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ALEXIUS III . ( See also: ANGELUS), emperor of the See also: East, was the second son of Andronicus Angelus, See also: nephew of Alexius I
.
In 1195, while his See also: brother Isaac II. was away hunting in See also: Thrace, he was See also: pro-claimed emperor by the troops; he captured Isaac at Stagira in See also: Macedonia, put out his eyes, and kept him henceforth a close prisoner, though he had been redeemed by him from captivity at See also: Antioch and loaded with honours
.
To compensate for this See also: crime and to confirm his position as emperor, he had to scattermonev
so lavishly as to empty his See also: treasury, and to allow such, licence to the See also: officers of the army as to leave the See also: Empire practically defenceless
.
He consummated the See also: financial ruin of the See also: state
.
The empress See also: Euphrosyne tried in vain to sustain his See also: credit and his See also: court; Vatatzes, the favourite instrument of her attempts at reform, was assassinated by the emperor's orders
.
Eastward the Empire was overrun by the See also: Turks; from the See also: north Bulgarians and See also: Vlachs descended unchecked to ravage the plains of Macedonia and Thrace; while Alexius squandered the public treasure on his palaces and gardens
.
Soon he was threatened by a new and yet more formidable danger
.
In 1202 the Western princes assembled at Venice, bent on a new crusade
.
To them Alexius, son of the deposed Isaac, made See also: appeal, promising as a crowning bribe to heal the See also: schism of East and West if they would help him to depose his See also: uncle
.
The crusaders, whose See also: objective had been See also: Egypt, were persuaded to set their course for Constantinople, before which they appeared in See also: June 1203, proclaiming the emperor Alexius IV. and summoning the capital to depose his uncle
.
Alexius III., sunk in debauchery, took no efficient See also: measures to resist
.
His son-in- See also: law, Lascaris, who was the only one to do anything, was defeated at See also: Scutari, and the siege of Constantinople began
.
On the 17th of See also: July the crusaders, the aged See also: doge Dandolo at their See also: head, scaled the walls and took the city by See also: storm
.
During the fighting and carnage that followed Alexius hid in the palace, and finally, with one of his daughters, See also: Irene, and such treasures as he could collect, got into a boat and escaped to Develton in Thrace, leaving his wife, his other daughters and his Empire to the victors
.
Isaac, See also: drawn from his prison and robed once more in the imperial See also: purple, received his son in state
.
Shortly afterwards Alexius made an effort in conjunction with Murtzuphlos (Alexius V.) to recover the See also: throne
.
The attempt was unsuccessful and, after wandering about See also: Greece, he surrendered with Euphrosyne, who had meanwhile joined him, to Boniface of See also: Montferrat, then master of a See also: great See also: part of the See also: Balkan peninsula
.
Leaving his See also: protection he sought shelter with Michael, despot of See also: Epirus, and then repaired to See also: Asia Minor,where his son-in-law Lascaris was holding his' own against the Latins
.
Alexius, joined by the sultan of See also: Iconium (Konieh), now demanded the See also: crown of Lascaris, and on his refusal marched against him
.
Lascaris, however, defeated and took him prisoner
.
Alexius was relegated to a monastery at See also: Nicaea, where he died on some date unknown
.
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