Leo V or Levon V (occasionally Levon VI; Armenian: Լեւոն, Levon V; 1342 – 29 November 1393), of the House of Lusignan, was the last Latin king of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. Leo was described as "Leo V, King of Armenia" on his own personal seal (Sigilum Leonis Quinti Regis Armenie),[1] and as "Leo of Lusignan the Fifth" in the Middle French inscription on his cenotaph: Leon de Lizingnen quint.[2]
Levon V Լևոն Ե | |
---|---|
King of Armenia | |
Reign | 14 September 1374 – 13 April 1375 |
Coronation | 14 September 1374 |
Predecessor | Constantine IV |
Born | c. 1342 Cyprus |
Died | 29 November 1393 Hôtel des Tournelles, Paris | (aged 50–51)
Burial | |
Spouse | Margaret of Soissons |
House | Poitiers-Lusignan |
Father | John of Poitiers-Lusignan |
Mother | Soldane Bagrationi of Georgia |
Religion | Armenian Catholic |
Signature |
Reign in Cilicia
editIn 1365, Pope Urban V selected Leo as the potential ruler of Cilician Armenia, but Constantine IV ascended the throne instead. After Constantine IV's murder, Catholicos Constantine V led the people in crowning Leo on September 14, 1374. However, his reign encountered internal opposition concerning the spiritual authority of the Pope.[3]
Leo ruled until April 13, 1375 when he was overthrown and captured following the fall of Sis by an invading army from the Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt. In July 1377, he met monk Jean Dardel, who accompanied him as counselor, ambassador, and historian-biographer. Leo was held hostage in Egypt with his wife and daughter for five years until ransomed by the King of Castile, John I. In October 1382, he embarked from Alexandria to Europe.[4]
Life in Europe
editLeo arrived ill and poor to Medina del Campo. In 1382 or 1383, the King of Castile named Leo Lord of Madrid.[5] John I granted him for life the town of Madrid, Andújar, Guadalajara and Villareal (today Ciudad Real) and a yearly gift of 150,000 maravedis.[6] Leon rebuilt the towers of the Royal Alacázar.
According to father Juan de Mariana, Leo left Castile for France after the death of his protector in 1390. Federico Bravo, however, states that he left after two years of ruling, and five years later, the Madrilenians were conceded the revocation of the lordship by John.
Leo V apparently went to Paris in June 1384, and received the Saint-Ouen castle and a sizable pension from King Charles VI of France.[7] He attempted to reconcile the French and the English (at the time fighting the Hundred Years' War) in order to set up a new Crusade[1] and obtain help to recover his lands, but the meeting he organized in 1386 between Boulogne and Calais were unsuccessful.[7] Leo continued his diplomatic mission to England in 1389 and in 1392.
Death
editLeo V never recovered his throne, and died in Paris on November 29, 1393. His remains were laid to rest in the Couvent des Célestins, the second most important burial site for royalty after Saint-Denis, located near what is now the Place de la Bastille in Paris.[8] The prestigious convent was located nearby Leo's residence of Hôtel des Tournelles, itself near Hôtel Saint-Pol, the favourite residence of Charles V and Charles VI in the area of Le Marais.
Leo received lavish funerals and had a lavish tomb, located in the choir of the church. However, the convent was profanated during the French Revolution.[1][8] After the revolution, his tombstone was recovered by Alexandre Lenoir who placed it in his Musée des monuments Français in the Saint-Denis Basilica. In 1815, during the Restoration, a new cenotaph was established for Leo V at the royal Saint Denis Basilica where most representatives of the French monarchy lie.
The effigy on the tombstone, by an anonymous artist, is of a high realism and quality, and it is thought that it was made while Leo was still alive.[7] Leo V is depicted holding a scepter (now broken) and gloves, symbol of great princes.
The tombstone bears the following inscription in Old French:[9]
Cy gist tres noble et excellent prince Leon de Lizingnen quint roy latin du royaume d'Armenie qui rendit l'ame a Dieu a Paris le XXIXe jour de novembre l'an de grace M.CCC.IIIIXX.XIII.
Priez pour luy.
English translation:[10]
Here lies the right noble and excellent Prince Leon de Lusignan V, Latin king of the kingdom of Armenia, who passed away in Paris on the 29th day of November of the year of Grace 1393. Pray for him.
He had one legitimate daughter, Marie de Lusignan (ca 1370 – Cairo, before July 4, 1381, who predeceased her mother and father), and two illegitimate sons, Guy de Lusignan or Guido de Armenia (died 1405), a Canon in Autun, Bayeux, Paris and Arras and Captain de la Tour d'Amblay, and Stephan or Etienne de Lusignan, a Knight in Sis.
Upon his death the title of King of Armenia was claimed by Leo's distant cousin James I.
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ a b c Mutafian, p.90
- ^ Full text of the cenotaph with translation hereunder.
- ^ Dadoyan 2013, pp. 190–191.
- ^ Dadoyan 2013, p. 191.
- ^ Un Madrid insólito: Guía para dejarse sorprender, pg. 39–40. Jesús Callejo. Editorial Complutense, 2001. ISBN 84-7491-630-5. The book, however, talks about Leon V of Armenia since Leo I of Armenia isn't counted as a King by some authors.
- ^ "¿Sabías que Madrid fue durante 8 años un reino independiente?".
- ^ a b c Mutafian, Leon V
- ^ a b Basmadjian, K. J. (Nov–Dec 1920). "Cilicia: Her Past and Future". The New Armenia. 12 (11–12): 168–9.
- ^ "Tombeau du roi Léon V de Lusignan". acam-france.org (in French). Association Culturelle Arménienne de Marne-la-Vallée (France). Archived from the original on 23 January 2021.
- ^ Translation by Pierre-Yves Le Pogam, Tomb of Leon V de Lusignan
References
edit- Boase, T. S. R. (1978). The Cilician Kingdom of Armenia. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press. ISBN 0-7073-0145-9.
- Mutafian, Claude (2001). Le Royaume Arménien de Cilicie. Paris: CNRS Editions. ISBN 2-271-05105-3.
- Claude Mutafian, Leon V of Lusignan, last king of Armenia (PDF) [dead link]
- Pierre-Yves Le Pogam, Tomb of Leon V de Lusignan (PDF) [dead link]
- Dadoyan, Seta B. (2013). The Armenians in the Medieval Islamic World: Armenian Realpolitik in the Islamic World and Diverging Paradigmscase of Cilicia Eleventh to Fourteenth Centuries. Vol. 2. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4128-4782-7.