuing war, much of Thrace and Macedonia was ravaged. The war was the undoing of the empire, since both sides freely called in Serbs or Ottoman Turks to support them.  7
 
1341–51
 
The HESYCHAST CONTROVERSY in the Greek Church added to the confusion. Hesychasm (literally, to be quiet) is a term used for the method of monastic prayer and contemplation designed to achieve union with God through interior quietude. Although hesychasm is commonly but misleadingly used to describe various currents of 14th-century spirituality, it became a social and political phenomenon when it was drawn into the civil wars of the period. The hesychasts supported and were victorious with Cantacuzene against John V, supported by the secular clergy. The dispute led to a great popular rising in Thessalonica where extremists tried to set up an independent state (1342–47).  8
 
1343
 
The Venetians, taking advantage of the civil war, seized Smyrna.  9
 
1346
 
Stefan Duan was crowned emperor of the Serbs and the Greeks, and made preparations to seize Constantinople and replace the Greek dynasty.  10
 
1347
 
Cantacuzene managed to take Constantinople, through treachery.  11
 
1347–54
 
JOHN VI (Cantacuzene), sole emperor. He made his son Manuel despot of the Morea (1348). The Serbs held all of Macedonia.  12
 
 
 
The Encyclopedia of World History, Sixth edition. Peter N. Stearns, general editor. Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Maps by Mary Reilly, copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

CONTENTS · SUBJECT INDEX · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
  PREVIOUS NEXT