Constantine IV of Armenia

King of Armenia

Constantine IV (also Constantine VI; Armenian: Կոստանդին, Western Armenian transliteration: Gosdantin or Kostantine; died 1373) was the King of Armenian Cilicia from 1362 until his death. He was the son of Hethum of Neghir, a nephew of Hethum I of Armenia. Constantine came to the throne on the death of his cousin Constantine III, whose widow, Maria, daughter of Oshin of Corycos, he married.

Constantine formed an alliance with Peter I of Cyprus, offering him the port and castle of Corycus. On Peter's death in 1369, Constantine looked for a treaty with the Sultan of Egypt. The barons were unhappy with this policy, fearing annexation by the sultan, and in 1373 Constantine was murdered. Upon his death he was succeeded by his distant cousin Leo V, one of the Poitiers-Lusignan dynasty, who would become the last king of Cilician Armenia.

coat-of-arms of Hetumids of Lesser Armenia

References

  • Boase, T. S. R. (1978). The Cilician Kingdom of Armenia. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press. ISBN 0-7073-0145-9.
Constantine IV of Armenia
House of Neghir
House of Lusignan
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Armenia
1362–1373
Succeeded by
  • v
  • t
  • e
Antiquity
336 BC–428
Orontids
Artaxiads
Non-dynastic
Arsacids
Bagratids
884–1045Cilicia
1080–1198 (principality)
1198–1375 (kingdom)
Rubenids
Hethumids
Lusignan
Neghir
Lusignan