Family Tree Welborn » Irini Irene Angelina Angelina of Byzantium (1181-± 1208)

Personal data Irini Irene Angelina Angelina of Byzantium 


Household of Irini Irene Angelina Angelina of Byzantium

She is married to Philip of Swabia of Swabia (Hohenstaufen).

They got married.


Child(ren):



Notes about Irini Irene Angelina Angelina of Byzantium



Irini Maria Angelina is your 24th great grandmother.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Francis "Fannie" Pernerviane Welborn
his mother ·Üí Primma M. Davis
her mother ·Üí Joel Pridgen
her father ·Üí Piety Mourning Tisdale
his mother ·Üí Mary Tisdale
her mother ·Üí Edward Flowers
her father ·Üí Henry Flowers
his father ·Üí Jacob Flowers
his father ·Üí Capt. John Flower
his father ·Üí John Flower, I
his father ·Üí Christopher Flower
his father ·Üí John Flower, IV
his father ·Üí John Flower, III
his father ·Üí John Flower, II
his father ·Üí Sir John Flower, I
his father ·Üí Robert Flower
his father ·Üí Roger Flower
his father ·Üí Sir William Flore
his father ·Üí Isabel Plantagenet
his mother ·Üí Henry of Lancaster
her father ·Üí Blanche of Artois
his mother ·Üí Mathilde van Brabant
her mother ·Üí Maria von Hohenstaufen
her mother ·Üí Irini Maria Angelina
her mother

Irini Maria Angelina is your 25th great grandmother.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Emma Corine Bombard
his mother ·Üí Emma Elizabeth Bombard
her mother ·Üí Isabelle Bynum
her mother ·Üí Robert W Bynum
her father ·Üí Elizabeth Bynum
his mother ·Üí Lydia Mitchell
her mother ·Üí Jonathan Wheeler, I
her father ·Üí Martha Wheeler (Salisbury)
his mother ·Üí William Salisbury, Jr.
her father ·Üí William Salisbury, of Denbigh & Swansea
his father ·Üí John Salisbury, of Denbigh
his father ·Üí Sir John Salusbury, III, "The Strong", MP
his father ·Üí Catrin o Ferain / Kathryn of Berain
his mother ·Üí Jane de Velville
her mother ·Üí Sir Roland Velville, of Beaumaris
her father ·Üí Henry VII of England
his father ·Üí Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond
his father ·Üí Catherine of Valois, Queen consort of England
his mother ·Üí Charles VI de Valois, roi de France
her father ·Üí Charles V le Sage, roi de France
his father ·Üí Bonne de Luxembourg, reine consort de France
his mother ᆒ Eliška - Elisabeth Přemyslovna, Česká královna
her mother ·Üí Wenceslaus II, King of Bohemia
her father ·Üí King Of Bohemia Otakar II
his father ·Üí Kunigunde von Schwaben
his mother ·Üí Irini Maria Angelina
her mother

===== maternal =====
Irini Maria Angelina is your 26th great grandmother.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith, Sr.
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith
his mother ·Üí William M LEE, Will
her father ·Üí Britton Lee
his father ·Üí William Samuel Lee
his father ·Üí Lemuel Samuel Lee
his father ·Üí Edward Lee, Sr.
his father ·Üí Mary Lee
his mother ·Üí William Bryan, I
her father ·Üí John Smith Bryan
his father ·Üí Catherine Bryan
his mother ·Üí Catherine Morgan
her mother ·Üí Nicholas Herbert
her father ·Üí Mary Gamage
his mother ·Üí Sir Thomas Gamage of Colty Castle
her father ·Üí Elinor Gamage
his mother ·Üí Margaret Touchet
her mother ·Üí Eleanor Tuchet (de Holland), Baroness Audley
her mother ·Üí Constance of York, Countess of Gloucester
her mother ·Üí Isabella of Castile, Duchess consort of York
her mother ·Üí Pedro I el Cruel, rey de Castilla y León
her father ·Üí Alfonso XI the Just, King of Castile and León
his father ·Üí Fernando IV el Emplazado, rey de Castilla y León
his father ·Üí Sancho IV el Bravo, rey de Castilla y León
his father ·Üí Alfonso X el Sabio, rey de Castilla y León
his father ·Üí Beatriz de Suabia, reina consorte de Castilla y León
his mother ·Üí Irini Maria Angelina
her mother

Irini Maria Angelina
Greek: Irini Maria ÕÜÕ≥Õ≥յժÕøŒÇ, Russian: Irini Maria œêœΩœ≥œµÅ“ª
Gender:
Female
Birth:
between circa 1172 and circa 1181
Constantinople, Byzantine Empire
Death:
August 27, 1208 (23-40)
Hohenstaufen, Goppingen, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany
Place of Burial:
Abbey of Lorch
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Isaac II Angelos, Byzantine Emperor and Herina Eirene Irene Angelos
Wife of Ruggero d'Altavilla and Philip von Hohenstaufen, duke of Swabia
Mother of Tancred Palermo, Heir; Beatrice Elisabeth von Hohenstauffen, Empress of the Holy Roman Empire; Kunigunde von Schwaben; Maria von Hohenstaufen; Beatriz de Suabia, reina consorte de Castilla y León; Reinald von Hohenstaufen and Frederick von Hohenstaufen « less
Sister of Euphrosyne Angelina; Anna-Maria Isaacovna Angelina Mstislavich of Byzantium, Grand Princess consort; Alexios IV Angelos, Byzantine Emperor and N/a Angelina, nun
Half sister of Ioannes Angelos (Kalojan) and Manuel Angelos

https://www.geni.com/people/Irini-Maria-Angelina/6000000000125362235

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irene_Angelina

Philip and Irene had five daughters:
·Ä¢Beatrix (April/June 1198 ·Äì 11 August 1212), who married her father's rival, Emperor Otto IV on 22 July 1212 and died three weeks later without issue.
·Ä¢Maria (1199/1200 ·Äì 29 March 1235), who married Duke Henry II of Brabant before 22 August 1215 and had issue.
·Ä¢Kunigunde (February/March 1202 ·Äì 13 September 1248), who married King Wenceslaus I of Bohemia in 1224 and had issue.
·Ä¢Elisabeth (March/May 1205 ·Äì 5 November 1235), who married King Ferdinand III of Castile on 30 November 1219 and had issue.
·Ä¢Daughter (posthumously born and died 20/27 August 1208). She and her mother died following childbirth complications.
Sources identified two short-lived sons, Reinald and Frederick, also born from the union of Philip and Irene-Maria Angelina, being both buried at Lorch Abbey alongside their mother. However, there were no contemporary sources who could ascertain their existence without doubt.

Irene Angelina (1181 ·Äì 1208) was the daughter of the Byzantine Emperor Isaac II Angelos by his first wife Herina Tornikaina. Her paternal grandparents were Andronikos Dukas Angelos and Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa.
In 1193 she married Roger III of Sicily, but he died on 24 December 1193. Irene was captured in the German invasion of Sicily on 29 December 1194 and was married on 25 May 1197 to Philip of Swabia. In Germany, she was renamed Maria.
Her father, who had been deposed in 1195, urged her to get Philip's support for his reinstatement; her brother, Alexius, subsequently spent some time at Philip's court during the preparations for the Fourth Crusade. She thus had an early influence on the eventual diversion of the Crusade to Constantinople in 1204.
She was described by Walther von der Vogelweide as "the rose without a thorn, the dove without guile".
Philip and Irene had four daughters:
Beatrice of Hohenstaufen (1198-1212), married Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor, died without issue.
Cunigunde of Hohenstaufen (1200-1248), married King Wenceslaus I, King of Bohemia, by whom she had issue.
Marie of Hohenstaufen (3 April 1201- 29 March 1235), married Henry II, Duke of Brabant, by whom she had issue.
Elisabeth of Hohenstaufen (1203-1235), married King Ferdinand III of Castile, by whom she had issue.
and two sons (called Reinald and Frederick) who died in infancy.
After the murder of her husband (21 April 1208), Irene - who was pregnant by that time - retired to the Burg Hohenstaufen. There, four months later (27 August 1208), she gave birth to a daughter (called Beatrice Postuma); but both mother and child died shortly afterwards. She was buried in the family mausoleum in the Staufen proprietary monastery of Lorch Abbey, along with her daughter and sons. Her grave, now destroyed, cannot be reconstructed today.

Irene Angelina
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irene Angelina (1181 - 1208) was the daughter of the Byzantine emperor Isaac II Angelos by his first wife Herina.
In 1193 she married Roger III of Sicily, but he died on 24 December 1193. Irene was captured in the German invasion of Sicily on 29 December 1194 and was married on 25 May 1197 to Philip of Swabia. In Germany, she was renamed Maria.
Her father, who had been deposed in 1195, urged her to get Philip's support for his reinstatement; her brother, Alexius, subsequently spent some time at Philip's court during the preparations for the Fourth Crusade. She thus had an early influence on the eventual diversion of the Crusade to Constantinople in 1204.
She was described by Walther von der Vogelweide as "the rose without a thorn, the dove without guile."
Philip and Irene had four daughters:
Beatrice of Hohenstaufen (1198-1212), married Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor
Cunigunde of Hohenstaufen (1200-1248), married King Wenceslaus I, King of Bohemia
Maria of Hohenstaufen (1201-1235), married Henry II, Duke of Brabant
Elisabeth of Hohenstaufen (1203-1235), married King Ferdinand III of Castile
and two other children, both sons -Reinald and an unnamed son, possibly called Frederick- who died in infancy.
After the murder of her husband (21 April 1208), Irene -who was pregnant by that time- retired to the Burg Hohenstaufen. There, four months later (27 August 1208), she gave birth to a daughter (called Beatrice Postuma); but both mother and child died shortly afterwards. She was buried in the Staufen Mausoleum in the Monastery of Lorch, along with her daughter and sons. Her grave, now destroyed, cannot be reconstructed today.
Sources
O city of Byzantium: annals of Niketas Choniates tr. Harry J. Magoulias (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1984).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irene_Angelina

Philip and Irene had six children, two sons (Reinald and Frederick) who died in infancy and four daughters:
·Ä¢Beatrix¬â€ (April/June 1198 ·Äì 11 August 1212), married her father's rival Emperor¬â€ Otto IV¬â€ in 1212 and died three weeks later without issue.
·Ä¢Maria¬â€ (3 April 1201 ·Äì 29 March 1235), married Duke¬â€ Henry, Hereditary Prince of Brabant¬â€ (later Duke Henry II), by whom she had issue.
·Ä¢Kunigunde¬â€ (February/March 1202 ·Äì 13 September 1248), married King¬â€ Wenceslaus I of Bohemia, by whom she had issue.
·Ä¢Elisabeth¬â€ (March/May 1205 ·Äì 5 November 1235), married King¬â€ Ferdinand III of Castile, by whom she had issue.
·Ä¢

ANDRONIKOS Doukas Angelos, son of KONSTANTINOS Angelos & his wife Theodora Komnene (-after 1185).¬â€  The record of the synod of 2 Mar 1166 records the presence of ·Äú...patruele...regis nato ex...patruo...regis, pansebasto...domino Constantino Angelo, domino...Joanne Duca; fratre eiusdem...nepote...regis domino Andronico Duca...·Äù[757].¬â€  The record of the synod of 6 Mar 1166 records the presence of ·Äú...patruelibus...nostri regis filiis...patrui...eius pansebasti...domini Constantini Angeli, domino Joanne, domino Alexio, domino Andronico, domino Isaacio...·Äù[758].¬â€  A military leader in Asia Minor 1176/83.¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "Angeli Constantini duo filii Iohannes et Andronicus...Macroducas Constantinus et Lapartas Andronicus" among those who witnessed the defeat at Myriokephalon, dated to 17 Sep 1176[759].¬â€ 
m (before [1155]) EUPHROSYNE Kastamonitissa, niece of THEODOROS Kastamonites, megas logothetis, daughter of --- (-killed in battle against Dyrrhacchion [1185/95]).¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "matrem Isaacii Angeli Euphrosynam"[760].¬â€  The primary source which confirms her parentage has not been identified.¬â€ 
Andronikos Angelos & his wife had eight children:
1.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  KONSTANTINOS Angelos.¬â€  The primary source which confirms his parentage has not been identified.¬â€  It is assumed that Konstantinos was his parents' oldest son, named after his paternal grandfather in line with Byzantine naming practices.¬â€  Blinded 1183.¬â€  S√©bastokrator 1185.¬â€ 
2.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  IOANNES Angelos.¬â€  The primary source which confirms his parentage has not been identified.¬â€  S√©bastokrator[761].¬â€  m ---.¬â€  The name of Ioannes's wife is not known.¬â€  Ioannes Angelos & his wife had two children:
a)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  ANDRONIKOS Angelos.¬â€  The primary source which confirms his parentage has not been identified.¬â€  Hostage to Emperor Friedrich I "Barbarossa" King of Germany in 1189[762].¬â€ 
3.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  ALEXIOS Komnenos Angelos (before [1155]-monastery of Hyakinthos, Nikaia after 1211, bur monastery of Hyakinthos[763]).¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "Isaacius et Alexius" as sons of "Andronicus Angelus"[764].¬â€  He deposed his younger brother 8 Apr 1195 at Kypsela while on campaign against Bulgaria, succeeding as Emperor ALEXIOS III.¬â€  He immediately called off the campaign and returned to Constantinople, but Bulgarian raids continued, marked by their capture of Serres, and Alexios was forced to send troops under his son-in-law Isaakios Komnenos who was defeated on the Struma River[765].¬â€  Emperor Alexios continued the abuses of his predecessor, attempting to buy support with large land gifts, overtaxing the poor, and selling offices, all resulting in a terminal weakening of the empire.¬â€  Alexios III was obliged to agree an enormous annual tribute to Heinrich VI Emperor of Germany, who threatened an invasion to avenge the overthrow of Emperor Isaakios II, but was unable to raise sufficient funds through his special "German" tax.¬â€  Emperor Heinrich was planning an attack but died before the preparations were complete[766].¬â€  Pope Innocent III began pressing for a full-scale crusade to the east after his election in 1198, but this Fourth Crusade was used as a pretext by the western allies to conquer Byzantium.¬â€  Arriving at Constantinople 24 Jun 1203, the city fell to the army of the crusaders 17 Jul 1203.¬â€  What may be an eye-witness account of the sack of Constantinople is included in the Novgorod Chronicle[767].¬â€  Emperor Alexios fled the city with most of the state treasury and the Byzantine crown jewels, and his brother Isaakios II was restored as emperor.¬â€  Alexios made his way to eastern Thessaly where his wife's family had large estates.¬â€  He allied himself with Leon Sguros, who had captured Thebes and large parts of Attika and Beotia, and to whom he gave his daughter Evdokia[768].¬â€  He was captured by Bonifazio Marchese di Monferrato, newly installed as king of Thessaloniki, during his campaign in Thessaly and held for ransom which was paid by Mikhael Komnenos Doukas Despot of Epirus[769].¬â€  He escaped and made his way to the court of the Seljuk Sultan of Iconium[770].¬â€  Together they attacked the new empire of Nikaia, ruled by Alexios's son-in-law, by whom he was captured in Spring 1211 and imprisoned in the monastery of Hyakinthos where he later died[771].¬â€  m ([1170/80]) EUPHROSYNE Doukaina Kamaterina, daughter of ANDRONIKOS Doukas Kamateros & his wife --- Kantakouzene (-Arta 1211).¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "Euphrosyna" as wife of Emperor Alexios[772].¬â€  Her parentage is confirmed by Niketas Choniates naming "fratri eius Camatero Basilio", referring to Euphrosyne, in a later passage[773].¬â€  She escaped to Arta in Epirus and found refuge at the court of Mikhael Angelos[774].¬â€  Ephr√¶mius records the death of "Euphrosyne regina" and her burial at Arta[775].¬â€  Emperor Alexios III & his wife had three children:¬â€ 
a)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  EIRENE Komnene Angelina (-after 1203).¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "Contostephanus Andronicus et Isaacius Comenus" as "duo generi" of Emperor Alexios[776].¬â€  Ephr√¶mius records that "filiarum·Ä¶Irene natu maior" married "Andronico·Ä¶de Contostephanis"[777].¬â€  Niketas Choniates records the second marriage of "imperator·Ä¶filias·Ä¶Irenem" and "Alexio Paleologo"[778].¬â€  Georgius Akropolites records that "Palaeologo, qui despot√¶ dignitate·Ä¶" married "imperatoris Alexii·Ä¶filiarum illius·Ä¶prima Irene"[779].¬â€  She went into exile in 1203.¬â€  m firstly as his second wife, ANDRONIKOS Kontostefanos, son of STEFANOS Kontostefanos, panhypers√©bastos, megas doux & his wife Anna Komnene (-[1196]).¬â€  Mega drongarios.¬â€  m secondly (1199) as his second wife, ALEXIOS Komnenos Palaiologos, son of --- Doukas Palaiologos & his wife Eirene Komnene Kantakouzene (-[1201/04]).¬â€  He was awarded the title despot in 1199.¬â€ 
b)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  ANNA Komnene Angelina ([1175/80][780]-1212, bur monastery of Hyakinthos[781]).¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "Contostephanus Andronicus et Isaacius Comenus" as "duo generi" of Emperor Alexios[782].¬â€  Ephr√¶mius records that "filiarum·Ä¶iunior·Ä¶Anna" married "Comnenorum·Ä¶Isaacio, qui apud Moesos obiit in vinculis"[783].¬â€  Niketas Choniates records the second marriage of "imperator·Ä¶filias·Ä¶Annam" and "Theodoro Lascaro, adolescenti"[784].¬â€  Georgius Akropolites records that "Theodoro Lascari" married "imperatoris Alexii·Ä¶filiarum illius·Ä¶secunda Anna"[785].¬â€  m firstly (before 1190) ISAAKIOS Komnenos, son of --- (-in prison Trnovo, soon after 1196).¬â€  S√©bastokrator 1195.¬â€  General.¬â€  He led his father-in-law's campaign in Bulgaria in 1196 but was defeated on the Struma River, captured and sent to Trnovo where he soon died in prison[786].¬â€  m secondly (early 1199) as his first wife, THEODOROS Laskaris, son of --- Laskaris & his wife --- ([1175]-Nov 1221, bur monastery of Hyakinthos).¬â€  After escaping Constantinople following its fall to the crusading army in Apr 1204, he established himself in Nikaia where he was crowned THEODOROS I Emperor in Nikaia in 1208.¬â€ 
c)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  EVDOKIA Komnene Angelina (-after 1208).¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "Eudociam" as third daughter of Emperor Alexios when recording her marriage to "Neemania filii"[787].¬â€  Her first marriage was arranged to seal the Byzantine/Serbian peace treaty of 1190[788].¬â€  After her first husband accused her of adultery, she was expelled from Serbia, on foot with only the clothes on her back, and sought refuge in Zeta with her brother-in-law Vukan who provided her with the means to return to Constantinople[789].¬â€  Niketas Choniates records the marriage of "Euphrosyna imperatoris·Ä¶filia Eudocia" and "imperatoris Alexeii"[790].¬â€  Georgius Akropolites records that "Ducas Alexius" (referring to Alexios Doukas Mourzouflos) married "imperatoris Alexii filiam Eudociam, filiarum illius postremam", commenting that "impuberem" she had married "crali Servi√¶"[791].¬â€  Villehardouin records the marriage of "Emperor Murzuphlus" and "the daughter of Emperor Alexius" but does not name her[792].¬â€  Ephr√¶mius records that "Eudociam filiam" married "Sguro", recalling that her previous husbands had been "principi·Ä¶Triballorum Stephano, qui repudiatam remisit in patriam·Ä¶[et] Murtzuflo Duc√¶"[793].¬â€  Georgius Akropolites records that "Alexius imperator·Ä¶Eudocia filia" married "Corinthum·Ä¶Sguro illius regionis dynast√¶"[794].¬â€  m firstly (1191, repudiated [1201/02]) STEFAN of Serbia, son of STEFAN NEMANJA Grand ≈Ωupan of Serbia & his wife Ana ---¬â€  (-24 Sep 1227).¬â€  He was granted the title s√©bastokrator by his wife's uncle Emperor Isaakios II.¬â€  He succeeded in 1196 on the abdication of his father as STEFAN Grand ≈Ωupan of Serbia.¬â€  He was crowned STEFAN "Prvovenƒçani/the First-Crowned" King [Kralj] of Serbia in [1217].¬â€  m secondly (1204 after 12 Apr) ALEXIOS Doukas Mourzouflos, son of --- (-murdered Nov 1204).¬â€  He was installed [Jan/Apr] 1204 as Emperor ALEXIOS V.¬â€  m thirdly (1204) LEON Sguros Archon of Navplion, son of --- (-1208).¬â€  After the establishment of the Latin Empire of Constantinople in 1204, he captured Thebes and large parts of Attika and Beotia.¬â€  He formed an alliance with ex-Emperor Alexios III, sealed by his marriage to the latter's daughter.¬â€  He was expelled by the advancing armies of Bonifazio Marchese di Monferrato King of Thessaloniki, who was expanding the territory of his newly founded kingdom south into Thessaly[795].¬â€  He took an active part in the defence of Corinth, whose siege was to last five years, but committed suicide by leaping on horseback from Acrocorinth when he lost hope of defending the city[796].¬â€ 
4.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  [MIKHAEL] Angelos.¬â€  The primary source which confirms his parentage has not been identified.¬â€  Blinded 1184.¬â€ 
5.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  THEODOROS Angelos.¬â€  Niketas Choniates records that "Angelum Theodorum adolescentem pene adhuc imberbem" was blinded [in 1184][797].¬â€ 
6.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  ISAAKIOS Angelos ([1155]-Constantinople in prison [28 Jan/12 Apr] 1204).¬â€  Niketas Choniates names "Isaacius et Alexius" as sons of "Andronicus Angelus"[798].¬â€  As leader of the aristocrats against whom Emperor Andronikos I had struggled, he succeeded in 1185 on the latter's downfall as Emperor ISAAKIOS II.¬â€  He immediately attacked the Normans, his general Alexios Branas defeating them at Mosynopolis and Dimitritsa 7 Nov 1185, which resulted in their expulsion from Thessaloniki, Durazzo and Corfu[799].¬â€  Isaakios also made peace with B√©la III King of Hungary, sealed by the emperor's second marriage with the king's daughter.¬â€  In 1186, he was faced with the rebellion of Alexios Branas, who had been sent to quell the Bulgarian rebellion of the brothers Ivan Asen and Teodor but, having penetrated rebel territory, used the army for his own interests and led it to Adrianople where he was proclaimed emperor.¬â€  Branas marched on Constantinople, but was put to flight and killed by loyal forces[800].¬â€  Emperor Isaakios led his army personally against Bulgarian rebels, successfully driving them across the Danube.¬â€  This was followed by further campaigns in Sep 1187 and 1188, but the emperor was forced to recognise Bulgarian independence under a peace treaty signed in 1188[801].¬â€  Tensions developed with Emperor Friedrich I "Barbarossa", leader of the Third Crusade, who had received a warm welcome in Serbia and had crossed into Byzantine territory at Braniƒçevo.¬â€  Anxious to protect his interests, Isaakios signed a treaty of alliance with Saladin, which worsened the situation.¬â€  After taking Philippopolis [Plovdiv] and Adrianople, as well as threatening Constantinople, Emperor Friedrich forced Emperor Isaakios to give him provisions and ships to cross into Asia Minor[802].¬â€  In Sep 1190, Byzantine troops defeated the Serbs at the Morava River, but although the Byzantines regained Ni≈°, Beograd and northern Macedonia including Skopje, under the ensuing peace treaty, they were obliged to recognise Serb independence and Nemanja's right to rule Zeta, southern Dalmatia, Trebinje and Hum[803].¬â€  In retaliation for Bulgarian raids on Philippopolis, Sardika [Sofija] and Adrianople, Emperor Isaakios attacked Bulgaria but was heavily defeated in [1194] near Arcadiopolis[804].¬â€  The reign of Emperor Isaakios saw a major weakening of Byzantium and was marked by a rapid revival of corruption and administrative abuses, especially increased taxes to establish his luxurious court[805].¬â€  He was deposed 8 Apr 1195 by his older brother Alexios while preparing a further campaign against Bulgaria, and blinded.¬â€  He was restored as emperor 17 Jul 1203 when the crusading army captured Constantinople and his brother Alexios III had fled, his son being named as co-emperor.¬â€  Isaakios was deposed end-Jan 1204 in an anti-Latin revolt which broke out in Constantinople, and imprisoned once more.¬â€  The necrology of Speyer cathedral records the death "VI Kal Sep" of "Maria regina Philippi regis contectalis, nata de Grecia" and the donations which she made to found the anniversaries "in octava Martini [18 Nov]·Ä¶patris eius et matris eius·Ä¶Ysaac et matre Herina" and "fratris·Ä¶eius et sororis eius tercia die post festum Michahelis [1 Oct]·Ä¶Manuel fratre, Effrosina sorore"[806].¬â€  m firstly (before [1181]) [EIRENE] Tornikaina, daughter of DEMETRIOS Tornikes & his wife --- Malakissa (-[18 Nov] [1183/85]).¬â€  The necrology of Speyer cathedral records the death "VI Kal Sep" of "Maria regina Philippi regis contectalis, nata de Grecia" and the donations which she made to found the anniversaries "in octava Martini [18 Nov]·Ä¶patris eius et matris eius·Ä¶Ysaac et matre Herina" and "fratris·Ä¶eius et sororis eius tercia die post festum Michahelis [1 Oct]·Ä¶Manuel fratre, Effrosina sorore"[807].¬â€  Bearing in mind the estimated date of death of Emperor Isaakios (see above), it is possible that 18 Nov commemorates the death of [Eirene], although it is also possible that the date commemorates some other family event.¬â€  There remains some doubt about whether "Eirene" can have been the name of Isaakios's first wife as the original baptismal name of her daughter, "Maria regina", is also recorded as Eirene, the Byzantine naming practice not normally being to name children after their parents.¬â€  One possibility is that [Eirene] died while giving birth to Eirene/Maria, as naming a child after a parent appears to have been acceptable practice in those circumstances.¬â€  If that is correct, it is unlikely that [Eirene] died later than [1184] considering her daughter·Äôs first marriage in 1192.¬â€  Her relationship with the Tornikes family is indicated by a document at Patmos which names Konstantinos Tornikes as uncle ("Õ∏յÕØÕøŒÖ") of Emperor Alexios IV, dated to Dec 1203[808].¬â€  While the passage would not exclude Konstantinos being the husband either of a maternal or paternal aunt of the emperor, or indeed a more remote relation as the word "Õ∏յÕØÕøŒÇ" could indicate a family relationship which is more distant than "uncle". ¬â€ Don Stone and Charles Owens, in their detailed analysis of all the relevant sources, argue convincingly that the most likely interpretation is that Konstantinos Tornikes was Emperor Alexios·Äôs maternal uncle[809].¬â€  m secondly (1185) as her first husband, MARGIT of Hungary, daughter of B√âLA III King of Hungary & his first wife Agn√®s [Anna] de Ch√¢tillon-sur-Loing (1175-after 3 Mar 1229).¬â€  The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names (in order) "Haymericum et Andream·Ä¶et duas reginas Constantiam de Boemia et Margaretam de Grecia" as children of "rex Bela de Hungaria" & his wife Agnes[810].¬â€  She brought Beograd, Braniƒçevo and probably Ni≈° as part of her dowry[811].¬â€  Niketas Choniates records the marriage of Emperor Isaakios and "Bel√¶ Hungari√¶ regis filiam", commenting that she was only ten years old at the time[812].¬â€  The special wedding tax levied to finance her elaborate nuptial ceremonies may have contributed to attracting support for the rebellion in Bulgaria by the brothers Ivan Asen and Tedor[813].¬â€  She adopted the name MARIA in Byzantium.¬â€  Villehardouin records that the wife of Emperor Isaakios, and stepmother of his son, was "the king of Hungary's sister", in a later passage naming her "the Empress Marie"[814].¬â€  She married secondly (May 1204) as his second wife, Bonifazio I Marchese di Monferrato, who wished thereby to advance his claim to be installed as emperor of the new Latin Empire of Constantinople[815].¬â€  The Cronica Fratris Salimbene de Adam records the marriage of "Bonifacius marchio" and "Margaritam imperatricem condam Ysachii, sororem Aimerici regis Ungari"[816].¬â€  Villehardouin records the marriage of "the Marquis Boniface de Montferrat" and "the lady who had been the Emperor Isaac's wife·Ä¶the king of Hungary's sister"[817].¬â€  Georgius Akropolites records that "rex Thessalonic√¶" married "Mariam Ungaram", widow of "imperatori Isaacio"[818].¬â€  She married thirdly (after Sep 1207) Nicolas de Saint-Omer Lord of Thebes.¬â€  She was regent of Thessaloniki in 1207.¬â€  Pope Gregory IX confirmed that "[Margaretha] soror·Ä¶regis Ungarie" acquired "terram·Ä¶ulterior Sirmia" by bull dated 3 Mar 1229[819].¬â€  Emperor Isaakios II & his first wife had [four] children:¬â€ 
a)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  EUPHROSYNE (-[1 Oct] ----).¬â€  Niketas Choniates records that Emperor Alexios had "ex priore coniuge·Ä¶filiabus duabus et uno filio", of whom "filiam natu maiorem monacham fect"[820].¬â€  A nun.¬â€  The necrology of Speyer cathedral records the death "VI Kal Sep" of "Maria regina Philippi regis contectalis, nata de Grecia" and the donations which she made to found the anniversaries "in octava Martini [18 Nov]·Ä¶patris eius et matris eius·Ä¶Ysaac et matre Herina" and "fratris·Ä¶eius et sororis eius tercia die post festum Michahelis [1 Oct]·Ä¶Manuel fratre, Effrosina sorore"[821].¬â€  The wording of this entry suggests that Euphrosyne predeceased her sister.¬â€ 
b)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  ALEXIOS Angelos ([1180/83]-murdered Constantinople 1204 after 28 Jan).¬â€  Niketas Choniates records that Emperor Alexios had "ex priore coniuge·Ä¶filiabus duabus et uno filio"[822].¬â€  It is assumed that Alexios was still an infant when his mother died, but there is little basis for being more precise about his age.¬â€  Imprisoned with his father when the latter was overthrown, he escaped in 1201 and fled to the court of his brother-in-law Philipp von Hohenstaufen Duke of Swabia who promised support for his claim to the Byzantine throne[823], maybe on the basis that he would be Alexios's successor[824].¬â€  Alexios joined the crusading army at Zara in Dalmatia 25 Apr 1203, promised large sums of money to the leaders and committed to submit the Orthodox church to Rome if he regained the throne[825].¬â€  He was accepted as emperor at Durazzo, and sailed on to Constantinople where they arrived 24 Jun 1203[826].¬â€  The city fell to the crusaders 17 Jul 1203 and Emperor Alexios fled.¬â€  Ex-Emperor Isaakios II was restored, with Alexios crowned as ALEXIOS IV co-Emperor at St Sofia 1 Aug 1203[827].¬â€  Unable to make the payments promised to the crusaders as ex-Emperor Alexios III had looted the state treasury, Alexios announced new taxes and confiscated large quantities of ecclesiastical plate to be melted down[828].¬â€  An anti-Latin revolt broke out in Constantinople.¬â€  The mob elected Nikolaos Kanabos as emperor[829], although he refused to accept the honour, and when Alexios Mourzouflos invaded the palace he was installed as emperor.¬â€  Alexios IV was imprisoned and strangled[830] by Alexios Mourzouflos[831].¬â€  The necrology of Speyer cathedral records the death "VI Kal Sep" of "Maria regina Philippi regis contectalis, nata de Grecia" and the donations which she made to found the anniversaries "in octava Martini [18 Nov]·Ä¶patris eius et matris eius·Ä¶Ysaac et matre Herina" and "fratris·Ä¶eius et sororis eius tercia die post festum Michahelis [1 Oct]·Ä¶Manuel fratre, Effrosina sorore"[832].¬â€  As noted below, under Alexios·Äôs half-brother Manuel, it is likely that "Manuel" in this entry is an error for Alexios.¬â€  Betrothed (1194) to IEVFEMIA Glebovna of Chernigov, daughter of GLEB Sviatoslavich Prince of Bielgorod and Chernigov & his wife [Anastasia] Riurikovna of Ovrutsch.¬â€ 
c)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  [daughter.¬â€  The primary source which confirms her parentage has not been identified.¬â€ ¬â€  Before 1185.¬â€  Nun.¬â€  same person as ·Ä¶?¬â€  ANNA .¬â€  According to Fennell[833], the second wife of Roman Prince of Galicia was the daughter of Emperor Isaakios by his first wife.¬â€  He says that she was "energetic and enterprising" and that she is named in the Lavrentevskiy Chronicle.¬â€  Anna has not been identified in Byzantine sources so far consulted, but it is not impossible that she was the same person as this unnamed daughter.¬â€  m ([1196/1200]) as his second wife, ROMAN Mstislavich Prince of Volynia, son of MSTISLAV II Iziaslavich "Chabry" Prince of Volynia and Kiev & his wife Agniesk of Poland (after 1160- killed in battle Zawichost 19 Jun 1205).¬â€  He succeeded as Prince of Galich in 1199, and as ROMAN Grand Prince of Kiev in 1199.]¬â€ 
d)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  EIRENE Angelina ([1180/84]-Hohenstaufen 27 Aug 1208, bur Kloster Lorsch).¬â€  Niketas Choniates records that Emperor Alexios had "ex priore coniuge·Ä¶filiabus duabus et uno filio", of whom "[filiam] alteram" married "Siciliam regis Tangris filio"[834].¬â€  On the basis of her first marriage in 1192, it is unlikely that Eirene was born much later than 1184 at the latest.¬â€  One possibility is that her mother died while giving birth to Eirene, which, as discussed further above, would provide the best explanation for mother and daughter having had the same names in apparent contradiction with Byzantine naming practices.¬â€  If this is correct, she would of course have been her parents·Äô youngest child.¬â€  The Ryccardus de Sancti Germano Chronica in 1191 record the marriage at Brindisis of "Ysacho Constantinopolitano imperatorie de Urania filia sua" and Roger elder son of Tancredo[835].¬â€  The Annales Casenses record the marriage in 1193 of "filiam imperatoris Constantinopolitani" and "Roggerus filio suo [=Tancredi]"[836].¬â€  She was among those taken as prisoners by Emperor Heinrich VI King of Germany when he invaded Sicily in 1194.¬â€  Niketas Choniates records that "Irene Isaacii imperatoris filia" was abducted from Sicily and married to "notho fratri Alemanni√¶ Philippo"[837].¬â€  Her second marriage is recorded by William of Tyre (Continuator), who names her father without naming her[838].¬â€  The Continuatio Admuntensis records the marriage of "Tanachredus Tanachredi filius viduam, Constantinopolitani imperatoris filiam" and "Philippus Romanorum imperatoris germanus"[839].¬â€  She adopted the name MARIA on her second marriage.¬â€  The necrology of Speyer cathedral records the death "VI Kal Sep" of "Maria regina Philippi regis contectalis, nata de Grecia" and the donations which she made to found the anniversaries "in octava Martini [18 Nov]·Ä¶patris eius et matris eius·Ä¶Ysaac et matre Herina" and "fratris·Ä¶eius et sororis eius tercia die post festum Michahelis [1 Oct]·Ä¶Manuel fratre, Effrosina sorore"[840].¬â€  m firstly (Brindisi [Jul/Aug] 1192) ROGER joint King of Sicily, son of TANCREDO King of Sicily & his wife Sibilla --- ([1180]-24 Dec 1193).¬â€  Created Duke of Apulia by his father in 1193.¬â€  m secondly (betrothed 2/3 Apr 1195, [Bari] 25 May 1197) PHILIPP von Hohenstaufen Duke of Swabia, son of Emperor FRIEDRICH I "Barbarossa" King of Germany & his second wife B√©atrice de Bourgogne [Comt√©] ([1172]-murdered Bamberg 21 Jun 1208, bur Speyer Cathedral).¬â€  He was elected PHILIPP King of Germany in 1198.¬â€  He supported the claim to the Byzantine throne of his brother-in-law Alexios Angelos, who had sought refuge at his court in 1201[841].¬â€  He and Alexios promised the leaders of the Fourth Crusade enormous sums in return for helping to remove Emperor Alexios III[842].¬â€  He was murdered by Otto von Wittelsbach.¬â€ 
Emperor Isaakios II & his second wife had two children:
e)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  MANUEL Angelos ([after 1192]-[1212]).¬â€  [The necrology of Speyer cathedral records the death "VI Kal Sep" of "Maria regina Philippi regis contectalis, nata de Grecia" and the donations which she made to found the anniversaries "in octava Martini [18 Nov]·Ä¶patris eius et matris eius·Ä¶Ysaac et matre Herina" and "fratris·Ä¶eius et sororis eius tercia die post festum Michahelis [1 Oct]·Ä¶Manuel fratre, Effrosina sorore"[843].¬â€  At first sight, it appears that "Manuel" who is commemorated would be donor·Äôs half-brother of that name.¬â€  However, it seems suprising that Eirene/Maria would commemorate her half-brother and not her full brother Emperor Alexios IV.¬â€  In addition, the entry quoted below appears to indicate that Manuel died after his half-sister Eirene/Maria, while it is clear from the wording of the Speyer entry that her relatives for whom she founded the anniversaries were already deceased at the time.¬â€  It therefore appears more probable that "Manuel" in the Speyer entry is in fact an error for "Alexios".]¬â€  It is unlikely that Manuel could have been born before 1192 bearing in mind the birth date of his mother.¬â€  He joined in the attack on Theodoros Laskaris, Emperor at Nikaia, in Spring 1211 and was captured.¬â€  An inscription found at Nikaia recording the death of "ŒÄŒÅÕØÕ≥Õ∫ÕπŒà ÕúÕ±ÕΩÕøŒÖÕÆÕª" in 1212 aged 35 has been linked to Manuel Angelos, despite the obvious inconsistency in the age[844].¬â€ 
f)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  IOANNES "Kaloioannes" Angelos (-before 13 Jan 1254).¬â€  Pope Honorius III wrote to "nobili viro Johanni nato·Ä¶Margarite quondam imperatricis Constantinopolitane" requesting him to keep his promise to campaign against the Bosnian heretics, dated 15 Jan 1227[845].¬â€  Hungarian under-Lord in Syrmia 1235/42.¬â€  Obergespan of Kö 1235.¬â€  "Iohannes filius quondam Iursac Imperatoris Constantinopolitani" gave commitments to the papal legate in Hungary by charter dated 22 Sep 1235[846].¬â€  Obergespan of B√°cs 1240/42.¬â€  m MATHILDE von Vianden, daughter of HEINRICH [I] Graf von Vianden & his wife Marguerite de Courtenay.¬â€  Her parentage and marriage are confirmed by the dispensation issued by Pope Innocent IV for the marriage of "Anselmum de Keu ac Mariam natam Matildis domin√¶ de Posaga, nat√¶ comitiss√¶ Viennensis" dated 15 Aug 1253, and the marriage licence for "Maria, nate quondam Calojohanni" dated 13 Jan 1254, the documents naming "imperatore Constantinopolitano, eiusdem Matildis avunculo"[847].¬â€  Ioannes & his wife had [two] children:¬â€ 
i)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  [HELENA [Jelena] (-Shkodra 8 Feb 1314).¬â€  ·ÄúHelena, Serbi√¶ regina·Äù confirmed the possessions of Ragusa by charter dated 1289[848].¬â€  The biography of Archbishop Danilo states that "she was of a French family" and a continuator of the work that "the family was of royal or imperial blood"[849].¬â€  Fine says less specifically that Jelena was "of Catholic and French origin, probably of the Valois family"[850].¬â€  A Hungarian origin is suggested by Georgius Akropolites who names "Rosum Urum·Ä¶Ungari√¶ regis generum (Õ≥ձպÕ≤ŒÅŒåÕΩ)"[851].¬â€  According to Europ√§ische Stammtafeln[852], she was related to the kings of Sicily [Anjou-Capet], and was sister of Marie wife of Anseau de Chaurs/Cayeux (Captain General in Albania of Charles I King of Naples and Sicily).¬â€  Charles I King of Sicily and Charles II King of Sicily [Anjou-Capet] addressed (the sisters) "Jelena and Maria de Chau" as "consanguinea nostra/cognata nostra/affinis nostra"[853].¬â€  McDaniel identifies "Marie de Chau" as the wife of "Anselm de Keu"[854], who can be identified as Anseau [IV] de Cayeux.¬â€  If this is correct, she was the daughter of Ioannes "Kaloiannes" Angelos and his wife Mathilde von Vianden.¬â€  McDaniel provides a trail of primary sources which appears convincing.¬â€  However, one big question remains: if he is correct, why did contemporary primary sources make so little of Queen Jelena·Äôs direct male line descent from the Angelos imperial family and from the Hungarian kings through her paternal grandmother?¬â€  m ([1250]) STEFAN UROŠ I "Veliki/the Great" or "Arapavi/the Holy" King of Serbia, son of STEFAN "Prvovenƒçani/the First-Crowned" King [Kralj] of Serbia & his third wife Anna Dandolo (-1 May 1280, bur Sopoƒáani).]¬â€ 
ii)¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  MARIA Angelina (-after 1285).¬â€  Pope Innocent IV issued a dispensation for the marriage of "Anselmum de Keu ac Mariam natam Matildis domin√¶ de Posaga, nat√¶ comitiss√¶ Viennensis" dated 15 Aug 1253, and the marriage licence for "Maria, nate quondam Calojohanni" dated 13 Jan 1254, the documents naming "imperatore Constantinopolitano, eiusdem Matildis avunculo"[855].¬â€  Pope Alexander IV confirmed the marriage of "nobili viro Anselmo domino de Keu et Marie uxori eius" dated 15 Jan 1255[856].¬â€  "Marie de Kaieu jadis fame monseigneur Ansel de Kaieu, grant baron et camberlenc de l ·Äòempiere de Costantinoble, et Anseaus, leur fils" donated property to the monks of Dommartin by charter dated Jun 1277[857].¬â€  McDaniel dates her last documented appearance to 1285[858].¬â€  m (Papal dispensation 15 Aug 1253, licence 13 Jan 1254) as his [fourth] wife, ANSEAU [V] de Cayeux, son of --- ([1195/1205]-[13 May 1273/Mar 1276]).¬â€ 
7.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  EIRENE Angelina.¬â€  Ioannes Kinnamos records that "Ioannes cognomento·Ä¶Cantacuzenus" married "Andronici sebastocratoris filiam"[859].¬â€  Niketas Choniates records that "Iohannes Cantacuzenus" married "imperatoris sororem"[860].¬â€  m (before 1170, dispensation [1185/86]) IOANNES Kantakouzenos, son of --- Kantakouzenos & his wife --- (-after 1186).¬â€  He was blinded in 1183 by Emperor Andronikos.¬â€  Appointed c√¶sar in 1185.¬â€  He was a military commander in Bulgaria, but was dispossessed and his title confiscated.¬â€ 
8.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  THEODORA Angelina (-after 1195).¬â€  Niketas Choniates records the marriage of "Conradi·Ä¶Montisferrati domini filius" and "Imperatoris Isaacius·Ä¶sorore Theodora"[861].¬â€  The Cronica Fratris Salimbene de Adam records the marriage of "sororem suam [Ysachii] Hermem" and "Conrado marchionis filio"[862].¬â€  After she was repudiated, she became a nun at Dalmatios convent.¬â€  m (early 1187, abandoned [May/Jun] 1187) as his second wife, CORRADO di Monferrato, son of GUGLIELMO V "il Vecchio" Marchese di Monferrato & his wife Judith of Austria [Babenberg] ([1145/47]-murdered Tyre 28 Apr 1192).¬â€ 
¬â€ 
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BYZANTIUM%2010571204.htm#EireneAdied1208

==

Irini Maria Angelina is your 23rd great grandmother.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Marvin "Toad" Henry Welborn, Jr.
your father ·Üí Heny Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H. Welborn
his father ·Üí Sarah Elizabeth Dikes
his mother ·Üí Benjamin Franklin Dykes, II
her father ·Üí William Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí George Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí Edward George Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Leonard Dykes
his father ·Üí Isabelle Dykes
his mother ·Üí Mary Pennington
her mother ·Üí Mary Hudleston
her mother ·Üí Sir Henry Fenwick
her father ·Üí Margaret de Percy
his mother ·Üí Sir Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland
her father ·Üí Mary of Lancaster, Baroness Percy
his mother ·Üí Henry of Lancaster
her father ·Üí Blanche of Artois
his mother ·Üí Mathilde van Brabant
her mother ·Üí Maria von Hohenstaufen
her mother ·Üí Irini Maria Angelina
her mother

https://www.geni.com/people/Irini-Maria-Angelina/6000000000125362235

Irini Maria Angelina
Greek: Irini Maria ÕÜÕ≥Õ≥յժÕøŒÇ, Russian: Irini Maria œêœΩœ≥œµÅ“ª, Spanish: Irene Angelina
Gender:
Female
Birth:
between circa 1172 and circa 1181
Constantinople, Byzantine Empire
Death:
August 27, 1208 (23-40)
Hohenstaufen, Goppingen, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany
Place of Burial:
Abbey of Lorch
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Isaac II Angelos, Byzantine Emperor and Herina Eirene Irene Angelos
Wife of Ruggero d'Altavilla and Philip von Hohenstaufen, duke of Swabia
Mother of Tancred Palermo, Heir; Beatrice Elisabeth von Hohenstauffen, Empress of the Holy Roman Empire; Kunigunde von Schwaben; Maria von Hohenstaufen; Beatriz de Suabia, reina consorte de Castilla y León; Reinald von Hohenstaufen and Frederick von Hohenstaufen « less
Sister of Euphrosyne Angelina; Anna-Maria Isaacovna Angelina Mstislavich of Byzantium, Grand Princess consort; Alexios IV Angelos, Byzantine Emperor and N/a Angelina, nun
Half sister of Ioannes Angelos (Kalojan) and Manuel Angelos

Irene Angelina (Greek: Õ∞ŒÅÕÆÕΩÕ∑ ‡ºàÕ≥Õ≥յժÕØÕΩձ; c. 1181 ·Äì 27 August 1208), was a Byzantine princess member of the Angelos dynasty and by her two marriages Queen of Sicily in 1193 and Queen of Germany from 1198 to 1208.
She was the second daughter of Byzantine emperor Isaac II Angelos and his first wife, an unknown Palaiologina? who became nun with the name Irene.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irene_Angelina

House Angelos
Father Isaac II Angelos

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About the surname Angelina of Byzantium


When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I31466.php : accessed May 16, 2024), "Irini Irene Angelina Angelina of Byzantium (1181-± 1208)".