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Constantine I, Prince of Armenia

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Predecessor
  
Roupen I

Name
  
Constantine Prince

Successor
  
Thoros I

Died
  
1102


Burial
  
Monastery of Castalon

Spouse
  
Bardas Phokas the Elder

Father
  
Roupen I

House
  
Rubenids

Reign
  
1095 – c. 1100/1102/1103

Issue
  
Thoros I Beatrice Leo I

Parents
  
Ruben I, Prince of Armenia

Children
  
Leo I, Prince of Armenia, Thoros I, Prince of Armenia, Morphia of Melitene

Similar People
  
Nikephoros II Phokas, Melisende - Queen of Jerusalem, Baldwin II of Jerusalem

Constantine I or Kostandin I (1035–1040 / 1050–1055 – c. 1100 / February 24, 1102 – February 23, 1103) was the second lord of Armenian Cilicia or “Lord of the Mountains” (1095 – c. 1100 / 1102 / 1103). During his rule, he controlled the greater part of the regions around the Taurus Mountains, and invested much of his efforts in cultivating the lands and rebuilding the towns within his domain. He provided ample provisions to the Crusaders, for example during the difficult period of the siege of Antioch in the winter of 1097. He was a passionate adherent of the separated Armenian Church.

Contents

Early years

He was the son of Roupen I; his father declared the independence of Cilicia from the Byzantine Empire around 1080. According to the chroniclers Matthew of Edessa and Sempat Sparapet, Constantine is also identified as being either a prince of King Gagik II, or some kind of a military commander in the monarch’s clan in exile.

Upon the murder of King Gagik II, Constantine’s father gathered his family and fled to the Taurus Mountains and took refuge in the fortress of Kopitar (Kosidar) situated north of Sis (today Kozan in Turkey). As Roupen was growing old by 1090, his command seems to have passed entirely to Constantine; and it was the latter who in the same year conquered the strategic Cilician castle of Vahka (today Feke in Turkey). The mastery of this mountain defile made possible the assessment of taxes on merchandise transported from the port of Ayas towards the central part of Asia Minor, a source of wealth to which the Roupenians owed their power.

His rule

After his father’s death in 1095, Constantine extended his power eastward towards the Anti-Taurus Mountains. As an Armenian Christian ruler in the Levant, he helped the forces of the First Crusade maintain the siege of Antioch until it fell to the crusaders. The crusaders, for their part, duly appreciated the aid of their Armenian allies: Constantin was honored with the titles of Comes and Baron.

The Chronographie of Samuel of Ani records that Constantine died soon after a lightning bolt struck his table in the fortress of Vahka. He was buried in Castalon.

Marriage and children

According to the Chronicle of Aleppo, his wife was descended from Bardas Phokas.

  • Beatrice (? – before 1118), the wife of Count Joscelin I of Edessa
  • Thoros I, Lord of Armenian Cilicia (? – February 17, 1129 / February 16, 1130)
  • Leo I, Lord of Armenian Cilicia (? – Constantinople, February 14, 1140)
  • [he did not have a daughter who married Gabriel of Melitene as some sources state.]
  • References

    Constantine I, Prince of Armenia Wikipedia


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