Michael, a scion of several former imperial…
1258 CE
Michael, a scion of several former imperial families (Doukas, Angelos, Komnenos) whom Theodore II had mistrusted, had passed a rather uneventful boyhood, seemingly marked primarily by fantasies of himself recovering Constantinople from the Latins; he had spent much of his youth living in the imperial palaces at Nicaea and Nicomedia.
At the age of twenty-one, the emperor John III had charged him with treasonous conduct against the state, a charge from which he had extricated himself by the force of his wit.
Gradually usurping more and more authority, he is soon invested with the titles of megas doux and, in November 1258, of despotēs.