III. The Postclassical Period, 500–1500 > F. Europe, 461–1500 > 7. Eastern Europe, 1300–1500 > f. The Byzantine Empire > 1390
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  The Encyclopedia of World History.  2001.
 
 
1390
 
John VII, a grandson of John V, deposed the latter, but after a few months the old emperor was restored by his second son, Manuel.  1
 
1391–1425
 
MANUEL II, an able ruler in a hopeless position. By this time the empire had been reduced to the city of Constantinople, the city of Thessalonica, and the province of Morea. The Ottomans held Thrace and Macedonia.  2
 
1391–95
 
The Ottomans, under Bayezid I, blockaded Constantinople, and only the Christian crusade that ended in the disastrous battle of Nicopolis (1396) gave the Greeks some respite (See 1396).  3
 
1397
 
Bayezid attacked Constantinople, which was valiantly defended by Marshal Boucicaut. This time the advance of the Tatars under Timur-I Lang distracted the Turks. The defeat and capture of Bayezid in the battle of Ankara (See 1402) (1402) led to a period of confusion and dynastic war among the Ottomans.  4
 
1422
 
The Ottomans again attacked Constantinople, because of Manuel's support of the Turkish pretender Mustapha, against Murad II.  5
 
1423
 
The Venetians bought the city of Salonika.  6
 
1425–48
 
JOHN VIII, the son of Manuel, whose position was, from the outset, desperate.  7
 
1428
 
Constantine and Thomas Paleologus, brothers of the emperor, conquered Frankish Morea, with the exception of the Venetian ports.  8
 
1430
 
The Ottomans took Salonika from the Venetians.  9
 
1439
 
The Council of Florence. John VIII, having traveled to Italy, once again accepted the union with Rome and the papal primacy. As on earlier occasions, this step raised a storm of opposition among the Greeks and to some extent facilitated the Turkish conquests.  10
A crusade preached by Pope Eugenius IV ended in disaster when the Ottomans defeated a Polish-Hungarian army at Varna (ancient Odessos, on the west coast of the Black Sea). The Crusade represents the final attempt by Western Crusaders to stem the Ottoman advance. Corinth fell into Turkish hands.  11
 
1448–53
 
CONSTANTINE XI, the last Byzantine emperor.  12
 
1453
 
The siege and capture of Constantinople by Mehmed II (1451–81). End of the Byzantine Empire after a thousand years of existence (See 1453, May 31).  13
 
 
 
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.

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