Distilling Aegean politics from the 13th century onward into three groups that disliked eachother to varying degrees is inevitably going to be a silly process. It was a complex mixture of dozens of regional and minor powers spaning three religions, many ethnicities and a multitude of shifting allegiances and alliances by the many factions looking to restore or replace the Byzantines in their heartland of the islands and coastal regions of the Aegean Sea or looking to carve out a portion of it for themselves.Thanas wrote:There was no love lost on either side, but it is worth mentioning the pope called for several crusades against the Ottoman and the Italian city states were the best defenders of Constantinople when it came down to the siege.Frank Hipper wrote:From what I've read, which isn't a great deal, this is precisely the opposite of what the situation was; the Byzantines hated the Western Church more than the Muslims.Byzantium was hated by the Catholics more than it was hated by the Muslims.
Like all issues in history, it is a bit more onedimensional than "they hated each other".
A such it was a chaotic system, with multiple factions that rose to the point of looking to come out on top until the Ottomans eventually did.