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John Komnenos Vatatzes
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John Komnenos Vatatzes : ウィキペディア英語版
John Komnenos Vatatzes

John Komnenos Vatatzes, (), or simply John Komnenos or John Vatatzes (the transliteration 'Batatzes' is also employed) in the sources, was a major military and political figure in the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire during the reigns of Manuel I Komnenos and Alexios II Komnenos. He was born c.1132, and died of natural causes during a rebellion he raised against Andronikos I Komnenos in 1182.
==Background and family==

John Komnenos Vatatzes was the son of the ''sebastohypertatos'' Theodore Vatatzes, and the ''porphyrogenita'' princess Eudokia Komnene, daughter of the emperor John II Komnenos and his empress Eirene of Hungary.〔Varzos, p. 382〕〔Magdalino, p. 207〕 Theodore Vatatzes was one of the 'new men' raised to prominence by John II; the Vatatzes family were not previously counted amongst the highest levels of the Byzantine aristocracy, though they had long been prominent in the region around the city of Adrianople in Thrace.〔Magdalino, p. 208〕 John's parents married in 1131, and he was born soon thereafter, probably ca. 1132.〔 John had a brother, Andronikos, who was also a prominent general - he led an army against the city of Amaseia in 1176 and was killed by the Seljuq Turks; they displayed his severed head during the Battle of Myriokephalon shortly afterwards. He had another brother, named Alexios.〔Choniates, pp. 440-441.〕 John's wife was named Maria Doukaina and they had two sons, Alexios and Manuel.〔Varzos, pp. 382–383〕 The latter was named for John's uncle, the Emperor Manuel, to whom John was very devoted—to the extent of tolerating a love affair between the emperor and his own sister Theodora.〔Varzos, p. 383〕

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