Michael signs a treaty with the Venetians …
Years: 1265 - 1265
Michael signs a treaty with the Venetians on June 18, 1265, but it is not ratified by the Doge.
His treatment of the Laskarid heir of Nicaea, for which the patriarch Arsenius—who in 1259 had crowned John and Michael as co-emperors—had excommunicated him in 1261, had appalled many of Michael’s own subjects and provokes what is known as the Arsenite schism in the Greek Church.
Arsenius, deposed by the Emperor in 1265, is exiled to Proconnesus, where he writes a testament that will serve as an important source of contemporary history.
After Arsenius' deposition, the empire is split into two factions known as the Arsenites (followers of Arsenius) and the Josephists (followers of Joseph, Arsenius' second successor).
Locations
People
Groups
- Genoa, (Most Serene) Republic of
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Christians, Eastern Orthodox
- Venice, (Most Serene) Republic of
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Palaiologan dynasty
Topics
- Crusades, The
- Saint Sabas, War of (Venetian-Genoese War of 1256-70)
- Latin Empire-Byzantine Empire War, Third
