Background
He was a son of Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos and Irene of Montferrat.
Marquess of Montferrat Aleramici Marquesses
He was a son of Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos and Irene of Montferrat.
The March of Montferrat was passed to Irene"s children. Patriarch Athanasius I of Constantinople blocked the candidacy of the elder son John, so Theodore went to Italy instead. Theodore sailed to Genoa in 1306.
Spinola used his wealth to back Theodore"s claim to Montferrat.
Theodore was opposed by Manfred IV of Saluzzo. Manfred was a cadet of the House of Savoy, and several marquesses of Montferrat had Savoyard wives.
King Charles II of Anjou also claimed parts of the March. He gradually overcame these foes and secured the whole March.
In 1310 he received the imperial investiture from Emperor Henry VII. Theodore and Argentina had two children, John ΙΙ (1313–1372) and Yolande (1318–1342), who married Aimone, Count of Savoy.
Theodore is known to have authored an original military manual, titled Les Enseignemens ou Ordenances pour un Siegneur qui a Guerres et Grans Gouvernemens a Faire, often referred to as Les enseignements. Originally composed in Greek in 1326-1327 while Theodore was in Constantinople, it exists now only in the medieval French translation of Jean de Vignay. The work is one of the most interesting medieval military manuals in that it is not dependent on Vegetius" De Re Militari or any other known classical text.
lieutenant thus serves as an example of the military thinking of the late Byzantine and Medieval worlds.
Theodore died at Trino Vercellese in 1338.