King Janus of Cyprus is succeeded by …
Years: 1396 - 1539
King Janus of Cyprus is succeeded by his son John II, whose reign is marked by dissension and intrigue.
The most important event in the reign of John II is his marriage to Helena Palaiologina, a Greek who is a granddaughter of a Roman emperor and a follower of the Orthodox faith.
Queen Helena, stronger in character than her husband, takes over the running of the kingdom and brings Greek culture out of the oblivion in which it has languished for three centuries.
Her actions in favor of the Orthodox faith and Greek culture naturally disturb he Franks, who come to consider her a dangerous enemy, but she has become too powerful to attack.
Greek Cypriots will always revere Queen Helena as a great heroine because of her boldness.
John II and Helena die within a few months of each other in 1458 and are succeeded by their seventeen-year-old daughter Charlotte, but the succession is contested by John's illegitimate son.
James, after six years of treachery and conniving (even with the Mamluks), ousts his half sister and ascends the throne as James II.
He is generally known as James the Bastard and is renowned for his political amorality.
The weakened Kingdom of Cyprus, after years of enduring rapacious forays by neighboring states, is forced to turn to its ally Venice to save itself from being dismembered.
The royal house of Cyprus is formally linked with Venice in 1468 by virtue of a marriage between James II and Caterina Cornaro, daughter of a Venetian noble family.
James dies in 1473, and the island comes under Venetian control.
Locations
People
Groups
- Muslims, Sunni
- Genoa, (Most Serene) Republic of
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Christians, Eastern Orthodox
- Jerusalem, Latin Kingdom of
- Venice, (Most Serene) Republic of
- Cyprus, Kingdom of
- Egypt and Syria, Mamluk Burji Sultanate of
- Ottoman Empire
- Ottoman Empire
