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Trebizond, empire of,
1204-1461. When the army of the Fourth Crusade overthrew (1204) the Byzantine
Empire and established the Latin Empire of Constantinople, several Greek
successor states sprang up. These were the empire of Nicaea, the despotate of
Epirus, and the empire of Trebizond. The last of these was founded by two
members of the former imperial Comnenus family, David and his brother Alexius I
(reigned 1204-22) of Trebizond, who took the titles of Grand Comnenus and
emperor, which were assumed by all his successors. The empire comprised the
entire southern coastal region of the Black Sea except its westernmost section,
which belonged to Nicaea. Trebizond, the capital, and Sinope were the chief
cities. The western part of the empire was the conquest of David Comnenus, who
soon lost his dominions to Nicaea. The empire of Trebizond was further
diminished when Sinope fell (1214) to the Seljuk Turks, and the emperor became a
vassal of the sultan of Iconium; for the remainder of its existence Trebizond
was restricted to the SE Black Sea coastal region. When the Byzantine Empire was
restored (1261) under Nicaean leadership, Trebizond remained separate and
independent, although it was often forced to pay tribute to the succeeding
dominant powers of Asia Minor. After the Mongol invasion the empire experienced
tremendous economic prosperity. It became the commercial route through Asia
Minor, leading into the great trade route to East Asia that the Mongols had
opened, and its position on the trade routes from Russia and from the Middle
East to Europe furthered its importance. Its commercial life was controlled by
the Genoese and the Venetians, and the empire profited much from the added
opportunity to export the produce of its own rich hinterland. The empire reached
its greatest prosperity under Alexius II (1297-1330), but with the decline of
Mongol power after 1320, Trebizond suffered increasingly from Turkish attacks,
civil wars, and domestic intrigues. In this period the emperors attempted to
gain strength by marrying the princesses of the Comnenus dynasty to Turkish
princes. Relations between Trebizond and the Muslims were generally friendly,
but after the Turkish conquest of Constantinople (1453), David Comnenus, the
last emperor of Trebizond, promoted an alliance of the non-Ottoman Asian states
against Sultan Muhammad II. In 1461, Muhammad forced David to surrender, and a
few years later the sultan had him put to death together with all the Comnenus
males but one. Trebizond was annexed to the Ottoman Empire. At the height of its
wealth and power the court of the Grand Comneni was a great artistic and
cultural center and made Trebizond the last refuge of Hellenistic civilization.
See studies by W. Miller (1926) and J. Monfasoni (1984).
