Manuel II Palaeologus (1350 – 1425)
Manuel II Palaeologus, (born July 27, 1350—died July 21, 1425), soldier, statesman, and Byzantine emperor (1391–1425) whose diplomacy enabled him to establish peaceful relations with the Ottoman Turks throughout his reign, delaying for some 50 years their ultimate conquest of the Byzantine Empire.
Manuel was a son of John V Palaeologus (reigned 1341–91 with interruptions) and Helena Kantakouzene and was named heir to the throne in 1373 after his older brother, Andronicus IV, led an unsuccessful revolt against their father. Manuel was crowned coemperor in September 1373 and, in 1379, helped his father regain Constantinople and the throne, which Andronicus had seized in 1376. John V and Manuel regained the throne with Turkish help and were forced to pay tribute to the sultan and lend him military aid. In 1390 John VII, son of Andronicus, seized Constantinople and the throne, but the Turks again helped Manuel and John regain it. Manuel was forced to live at the court of Bayezid I as a submissive vassal, remaining there until he escaped to Constantinople after learning of his father’s death in February 1391.