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Byzantine Empire

Alternate titles: Byzantium; East Rome; Eastern Roman Empire
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Turkish expansion

Byzantine Empire: Byzantine Empire, ad 1355 [Credit: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]Byzantine Empire: Byzantine Empire, ad 1355 [Credit: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]John Cantacuzenus’ relationship with the Turks had been based on personal friendship with their leaders, among them Orhan, to whom he gave his daughter in marriage. But once the Turks had set up a base on European soil and had seen the possibilities of further conquest, such relationships were no longer practicable. Stefan Dušan, who very nearly realized his ambition to found a new Serbo-Byzantine empire, was the only man who might have prevented the subsequent rapid expansion of the Turks into the Balkans, but he died in 1355 and his empire split up. The new emperor, John V, hoped that the Western world would sense the danger, and in 1355 he addressed an appeal for help to the Pope. The popes were concerned for the fate of the Christian East but guarded in their offers to Constantinople so long as the Byzantine Church remained in schism from Rome. In 1366 John V visited Hungary to beg for help, but in vain. In the same year his cousin Amadeo, count of Savoy, brought a small force to Constantinople and recaptured Gallipoli from the Turks, who had by then advanced far into Thrace. Amadeo persuaded ... (200 of 32,247 words)

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