Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Constantine IV was portrayed by Iossif Surchadzhiev in the 1981 Bulgarian movie Aszparuh, directed by Ludmil Staikov. Constantine IV is the subject of the song "Imperator" ("Emperor"), released by the Bulgarian heavy metal band Epizod in their 2012 album Moyata molitva ("My prayer").
Anastasia entered historical record when her husband Constantine IV succeeded to the throne in 668, following his father's death. [2] On September 15, 668, her father-in-law Constans II was assassinated in his bath by his chamberlain.
Constantine IV received envoys from the Avars and the Balkan Slavs, who bore gifts and congratulations and acknowledging Byzantine supremacy. [1] The subsequent peace also gave a much-needed respite from constant raiding to Asia Minor and allowed the Byzantine state to recover its balance and consolidate itself after the cataclysmic changes of ...
Heraclius (Greek: Ἡράκλειος) [1] was born between 667 and 685, [a] [b] and was the son, and second of two children, of Byzantine Emperor Constantine IV and his wife, Empress Anastasia. [4] Unlike his older brother Justinian II, he was never made co-emperor under his father, and was never emperor. [5]
Constantine was the eldest son of Ioane I, Prince of Mukhrani, and Princess Ketevan of Georgia, daughter of King Heraclius II of Georgia.He succeeded to the headship of the House of Mukhrani on the death of his father in October 1801.
Constantine IV (also Constantine VI; Armenian: Կոստանդին, Western Armenian transliteration: Gosdantin or Kostantine; died 1373) was the King of Armenian Cilicia from 1362 until his death. He was the son of Hethum of Neghir , a nephew of Hethum I of Armenia .
Constantine IV of Constantinople (Chliarenus Greek: Κωνσταντῖνος Χλιαρηνός; died May 1157) was Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from November 1154 to May 1157. Notes and references
Constantine's arms, a combination of those of Lusignan, Jerusalem, and Cilicia. Constantine II (Armenian: Կոստանդին Բ), (also Constantine IV; Western Armenian transliteration: Gosdantin; died 17 April 1344), born Guy de Lusignan, [1] was elected the first Latin King of Armenian Cilicia of the Poitiers-Lusignan dynasty, ruling from 1342 until his death in 1344.