(Redirected from Leo I of Armenia)'Levon I' () (died
February 14,
1140) was prince of
Armenian Cilicia from
1129 until his death in
1140. His name is also spelled as 'Leo' and 'Leon'
Leo, like his predecessors, continued to push the Armenian borders outward, expanding onto the Mediterranean littoral. He captured
Korikos during the
1130s, and in
1132 he seized
Tarsus,
Adana, and
Mamistra. This brought him into conflict with the
Crusaders, particularly in
1135 when he seized
Saravantikar, against the opposition of the
Antiochenes.
Raymond, the prince of Antioch coveted Saravantikar, and in
1136 he seized Leo by treachery and held him for a ransom: 60,000 gold pieces, the surrender of Saravantikar, Mamistra, and Adana, and the promise of help against Byzantine emperor
John II Comnenus. Leo agreed to the terms, but quickly returned to the offensive. He recaptured those cities and attacked the
Principality of Antioch and its allies from the
Kingdom of Jerusalem, but
Joscelin II of Edessa mediated a peace and alliance against the Emperor in
1137.
The invasion of John II Comnenus in that year resulted in the fall of
Seleucia,
Korikos, Tarsus, Mamistra, Adana,
Til Hamdoun, and
Anazarbe. Leo retreated into the
Taurus Mountains with his second wife and their children, but Gaban and Vahka fell in
1138, and he was captured. (His sons by his first marriage had taken refuge in
Edessa.) His wife and children were taken off with him to Constantinople, where he died in captivity in
1140.
Despite the loss of their ruler, the Armenian army was still active and retook
Vahka in
1139. On his death he was succeeded by his son
Stephen I.
He had four children by his first wife Beatrice de Rethel:
# a daughter, married
Vasil Dgha
# Constantine (bef.
1109 – bef.
1144, Edessa)
#
Stephen (bef.
1110–
1165)
#
Mleh (bef.
1120–
1175)
By his second wife, unknown but probably Armenian:
# a daughter, mother of the Regent Thomas (tenure
1168–
1169)
# a daughter, married
John Tzelepes Comnenus
#
Thoros II
# Roupen (aft.
1120–
1141, Constantinople), murdered in captivity
# a daughter, mother of Fulk of Bullion, Lord of
Bagras
References
★
The Cilician Kingdom of Armenia, , T. S. R., Boase, Scottish Academic Press, 1978, ISBN 0-7073-0145-9
External links
★
Smbat Sparapet's Chronicle
★
★ class=wikiexternal target=_blank>.html The Barony of Cilician Armenia (Kurkjian's History of Armenia, Ch. 27)