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Very little is known about Panaretos himself, save the few glimmers which appear in his chronicle. He was a ''[[protosebastos]]'' and ''[[protonotarios]]'' in the service of [[Alexios III of Trebizond|Alexios III Komnenos]]. Panaretos makes his first appearance in an entry for 1351 when he records that he went with the mother of the emperor Alexios III, [[Irene of Trebizond]], against [[Limnia]] to break the power the rebel [[Constantine Doranites]] held there. What Panaretos' exact possession was at this time is not certain, but his next appearance does not come until the Trapezuntine civil war was over when he records he went with the emperor Alexios III in a disastrous attack on [[Cheriana]], which he himself barely escaped from with his life. Thereafter, his occurrence becomes quite frequent in the annals. In 1363, he was sent with the ''[[megas logothetes]]'', [[George Scholaris]], to Constantinople and met with the emperor [[John V Palaiologos]], the emperor-monk [[John VI Kantakuzenos]], and also notably the Venetian ''[[podestà]]'' and the capetan of Genoese Galata in order to arrange a marriage alliance between the daughter of his master and one of the sons of the emperor John V.
Very little is known about Panaretos himself, save the few glimmers which appear in his chronicle. He was a ''[[protosebastos]]'' and ''[[protonotarios]]'' in the service of [[Alexios III of Trebizond|Alexios III Komnenos]]. Panaretos makes his first appearance in an entry for 1351 when he records that he went with the mother of the emperor Alexios III, [[Irene of Trebizond]], against [[Limnia]] to break the power the rebel [[Constantine Doranites]] held there. What Panaretos' exact possession was at this time is not certain, but his next appearance does not come until the Trapezuntine civil war was over when he records he went with the emperor Alexios III in a disastrous attack on [[Cheriana]], which he himself barely escaped from with his life. Thereafter, his occurrence becomes quite frequent in the annals. In 1363, he was sent with the ''[[megas logothetes]]'', [[George Scholaris]], to Constantinople and met with the emperor [[John V Palaiologos]], the emperor-monk [[John VI Kantakuzenos]], and also notably the Venetian ''[[podestà]]'' and the capetan of Genoese Galata in order to arrange a marriage alliance between the daughter of his master and one of the sons of the emperor John V.


We know that he had at least two sons, both of whom died in 1368 while Penaretos was away in Constantinople: Constantine who was fifteen, had drowned; Romanos who was seventeen, died from disease. Panaretos was obviously heartbroken by their deaths because it is the only personal event that he mentions in his chronicle.
We know that he had at least two sons, both of whom died in 1368 while Penaretos was away in Constantinople: Constantine who was fifteen, had drowned; Romanos who was seventeen, died from disease. Panaretos was obviously greatly affected by their deaths because it is the only personal event that he mentions in his chronicle.


== The Chronicle ==
== The Chronicle ==

Revision as of 17:47, 2 November 2013

Michael Panaretos (Greek: Μιχαήλ Πανάρετος) (1320 – c. 1390) is a Greek historian. His primary work is a chronicle of the Trapezuntine empire of Alexios I Komnenos and his successors from 1204 to 1426. This chronicle, the only direct source on the history of this medieval empire, also contains much valuable material on the early history of the Ottoman Turks from a Byzantine perspective, but was almost unknown until its discovery by Jakob Philipp Fallmerayer among the papers of Cardinal Bessarion in the nineteenth century.[1]

Life

Very little is known about Panaretos himself, save the few glimmers which appear in his chronicle. He was a protosebastos and protonotarios in the service of Alexios III Komnenos. Panaretos makes his first appearance in an entry for 1351 when he records that he went with the mother of the emperor Alexios III, Irene of Trebizond, against Limnia to break the power the rebel Constantine Doranites held there. What Panaretos' exact possession was at this time is not certain, but his next appearance does not come until the Trapezuntine civil war was over when he records he went with the emperor Alexios III in a disastrous attack on Cheriana, which he himself barely escaped from with his life. Thereafter, his occurrence becomes quite frequent in the annals. In 1363, he was sent with the megas logothetes, George Scholaris, to Constantinople and met with the emperor John V Palaiologos, the emperor-monk John VI Kantakuzenos, and also notably the Venetian podestà and the capetan of Genoese Galata in order to arrange a marriage alliance between the daughter of his master and one of the sons of the emperor John V.

We know that he had at least two sons, both of whom died in 1368 while Penaretos was away in Constantinople: Constantine who was fifteen, had drowned; Romanos who was seventeen, died from disease. Panaretos was obviously greatly affected by their deaths because it is the only personal event that he mentions in his chronicle.

The Chronicle

His Chronicle is very short, covering twenty printed pages, though about half of the chronicle is devoted to the years between 1349 and 1390; the rest of the chronicle to 1426 was written by an anonymous contributor. As Anastasius Brandy notes, "Although this Chronicle is generally described as drab, meagre, and sketchy, nevertheless, it constitutes a valuable and reliable narrative for putting in order historical events and personages which otherwise would have remained unknown."[2] Throughout the chronicle, Panaretos never refers to his countrymen as Greeks, as was the custom in Byzantium, but always as Romans, or more often than not Christians.

Thsi work is preserved in a single manuscript, The Codex Marcanius, Although it was discovered by Fallmerayer, the editio princeps was the work of T. L. F. who published the Greek text in 1832 but without translation or commentary. Fallmerayer published an edition of the Greek text with a German translation and commentary in 1844. The first scholarly, critical text of the Chronicle was done by Spyrindon P. Lambros, a Greek scholar, in 1907. The most recent edition was by Odysseus Lampsides in 1958.[3]

References

  1. ^ George Finlay, The History of Greece and the Empire of Trebizond, (1204-1461) (Edinburgh: William Blackwood, 1851), p. 307 n .1
  2. ^ "Introduction" to the 1969 reprint of William Miller, Trebizond: The Last Greek Empire of the Byzantine Era, 1204-1461 (Chicago: Argonaut, 1969), p. viii.
  3. ^ "Michael Panaretos: Concerning the Great Komnenoi", Άρχἔιον Πόντον 22 (1958), pp. 5-128 (in Greek)

External links

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