John III Ducas Vatatzes (born c. 1193, Byzantine Empire—died November 3, 1254, Nymphaion [modern Kemalpaşa, Turkey]) was the emperor of Nicaea (1222–54) who, by acquiring territory, encouraging economic growth, and supporting a cultural revival from his capital at Nicaea (modern İznik, Turkey), paved the way for the recovery of Constantinople from the Latin emperors and the reestablishment of the Byzantine Empire.
Born to an aristocratic Byzantine family, he married Irene, daughter of Theodore I Lascaris, emperor of Nicaea, becoming emperor on Theodore’s death. Civil war broke out when Theodore’s brothers, Alexius and Isaac, protested the succession, but John defeated them in battle and imprisoned and blinded them (1223). Two years later he also defeated the Latin forces supporting his rivals and made himself master of Asia Minor. He later clashed with Theodore Ducas, despot of Epirus, after the latter took Thessalonica (modern Thessaloníki, Greece) and proclaimed himself Byzantine emperor (1225). John’s forces were routed by Theodore when they attempted to take Adrianople later that year. Allied with the Bulgarian tsar John Asen II, John III defeated Theodore in battle (1230) and besieged Constantinople in 1235. Realizing the potential threat from Nicaea, however, Asen declared war on his ally. A peace was arranged in 1237, and, when Asen died in 1241, John III annexed territory in Bulgaria and attacked the despotate of Epirus. By 1242 he had reduced Epirus’s territory and forced it to recognize Nicaean suzerainty.
John III also promoted the isolation of Latin Constantinople by making pacts with Western leaders. About 1250 he promised to become the vassal of Frederick II, Holy Roman emperor, in return for aid in reconquering Constantinople. Though the pact was sealed by John’s marriage to the emperor’s daughter, Constance, little came of their agreement. He also negotiated unsuccessfully with the papacy, promising to end the schism between the Eastern and Western churches if the Latins returned Constantinople.
In domestic policy John III made the Nicaean empire economically self-supporting, improved agriculture and stockbreeding, built hospitals and poorhouses, and encouraged the development of Nicaea’s cultural life. His popularity among his subjects and his reputation for goodness caused him to be canonized a saint of the Eastern church a half century after his death.