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BYZANTINE
EMPRESSES
BYZANTINE
EMPRESSES

CHARLES DIEHL

'Translated from the French by

Harold Bell and Theresa de Kerpely

19 6 3

ALFRED A. KNOPF/ JV’E/F TORK


Î^IÎHL

L. C. catalog card number: 62-15576

THIS A BORZOI BOOK


IS

PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC.

Copyright 1927 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.,


renewed;
© 1963 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. All rights
reserved.
No part of this book may
be reproduced in any form
without permission in writing from the
publisher, ex-
cept by a reviewer, who may quote
brief passages in
a review to be printed in a magazine
or newspaper.
Manufactured in the United States of America,
and
distributed by Random House, Inc.
Published simul-
taneously in Toronto, Canada, by
Random House of
Canada, Limited.

first BORZOI EDITION


Chapters I through VII first appeared
in Byzantine
Portraits, Alfred A. Knopf,
1927; originally issued in
French as Figures Byzantines, Paris:
Armand Colin,
1906. Chapters VIII through XIV
originally appeared
m French as parts of Impératrices de
Max Leclerc et Cie, proprietors of
Byzance, © 1959,
Librairie Armand'
Colin.

177:173
COJ^TEXrS

I. THE LIFE OF A BYZANTINE EMPRESS 3

II. ATHENAIS
III. THEODORA
IV. IRENE
V. THE BLESSED THEODORA 94

VI. THEOPHANO
VII. ZOË THE PORPHYROGENITA 136

VIII. ANNA COMNENA 174

IX. IRENE DUCAS 198

X. BERTHA OF SULZBACH 226

XI. AGNES OF FRANCE 244

XII. CONSTANCE OF HOHENSTAUFEN 259

XIII. YOLANDA OF MONTFERRAT 276

XIV. ANNA OF SAVOY 287


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BYZANTINE
EMPRESSES
Chapters I through VII of this book were
translated by Harold Bell, and Chapters
VIII through XIV by Theresa de Kerpely.
I

THE LIFE OF A
BYZANTINE
EMPRESS
I

n the most secluded part of the Imperial Palace of Byzan-


I tium, far beyond the guardrooms and the apartments of
state, in the midst of shadowy gardens and running waters,

which, to quote a contemporary chronicler, made of it “a


new Eden,” “another Paradise,” arose the private dwelling
of the Greek Emperors of the Middle Ages.
Fromthe descriptions of Byzantine historians we can still
obtain some idea of the exquisite, splendid abode which
many generations of Princes had embellished from age to
age, and where, far from the noise of the world, and the
tedium of ceremonial, the Basileis, representatives of God on
earth, were able from time to time to become men for a
space. Precious marbles and glittering mosaics abounded. In
the great hall of the New Palace, constructed by Basil I,
above the magnificent colonnade of green marble alternating
with red onyx, were vast compositions, monuments of that
secular art, which the Byzantine masters practiced far more

3
4 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
commonly than one imagines, representing the sovereign
enthroned among his victorious generals, and unfolding
the
glorious epic of his reign: “the Herculean
labors of the
Basileus,” as a contemporary chronicler has it,
“his solici-
tude for his subjects, his deeds on the battlefield,
and his
God-awarded victories.” But above all, the imperial bed-
chamber must, it seems, have been a marvel. Below the
high
ceiling, studded with golden stars, in the midst of which, in
green mosaic, was a cross, the symbol of salvation,
the whole
of the vast chamber was magnificently
decorated. In the mo-
saic floor a central medallion enclosed
a peacock with spread-
ing plumage, and in the corner were
four eagles the
imperial bird-framed in green marble,
with wings out-
stretched ready to take their flight. On the
lower part of the
walls, the mosaic made, as it were, a
border of flowers.
Higher up, against a background of glowing gold,
still other
mosaics represented the entire imperial family
in state cos-
tume: Basil crowned and seated on his throne,
near him his
wife Eudocia, and grouped around them,
very much as they
may be seen in the faded miniatures of a fine manuscript
in
the Bibliothèque Nationale, their sons
and daughters, hold-
ing books on which were written
pious verses from the
Scriptures. They all raised their hands
solemnly toward the
redeeming and long inscriptions carved on the walls
cross;
invoked upon the dynasty God’s blessing
and the assurance
of eternal life.

The Pavilion of the Pearl, with golden vault upheld by


its
four columns of marble and its
mosaic wainscot with hunt-
ing scenes, contained the summer
bedchamber of the sover-
eigns, and opened through
porticoes on two of its sides upon
cool gardens. There was the
winter bedchamber in the
Carian Pavilion, so called from being
constructed through-
out of Carian marble, protected
from the violent winds that
The Life of a B TZ AN TINE EMPRESS (( 5

blew from the Sea of Marmora; there was the Empress’s


wardrobe, wainscoted in the white marble of Proconnesus,
and covered with pictures And, finest of all,
of the saints.
there was the bedchamber of the Empress, a wonderful
^ *

room whose marble pavement seemed like “a meadow of


enameled flowers,” the walls of which, lined with porphyry,
Thessalian breccia, and white Carian, were such rare and
happy combinations of color that it was known as the Pavil-
ion of Harmony. There was the Pavilion of Love also, and
that of the Purple, wherein, according to custom and tradi-
tion, the imperial children must be born, and from which

they derived their title of Porphyrogenitus. And everywhere


was the splendor of silver and ivory doors, purple curtains
sliding on rods of silver, tapestries embroidered in gold with
fantastic animals, great golden lamps swinging from the
domes, precious furniture wonderfully incrusted with mother
of pearl, ivory, and gold.
It was in this marvelous Palace, in the midst of her court
of eunuchs and women, far from the tedium of ceremonies,
far from the tumults of the capital, in the quiet peacefulness
of flowery gardens, amid the clear sparkle of fountains, that
she lived whose life I shall attempt to describe in the follow-
ing pages; “the Glory of the Purple, the Joy of the World,”
as the people of Constantinople hailed her; “the Most Pious
and Most Happy Augusta, the Christ-loving Basilissa,” as
she was officially styled— in short, the Empress of Byzan-
tium.

II

One is apt to form a rather false notion of the life of these


Greek Empresses of the East. By an unconscious association
of ideas— the life of women in ancient Greece, in medieval
6 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Russia, in the Mohammedan Orient— one is too ready to as-
sume that the Byzantine Empresses were perpetual recluses,
carefully cloistered in the Gynaeceum and guarded by armed
eunuchs; seeing none but women, “beardless men,” as eu-
nuchs were called in Byzantium, and old priests; appearing
in public only on very rare occasions, and even then closely
veiled from the public eye. One is apt to imagine them reign-
ing over a court of women carefully separated from that of
the Basileus— living, in short, a harem life in a Christian
world.
This notion, though widespread, is very questionable. Un-
der few governments have women had a better position, or
played a more important part, or had a greater influence upon
and government, than under the Byzantine Empire.
politics
It is, as has been justly remarked, “one of the
most striking
characteristics of Greek history in the Middle Ages.” " Not
merely did many of these Empresses dominate their hus-
bands by their beauty, or by their superior intelligence: that
alone would prove little, and harem favorites have done
as
much. But under the monarchy founded by Constantine, in
almost every century of its history, one meets with women
who either have reigned themselves or, more frequently, have
with sovereign power disposed of the crown and made Em-
perors. And
these Princesses looked neither the outward and
visible signs of authority, nor the substance
of it. find We
evidence of this legitimately wielded power not
only in the
life of the Gynaeceum, but even more definitely in public af-
fairs, in which its legality is expressly admitted by Contem-
poraries. And therefore, those who wish to know and under-
stand the society and civilization of Byzantium
must learn
“Impératrices d’Orient,” Revue des Deux Mondes,
1
1891, tome i, p. 829.
TheLifeofaBTZANTlNE EMPRESS (( 7

some unexpected things about the life of these forgotten

Princesses of long ago.

Ill

Throughout the vast extent of the Imperial Gynaeceum


the Empress reigned supreme. Besides her women, she too,
like the Emperor, had a numerous retinue of palace officials.

At the head of her household was a Praepositus, or Lord


Chamberlain, in supreme command of all the chamberlains,
referendaries, ushers, and silentiaries, attached to the serv-
ice of the Basilissa, all, together with the halberdiers, or
protospatharii, of her bodyguard, carefully chosen from
among the eunuchs of the Palace. To serve her at table the

Empress, as well as the Emperor, had a Grand Master and a


Chief Taster. At the head of her women was a Grand Mis-
tress of the Palace, on whom was generally bestowed the
high dignity of Patrician of the Girdle, and who, with the
Protovestiarius, managed the innumerable throng of maids
of honor, ladies of thebedchamber, and ladies-in-waiting. As
a rule, the Emperor appointed those who were to serve the
Augusta, and he especially reserved to himself the privilege

of personally investing the Grand Mistress with the insignia


of her office, as well as that of receiving the homage of newly
appointed maids of honor. But for the majority of her at-
tendants the Empress held a special investiture in order to
emphasize the fact that they were in her service. And al-

though, on the day of their installation, when assuming their


official robes— golden tunic, white mantle, and high, tower-

headdress (the propoloma) with long white veil— the


like

women of the Basilissa were admonished by the Praepositus


to fear God and be sincerely faithful and wholly devoted to
^ )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
the Basileus and the Augusta, there is reason to believe that,
once admitted to the imperial chamber, they soon forgot the
Emperor in their loyalty to the Empress.
Since she could rely upon the fidelity of her servants, the
Empress was free to act as she chose within the Gynaeceum,
and she used this freedom in accordance with her character
and temperament. For many of these fair Princesses their
toilet was one of their chief occupations. It is said
that Theo-
dora, accomplished coquette as she was, took great care
of
her beauty; she slept far into the morning so that her face
might appear serene and lovely; she took frequent and pro-
longed baths in order to preserve the striking freshness of
her complexion; she loved splendid robes of state, the dazzle
of great purple-violet mantles embroidered in gold,
the glit-
tering jewels, and the precious stones and pearls:
I for she
knew that her beauty was the best guarantee of her absolute
power. Other Princesses had simpler tastes; except in
state
ceremonies, Zoë wore only soft, light dresses, which
were
better suited to her fair beauty; but on the other
hand, she
was addicted to the use of perfumes and cosmetics, and in
her apartments great were kept going summer and win-
fires
ter for the preparation of unguents and
perfumes, so that
they were rather like an alchemist’s laboratory.
And there
were others who despised all such refinements of luxury,
pre-
ferring, in the words of a contemporary, “to adorn them-
selves with the beauty of their virtues,”
and scorning as
unworthy and futile “the cosmetic art beloved of
Cleopatra.”
Some, like Theodora, thought an exquisitely served
table
an inalienable privilege of supreme power; while
others spent
but little on themselves, and took delight in
storing money
away in great strongboxes. Many
were pious; devotional ex-
ercises, long vigils before the holy
icons, and serious con-
versations with austere monks, took up much
of an Empress’s
The Life of aBYZANTlNE EMPRESS (( 9

time. Many had a taste for books, and gathered about them
a group of men of letters, who composed to their order works
in prose and in verse, for which they were always well paid.
Occasionally some of these Empresses, such as Athenais and
Eudocia, condescended to authorship; and the Princesses of
the Comnenian dynasty in particular have the merited repu-
tation of being well educated, scholarly, and learned. Others
took pleasure in buffoons and clowns: notwithstanding her
intelligence, the great Theodora herself, with her native gen-
ius for staging, occasionally got up amusements in doubtful
taste, often at the expense of her guests. And, finally, court

intrigues and love affairs occupied much of their time, and


often even worried the Emperor.
It must not be supposed, however, that a Byzantine Em-
press divided all her hours between religion, the toilet, re-

and holidays. Higher matters often en-


ceptions, festivities,
gaged the attention of many of them, and more than once the
government felt the power of the Gynaeceum. The Augusta
had her private fortune, which she managed as she chose

without consulting or even notifying the Basileus; she had


her own political opinions, which were not infrequently at
variance with those of the sovereign. It is even more surpris-
ing in such an autocracy to find that the Emperor gave the
Basilissa complete liberty in certain respects, and often was
what went on in her part of the Palace.
quite ignorant of
For the Gynaeceum was the scene of strange and mysterious
happenings. When
Anthemius, Patriarch of Constantinople,
was cited under strong suspicion of heresy to appear before
the Council and was excommunicated by the Church and
exiled by Justinian, it was in the Palace itself, in Theodora’s
apartments, that he found refuge. There was some astonish-
ment at first at his sudden disappearance; he was thought to

be dead, and finally was forgotten. Great, therefore, was the


10 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
general amazement when, after the Empress’s death, the Pa-
triarch was discovered in the depths of the Gynaeceum; he
had lived twelve years in this safe retreat unknown to Justin-
ian and— what is perhaps even more admirable— unbetrayed
by Theodora. Itwas also in the Gynaeceum that the plot was
hatched to murder the Emperor Nicephorus Phocas. With-
out any suspicion on the part of the Basileus, Theophano was
able to receive her accomplices, to introduce armed men into
thewomen’s quarters, and to hide them so well that when the
Emperor, who had been warned at the last moment by an
anonymous letter, ordered a search of the Gynaeceum, no one
was found, and it was thought that someone had tried to play
a practical joke. Two
hours later in a stormy night the chief
conspirator was hoisted up to the Empress’s chamber in
a
wicker basket, and the Basileus, attacked defenseless in his
bedchamber, dead, his skull split open by a mighty sword
fell

stroke, and his body riddled with wounds.


One obviously must not draw very far-reaching conclu-
sions from such exceptional occurrences. But the
extraordi-
narily significant point is that there was no such impassable
barrier as one is apt to imagine between the court of the sov-
ereign and the Empress’s apartments. Just as, on
the one
hand, the Augusta’s women received investiture
at the
hands of the Basileus in the presence of all his courtiers,
so
the Basilissa permitted many of the high
dignitaries, who
were by no means “beardless officers,” to visit her in her own
quarters; and that same Byzantine etiquette
which has been
represented as so strict and prudish demanded
that on cer-
tain solemn occasions the Gynaeceum
should be open to
everyone.
For example, when the new Empress, three days
after her
wedding, left the bridal chamber to take her bath in
the Pal-
ace of Magnaura, courtiers and people lined the paths of the
The Life of a B Y Z ANT IN E EMPRESS (( 11

garden through which she went with her swite. And as the

Basilissa passed along, preceded by attendants bearing dress-


ing gowns, perfumes, boxes, and vessels, and escorted by
three maids of honor holding red apples encrusted with
pearls, as a symbol of love, the organs played, the people
cheered, the court players made coarse jests, and the high
officers of state accompanied the Empress to the baths, and

waited for her at the door to conduct her back again in pomp
to the nuptial chamber.
And several months later, when the Empress gave birth to
a son, a week after her delivery the entire court filed past the

young mother. In the room, hung for the occasion with gold-
embroidered tapestries and glittering with the light of in-
numerable lamps, the Basilissa lay in a bed covered with
golden coverlets, and near her was the cradle of the young
heir to the throne. One by one the Praepositus presented to
the Augusta the officers of the imperial household, and after-
ward, according to their rank, the wives of the great court
dignitaries,and even the widows of high officials. Last of all
came the aristocracy of the Empire, senators, proconsuls,
patricians, and officials of all kinds; and each, as he made
his obeisance to the Empress, offered his congratulations,
and left a little present near the bed for the newborn child.
One can readily see that these are not harem customs; and,
in the face of such testimony, is it fair to speak of the strict

seclusion of the Gynaeceum, and of the inflexible prudery of


Byzantine ceremonial?

IV

A Byzantine Empress spent by no means all her life within


the narrow confines of her private dwelling. Official rules of
procedure regulated her position in public life, and defined
)) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
her part beside the Basileus both in the state ceremonies and
in the government of the monarchy.
The importance of court ceremonies in the life of a Byzan-
tine Emperor is well known. One of the most curious works
transmitted to us from that distant period, and one of the
most useful in reconstructing the strange and picturesque
aspects of that vanished society, is the Book of Ceremonies^
written toward the middle of the tenth century by the Em-
peror Constantine VII. It is entirely devoted to descriptions
of the processions, festivals, audiences, and state banquets,
which a heavy and inflexible etiquette imposed as duties upon
the sovereign. Although the importance attached to these of-
ficial acts has been often misunderstood, like so
many other
things in connection with Byzantium— St. Louis, for in-
stance, and even Louis XIV, heard Mass more often than a
Basileus— it nevertheless certain that they constituted a
is

very large part of the business of being Emperor. Now the


Empress took part in them constantly. “When there is no
Augusta,” says a Byzantine historian, “it is impossible to
celebrate the festivals and to give the entertainments pre-
scribed by etiquette.”
Thus, in the public life of the monarchy, the Empress had
her part and her share of royalty. The Emperor naturally
left
in her hands nearly everything connected
with the ladies of
the court. On Easter, while the Basileus in the nave of St.
Sophia was receiving the high dignitaries of the Empire, who
solemnly gave him the kiss of peace in memory of Christ’s
resurrection, the
Empress, enthroned in the women’s gallery
of the Great Church, surrounded by her
chamberlains and
bodyguards, received the wives of the high officials
accord-
ing to their husbands’ rank; and each in full court
dress of
silk,covered with jewels and gold, and crowned
with the
propoloma, came and kissed the Empress.
The Life of a B Y Z ANT IN E EMPRESS (( 13

Ceaselessly the recurring festivals gathered this brilliant


throng of ladies around the Empress. In November, on the
feast of the Brumalia, an ancient pagan survival, the Basi-
lissa in the Pavilion of the Purple presented rich silks to the

ladies of the court. On same feast day she


the evening of the
entertained them elaborately, while the choir from St. Sophia
and the Holy Apostles recited poems in her honor, and the
court comedians and buffoons amused the company with in-
terludes, and toward the end of dinner representatives of the
circus factions with some of the highest state officials per-
formed a slow and stately torch dance before the Augusta
and her guests. It was the Empress, again, who assisted the

Emperor in the receptions given to foreign Princesses when


they visited the Palace at Byzantium. She, as well as the Ba-
sileus, gave them audience; she invited them and the women
of their suites to dine with her; she showered them with gifts
and attentions. In this way she had a certain part in the for-
eign policy of the monarchy, and on the graciousness of her
welcome depended many of the successes of the imperial

diplomacy.
But by no means limited the Basilissa to
official etiquette

the reception of ladies. She often assisted the Emperor her


husband still more directly. On Palm Sunday she received
with him. At court banquets she sat at table with him, among
the senators and high dignitaries honored by a command to
the imperial entertainment. And since, according to etiquette,
she had her share in the prescribed acclamations with which
the populace were in the habit of saluting their rulers, she
did not hesitate to show herself in public with the Basileus.
In the Hippodrome on the occasions of the principal races,
and in front of the Sacred Palace at the performance of cer-

tain political ceremonies of great importance, the multitude


chanted: “Appear with the Augustae, O God-crowned Em-
)) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
perors!” and again: “O God-protected pair, O Basileus, and
thon, Glory of the Purple, come and enlighten your slaves,
and rejoice the hearts of your people!” and again: “Come
forth. Empress of the Romans!”— all of them meaningless
phrases if the Basilissa was not in the habit of showing her-
self on those days in the box in the Hippodrome or on
the bal-
cony of the Palace. It was even so little the custom for her to
confine herself to the imperial residence that she often ap-
peared in public without the Emperor. Thus, she used to go
without him in solemn procession to St. Sophia; she made her
state entrance into the capital without him; she went
to meet
him on his return from military expeditions. For a Byzantine
Empress was something more than the consort and associate
of the Emperor: the great part which she so often played in
politics is due to the fact that from the day that she
was first
enthroned upon the throne of Constantine she received the
fullness of imperial power.

V
In Byzantium reasons of state had, as a rule, little
effect
upon the Emperor’s choice of a consort. The monarch
se-
lected his wife in a more original and somewhat extraordi-
nary fashion.
When the Empress Irene wished to find a wife for her son
Constantine, she sent messengers up and down the
Empire
to seek out the most beautiful girls in
the monarchy and bring
theni to the capital. With
a view to limiting the choice and
facilitating the task of her envoys, the
Empress indicated
carefully what she considered the suitable age of candidates
to be, as well as their height and their size in shoes.
After re-
ceiving these instructions the messengers
set out, and one
evening arrived in a Paphlagonian village. Seeing
in the dis-
The Life ofaBYZANTINE EMPRESS a 15

tance a large and splendid mansion which had the appear-


ance of belonging to a rich landowner, they decided to pass
the night there. Their choice was unfortunate; the proprietor
was a saint, who had completely ruined himself by his alms-
giving to the poor. Nevertheless, he welcomed the Emperor’s
envoys with great hospitality, and calling his wife said:
“Serve us up a good dinner.” Her resources being somewhat
limited, she answered: “How can I? You have managed your
affairs so well that we haven’t so much as a single fowl in the
yard.” “Go light your fire,” the saint replied, “get ready the
great dining hall, and set the old ivory table; God will pro-

vide our dinner.”God did provide; and when the envoys, who
were delighted at the way in which they had been made wel-
come, questioned the old man over the dessert about his fam-
ily, they found that he had three granddaughters of mar-
name of the God-crowned Emperor,”
riageable age. “In the
they exclaimed, “show them to us, for there is not in all the
Roman Empire a young girl whom we have not seen.” The
girlswere sent for and proved to be charming; and it hap-
pened that one of them, Mary, was of the required age and
proportions and wore shoes of the specified size.

The messengers were delighted with their find, and took


the whole family with them to Constantinople. About a dozen
other young girls had been assembled there, all very pretty,
and most of them of rich and noble families. At first these
beautiful creatures rather despised the newcomer; but she,
who was by no means a fool, said one day to her companions:
“Girls, let’s make an agreement that whichever of us shall be
chosen by God to be Empress shall help the others to find
husbands.” Whereupon a general’s daughter scornfully an-
swered: “Oh, indeed! I am the richest, the best born, and the
most beautiful; the Emperor will undoubtedly marry me.
None of the rest of you need have any hopes, for you have no
16 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
families to speak of, and nothing but your pretty faces.”
Needless to say, she was punished for her disdain. When the
candidates were brought before the Empress, her son, and
the Prime Minister, she was immediately told: “You are
charming; but you are not the wife for an Emperor.” Mary,
on the other hand, instantly won the young sovereign’s heart,
and he chose her.
There are other similar anecdotes to show that this was
the usual manner of choosing a Byzantine Empress, though
sometimes the sovereign simplified matters even more by
taking a fancy to some beautiful adventuress, as did Justin-
ian to Theodora. One can see at all events that the Basileis
did not insist upon noble birth, and that in their eyes any
pretty woman might make a suitable Empress. But it is also
noteworthy that the solemn ceremonies accompanying the
coronation and marriage gave the future Empress an entirely
new character, and made of the poor girl of yesterday a su-
perhuman being, the incarnation of
power and holiness.
I shall not describe in detail the pompous ceremonies
— for
all these Byzantine functions are somewhat alike in
their mo-
notonous magnificence — with which the future Empress was
conducted veiled into the great hall of the Augustaeum to be
invested by the Emperor with the purple chlamys, which the
Patriarch had already blessed; nor shall I tell how the sover-
eign placed upon her head the crown with long diamond
pendants; nor of the court reception in the Palace Chapel of
St. Stephen; nor shall I describe the wedding, when the Pa-
triarch placed the nuptial crown upon the heads of
the newly
married pair. Out of all the complicated ritual it will be
enough to point out a few salient features, which will clearly
indicate the complete sovereignty implied in the
glorious title
of Empress of Byzantium.
In the first place, the marriage follows the coronation in-
The Life of a B TZ AN TINE EMPRESS (( 17

stead of preceding it. It is not as the Emperor’s wife that the


Empress shares the autocratic power; it is no reflected author-
ity that she receives from her husband. By a premarital and
independent act she is invested with sovereign powers; and
this sovereignty, to which she, like the Emperor, is raised by
God’s actual choice, is equal in plenitude to that of the Basi-
leus. And so true is this, that it is not the Emperor who pre-
sents the new Empress to the people. After the imposition of

the crown has conferred supreme power upon her, she goes
forth unaccompanied by the sovereign, and escorted only by
her chamberlains and her women. Slowly, between the ranks
of guardsmen, senators, patricians, and high dignitaries, she
passes through the Palace and goes out upon the terrace, be-
neath which are stationed the members of the high public
services, the soldiers, and the people. Aloft in her rich impe-
rial robes, glittering with gold embroideries, she shows her-

self to her new subjects and makes herself solemnly known to

them. Before her the colors are dipped, grandees and people
prostrate themselves, their heads in the dust, and the factions
raise the time-honored acclamations. Very reverently, a can-
dle in either hand, she first bows before the cross; then she
greets her people, while a unanimous cry goes up: “God save
the Augusta!”
Here is another instance. The coronation of the Empress,
indeed, is surrounded with somewhat more mystery than
that of the Emperor, for instead of being celebrated in St. So-
phia it takes place in the Palace. But one should not imagine
this to be the effect of certain so-called Byzantine notions
“which imposed,” we are told, “a life of seclusion upon the
wife, and accorded much publicity.” As a matter of
ill with
fact, all the courtiers, men and women alike, are present at

her coronation; and, when at the conclusion of the ceremony


the sovereigns hold a reception in St. Stephen’s Church, there
18 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
are not, as sometimes thought, two separate receptions, the
is

Basileus receiving the men, and the Augusta the women.


First all the men and then all the women of the court pass be-
fore the thrones on which the Emperor and Empress are
seated side by side. And being presented, each in turn,
after
men as well as women, supported under the arms by two si-
lentiaries, prostrates himself and kisses the knees of the Ba-
sileus and of the Augusta.
Here is yet another instance. After their marriage in St.
Stephen’s the imperial pair are escorted to the bridal chamber
by the entire court, both men and women. The people make
a lane for them as they go, and salute the new Basilissa as
follows: “Welcome, God-chosen Augusta! Welcome, God-
protected Augusta! Welcome, Wearer of the Purple! Wel-
come, thou whom all desire!” The crowd is admitted into the
nuptial chamber itself, before the imperial bed of gold, and
the newly married couple have to listen to the acclamations
and congratulations all over again. And in the evening at the
wedding banquet, the greatest nobles of the court— those
who are styled Friends of the Emperor— and the greatest la-
dies dine with the sovereigns in the Triclinium of the Nine-
teen Couches. W^hat strikes one most in all these ceremonies
is the freedom of association between men and women in this
court which has been stigmatized as prudish; and also how
little secluded is the life of such an Empress, who is
required
by official etiquette as the first act of her reign to show her
face to all the people of Byzantium.
We must, of course, guard against overstating the case. In
these delicate matters, custom and etiquette naturally
varied
with the times. It seems, indeed, that toward the end of the
ninth century and during the tenth, perhaps under the
influ-
ence of the Mohammedan East, a stricter etiquette confined
the Empress more closely to the Gynaeceum, that she veiled
The Life of aBYZANTlNE EMPRESS (( 19

herself more, that she appeared less frequently in public cere-


monies. But between the fifth and ninth centuries there is no
and when, from the end of the
trace of anything of the sort;
eleventh century onward, Byzantium came day by day into
closer contact with the West, when Western princesses sat
upon the throne of Constantine, this rigidity of etiquette, if it
had ever existed, broke down, and the ancient ceremonial
perished.
One last example will serve to illustrate fully the rights
which law and custom conferred upon a Byzantine Empress.
When the Emperor Zeno died in the year 491, his widow, the
Empress Ariadne, seized the power firmly in her own hands,
and, going forth from the Palace to the Hippodrome with the
great dignitaries of court and monarchy, stood up in the im-
perial box in her robes of state and addressed the assembled
people. She told them that by her order the Senate and the
high officials were about to meet, and that under her presi-
dency, they, together with the army, would choose a succes-
sor to the deceased Emperor. As a matter of fact, the supreme
council of the Empire did meet in the Palace; but its first act

was to leave in Ariadne’shands the choice of the new sover-


eign. Extraordinary as such procedure may seem, one must
be careful not to regard it as revolutionary. The Augusta, le-
gitimately invested with supreme power from the day of her

coronation, exercises it legitimately in all its fullness, and


transmits it as it pleases her. The people in ratifying her
choice formally recognize her rights. “Thine is the imperial
power, Ariadne Augusta,” cried the 'multitude. And the ex-
perienced minister who in the sixth century edited the cere-
monial code from which this story is taken says explicitly
that the question of the succession becomes extraordinarily
difficult “when there is neither Augusta nor Emperor to

transmit the power.”


20 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
And therefore it is that in every act involving a change in
the government of the monarchy, the election or the associa-
tion of a new Basileus, the Basilissa always appears officially,
showing herself in the Hippodrome, haranguing the people,
energetic and active, without anyone’s being at all astonished
or scandalized. Since thepower was vested in her, she could
as her fancy directed either create a new Emperor, or rule as
Regent in the name of her young children, or even reign her-
self. At a time when the Germanic West would have been in-

dignant at the idea of a woman reigning, oriental Byzantium


accepted peacefully an Empress who in her official docu-
ments proudly styled herself as a man: “Irene, great Basileus
and Autocrat of the Romans.”

Byzantine miniatures have preserved the portraits of many


of these Princesses of long ago. They are of many different
physical types, for as a matter of fact every nation gave Em-
presses to Byzantium— Europe and Asia, the Caucasus and
Greece, Constantinople and the provinces, Syria and Hun-
gary, France andGermany, and even the barbarous Khazars
and Bulgars. In like manner they show equally profound
differences of character: “Among those Augustae,” as has
been well said, “was every conceivable type of woman — poli-
Theodora or Irene of Athens; writers, like Eudo-
ticians, like

cia or Anna Comnena; women of pleasure, like Zoe


the
Porphyrogenita; and others pure and devout, like her sister
Theodora; some who cared only for concocting new combina-
tions of perfumes and elegancies of toilet, or for inventing
gowns and coiffures to revolutionize Byzantine feminine so-
ciety; some whom no one ever talked of and
others about
whom there was too much talk; some whose doors were
opened only to pious monks and zealot priests; others who
welcomed buffoons and storytellers; and some whose win-
The Life of a B Y Z ANT INK EMPRESS (( 21
dows opened now and again to human body sewn
drop out a
in a sack into the silent waters of the Bosphorus.” " To under-
stand them, we must therefore not be deceived either by the
sumptuous uniformity of the imperial costume that they
wore, or by the apparently rigid ceremonial which may seem
to have regulated their lives. Their natures differed,
and so
did the parts they played; and it is precisely this which con-
stitutes their interest for us.

In the history of a vanished society it is not the wars, pic-


turesque as they may be, nor the palace revolutions
and bar-
rack mutinies, though they were often tragic enough, which
should engage our chief attention. The most fruitful proce-
dure is to endeavor to reconstruct the varying aspects of daily
life, the different ways of living and thinking, the manners
and customs— the civilization, in short. On all of these the life
of a Byzantine Empress may perhaps shed some new light;
and, in restoring her to the historical setting and in recon-
structing the surroundings in which she lived, we may have
accomplished a not wholly useless task. From these seem-
ingly restricted studies there will emerge a more general im-
pression, and with it some vivid, picturesque scenes from the
little-known society of distant Byzantium.

^ A. N. Rambaud, loc. cit., p. 838 .


s»i II

ATHENAIS

O n the 7th of June 421, the Most Pious Emperor Theo-


dosius, then about twenty years of age, married a
young girl who came from Athens, where her father had
been a professor in the university. She was born of pagan
parents; but in order to ascend the throne of Constantine she
had become a Christian, and on the day of her baptism had
changed her pretty name Athenais to Eudocia, a name at
once more Christian and more suited to her imperial rank.
How did this astonishing marriage between a little provin-
cial girl and the all-powerful Basileus come about? The an-
swer is simple. It was a love match, and the Byzantine chron-
iclers have fortunately given us the whole romantic story.
The young Theodosius, from the time he had reached man’s
estate, had contemplated marriage. He pestered his eldest

sister Pulcheria, who had brought him up and governed the


Empire in his name, and insisted that she should find a wife
for him. Neither birth nor wealth mattered; but he insisted

22
ATHENAIS (( 23
that she should be beautiful, supremely beautiful, with a
beauty such as Byzantium had never before beheld. And so to
please him Pulcheria searched all the East without finding
anyone possessed of the requisite perfections. Paulinus, the
friend of her childhood, the Emperor’s crony, also made in-
vestigations, when chance unexpectedly threw in their way
the longed-for beauty.
Leontius, a professor at the University of Athens,had two
sons and a daughter. He was a rich man. But when he came
to die, he left his fortune, by a curious whim, to his sons Va-

lerius and Gesius. “To my beloved daughter Athenais,” he


wrote in his vdll, “I bequeath one hundred pieces of gold. To
succeed in the world she will have her good luck, which is
better than any other woman’s.” In vain Athenais begged
her brothers to share their father’s estate with her; she was
obliged to leave home and seek refuge with her mother’s sis-

ter, who took her to Constantinople, where another aunt,


Leontius’s sister, lived. These two women persuaded the girl

to invoke the help of the Palace against her brothers, and she
obtained an audience of the Augusta Pulcheria. Athenais
was twenty years of age. She was very beautiful, being rather
tall, with a wonderful figure, and curly blond hair that
framed her features in a golden aureole and enhanced the
brilliancy of her fair complexion. Her lovely eyes were intel-
ligent and full of life, and she kept them modestly lowered.
She had a pure Greek nose, and she carried herself with
grace and dignity. Furthermore, she could express herself
well, and stated her request to perfection. She made an im-
mediate conquest of Pulcheria, who was enthusiastic about
her. The Augusta asked the girl a few questions about her
family and her past life, and soon ran to tell her brother of
the marvelous creature she had discovered. Theodosius in
great excitement was smitten with Athenais from his sister’s
24 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
description, and begged the Augusta to show him the young
enchantress at once. So he hid himself behind a tapestry with
his friend Paulinus, and waited for the young petitioner to

enter the room. The effect she young men


made upon the two
was prodigious; Paulinus was delighted, and the Emperor
fell completely in love with her. A few weeks later, after the

Patriarch Atticus had instructed her in the Christian religion


and purified her in the waters of baptism, Athenais-Eudocia
became Empress of Byzantium.
It is difficult to say how much truth there is in this charm-
ing tale. The outlines of it do not appear before the eleventh
century and are greatly elaborated by the fancy of later peri-
ods. Contemporary historians know nothing of the details I
have just given. The only undoubted fact is that the new Em-
press was born an Athenian and a pagan, and that she was
very pretty and perfectly educated. That was sufficient to
captivate Theodosius, who was in any case anxious for politi-

cal reasons to perpetuate the dynasty; and one can under-


stand, moreover, that the ambitious Pulcheria, who was su-
preme, and anxious to preserve her supremacy, should wish
to further a marriage in which the bride would owe every-
thing to her. She was her godmother; she wished to adopt
her; and she may well have thought that in the circumstances
there would be no changes in the Sacred Palace.

II

At the time when Athenais-Eudocia became the consort of


Theodosius, life in the Imperial Palace at Byzantium pre-
sented a peculiar appearance. For seven years Pulcheria, a
young woman of twenty-two, the eldest sister of the Basileus,
had ruled over it with complete authority. She was astute, en-
ergetic, ambitious, and essentially a politician. After the
ATHENAIS (( 25

death of Arcadius, she, as the oldest member of the family,

had carried on the government during her brother’s minor-


ity, and in 414 at the age of fifteen, had taken the title of
,

Augusta, thereby regularizing her assumption of power. Be-


ing anxious to devote herself without hindrance to her task—
also, perhaps, not wishing to share the authority with another
—she had made a vow, at the age of sixteen, never to marry,
and as a memorial had dedicated in St. Sophia
of her promise
a golden table adorned with precious stones. And, as she was
very religious, she had reformed the court and turned the
Palace into a monastery. Under the influence of the Patriarch
Atticus, Pulcheria’s two sisters, Arcadia and Marina, had
followed her example and taken the vow of celibacy. And the
suites of these pious Princesses so modeled themselves upon
them that, night and day, hymns and religious exercises
were constantly in progress in the imperial dwelling. Instead
of gorgeous ceremonies and splendid costumes, military pro-
cessions and the cheers of the multitude, nothing was heard
but the intoning of the offices, nothing seen but the somber
habit of priests and monks. The Palace, now purged of the

licentious courtiers who had dishonored it, and carefully


ruled in every detail according to grave and holy precepts,
presented a totally new appearance. Disdaining luxury, beau-
tiful clothes, and the idleness characteristic of high rank,
these Princesses worked with their own hands, spinning and
sewing for the poor, extending their charities and their good
works. Pulcheria founded churches and gave vast endow-
ments to hospitals and charitable institutions; her sisters
imitated her. A great gust of piety, charity, and renunciation
reinvigorated the Sacred Palace and swept away the old
atmosphere of intrigue.
Itwas in this atmosphere that Pulcheria had brought up
the young Theodosius. Highly educated herself— she knew
26 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
both Greek and Latin, an accomplishment already rare at
that period— she had surrounded him with excellent masters
and carefully chosen companions. He profited by his good
teaching, and was really a very learned young man. He had
been taught Greek and Latin, astronomy, mathematics, natu-
ral history, and many other things; he could draw and paint,
and was fond of illuminating his manuscripts with beautiful
miniatures. He had a taste for reading, and had formed a
large library, and in the evening liked to work very late by
the light of a lamp that he had invented. His reward is to be
known Theodosius the Calligrapher. But Pul-
in history as
cheria had watched even more carefully over her brother’s
moral education. He was very devout, he took pleasure in
singing hymns with his sisters, he fasted regularly twice a
week, and he liked to dispute with theologians. Pulcheria her-
self had even given him lessons in deportment; she had

taught him how an Emperor should wear his clothes, how he


should receive people, when to smile and when to appear
grave and serious— in short all the refinements of ceremonial
that an Emperor was obliged to know. And thus, at the time
of his marriage, Theodosius was a nice young fellow, of
medium height, fair, with black eyes, very well brought up,
very polite, quiet, gentle, and amiable, and somewhat
of a
bore and a pedant. Of physical exercises, he cared only for
hunting, and, not being particularly energetic, was not in the
least attractedby war and fighting. He was of a sedentary
disposition and preferred to stay in the
Palace; and, as his
character was feeble, he was easily influenced.
In short, he
was a conscientious and mediocre Emperor,
good enough
perhaps for quiet times, but totally unsuited
for the troubled
century in which he lived.
Between her imperious sister-in-law and
her easy-going
husband, what would become of Athenais?
It must not be
ATHENAIS (( 27
forgotten that she too was a cleverwoman. At the time of her
birth Athens, her native city, was still the great university
town of the Hellenic East, the finest museum of ancient
Greece, the last refuge of pagan learning. As a professor’s
daughter she naturally had received an incomparable educa-
tion. Her father had taught her had made her learn
rhetoric;
the masterpieces of ancient literature, Homer, the tragic
poets, Lysias, and Demosthenes; had trained her, in the man-
ner of the schools, to improvise brilliantly on given subjects,
to compose pretty verses, to speak with elegance. Further-
more, she had been initiated into the mysteries of the Neo-
platonic philosophy, whose most had
illustrious exponents

been made welcome in Athens; she also knew astronomy and


geometry, and succeeded equally in everything. She pleased
Pulcheria by her intelligence and her gift of expression, and
one may well believe that she delighted Theodosius as much
by her erudition as by her beauty.
The education that Athenais had received was an alto-

gether pagan one, and the thin veneer of Christianity which


the Patriarch had applied to her soul failed, in all probability,

to way the teachings of her youth. Moreover,


impair in any
among people who remained faithful to ancient ideas, the
Emperor’s marriage with the young Athenian may well have
appeared as a victory for paganism, or, at the least, as a prom-
And, in fact, the Empress did not
ise of toleration. at first dif-

fer materially from the daughter of Leontius.


Indeed, Constantinople in the fifth century, notwithstand-
ing its position as a Christian capital, retained a strong im-
press of paganism. It had been enriched by Constantine and
his successors with the finest spoils of ancient sanctuaries; its
squares and its palaces were adorned with the most renowned
masterpieces of Greek sculpture; and in this incomparable
museum the dethroned gods seemed still to retain their pres-
25 ;; BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
tige and their glory. At the court, in spite of the dominant
tone of religion and bigotry, many ceremonies and festivals
preserved the memory of pagan traditions; and, although pi-
ous folk considered any dealings with the Graces and the
Muses a mortal sin, poetry was by no means exiled from the
Imperial Palace. Eudocia was fond of verses and took pleas-
ure in composing them, and she found about her people to
share her tastes and encourage her in them. One of her first
acts immediately after her marriage was to compose a poem
in heroic verse upon the Persian War, which had just been
brought to a successful conclusion. She could have done noth-
ing better calculated to please Theodosius and win com-
pletely the love of her studious husband. When, toward the
end of the year 422, she in addition bore him a daughter, her
influence increased still more; on the 2nd of January 423, the
Basileus gave her, as a New Year’s present, the title of
Augusta, thus making her officially the equal of Pulcheria.
And in the privacy of the imperial family her ascendancy
over her weak husband grew steadily greater.
It is not unlikely that she had a voice in the foundation,
in
the year 425, of the University of Constantinople.
In it we
can see the preponderating position given to Greek:
whereas
thirteen professors taught the Latin language and literature,
fifteen were appointed to teach Greek;
one chair was created
in philosophy; and the most eminent
men of the times, some
of them very recent Christians, were invited to lecture at the
new university. It should, however, be
observed that, if the
foundation of a university and the
consideration thereby
shown to letters are characteristic
of the taste of the period,
the new institution had in general a Christian
tone-witness
the subordinate position given
to philosophy-and was in-
tended by founders to be in a sense a rival
Its
to the too pagan
University of Athens. And this
illustrates vividly the evolu-
ATHENAIS (( 29

tion which was slowly taking place in the soul of the Empress
Eudocia.
Living in the devout atmosphere of the court, she felt un-
consciously the influence of her surroundings. Her marriage
may have seemed a victory for paganism, but as a matter of
fact she had done nothing for her former co-religionists; and
in 424, the Emperor Theodosius, in renewing the edicts of
proscription against the worship of the false gods, declared
solemnly that he “thought there were no longer any pagans.”
A further significant fact is that Eudocia, like a true Byzan-
tine,developed a passion for theological disputes. When in
428 Nestorius, Patriarch of Constantinople, taught the her-
esy which bears his name, and the ambitious Cyril, Patriarch
of Alexandria, more from jealousy of a rival than from devo-
tion to Orthodoxy, thereupon started a serious quarrel in the
Eastern Church, Eudocia joined with her husband in cham-
pioning the Patriarch of the capital against his enemies, and
tried to checkmate the turbulent successor of Athanasius,
whose chief aim was to establish a primacy for his see over
all the Eastern bishoprics. This episode is valuable not only
as an illustration of the part which Athenais-Eudocia played
in religious quarrels, but also as a proof of her increasing in-
fluence and of the breach that was widening between her and
Pulcheria.
In arranging her brother’s marriage, the imperious Au-
gusta had had no intention of resigning the power that Theo-
dosius had permitted her to exercise. Nevertheless, Eudocia’s
star waxed ever more powerful. She advanced her friends

and relatives in the sovereign’s favor; she used her influence


on behalf of Paulinus, the Master of the Offices, and also the
Egyptian Cyrus of Panopolis, who, like her, was fond of
books and wrote verses; she had her flatterers and her party
at court, and soon she was not afraid to oppose her sister-in-
50 ;; BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
law. Rumors underground rivalry spread beyond the
of this
Palace, and clever intriguers egged the two women on in the
hope of gaining some personal advantage. Cyril, especially,
made use of it in his quarrel with Nestorius; when writing to
the Emperor and his wife, he wrote also to the Augusta Pul-
cheria, whom he knew to be hostile to his rival, and whose in-
fluence with the weak Basileus he counted upon. But even
though Theodosius reproved him in very energetic terms for
his conduct, saying: “Either you thought that my wife, my
sister, and I, were not harmony with one another, or Your
in
Piety hoped that your letters might sow dissension between
us” — notwithstanding this protest, the results proved that
Cyril had not been mistaken in his calculations. Theodosius,
after having convoked the Council of Ephesus with the firm
intention of upholding Nestorius, allowed himself finally to
be imposed upon by Cyril’s illegal audacity, by the clamor of
the monks of Constantinople, by the advice of the high digni-
taries whom the Patriarch of Alexandria had won over, and
above all by the influence of Pulcheria. The gathering of 431
was a victory for the Alexandrians and a triumph for the im-
perious Augusta. For Eudocia was a serious reverse; she
it

was later to suffer even more cruelly from the consequences


of these court rivalries, and from the struggle for influence in
which she was engaged.

Ill

The journey which Athenais-Eudocia made in the year


438 Jerusalem provides interesting testimony
to
regarding
the outstanding feature of her
personality: the mixture in her
soul of pagan memories and Christian
preoccupations.
In 423 the court of Constantinople
had received an impor-
tant visitor. The celebrated
Galla Placidia, half sister of
ATHENAIS (( SI

Honorius and aunt of Theodosius II, having been obliged to


leave the Palace at Ravenna, had come with her daughter
Honoria and her young son Valentinian to take refuge in
Byzantium. A marriage had been proposed between the im-
newborn Eudoxia and the five-year-old
perial children, the
Caesar, who was now, by the death of Honorius, heir to the
Western Empire. Theodosius II spared no pains to procure
the recognition of his future son-in-law in Italy, under the
guardianship of Galla Placidia. Fourteen years later, in 437,
the cherished scheme was fulfilled. Athenais-Eudocia had
ardently desired this alliance, which would set her daughter
upon the glorious throne of the West, and had vowed, if the
marriage took place, to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, like

St.Helen before her, to give thanks to God in the very place


where His divine Son had died for mankind. Her necessary
separation from a child whom she adored made her perhaps
the more willing to undertake the journey, and in 438 the
Empress set out for the Holy City.
The first place she visited was Antioch. This city, which
was still full of the traditions and monuments of ancient civi-
lization, awoke within her the memories of her pagan youth.

In the Senate House, seated on a golden throne that glittered


with precious stones, she received the civic magistrates and
the principal inhabitants, and, recalling her father’s teach-
ings, improvised a brilliant speech in honor of the whose
city

guest she was. She alluded to the distant age when Greek cob
onies had carried Hellenic civilization throughout the archi-
pelago as far as the coasts of Syria, and ended by quoting a
line of Homer:

1 claim proud kinship with your race and blood.

The Antiochenes were too cultivated and too fond of letters

not to be wildly enthusiastic about a Princess who thus in-


32 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
yoked the purest traditions of Hellenism. And, as in the
splendid days of ancient Greece, the municipal senate voted
her a golden statue in the Curia, and deposited in the museum
a bronze stele inscribed with a record of the imperial visit.
Her stay in Jerusalem is in striking contrast with this vi-
sion of antiquity. Jerusalem was essentially a Christian city,
full of pious memories of the Saviour, peopled with religious
of both sexes, and covered with churches and monasteries
built over all the spots which the Passion of Christ had hal-
lowed. Eudocia remained there an entire year devoting her-
self to religionand good works, visiting the Holy Places,
attending the consecration of churches, and distributing rich
gifts among the most venerated sanctuaries. In return, she

obtained precious relics— some of the bones of St. Stephen


and the chains with which the Apostle Peter had been bound.
These she brought piously from Jerusalem to Constantinople
and deposited them with ceremony in the Church of St. Law-
rence. Half of the chains she sent to her beloved
daughter in
Rome, the young Empress Eudoxia, the thought of whom
had inspired and accompanied her on her voyage, and
the
Church of San Pietro in Vincoli was built to receive them.
A few years later
Athenais-Eudocia was to return to the
Holy City of Jerusalem, and this time for the rest
of her life.
In 439, at the time of her return to
^
the capital, the Basi-
lissa was at the height of her
glory. Her daughter was mar-
ried to an Emperor, and she herself had just made a royal
progress through the East amidst
universal rejoicing. She
seems to have thought that the time
was ripe for a more overt
struggle with her former
benefactress and present rival, the
Augusta Pulchena. At all events,
between 439 and 441, her
riends became increasingly
influential in the Palace; the of-
fice ofPraetorian Praefect of the
East was given to her pro-
tégé Cyrus of Panopolis, a
poet and man of letters whose es-
ATHENAIS (( 33

had been for some time past a bond


sentially Hellenic culture
between him and the Empress. Such a man could never com-
mend himself to Pulcheria and the religious party, and it was
thus a personal triumph for Eudocia to have won him the fa-
vor of Theodosius. This success encouraged her to go still

further. In the Sacred Palace at that period, the eunuchs had


great influence over the irresolute Emperor; Eudocia joined
forces with Chrysaphius, the favorite for the time being, in
order to effect the definite removal of Pulcheria from the gov-
ernment; and for a while she seemed to have wen. The Au-
gusta was obliged to leave court and retire to her own house;
but, while appearing to abdicate, Pulcheria never abandoned
the struggle. Her orthodox friends, disliking the new direc-

tion of affairs and the favor shown to statesmen of over-

liberal opinions, were in the end to make Eudocia pay dearly


for her ephemeral victory.
The story of her downfall is no less romantic than that of
her elevation to the throne. Paulinus, the Master of the Of-
fices, was a great favorite of the Emperor’s, with whom he

had played as a child and whose confidence he had won; and


he was equally a friend of the Empress’s, since he had used
all his influence to bring about her marriage. The Basileus
had chosen him to be his “best man” at his wedding, and
thereafter had loaded him with honors. Paulinus was on
terms of the greatest intimacy with the sovereigns, whom he
visited freely whenever he chose, and his influence was pow-
erful in the Palace.Now, Paulinus was handsome, elegant,
and of haughty carriage; he is said to have made an impres-
sion even upon the austere Pulcheria herself. The enemies of
Athenais were not slow in making capital out of all this; the

passionate devotion of the Master of the Offices to the Basi-


lissa and the real friendship which she showed for him
became in their hands weapons to arouse the jealousy of
S4 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Theodosius and thereby to produce the most unfortunate
results.

The Emperor, so runs the tale, went to church one day,


and Paulinus, who was unwell, was excused from taking part
in the solemn procession. On the way a beggar offered the

Emperor a Phrygian apple of extraordinary size. Theodosius


bought it, and, as he was still devotedly attached to his wife,
sent it to her. She, in turn, made a present of it to Paulinus,
and the Master of the Offices, not knowing who had given it
to the Empress, offered it to Theodosius, thinking to please
him. The Emperor was astonished, and, as soon as he had re-
turned to the Palace, summoned the Empress and blurted
out: “Where is the apple I sent you?” “I have eaten it,” re-
pliedEudocia imprudently. For the sake of her salvation,
Theodosius adjured her to tell him the truth, but she gave
him same answer. Then, taking the apple out from under
the
his cloak, the Basileus showed it to his untruthful wife.
There followed a violent scene. Furiously jealous, the Em-
peror ceased to live with his wife; and Paulinus was com-
pletely disgraced and exiled to Caesarea in Cappadocia,
where soon afterward Theodosius had him assassinated.
Here again it is difficult to determine with any degree of
certainty what truth there may be in the story. The
oldest ac-
counts of we have date only from the sixth century,
it that
and contemporaries knew nothing of it, or at least did
not re-
cord it. The main features, however, have an
air of verisimili-
tude. It not necessary to assume that Eudocia
is
was guilty of
anything other than imprudence; many
years later, when on
her deathbed and about to appear
before her Maker, she
swore that she and Paulinus had been
absolutely innocent.
But the fury and jealousy of
Theodosius speedily resulted in
the Empress’s disgrace. Her enemies
made good use of the af-
fair to regain their influence
over the Emperor. After the dis-
ATHENAÎS (( 35

grace of Paulinus came that of Eudocia’s other friend, the


Praefect Cyrus. At last, knowing that her influence was
gone, almost openly quarreling with her husband, alone, sus-
pected in her own court, exasperated furthermore by the slan-

ders which were circulated about her, and justly outraged by


the odious murder of Paulinus, she sought permission of
Theodosius The Emperor accorded it
to retire to Jerusalem.

gladly, and may even have urged her to go. He felt hence-
forth only hatred, suspicion, and bitterness for her, and
found it easy to separate forever from the wife he once had
loved so much.
It was about the year 442 that Eudocia returned to the

Holy and she lived there eighteen long years until her
City,
death. This sad and melancholy end of her life seems to have
strangely altered the Princess’s character. She had hoped, on
leaving Constantinople, to find peace and forgetfulness at the
tomb of Christ; but even in her distant exile she was pursued
by the rancor of enemies, and her husband’s suspicions bru-
tally invaded the calm of her retreat. In 444, two of her inti-
mate and the deacon John, whom
friends, the priest Severus
she had taken with her from Byzantium and who had great
influence with her, were denounced to the Emperor, arrested,
and put to death. The Empress, furious at the outrage, re-
venged herself by bloodshed: Saturninus, the governor of
Jerusalem, was murdered by assassins whom she had hired.
Afterward her passionate nature sought other means of satis-
fying its restlessness. She devoted herself to religion, living
among ascetics and monks, and became an adherent of the

most mystical form of Christian theology. The little pagan


girl of Athens took sides with the Monophysites, who at this

very period were winning a victory for their doctrine, under


Dioscorus of Alexandria, at the Conciliabulum of Ephesus
(449), and forcing their will upon Theodosius. It may be
36 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
hoped by associating with them to revenge herself in
that she
some way upon the Emperor, upon Pulcheria, and upon those
who had brought about her disgrace. Whatever the reason,
she threw herself heart and soul into the struggle, and put all
that was left of her influence and wealth at the service of her
friends. Even after the Council of Chalcedon in 450, concur-
rently with the Roman legates, had solemnly condemned her
favorite heresy, she clung to it obstinately, perhaps because it
still pleased her to oppose Pulcheria, whom she hated, and
who, now that Theodosius was dead, shared Eudocia’s throne
with a Prince Consort. The Basilissa eagerly encouraged the
dissenters, and incited them to armed resistance to the impe-
rial forces. The
representations of her daughter and of her
son-in-law, and the entreaties of Pope Leo the Great himself,
were necessary to bring Eudocia back to Orthodoxy.
She yielded at last to the pontiff’s admonitions, and, to win
the “eternal glory” which he promised her, she used all her re-
maining influence to pacify the Palestinian monks who had
risen against their bishops, and to guide penitent heretics
to the faith of Chalcedon (453). Every year as it passed
brought fresh sorrows to the aged woman. Her
husband The-
odosius died in 450, and in 455 her
sister-in-law Pulcheria
followed him: her condition as a
dethroned Empress re-
mained unchanged. In the West, during the sack of Rome in
455, her daughter Eudoxia and her
granddaughters had
fallen into the hands of the
Vandals, and one of them had
been forced to marry Genseric.
In the East, another dynasty
had replaced the family of
Theodosius the Great upon the
throne of Byzantium. Eudocia,
now no longer of any impor-
tance, was forgotten. In
the Holy City, which she loved,
she found consolation in
building hospitals, convents, and
c urc es, in repairing the
city wall, and in writing
verses—
the last vestige of her early
taste for letters. Thus engaged.
ATHENAIS (( S7

she died about the year 460, and was buried in the Basilica of
St. Stephen, which she had founded; and the grateful people

of Jerusalem gave to her who had done so much for their city
the title of “the New Helen.”

IV

Athenais-Eudocia had indeed a strange career: she was


born in Athens a pagan; through a love match she became
Empress of Byzantium; and she died in exile at Jerusalem
near the tomb of Christ, a devoted and impassioned Christian
mystic. And it is just because of these contrasts in her roman-
tic and melancholy life that she is of such interest to the his-
torian. Placed on the borders of two worlds, at the meeting
point of two civilizations, combining in herself the dying tra-
ditions ofpagan culture with the precepts of victorious Chris-
tianity, and having withal sufficient intelligence and educa-

tion to understand the evolution in process around her, she


presents a curious and significant example of the way in

which the most contradictory ideas and the most violent con-

trasts could, in that century, exist side by side in a single

personality. Her life has already demonstrated the fusion


of these diverse elements; in her writings it is even more
apparent.
Eudocia had always loved poetry. In the period of her
greatness she had, as we have seen, celebrated in heroic verse
the victories won by the imperial armies over the Persians,
and her eulogy of Antioch may have been composed in verse.

In the last years of her life she once more diverted herself
with literary exercises, but this time she was inspired exclu-
sively by religious subjects. She translated into heroic verse

Old Testament, the Pentateuch, Joshua, Judges,


parts of the
and Ruth; even in the ninth century so good a literary critic
38 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
as the Patriarch Photius admired her work greatly, and con-
sidered it quite remarkable “for a woman, and an Empress at
that.” She also made similar translations of the prophecies of
Zechariah and of Daniel which the grammarian Tzetzes
highly commends, referring to the talent of “the golden Em-
press, the very learned daughter of the great Leontius.”
Moreover, she composed the Homerocentra, or Homeric Cen-
tos, in which she undertook to tell the episodes of the life of

Christ by means of Homeric verses ingeniously assembled.


That happened to be a style of composition greatly esteemed
in her time, and Eudocia, as she herself acknowledged, was
only continuing the work of one of her contemporaries.
Bishop Patricius. must, however, be admitted, in spite of
It

the praises which Byzantine critics of later times bestowed


upon the imperial labors, that her production was of no great
value. At bottom has no sort of originality of any kind,
it

and, notwithstanding Eudocia’s vaunt that she “had made


the sacred stories harmonious,” the form is no better. Her
language is feeble and her versification mediocre. In short,
the only interestingand characteristic feature of the work is
the attempt to clothe the life of Christ with the
rhythm and
language of Homer, thus achieving a strange union of pagan
and Christian elements. There would therefore be
very little
to say about the writings of Athenais-Eudocia
if she was not
the author of a more curious work
namely, a — poem in three
cantos on St. Cyprian of Antioch, which
was much admired
by Photius, and of which some important
fragments have
been preserved.
According to the legend,
Cyprian of Antioch was a cele-
brated magician. One day a young
pagan, Aglaidas, came to
ask him to use his mysterious
science on his behalf. He loved
a Christian maiden, Justina,
who did not reciprocate his af-
fection, and saw no means other than
diabolical of overcom-
ATHENAÎS (( S9

ing her resistance. Cyprian consented, and to vanquish the


virgin put forth all his powers to such effect that he himself
soon succumbed to Justina’s radiant beauty. All the magi-
cian’s attempts were in vain; the demons whom he invoked
fled before the sign of the cross which the young girl made.
At becoming convinced of the vanity of his horrid arts,
last,

Cyprian burned his books of magic, gave all his goods to the
poor, and embraced Christianity. The defeated lover did like-
wise. Finally, the repentant magician became Bishop of Anti-
och, and with Justina bravely underwent martyrdom for his
faith.

The most interesting part of the poem that I have briefly


outlined the second book, containing Cyprian’s confession.
is

When the time had come for him to abjure his errors, the
learned pagan determined to make the story of his life public
and to tell the assembled people all that he had gathered from
the magic arts of paganism, all the sinful things he had done

with the accursed help of the demons, and how in the end,
when his soul was enlightened, he had come to repent and be
converted. In the course of his long recital, Cyprian explains
how he had been initiated in all the holy places of paganism:
at Athens and at Eleusis; upon Olympus,

Where foolish mortals say the false gods live;

at Argos and in Phrygia, where the augur’s art is taught; in

Egypt and in Chaldaea, where one can learn the mysteries of

astrology. Forcefully he tells how he had studied

Those fleeting forms that ape the eternal wisdom;

how he had fed upon that ancient and baneful science spread

abroad by demons, to the undoing of the human race. By his


accursed skill he had been able to raise up even the Prince of
Demons, who had
,

40 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Given the lordship of the world to him^
And power upon the legions of the damned.
But this Satan whom Cyprian describes is not the Devil of
the Middle Ages; in his sinister grandeur he is more sugges-
tive of the fallen archangel whom Milton was later to portray
in Paradise Lost:

His face was like to a flower of purest gold


Shining in the flame -radiance of his eyes.
Upon brow a glittering crown was
his set;
His vesture was resplendent.
Earth trembled when he moved; about his throne
Numberless hosts kept vigil; like a god
He seemed, and like one thought to vie with God,
Nor feared to battle with the Lord Eternal.
This fallen god the father of vanities, and builds of vain
is

shadows all that can deceive and destroy mankind :

and palaces and shadowy streams


Cities
Deep woods, and even the longed-for sight
of home.
And all the illusions of night-wanderers —
deceptive mirages, wherewith the demons fool men and lead
them on to damnation.
Next, he tells the story of the temptation of
Justina. Cy-
prian lets loose demon upon demon against her, even Satan
imself, but all in vain. Then the magician
creates phantom
seducers for her undoing. To
have the readier access to her,
so that he may tempt her
even more sorely, he transforms
himself now into a young woman, now into a beautiful
bird
t at sings entrancingly;
he even changes Aglaidas into
a
swa ow, so that he can fly to his
sweetheart. But beneath the
pure and steadfast gaze of
the maiden the lying bird falls
ATHENAIS (( 41

heavily to the ground. Cyprian then tries other means. Jus-


tina’s family is overwhelmed with every kind of calamity,
and the plague decimates her native city, but nothing can
move the inflexible girl. many failures, the
In the face of so
defeated magician begins to doubt his own power; he curses
Satan, and resolves to break the compact which binds him to
the Prince of Devils. And like Justina he now opposes the
sign of the cross to the onslaughts of the Enemy. But Satan
ironically and implacably taunts the victim who would escape
his clutches:

Christ will not snatch thee from my hands^ he never


Opens his arms to one who has obeyed me.

And the wretch, terrified by the menace of eternal damna-


tion, ends his confession with this pathetic appeal:

Such was my life; say now., will Christ be moved


To grant my prayer?
Throughout this poem there are passages of real and vig-
orous beauty, and it at once arouses in the mind a host of lit-
erary reminiscences and comparisons. Cyprian and Satan are
Faust and Mephistopheles, and in the proud, splendid demon
of the Greek writer, in the haughty speeches which are put
into his mouth, there is already something of the fallen arch-
angel of Paradise Lost. There are passages elsewhere which
suggest The Divine Comedy, such, for instance, as that in
which Eudocia describes vigorously the personifications of
the vices which evil spirits spread throughout the world:
Falsehood and Lust, Fraud and Hatred, Hypocrisy and Van-
ity. And indeed it is no small merit in a Greek work of the

fifth century that it should thus recall Dante, Goethe, and

Milton. Does this imply that Athenais-Eudocia is to be cred-


ited with great originality? Here again her personal contribu-
42 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
tion is but slight, for not one of these admirable inventions is

of her creating. As early as the fourth century, probably in


Syria, the legend of St. Cyprian of Antioch had become suffi-
ciently popular to be rendered into Greek prose. This is the
tale which the Empress put into verse, as she had versified

the Scriptures and the life of Christ. The beauty of the sub-
ject she chose is no proof of her intellectual superiority.
But she deserves some credit, at least, for having chosen it;
and it is by her very choice that her work is of importance for
the study of her character. One may fancy that the story of
Cyprian of Antioch had a very special interest for Athenais-
Eudocia, for it was in a certain sense her own story. Her par-
ents had wished her to learn, like the magician, “all that
there is in earth and air and sea.” Like him she had been ini-
tiated “into the foolish wisdom of the Greeks.” Like him “she
had thought she lived, though being in truth but dead.”
Then, like him, she had renounced “the impious faith of
idols,”and had broken “vain images of the gods.” And like
him, also having become a Christian and devout, she longed
to convince “those who take pleasure still in perverse idols.”
And this is why one has a right to imagine that into her edify-
ing story Athenais-Eudocia has put something of herself.
And cannot be said that even this sincerity of hers
yet it

has added any touch of genius to her performance. Here, as


in her other
poems, the form, her only contribution, is medi-
ocre. The work itself, however, is full of interest when
we
come study the psychology of our heroine. From the very
to

beginning of her contact with Christianity, the new influence


rapidly blotted out of her soul all the graces of pagan antiq-
uity and all the charm of the recollections of her youth. Ath-
ens, Eleusis, and Argos, all those holy places where her early
years had been spent, were to her from henceforth only cities
of refuge for the false gods. The learning in which she
had
ATHENAIS (( 43

been brought up seemed an illusion sent by malevolent de-


mons; the beautiful legends that had delighted her childhood
meant no more to her now than old wives’ tales. As Renan
says in a celebrated passage of his Saint Paul:

Ah! beautiful, pure images, very gods and very god-


desses, tremble, all of ye! The fatal word has gone
forth: ye are idols. The error of this ugly little Jew is

your death-warrant.

It was thus that in a day triumphant Christianity completely


transformed Athenais. The learned young pagan girl-

philosopher of yesterday vanishes, and in her place we have


only the Most Pious Empress Eudocia. And when some
vague echoes of her classical training sounded in her soul,

when she found that her Hellenic education still kept alive
within her the worship of form and the memory of Homer,
perhaps she feared that she was yielding once again to the
frauds and deceits of Satan— if it were not rather that she
thought, like a good Christian, that by consecrating the glo-
paganism to the service of the Divine Majesty she had
ries of

thereby made them to become sanctified.


III

THEODORA

T he adventurous Theodora, Empress of Byzan-


life of
tium, who, beginning her career behind the scenes in
the Hippodrome, rose to the throne of the Caesars, has al-
ways aroused and excited the imagination. During
curiosity
her lifetime her extraordinary good fortune so greatly aston-
ished her contemporaries that the idle tongues of Constanti-
nople invented the most incredible stories to explain it—
hence all that mass of gossip that Procopius has gathered to-
gether painstakingly in The Secret History and has handed
down to After her death the legend grew to
posterity.
still greater dimensions: Orientals and Occidentals, Syrians,
Byzantines, and Slavs added more and more touches to
the
romantic incidents of her romantic story; and because of
this
rowdy fame Theodora, alone out of so many Princesses who
sat upon the throne of Byzantium, has been
well known
down to our own times, and is almost popular.^
^ For the details of Theodora’s life I refer the reader
to my monograph:
Théodora, impératrice de Byzance, Paris, 1904. I
have felt, nevertheless.

44
THEODORA (( 45
I do not feel, however, that we have the right to assume
any very exact knowledge of this famous Empress, whom so
many regard as simply an illustrious adventuress. Down to

the present time, the majority of those who have attempted to


describe her have used chiefly, almost exclusively, the anec-
dotes that Procopius retails. I am far from maintaining that
his work is of no value; I even think that by a careful study of
it one could become better acquainted than heretofore with
the psychology of Theodora during her stormy youth. But it

must always be borne in mind that The Secret History is not


our only source of information. Other, newer documents have
been discovered, mainly in the last few years, from which we
can gather more material for a character study of the cele-

brated Empress. The Lives of the Blessed Orientals^ which


was compiled about the middle of the sixth century by an in-
timate friend of the Empress, John, Bishop of Ephesus; the
unpublished fragments of the same author’s great Ecclesias-
tical History; the anonymous chronicle attributed to Zacha-
rias of Mytilene; and other contemporary works, such as
the biographies of the Patriarch Severus and Jacobus Bara-
daeus, the Apostle of the Monophy sites, have all been pub-
lished or translated from the Syriac manuscripts inwhich
they lay forgotten, and they shed a curious light upon the
part that Theodora played in questions of religion and poli-

tics. There are other writers as well, longer known to us but


rarely enough consulted, such as Johannes Lydus; there are
the new fragments of Malalas, not to speak of the Imperial
Novels, whose tiresome verbosity has, in spite of the great
amount of important material they contain, damped the ar-
dor of many; and even Procopius himself, who, happily for
us, has left other works besides The Secret History. And

the necessity of including a sketch of this celebrated Empress among my


portraits of Byzantine Princesses.
46 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
from all these writings, if one takes the trouble to read them
carefully, certain facts emerge which place the people of Jus-
tinian’s court in a different light from that in which they are
generally presented to us.

In the early years of the sixth century the notoriety of the


actress and dancer Theodora was widespread throughout
Constantinople.
Little is known of her origins. Some of the later chroni-
clers say that she was born in Cyprus, the hot, passionate
land of Aphrodite. Others, with greater likelihood, bring her
from Syria. But, whatever her birthplace, she came while
still Byzantium with her parents, and it was
a child to in the
corrupt and turbulent capital that her youth was spent.
Her family is equally obscure. In the legend, out of rever-
ence for the imperial rank to which she attained, she is given
an illustrious, or at least a presentable, ancestry in the person
of a steady and respectable father of senatorial rank. As a
matter of fact, she seems to have been of humbler origin. Her
father ,iî The Secret History may be trusted, was a poor man
named Acacius, by profession guardian of the bears in the
amphitheater; her mother was no better than she should
be,
like many connected with the stage and the
circus. Into this
professional household three daughters were born,
the sec-
ond, the future Empress, about the year 500.
Early Theodora came in contact with the people
in life
whom she was later to charm as an actress before governing
as Empress. Acacius had died leaving his
widow and his
three daughters in very straightened
circumstances. To re-
tain her latehusband s position, the family’s only means of
support, the mother saw no better way than to
take up with
THEODORA (( 47
another man, who should obtain the guardianship of the
bears, and thus look after both the family and the animals.
But the success of her plan depended upon the consent of
Asterius, the head of the Greens, and Asterius had accepted
money to support a rival candidate. In order to overcome op-
position, Theodora’s mother thought she might be able to in-
terest the people in her cause, and, one day when the crowd
was assembled in the circus, she appeared in the arena thrust-
ing before her her three little daughters, crowned with flow-
ers, who held out their hands in supplication to the specta-
tors. The Greens merely laughed at the touching request.

But fortunately the Blues, who were always delighted to op-


pose their adversaries, hastened to grant the prayer which the
Greens refused, and awarded Acacius’s family an employ-
ment similar to that which it had lost. Theodora never forgot
the scornful indifference with which the Greens had received
her entreaties; and from that moment began in the child the
tendency toward long-cherished rancor, and the implacable
desire for vengeance,which became so strong in the woman.
Thus Theodora grew up in the casual society of the Hip-
podrome, and in the course of time was ready for her future
career. The elder of her sisters had made a success on the
stage, and Theodora followed in her footsteps. She went on
the boards with her big sister and played the part of lady’s
maid; she also accompanied her to entertainments, where, in
the mixed company of the more public apartments, she came
across much impurity and indiscreet familiarity. Then she,
in her turn, became a full-fledged actress, but she had no de-
sire to be a flute-player, a singer, or a dancer, like so many
others; she preferred to appear in living pictures, in which
she could display undraped the beauty of which she was so
proud, and in pantomimes wherein her vivacity and her feel-

ing for comedy could have full scope.


48 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
She was pretty and rather small, but extraordinarily grace-
ful; and her charming face, with its pale, creamy coloring,

was lighted up by large, vivacious, sparkling eyes. Little of


this all-powerful charm is left in her official picture in San
Vitale at Ravenna. Beneath her imperial mantle she appears
stiff and under the diadem that hides her forehead her
tall;

delicate small face, of a narrow oval shape, and her large,


thin, straight nose, invest her with a sort of solemn gravity,
almost with melancholy. One feature alone remains unal-
tered in this faded portrait, and that is the beautiful black
eyes that Procopius speaks of, under the heavy, meeting eye-
brows, which still illumine her face and seem almost to en-
gulf it.

But ^heodora had someth ing else besides her beauty. She
was intelligent, witty, and amusing: she had Bohemian high
spirits which were often exerted at the expense of her fellow

actresses, and a pleasing and comJc way with her that kept
even the most volatile adorers firmly attached. She was not
always kindly, and she did not stop at hard words if they
would provoke a laugh, but when she wanted to please, she
knew how to put forth irresistible powers of fascination.
Bold, enterprising, and audacious withal, she was not con-
tent to wait for favor to seek her out, but set forth consciously
and joyously to provoke and encourage it; and having but lit-
tle moral sense — it is difficult to see where
she could have ac-
quired it as well as to a rare degree the perfect amorous tem-
perament, she became an immediate success, both without
and within the theater. Belonging to_aLpiX)jessioji of which
virtue not a necessary attribute, she amused, charmed,
is
and
scandalized Constantinople. On the stage she indulged
in the
most audacious exhibitions and the most immodest
effects.
Off it she soon became celebrated for her wild
suppers, her
adventuresomeness, and the number of her lovers. Soon
she
THEODORA (( 49
became so compromised that respectable people passing her
in the street drew aside lest they should sully themselves by
contact with a creature so impure, and the very fact of meet-
ing her was considered an ill omen. At this time she was not
yet twenty years of age.
Suddenly she disappeared. She had a Syrian lover,
bolus by name, who was appointed governor of the African
Pentapolis; Theodora decided to accompany him to his dis-
tant province. The romance, unfortunately, did not last long.
For reasons unknown, Hecebolus brutally sent her away, and
penniless, without the necessities of life, the unfortunate
Theodora for some time roamed all the East in misery. In
Alexandria at last she settled down for a while, and her so-

journ there was not without its effect upon her future. The
capital of Egypt was not merely a great commercial center, a
rich and splendid city, of loose habits, corrupt, the favorite

abode of many celebrated courtesans. From the fourth cen-


tury onward it was also one of the capitals of Christianity.
Nowhere else were religious quarrels more bitter, nor theo-
logical disputes more subtle and heated, nor fanaticism more
easily excited; nowhere else had the memory of the great
founders of the solitary life produced a richer flowering of
monasteries, of mystics, and of ascetics. The suburbs of
Alexandria were studded with religious houses, and the Lib-
yan desert was so full of hermits as to be worthy of its name
—“the Desert of the Saints.”
In her moral distress, Theodora was not insensitive to the
influence of the sphere into which circumstances had cast
her. She approached such holy men as the Patriarch Timo-
thy and Severus of Antioch, who preached especially to
women; and it is not improbable that owing to them the peni-
tent courtesan may, momentarily at least, have entered upon
a purer and more Christian mode of life. By the time of her
50 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
return to Constantinople, she had become more sensible,
more mature, and was weary of her wandering existence and
of her wild adventures. Whether sincerely or not, she was
careful to lead a more virtuous, retired life. According to one
tradition she was very respectable and proper, and lived in an
unpretentious little house, staying at home and spinning, like
the matrons of good old Roman times. It was under these cir-

cumstances that she met Justinian. We cannot tellhow she


managed to enslave and hold this man, no longer young— he
was nearly forty— this politician in so delicate a situation,
with a future which must not be compromised. Procopius
talks of magic and philters, but that really complicates mat-
ters too much, and leaves out of account the consummate in-
telligence, the easy grace, the humor and wit, with which
Theodora had conquered so many hearts. Above all, it omits
her clear, inflexible courage, that was to influence so pow-
erfully her lover’s feeble and undecided character. At all
events, we know that the Prince was completely enslaved.
Being madly in love, he refused his mistress nothing. She
was fond of money, so he loaded her with wealth. She coveted
honors and distinctions, so he persuaded his_uncle, the Em-
peror, to raise her to the highTanF of patrician. She was am-
bitious and keen for power, so he allowed himself to be
swayed by her advice and was the docile instrument of her
likes and of her hates. Soon he came to the point of insisting
upon marriage. The good Emperor Justin was not worried by
her lack of noble birth, and does not seem to have grudged
his consent to his beloved nephew. The opposition to Justin-
ian’sscheme came from an unexpected quarter. In her peas-
ant mind the broad common sense of the Empress Euphernia
was shocked thought of having a Theodora as her suc-
at the
cessor; and, in spite of all her affection for her nephew, in
spite of her usual compliance with his every wish, on this
THEODORA (( 51

point she stood firm. Very fortunately, Euphemia died in 523,


in the nick of time. Henceforth it was plain sailing. Senators
and high dignitaries were forbidden by law to marry women
of servile condition, innkeepers’ daughters, actresses, or cour-
tesans. To please Justinian, Justin abrogated the law. He
went even further. When in April 527, he associated his
nephew with him officially in the imperial power, Theodora
shared in her husband’s elevation and triumph. With him on
Easter day in St. Sophia, gleaming with candlelight, she was
solemnly crowned. Afterward, according to the custom of
Byzantine sovereigns, she went to the Hippodrome and re-

ceived the acclamations of the people in the place where she


had made her first public appearance. Her dream had come
true.

H
Such is the history of Theodora’s youth— at least, that is

how Procopius tells it; and for some two centuries and a half
since the discovery of the manuscript of The Secret History
this scandalous narrative has received almost universal cre-
dence. Must it therefore be accepted without reserve? A pam-
phlet is not history, and one may well inquire into the truth
of these amazing adventures.
Gibbon declared long ago that no one would invent such
incredible things, and that therefore they must be true. Of
on the other hand, intelligent scholars have at vari-
late years,

ous times doubted the authority of Procopius’s unsupported


statements, and there has been serious talk of the “Theodora
legend.” Without wishing to reopen the question, or to be-
little the value of some of the comments that have been made,
I should hesitate to whitewash too thoroughly her whom The

Secret History has so outrageously blackened. It is a pity that


52 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
John, Bishop of Ephesus, who had access to Theodora and
knew her well, should, out of respect for the great ones of
the earth, have omitted to give us full particulars concerning
the insults which the pious but brutally outspoken monks
more than once, so he tells us, directed against the Empress.
It is certain, at all events, that Procopius was not alone

among her contemporaries in criticizing her, and that there


were persons attached to the imperial court, such as the secre-
tary Priscus and the Praefect John of Cappadocia, who knew
the joints in her armor. I do not know whether, as Procopius
states, she really had a son in her youth, whose birth was, it

appears, such an unfortunate accident; it is certain, at all


events, that she had a daughter of whom Justinian was not
the father. This reminder of her stormy past does not seem,
however, if we may judge by the success that this girl’s son
had at court, either tohave worried the Empress very much
or to have troubled the Emperor. Certain of Theodora’s char-
acteristicis j&t in fairly well with the stories that are told about
her youth: the interest she took in poor girls of the capital,
who had been led astray, more often through want than
through viciousness, and the steps she took to rescue these
unfortunates and to free them, as a contemporary writer puts
it,“from the yoke of their shameful slavery”; and also the
rather contemptuous harshness with which she always
treated men. And if all this that is undeniable is admitted,
it
will be impossible to reject The Secret History in its entirety.^
But are we therefore obliged to believe that Theodora’s

It must be added that in an unfortunately somewhat obscure passage


in The Lives of the Blessed Orientals,
John of Ephesus, who knew the
Empress well, calls her rather brutally, but without
otherwise seeming to
cast reproach upon her, “Theodora the
strumpet.” If the translation
e/c roi; TToppelov, by which Land renders the Syriac text, is accurate, the
passage would confirm in one word the essence of
what Procopius relates
m such detail.
THEODORA (( 53

adventures had the blazing notoriety that Procopius invests


them with; that she was, as in his account, a courtesan on the
heroic scale, an angel of evil, whom the Devil permitted to go
flaunting her lusts to and fro upon the earth? It must not be
forgotten that Procopius has a habit of investing his char-
acters with an almost epic perversity; and, although he tries
hard to determine to a hair’s breadth the lowest point to
which Theodora fell, I for my part regard her— though her
interest may thereby be diminished— as the heroine of a less
extraordinary tale. She was a dancer who, having led th e
sam e life as the majority of her kind in all ages, tired sud-
denly of her precariousamoms, an dj^ finding a sensible man
who could provide her with a hon^, settled down to married
life and conjugal devotion— an adventuress, perhaps, but at

the same time astute, quiet, and clever enough to be able to


keep up appearance^; one who could marry even a future
Emperor without a fearful scandal. Ludovic Halévy, I know,
created just such a character and named her Virginie Cardi-
nal. But it is not this Theodora who is of importance to us.

For there is another, a less well-known and far more interest-


ing Theodora: a great Empress, closely associated in all
Justinian’s work, who often played a decisive part in the
government, a woman of high courage, of exceptional intel-

ligence, energetic, de spo tic, proud, violent and passionate,


complex and baffling, but always extraordinarily fascinating.

Ill

In the apse of San Vitale at Ravenna, glowing with golden


mosaics, we may still see Theodora in all the splendor of her
majesty. The costume she is wearing is of unparalleled mag-
nificence. Clad in a long purple-violet mantle with a broad
border of gold embroidery fiowing in glistening folds, she
54 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
wears on her aureoled head a lofty diadem of gold and pre-
cious stones; in and out through her hair are wound twisted
strands ofgems and pearls, while other jewels fall in spar-
kling streams upon her shoulders. Thus she appears in this
official portrait to the eyes of posterity, and thus in her life-

time she desired to appear to her contemporaries. Seldom has


upstart accustomed herself more rapidly to the exigencies of
her newly acquired majesty; seldom has highborn sovereign
loved and appreciated more thoroughly the many pleasures,
the delights of luxury, and the little gratifications of pride,
which the exercise supreme power can bestow. Very femi-
of
nine, always elegant and eager to please, she loved sumptu-
ous apartments, magnificent clothes, marvelous jewels, and
an exquisite and delicate table. She took careful and constant
care of her beauty. To keep her face calm and serene, sEe
lengthened her hours of sleep by endless siestas; to pre-
serve the freshness of her complexion, she took frequent
baths followed by long hours of rest. For she felt that her
charm was the surest guarantee of her influence.
Even more tenacious was she of the circumstances of
power. She wüîdd hâve her own court, her own following,
her own ^ards and processions; like the upstart she was, she
loved the complications of ceremonial, and added to them. To
win her approval one had to be constantly paying court to
her, to prostrate oneself at her feet, and
dance attendance
to
interminably every day in her antechambers at her hours of
audience. Her theatrical experience had given her a taste for
stage effects as well as the knowledge of how to obtain them;
but above being very haughty, she insisted jealously upon
all,

her rank, and it doubtless gave her a secret delight


to see so
many great nobles, whoformer days had treated her with
in
more familiarity, bending low over her purple buskins.
It would be somewhat ingenuous,
however, to imaeine
THEODORA (( 55

that all this display, this apparent insistence upon etiquette,

must necessarily have excluded such adventures as those


that Sardou has invented for his Theodora. It is certain that
many mysterious things about v^hich Justinian knew noth-
ing could take place in the Imperial Gynaeceum; the story
of the Patriarch Anthemius which I have already related is
proof of this. Nor would I be so foolish as to insist upon
Theodora’s post-marital virtue. Although, as is well known,
it is always difficult to be certain on such points, I am not
ready to believe that the Augusta’s was without re-
life

proach. I am fully convinced that during her youth she went


the pace, and I do not feel called upon to be scandalized if she
kept it up in later life; Justinian would have been the only
person entitled to complain. But facts are facts and one must
take them as one finds them.
Now, it is certain that no contemporary writers nor any
historians of a later age— and it is these last who have
strongly censured Theodora for her cupidity, her despotic
and violent temper, her excessive influence over Justinian,
and the scandal to which her heterodox views gave rise— not
one of them records anything which casts doubt upon the
correctness of her private life after her marriage. Even Pro-
copius, who has so calumniated her, relating so fully the ad-
ventures of her youth, and telling with his notorious wealth
of detail of her perfidies, her cruelties, and her infamies, as
a grown woman, even he — however little attentively one may
wish to read the text— does not hint at the shadow of an
amorous adventure after her marriage on the part of this ab-

solutely corrupt woman. I think it will be readily allowed


that, if the Empress had given the slightest occasion, the
pamphleteer would not have been backward in describing
her adulteries in detail. He has told of nothing of the sort be-
cause there was really nothing to tell.
56 ;; BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
But this reflects no credit upon Theodora’s moral qualities.
Aside from the fact that she was no longer young when she
ascended the throne— an Eastern woman at thirty is almost
on the threshold of old age— she was too intelligent and too
ambitious to risk compromising by love intrigues the position
she had won for herself. Supreme power was worth taking
/ some pains and the dignity of her life reflects
to preserve,
credit quite as much upon her common sense as upon her
moral qualities. But chiefly, this courageous and ambitious
) woman, so eagerly desirous of power,
had other interests
/ than the pursuit of vulgar amours. She was endowed with

/ several of the principal qualities which justify the striving


for supreme power: a proud energy, a stern fixity of pur-

;
pose, and a serene courage that never failed her even in the

/ most difficult circumstances. It was owing to these qualities


that, during the twenty-one years that she shared Justinian’s
!
;
throne, she exercised a profound— and legitimate— influence
'^nver her adoring husband.

IV

One incident that must never be forgotten in writing of


Theodora is the part she played on that tragic 1 8th of Janu-
ary 532, when the triumphant rebels stormed at the gates
of the Imperial Palace, and the distracted Emperor com-
pletely lost his head and thought only of flight. Theodora was
present at the council; in the midst of the general discourage-
ment she alone was brave and self-controlled. At first she
said nothing; suddenly, in the silence, she arose, disgusted
with the universal cowardice, and recalled the wavering Em-
peror and his ministers to their duty. “If there were left me
no safety but in flight, I would not fly,” said she. “Those who
have worn the crown should never survive its loss. Never will
THEODORA (( 57

I see the day that I am not hailed Empress. If you wish to fly,

Caesar, well and good; you have money, the ships are ready,
the sea is clear; but I shall stay. For I love the old proverb
that says: ‘The purple is the best winding-sheet.’ ” On that

day, when, to quote a contemporary, “the very Empire


seemed upon the brink of destruction,” Theodora saved Jus-
tinian’s throne; and in this supreme struggle, when
her

crown and her life were at stake, ambition inspired her to


real heroism.
At this decisive moment, Theodora, by her coolness and
energy, showed herself a statesm^ as has been well

said, sheproved herself worthy of her place in the Imperial


Council which until then she had owed to the Emperor’s
weakness. Henceforth she never lost it, and Justinian did
not begrudge it her. To the very last he was passionately de-

voted to the he had adored in his younger days; and


woman
superior in-
as he was completely under the influence of her
telligence and of her strong and resolute will, he never
re-

fused her anything, either the outward show or the


real

exercise of supreme power.


Upon the church walls of that time and over the gates of
citadels, Theodora’s name be read alongside of the
may still

Emperor’s; in San Vitale at Ravenna her portrait is a pendant


to that of her imperial husband; and, in the
mosaics that deco-

rated the apartments of the Sacred Palace, Justinian


ha d in
like manner associated Theodora with him in conn ect ion
wTthHmmdhts^^ the brightest glories of his
officials did
reign. The people erected statues to her, and
homage to her, as they did to Justinian, for throughout her
life she was the equal of the Emperor.
Upon the inq_st mo-
mentous questions Justinian was pleased to take the advice
of “the most reverend spouse whom God
had given unto
him,” whom he loved to call “his sweetest delight”; and
her
)) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
contemporaries are unanimous in declaring that she used
unscrupulously her boundless influence over the sovereign,
and that her power was quite as great as his, and perhaps
greater.

jJ Puring thejwenty-one years of her reign she interfered in


^verything: she filled the administration with her protégés;
v\ she meddled in diplomacy, in politics, and in the Church,
and
managed things to suit herself; she created and deposed
popes and patriarchs, ministers and generals, as her
fancy
dictated, she was as eager to advance her favorites
as she was
to ruin the influence and power of her adversaries; nor did she
even hesitate, whenever she thought proper, to countermand
openly the sovereign’s orders and substitute her
own for
them. In all matters of importance she was her
husband’s ac-
tive assistant; and, although her influence
was sometimes un-
fortunate, although her cupidity, her violence,
and her pride,
by arousing the pride and cupidity of the Emperor,
inspired
unwise acts, it must be remembered that she had
often a
truer insight than he into the interests of
the State, and that
the political ideas that she had at heart,
if the times had per-
mitted of their full realization, would have
and
solidified
strengthened the Byzantine Empire and perhaps
even have
altered the course of history.

Whelms Justinian, carried away by the splendor of Ro-


man antiquity, reveled in fancies now magnificent, now hazy,
dreaming of the restoration of the Empire of
the Caesars and
the triumph of Orthodoxy through
union with Rome, Theo-
dora, with a clearer and more penetrating vision, turned her
eyes to the East. She had always
been in sympathy with the
monks of Syria and Egypt, such as Zooras,
Jacobus Bara-
daeus, and many others, receiving
them in the Palace, and
entreating their prayers in spite
of their ugly rags and their
uncouth manners. Like all good
Byzantines she was sin-
THEODORA (( 59

cerely devout. But besides this she w^as too acute and had too
keen a political sense not to understand the importance of
religious questions in a Christian State, and the danger of
ignoring them. Now, she felt that the rich and flourishing
provinces of Asia, Syria, and Egypt, constituted the real
strength of the monarchy; she realized the danger that was
brewing for the Empire in the religious differences by which
the peoples of the East from this time forth began to mani-
fest their separatist tendencies; she felt the need of pacifying
the dangerous unrest by opportune concessions and by broad
toleration; and, in trying to divert the imperial policy to the
attainment of this end, she may without paradox be con-
sidered to have shown better judgment and a clearer insight

into the future than her imperial colleague.


Whereas Justinian, a theologian at heart, gave up his time

to religious questions out of a love of controversy for the


sterile pleasure of dogmatizing, Theodora, by her realization
of the deep political problems which underlay the shifting
and changing quarrels of the theologians, proved herself of
the race of the great Byzantine Emperors. And that is why,
in the interests of the State, she went on her way unswerving,

openly protecting heretics, boldly challenging the Papacy,


carrying the irresolute Justinian along with her, throwing
herself with her whole soul into the struggle, and never ac-

knowledging defeat. It was to her protection that heretic


Egypt owed many years of toleration; it was through her
that heretic Syria was able to put its persecuted national
church upon a firm foundation; she it was who made it pos-
sible for the dissenters first to be restored to favor and to re-

sume freely the spreading of their doctrines, and afterward


to withstand the excommunications of many councils and
the harshness of the secular arm; and it was to her that the
Monophysite missions in Arabia, Nubia, and Abyssinia owed
60 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
their success. TojJ^d^ ofjber death, she kept up a tena-
cious, impassioned struggle for her beliefs, lik£ a statesman^

^ true woman. She could be yielding or brutal


according to circumstances; she had the boldness to cause
the arrest and deposition of one Pope, and the ability to bend
another to her will; she had the courage to protect her per-
secuted friends and to furnish them with the means of re-
forming their church, and the adroitness often to make the
Emperor carry out her policies whether he would or no.
The Church has never pardoned Theodora the brutal
deposition of Pope Silverius, nor the tenacity
with which she
clung to Monophysitism, nor the overbearing violence with
which she settled scores with ecclesiastics— with Vigilius in
particular. Century after century, ecclesiastical historians
have hurled curses and insults at her. But Theodora is
worthy of being judged with less violence and more justice.
Doubtless she carried out her plans with a too passionate
eagerness, a too imperious brutality, a too obstinate
rancor,
even with a too cold-blooded cruelty; but she had
great
gifts as well: she was keenly alive to the needs of the gov-
ernment and saw clearly what was capable of accomplish-
ment. The policy she had at heart does honor to her
clarity
of vision, and, taken all in all, was worthy of an Emperor.

V
But her great interest lies in the fact that under her states-
manlike qualities Theodora was a woman. She
shows it by
her love of luxury and elegance, and much
more by the fierce-
ness of her passions and the strength of
her hates. When her
interests were at stake, she had
no hesitations and no
scruples. Mercilessly she got rid of
everyone whose influence
might outweigh her own; pitilessly she broke all whose am-
THEODORA (( 61

bition showed signs power or of undermining


of affecting her

her influence. To avenge herself and to preserve her power


she would stoop to anything, force and craft, falsehood and
bribery, intrigue and violence. And if she felt at times that

the feeble Justinianwas escaping from her grasp, if circum-


stances and influences beyond her control caused her mo-
mentarily to give way, she always contrived by means of her
audacity and her pliancy to stage a striking revenge; ambi-
tious and subtle, she always insisted upon having the last
word on everything— and she always succeeded.
The gossips of Constantinople told dark stories of secret

executions at Theodora’s orders, of underground dungeons,


of prisons, silent and terrible, where her victims were in-
carcerated and tortured. One must be careful not to take

these tales too literally. Some of the Em.press’s most illustri-

ous victims did not fare so badly on the whole, and succeeded,
in spite of short periods of disgrace, in making creditable

careers for themselves; it is a fact, moreover, that her most


dangerous adversaries were sent not to death but merely into
exile.

But, without enlarging unnecessarily the list of her cruel-


ties, one must not make Theodora out too
merciful and too

good. When she hated, she was not the sort of woman to stop

at anything, whether at the scandal of an unjust disgrace, or


even, perhaps, at an assassination. The stories of the Em-
peror’s nephew Germanus, of Priscus the secretary, and of
Photius, the son-in-law of Belisarius, are enough to show the
strength of her hatred. The fall of the Praefect John of Cap-
padocia, the bold and formidable minister who held her in
his grip for a moment and made her fear for
her power, il-

lustrates even better the unscrupulous energy of


her ambi-

tious soul and the incredible resources of her perfidy.


In like

manner, and by a similar mixture of adroitness and violence.


62 ;; BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
she made so great a general as Belisarius pay for his rare out-
bursts of independence, and, through her ascendancy over
Antonia, the patrician’s wife, contrived to make him her very
humble and docile servant. Here again one is forced to ad-
mire both the Empress’s great ingenuity in managing an
intrigue, and her indifference to the means and instruments
employed. Antonia, after a stormy youth, constantly de-
ceived her doting husband; but she was astute and bold, con-
summate and capable, says Procopius, who knew
in intrigue,
her well, of accomplishing the impossible. Theodora
quickly
saw that by veiling this woman’s love affairs she could make
her the devoted slave of her schemes and the best
guarantee
of Belisarius’s fidelity. They formed an Antonia put
alliance.
all her cleverness at the Basilissa’s disposal, and in the dep-
osition of Pope Silverius, as well as in the disgrace of John
of Cappadocia, played an important part,
and demonstrated
the extent of her ability. In return, Theodora covered up her
follies and her and on several occasions reconciled
slips,
her to Belisarius and made him pardon her. And thus,
having
her favorite at her mercy, the Empress through
her kept the
general under her thumb.®
From the favor she showed Antonia, must we conclude,
with The Secret History^ that Theodora
tolerated women’s
failings and concealed many lapses under her imperial
robe?
The facte give a contrary impression.
It may
be that, owing
to her highhanded impulses and her
habit of subordinating
everything to her schemes, Theodora
did at times interfere
indiscreetly in the family affairs
of others, and arranged
marriages in the same despotic way
that she governed the
State. But by the laws which
she caused to be made on di-

may consult two chapters in my


pp. 173-90,
THEODORA (( 63

vorce and adultery, as well as by her actions, she showed a


constant interest in strengthening the ties of marriage— “that
holiest of all things,” as a law of the period terms it— and in
making this lawful and holy estate respected by everyone.
The truth is that she was, as an historian says,^‘natoally
anxious to help unfortunate women,” and this anxiety is
shown in the measures she caused to be adopted with regard
to women who were badly treated or unhappily married, and
also in those which she advised for comedy actresses and
fallen women. She knew from experience the slums of the
capital, and realized all the misery and shame that they con-

tained, and early used her influence to im-


in her reign she

prove them. But she was nonetheless very strict, a watchful


guardian of public morals, and she undertook the task of
making her capital purer and more moral.^
Are we to believe that some memory of her own experi-
ences and a measure of sorrow for her past were responsible
for these measures? On the whole it is probable, if not cer-
tain, cannot but enhance our opinion of her. There is a
and it

singular nobility in the following words from an imperial


edict, which she undoubtedly inspired: “We have
set up

magistrates to punish robbers and thieves; are we not even


more straitly bound to prosecute the robbers of honor and
the thieves of chastity?”
would indeed be puerile to try to conceal Theodora’s
It

defects and vices. She loved money and she loved power; she
showed perhaps too^munh-famiTy^affeSr^ in providing for

her relatives; and, to preserve the throne she had ascended,


she was unscrupulous, perfidious, violent, cruel, implacable,
bitter, and adamant, to those who had incurred her hatred.
She was a woman of great ambition, who by her intrigues

^ See the chapter, “Le Féminisme de Théodora,” pp. 217-30, in my


book.
64 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
trou bled the Palace and the Empire p rofonnrily. But she had
her good qi^ities as well. Her friends called her “the faithful
Empress,” and she deserved the name. She had other, more
eminent virtues: a masculine vigor, a lofty energy, and a
statesman’s clear and powerful intelligence. Her influence
was not always good, but she made a deep impress upon
Justi nian’s gover nment. After her death, there
followed a
period of decadence in which the once-glorious reign
drew
sadly to a close.
When on the 29th of June 548, Theodora, after a long
illness, died of cancer, Justinian mourned bitterly a loss
which he rightly felt to be irreparable. During her lifetime
he Tiad adored her and after her death he piously
, treasured
her memory. As a memorial to her, he desired to
keep in his
service allwho had been near her; many years later, when-
ever he wished to make a solemn promise, he
was in the habit
of swearing by the name of Theodora,
and those who desired
to please him would talk to him about “the excellent, beauti-
ful, and wise sovereign” who, after helping him
faithfully in
this world, was now praying to God
for her husband.
It must be admitted that this
apotheosis is somewhat ex-
cessive. Theodora the dancer did not have precisely those
virtues which carry one straight to
Paradise. Theodora the
Empress, in spite of her piety, was possessed
of faults and
vices hardly consistent with the
halos of the saints. But the
point is worthy of notice, for it
shows the incomparable fasci-
nation and charm that this very
ambitious, but thoroughly
feminine, woman was able to exert even from beyond the
grave.
IV iWI

IRENE

T oward the end of the year 768, Constantinople


festive array: the Byzantine capital was celebrating the
marriage of the heir apparent of the Empire, Leo, son of Con-
was in

stantine V.
On the morning of November 1st, a flotilla of boats, sump-
tuously spread with brilliant silks, had gone to the Palace of
Hieria, on the Asiatic shore of the Bosphorus to fetch the
young bride across for her solemn entry into Byzantium.
Several weeks later, on the 18th of December, in the tri-
clinium of the Augustaeum in the Sacred Palace, before the
assembled court, the two Basileis had crowned the new sov-
ereign. Seated on golden thrones, Constantine and his son, in

had lifted the veil that hid the


the presence of the Patriarch,
face of the future Empress, had vested her with the silken
chlamys over her long golden robe, had set the crown upon
her head, and had fastened the jeweled pendants in her ears.
Then, in St. Stephen’s Church, the new Augusta had re-

65
65 ;; BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
ceived the homage of the high officials of the monarchy; from
the terrace of the Hall of the Nineteen Couches she had
shown herself to the people and had been acclaimed by them.
Lastly, she had returned to St. Stephen’s, with her brilliant
following of patricians, senators, cubicularies, and maids of
honor, and there the Patriarch Nicetas had solemnized the
marriage, and had placed the nuptial crown upon the heads
of bride and bridegroom.
The Emperor Constantine V, that energetic iconoclast,
old
never dreamed when he arranged these festivities and when
he set the diadem of the Caesars upon the young woman’s
head, that this delicate Basilissa was to destroy his life’s work
and lose the throne for his dynasty.

Like Athenais-Eudocia, Irene was by birth an Athenian;


was an orphan, when circumstances of which
like her, she

we know nothing, and in which her beauty was doubtless the


essential factor, made her an Emperor’s daughter-in-law.
But there the resemblance between the two Princesses stops.
Athens in the eighth century was wholly different from what
it had been in the fifth. It was no longer the home of pagan

letters, a university town, full of the glory of ancient writers


and the memory of illustrious philosophers. It no longer pre-
served religiously the memory of its exiled gods in the
shadow of its temples. In the time of Irene
was a pious,
it

quiet, little provincial town, where the Parthenon had been


converted into a church, where St. Sophia had driven Pallas-
Athene from the Acropolis, and where the saints had re-
placed the gods. In such surroundings, education, and, above
all, feminine education, could no longer be what it
had been
in Athenais’s time. Like the majority of her contemporaries.
IRENE (( 67

"Irene was devout and pious, with an intense, burning piety,


that was aggravated by the events of the troubled times in
which she lived.

A had been disturbing the By-


serious religious conflict
zantine Empire for more than forty years, and the struggle,
called the Iconoclastic Controversy, was now at its height.
The strictly theological nature of the term must not blind
one to the real character of this formidable crisis; it was quite
other than a mere trifling question of discipline or worship.
Undoubtedly the Iconoclastic Emperors, devout as were all
the men of their age, were inspired by the most ardent and
sincere religious motives; one of the objects of their reform
was to raise the moral plane of religion by stripping it of

such a renascence of paganism as the excessive veneration of


the images of the Virgin and the saints seemed to them to be.

Another point troubled them even more: above all else, they
were dismayed at the power that the monks, the chief de-
fenders of the images, had, by their wealth and influence,
acquired in the State. Beginning with the eighth century,
there was in fact— strange as it may appear in so Christian
an Empire as Byzantium— a struggle between the State and
the monks.
Against the latter, the Emperor Constantine V, a passion-
ate, violent, energetic man, had carried on the war with pe-
culiar severity. By his and often terrible execu-
orders, brutal
tions had taken place. The monasteries had been secularized,
and the religious driven out, imprisoned, or exiled. Constan-
tinople had scarcely any monks left in it. All Byzantine so-
ciety had joined in the struggle in one or the other camp. On
one side was officialdom: the court clergy, the functionaries,
the upper classes, and the army, utterly devoted to so victori-
ous a general as Constantine V. On the other side were the
lower clergy, the middle classes, the people, and the women.
68 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
whose mystical piety was enthralled by the splendors of
ritual, whose devotion was kindled by the magnificence of the

churches, and who could not bring themselves to give up the


miraculous and venerated icons.
Irene woman, and came besides from a province
was a
ardently devoted to the images. Her sympathies were thus
not to be doubted. But at the time when she became a mem-
ber of the imperial family, the persecution was at its height,
and it would not have been wise for her to show too decided
an opposition in the neighborhood of the formidable Constan-
tine V. Irene, therefore, carefully dissimulated her real be-
liefs. She even, went to the
at her father-in-law’s request,
extent of swearing a solemn oath never to accept image wor-
ship; and at this moment some part of her lying and un-
scrupulous spirit, later to show itself so forcibly, makes its
appearance.
However, despite this apparent submissiveness, the young
woman’s piety was not without its results. This became clear
when in 775, upon the death of Constantine V, the new Em-
peror, Leo IV, perhaps under Irene’s influence, which was
very great at the beginning of his reign, relaxed to some ex-
tent the former penalties. The Basilissa was determined.
Many women harbored the proscribed images; it is said that
in the Palace itself Anthusa, a daughter of Constantine V,
fearlessly kept up her devotion to the forbidden icons. Irene
imagined she could imitate her sister-in-law, and fancied she
might be able to restore the prohibited worship secretly in
the imperial residence. Her attempt was destined to a tragic
outcome. In April 780, several of the Empress’s intimate
friends were arrested and put to torture by order of Leo IV,
under suspicion of Iconodule sympathies. The Basilissa her-
self was compromised. It was reported that one day her
IRENE (( 69

husband discovered in her apartments tw^o images of saints


hidden under the cushions. At sight of them he became vio-
lently angry; and although Irene, who was always ready to
swear to anything, vowed she had no idea who had put them
there, her influence with the Emperor was seriously im-

paired. She was when, happily for her,


in a sort of disgrace

Leo IV died suddenly in September of the same year. The


heir to the throne, Constantine VI, was a child of ten; and
Irene, his governor and regent, was Empress.

II

Few historical personages are more difficult to estimate

correctly than the celebrated sovereign who restored Ortho-

doxy in Byzantium. She is known to have been beautiful;


there every reason to believe that she was chaste and that,
is

although thrown while still in her youth into a corrupt and


dangerous court, she always kept herself above reproach.
And, lastly, she was devout. But besides this what do we
know of Irene? What was the temper of her mind? What was
her character? The acts of her government, to be sure, give
us glimpses; but were these acts the result of her own will?
During her reign, did she have ideas of her own, or was she
only an instrument in the hands of astute advisers? These are
a few of the difficult problems to be decided, and they
are the

more difficult from the fact that the writers of her time ex-

haust all the expressions of unbounded admiration in speak-

ing of this devout, orthodox Princess.


It would be possible, by following their lead,
to describe

Irene in the most flattering terms; and some writers of our


own times have not failed to do so. A celebrated novelist who
amused himself in his younger days by making a sketch of
70 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
this most pious Empress, and who has just portrayed her
more fully in a picturesque and masterly novel, ^ describes her
as initiated into the mysteries of Platonic philosophy, into
the dogmas of “cosmopolitan
Hermetism,” as knowing “the
power-bestowing theurgical incantations,” and as using this
power, when she had mastered it, for one end alone, the
greatness of Byzantium and the restoration of the ancient
hegemony of the Roman Empire. Let him who would see her
through the eyes of Paul Adam read this: “Seated beneath
the imperial canopy at the extreme point of the promontory
overlooking the rapid waters of the Bosphorus, she spent her
evenings under the deathless beauty of the Levantine sky
watching her reflection in the polished metal basins, splendid
as the Mother of God in the shrine-like majesty of her gar-
ments that caught the glimmer of the twinkling stars in
every facet of their matchless jewels. Thoughts of victory
thrilled within her. She called to mind the mysterious teach-
ings of the schools. The love of making a people vibrate to
the breath of her soul left her panting and exhausted.” ^
And
such is the author’s sympathy for this remarkable woman
that her very crime finds excuse in his eyes, and seems to
him almost justified. She dethroned her son and had him
blinded, says the novelist, “because she preferred to
suppress
the individual for the benefit of the race. And she
was abso-
^
lutely right.”
These, of course, are poetic imaginings. But even
serious
historians have portrayed Irene in no less
seductive guise.
One praises her talents, her great ability, her
resourceful-
ness, her clear-sightedness, and her
force of character.^ An-
^ Paul Adam, Irène et les eunuques, Paris,
1906.
2 Paul Adam, Princesses byzantines,
pp. 33-4
3 Ibid. p. 80.

byzantin et la monarchie franque,


pp. 252,
IRENE (( 71

other regards her as an altogether remarkable woman, who


gave the Byzantine Empire “the best and most reconstruc-
tive government that it probably ever had.” And he adds:

“She was a woman really born to rule, for she had a mascu-
line intellect, she was admirably endowed with all the quali-
ties of a great sovereign, she knew how to speak to the people
and make them love her; she was excellent in her choice of
advisers, and was possessed of perfect courage and admir-
®
able presence of mind.”
I must confess that to me Irene is much less attractive. She
was overwhelmingly ambitious— her admirers remark that
her dominating characteristic was the love of power (to
(j)i\apxov) —and all her life she was devoured by a consuming

passion, the desire to rule. She was young and beautiful, but
she never took a lover for fear of acquiring a master. She
was a mother, but ambition stamped out even her maternal
affection. To attain her self-appointed ends she allowed no

scruples to stand in her way; she considered all means


worthy, dissimulation and intrigue, cruelty and treachery.
She directed all the powers of her mind and all the strength

of her pride toward one single object, the throne. And this
was her entire life. Even her very real and deep piety helped
her ambitious schemes; for it was a narrow, superstitious
piety,which made her fancy that she was God’s chosen in-
strument, that she had a work to accomplish in the world, a
work that she must defend and never permit others to over-
throw. She thus successfully combined religious promptings
with ambition and love of power; and, being consequently
always convinced that she was in the right, and certain of
her duty, she pressed sincerely on to her goal without paus-
ing at any obstacle or allowing any difficulty to turn her
aside from the path. She was proud and passionate, violent,
® G. Schlumberger, Les lies des Princes^ p. 112.
72 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
brutal, and cruel; she was tenacious and obstinate, and fol-
lowed up her schemes with extraordinary and untiring per-
severance. She was subtle and dissembling, and brought an
unprecedented resourcefulness and an incomparable genius
for plotting and intrigue to the fulfillment of her designs.
There is, decidedly, an element of grandeur in this familiar
habit of supreme power which ultimately gains a complete
mastery of the soul and so transforms it that all natural feel-
ing is abolished and nothing is left but ambition.
It is well to bear in mind that, in externals, Irene was
admirably suited to the part of a woman of great ambition.
She was majestic, she had the dramatic sense, she loved
splendor and magnificence, and she loved to build-in all of
which she reveals her femininity. In addition, her friends
maintain that she governed well, that the people loved her
and regretted her downfall, and that her reign was an era of
unmixed prosperity. We shall see presently what to think of
this praise. In any case, I am unable to distinguish the great
intelligence, the vigorous intellect, the masculine courage,
and the strength of soul in adversity, that her adherents at-
Empress. One thing that makes me doubt her
tribute to the
statesmanlike qualities and her clearness of insight is the
fact that she was always too quick to think she had suc-
ceeded, and that several times she encountered
obstacles
which she ought to have foreseen. She was able and power-
ful,perhaps, at intrigue; but in her methods of operation
I
see rather a petty trickiness and slyness,
which, while it
sometimes undoubtedly succeeded, in no way implies
genius.
I grant that she was pertinacious,
and that she kept ham-
mering at obstructions until she had broken them down.
But, in spite of her much-vaunted greatness
of soul (rô
KparaL6cf>pov) and masculine spirit (t6
àf>pevco 7rbp <t>p6vr)p,a) she
,

appears to me neither truly energetic nor really brave.


IRENE (( 73

In 797, when she was on the point of carrying out the coup
d’Êtat that overthrew her son, she lost her head at the criti-

cal moment; she took fright, thought of humiliating herself,


believed the business had miscarried, and wanted to abandon
the whole project. In 802, when some conspirators brought
about her downfall, she allowed herself to be dethroned with-
out even attempting resistance. She was weak in defeat, and
in victory pitiless. The treatment she inflicted on her son
makes it superfluous to mention her heart. Undoubtedly she
did some great things during the twenty-odd years of her
reign: she dared bring about a political and religious revolu-
tion of unparalleled importance. But she herself had neither
greatness of soul nor greatness of will.
But, whatever Irene was like, the times in which she lived
still remain strangely interesting and dramatic. As has been
truly said: ‘In all Byzantine history, full as it is of incredible

events, the reign of Irene is perhaps one of the most aston-


^
ishing.”

III

When the death of Leo IV gave into Irene’s hands the


substance of supreme power, there were many rival ambi-
tions in the field. At court she was confronted by the silent
hostility of her brothers-in-law, the five sons of Constan-
tine V, popular and ambitious men, from whom she had
everything to fear. Their father, before he died, had vainly
made them swear never to conspire against the legitimate

sovereign; as soon as Leo IV had ascended the throne they


had broken their oaths; and even though, after this attempt,
the eldest of them, the Caesar Nicephorus, had been stripped
of his dignities and exiled to far-off Cherson, a numerous
® E, Molinier, Histoire des arts appliqués à Vindustrie^ tome i, p. 84.
74 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
following undertook to work on their behalf. Moreover, all
the chief posts in the government were occupied by zealous
Iconoclasts. The Master of the Offices, or Chancellor, and the
Domestic of the Scholae, or Commander-in-Chief of the
Army, were old and tried servants of the dead Basileus Con-
stantine V. The Senate and the high provincial officials were
no less devoted to the policies of the preceding reign. The
Church, under the administration of the Patriarch Paul, was
full of enemies of the images. With such men Irene could

undertake nothing, while they in their turn rightly suspected


the Basilissa’s tendencies, and feared lest she should attempt
some reactionary measures. To realize her pious projects and
her ambitious dreams the Empress would have to look else-
where for advice and support.
And here appears her skill in preparing the way. Some of
her opponents she broke mercilessly by sheer force; others
she ousted more gently from positions where they hampered
her. A plot having been formed to elevate the Caesars to the
throne, she grasped the opportunity to force them into
holy
orders; and, so that no one should be in ignorance of
their
final downfall, she compelled them to take part in the solemn
Christmas services of the year 780 in St. Sophia, in the pres-
ence of all the people of the capital. At the same time, she
little by changed the personnel of the Palace. She ad-
little

vanced her own family, and gave positions to her brother,


her
nephew, a female cousin, and other relatives. She
disgraced
Constantine V’s old generals, in particular the
terrible Mi-
chael Lachanodraco, Strategus of
the Thracians, who had
made himself notorious by his savage hatred of the
monks,
and by his jovial brutality in forcing
marriage upon them.
Their places she filled with her own
creatures, particularly
with the eunuchs of her household,
who were her especial
friends. It was to them that she entrusted all the great offices
IRENE (( 75

in the Palace and in the administration, and it was from their

number that she finally selected her Prime Minister, Staura-


cius.

This man, the Basilissa’s chief favorite, became patrician


and Logothete of the Dromos, and was soon the acknowl-
edged and all-powerful master in the Sacred Palace. As
diplomatist he negotiated a peace with the Arabs; as general
he crushed the Slavic rebellion; and, to enhance his prestige
still further, Irene allowed him a solemn triumph in the Hip-
podrome. The army, discontented under such a commander,
vainly manifested its hatred of the upstart; he was certain of
the Empress’s favor, and increased in pride and insolence.
Indeed, he attached himself faithfully for twenty years to
Irene’s fortunes, always falling with her, and with her re-

turning to power. And perhaps this energetic, active, ambi-


tious man, whose merits cannot be denied, often directly in-

spired the sovereign’s measures; but it is obvious what a


private character— of the nature of a camarilla— this seizure
machinery of the administration by the eunuchs of
of all the
the household gave from the outset to Irene’s government.
Irene, while filling the public services with new men,
modified the general policy of the Empire. She brought to an
end the war in the East, and in the West sought a reconcilia-

tion with the Papacy, and began negotiations for an alliance


with Charlemagne. Above all, she restored a long-abandoned
policy of toleration. “Pious men,” says a contemporary
chronicler, “began to speak freely; once more the Word of

God could spread without hindrance; those who sought eter-

nal salvation could retire unmolested from the world, and


God’s glory was once more celebrated; the monasteries flo«r-

ished again, and prosperity was universal.” Monks reap-

peared in Constantinople, and the cloisters were opened at


last to many who had long been forbidden to have vocations.
76 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
The Empress ostentatiously took measures to repair the
sacrileges of the former régime; she went in great pomp to
restore to St. Sophia the valuable crown that Leo IV had re-
moved, and she replaced solemnly in their sanctuary the
relics of St. Euphemia, which had been thrown into the sea

by order of Constantine V and miraculously recovered. The


religious party was delighted at these developments, greeting
the accession of this pious sovereign as an unexpected mir-
and they gave thanks to God who “by the hand of a
acle;

widow and a fatherless child would now overthrow sacrilege


and put an end to the Church’s enslavement.”
An ably managed intrigue gave into Irene’s hands the only
power she lacked— the Patriarchate. Suddenly, in 784— with-
out consulting the government, says Theophanes, though it

ismore probable that the suggestion emanated from the


Palace— the Patriarch Paul resigned his office and retired to a
monastery, declaring to all who cared to listen that he was
full of remorse for his and desirous of expiating his
sins,
crimes against the images, in the hope at least of dying at
peace with God. This decision of his, which made a great
the capital, Irene very cleverly exploited, and chose the
stir in

imperial secretary Tarasius, a layman, a man she was sure of,


to be head of the Church in Paul’s place. He was an astute,
who played admirably the part the sov-
pliable politician,
ereign had doubtless mapped out for him. When his
name
was proposed, and when the Empress herself begged him
to accept the nomination and allow himself to be elected, he
refused, declining the charge which he was
asked to under-
take and requesting permission to explain to the
people the
reasons for his refusal. In a long discourse he
reviewed in de-
tail the deplorable condition of
the Church, the discords that
rent it, and the schism that separated
it from Rome, and,
very adroitly, naming it as the price of his
acceptance, he
IRENE (( 77

launched the idea of an Ecumenical Council to restore peace


and concord to the Christian world. At the same time, by a
clever sidethrust, he disavowed the Iconoclastic synod held
in 753, denying that it had any canonical authority, on the
ground that it had done nothing but register illegally pro-
mulgated decrees of the civil authority concerning the
Church. And, having thus prepared the way for the Basilis-
sa’s schemes, he finally gave in, received all the sacred orders
at one and the same time, and ascended the patriarchal
throne.
Provided with so valuable an ally, Irene felt able to throw
aside the mask. Writs were sent throughout the Empire call-
ing upon the prelates of Christendom to meet in Constan-
tinople during the spring of 786, for the Empress was sure
of victory. But she had left out of account the opposition of
certain bishops, as well as that of the regiments of the
Imperial Guard, which was faithful to the memory of Con-
stantine V and firmly attached to the policy of that glorious

Emperor. The error was obvious from the moment the Coun-
cil opened in the Church of the Holy Apostles. The bishops

were solemnly seated in their chairs; Irene and her son were
in the Porch of the Catechumens; Plato, Abbot of Sak-

kudion, one of the most ardent defenders of the images, had


the floor and was delivering an appropriate homily, when
suddenly the soldiers, sword in hand, burst into the church
and threatened the prelates with death. Irene, not lacking in
courage, tried in vain to interpose and calm the uproar: her
effortswere useless and her authority unrecognized. The
Orthodox bishops were insulted, hustled, and driven out,
seeing which the Iconoclastic bishops joined with the army,
applauding and crying: “We have won! We have won!”
Irene herself escaped not without some difficulty “from the
lion’s claws,” as an ecclesiastical chronicler says; and though
7S )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
she was unscathed, her partisans ostentatiously proclaimed
her a martyr.
She had gone too fast, and all was to do over again. This
time a tortuous policy was adopted. The Basilissa and her
Prime Minister brought to the task all their wiles and all

their capacity for intrigue. The government by money and


promises won over the Asiatic army corps, which were al-

ways jealous of the troops on garrison duty in the capital. A


great expedition against the Arabs was then announced. The
guard regiments were the first to leave for the front, and they
were immediately replaced in Constantinople by divisions
whose fidelity was At
same time, to force the
assured. the
recalcitrants to obedience, the wives and children of the
soldiers in the field were arrested and their property was
seized. With these precious hostages in their hands, the gov-
ernment was able without danger to break, furlough, and
disband the ill-disposed guard regiments. Irene had now the
necessary support for her schemes— namely, an army of men
of her own choosing under leaders devoted to her. Neverthe-
less,having her failure of 786 in mind, she did not risk re-
opening the Ecumenical Council in Constantinople itself. It
met in 787 and under the all-powerful influence of
at Nicea;
the court, the Patriarch, and the monks, it unhesitatingly
anathematized the Iconoclastic decisions of 753, and com-
pletely re-established image worship and Orthodoxy. Then,
inNovember 787, the Fathers crossed over to Constantinople,
and at a last solemn session in the Palace of Magnaura,
Irene, in the presence of Pope Hadrian’s legates, subscribed
her name to the canons that restored her cherished beliefs.
Thus, by seven years of patient skill, Irene had, in spite
of some precipitancy, made herself all-powerful. She
had
gratified the Church and her own piety; above all, she had
crushed under foot everything that interfered with her ambi-
.

IRENE (( 79

tion. And her friends, the religious party, proud of such a


sovereign, hailed her pompously as “the Christ-supporting
Empress, whose government, like her name, is token of
peace” (xpto’ro^opos EipTjVT], rj (pepœpvfjiœs ^aaiXevaaaa)

IV

At the very moment that Irene was winning this victory,


when her triumph seemed most complete, her ambition was
seriously threatened.
Constantine VI was growing up; he was seventeen years
of age. Between the son, eager to reign, and the mother,
passionately desirous of supreme power, a conflict was in-

evitable; and it was destined to surpass in horror anything


that can be imagined. Accordingly, the pious historians of
the period are unable to account for this infamous struggle
except by diabolical inspiration, and, in their anxiety to ex-
cuse the most devout Empress, have so far as possible cast
the blame for her misdeed upon her sinister counselors. But
these excuses will not stand investigation: from what we
know of Irene it is certain that she was fully aware of her
actions and was completely responsible for them. She was
bound to safeguard the work that had just been accomplished
and to retain her usurped power: to do so she halted neither
at strife nor at crime.
Irene, domineering and passionate, continued to treat her
son like a child. At the beginning of her reign, from political
motives, she had begun negotiations for a marriage between
Constantine VI and one of Charlemagne’s daughters; and a
palace eunuch had been dispatched to Aix-la-Chapelle to in-
struct the young Rotrude in the language and customs of her
future country; the learned men of Charlemagne’s Palatine
Academy, in their pride at the prospective alliance, were in-
80 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
spired with a longing to learn Greek. But politics undid
what they had done. After peace had been re-established with
Rome, the Frankish alliance seemed less necessary to
Irene; it is said that she feared chiefly lest the
mighty Charles
should become too strong a support to his son-in-law and help
him be master of the Empire. Thus she abandoned the
cherished plan, and in spite of Constantine’s protests— for he
had conceived from afar an affection for the young Western
Princess— forced another marriage upon him. I have already
given the charming tale out of the Life of St. Philaret of how
the imperial envoys, according to established custom, trav-
eled throughout the provinces to discover a bride worthy
of the Basileus, and how, from among the candidates for
Constantine’s hand, Irene and her minister chose a young
Armenian girl from the Paphlagonian Theme, Mary of
Amnia. She was pretty, intelligent, and devout, and came,
moreover, from a family of modest origins; above all, Irene
felt that she would submit with docility to her
benefactress’s
wishes, and that from such a daughter-in-law she need have
no fear of inconvenient ambitions. The marriage was thus
determined upon, and Constantine, in spite of himself, had
to obey. This was in November 788.

Irene, furthermore, was careful to keep her son out of all


public business. The Emperor was practically isolated in
his own court, without friends or influence; while the all-
powerful Stauracius, on the other hand, insolent and
haughty, governed as he chose, and everyone humbled
him-
self before the favorite. At young Emperor revolted
last the
against this tutelage, and with some of his
intimates con-
spired against the Prime Minister. But
misfortune overtook
him. The plot was discovered, and Irene realized
at once that
she had been directly threatened. From that
day forth ambi-
tion stifled her maternal affection.
She retaliated brutally.
IRENE (( 81

The conspirators were tortured, exiled, or cast into prison;


the Emperor himself was beaten with rods, like a disobedient
child, roundly rebuked by his mother, and kept for several
days in close confinement. After this the Empress thought
herself safe. Her flatterers also encouraged her illusion, pro-
claiming that ‘‘even God did not wish her son to reign.” Be-
ing superstitious and credulous, like all her contemporaries,
she allowed herself to be convinced by their words and by
soothsayers who promised her the throne; and, in order to
make sure of it, she risked everything upon a single throw.
The army was asked to take a new oath of allegiance, and
the soldiers were obliged to swear in the following unusual
way: “So long as thou shalt live we will never recognize thy
son as Emperor.” And henceforth, in the official acclama-
tions, Irene’s name was put before Constantine’s.
As in 786, so again this time, the eager and ambitious
Princess had proceeded too quickly. In 790, a manifesto was
suddenly issued by the Asiatic regiments in favor of the
young Emperor. The revolt spread from the Armeniac army
corps to the other themes, and soon all the troops gathered
together and demanded that Constantine VI should be set at
libertyand recognized as the one and only Basileus. Irene
was frightened and gave in. She consented to free her son
and abdicate; raging but powerless, she witnessed the dis-
grace of her closest friends. Stauracius, the Prime Minister,
was tonsured and exiled to Armenia, and Aetius, another
of her intimates, shared his downfall. She herself was obliged
to retire to her magnificent Eleutherian Palace, and she be-
held in the enjoyment of the favor of the young Prince, now
solemnly proclaimed, all those whom she had fought, all the
Among the fore-
enemies of the images that she had restored.
most was old Michael Lachanodraco, on whom was bestowed
the high dignity of Master of the Offices.
82 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
But Constantine VI bore no grudge against his mother.
Hardly a year had elapsed since Irene’s downfall, when, in
January 792, the young monarch granted her petitions, re-
stored to her the title of Empress, brought her back to the
Sacred Palace, and associated her in the government. At the
same time the Basileus weakly recalled her favorite, Staura-
cius. Irene returned thirsting for vengeance, determined to
punish those who had betrayed her, and more eager than
ever to fulfill her ambitious desires. But this time she acted
more circumspectly. In 790 she had been too certain of suc-
cess; she had wished to hurry matters and win the throne at

one stroke, and by her cruelty toward her son had scandalized
public opinion and caused the army to revolt. Her failure
taught her to be more careful; this time she took five long
years in the slow preparation of her triumph by the most
subtle and ingenious intrigues.
Constantine VI had undoubted qualities. Like his grand-
father he was brave, energetic, intelligent, and capable; his
very adversaries praise him, recognizing his merits as a
soldierand his aptitude for government. The accusations
brought against him, chiefly that of debauchery, are not to be
taken as literally as one might imagine, for in the minds of
their authors they are all inspired
by the scandal of his second
marriage. His Orthodoxy being beyond dispute, he was ex-
tremely popular with the lower classes and in good odor
with the Church; and as he was a brave and active general,
quite willing to resume hostilities against the Bulgarians
and the Arabs, he satisfied the army. It was Irene’s master-
stroke to embroil this estimable sovereign with all his best
friends in turn, to make him appear at once ungrateful,
cruel, and cowardly, to lose him the goodwill of the army, to
turn popular feeling against him, and, finally, to ruin him
with the Church.
a

IRENE (( 83
Her first use of the influence which she had regained was
to excite Constantine’s suspicions against Alexius Muselé,
the general who had issued the manifesto of 790; him she
managed to compromise so thoroughly that the Emperor dis-
graced and imprisoned him, and then had him blinded. This
was a double victory for Irene, for she not only revenged her-
self upon the man who had betrayed her confidence, but also
stirred up against Constantine his best support, the Ar-
meniac troops. At the same time, since there was still a party
that continued to plot on behalf of his uncles, the Caesars,
the Emperor, on Irene’s advice, sentenced the eldest to be
blinded and had the tongues of the four others cut out—
useless cruelty that made him very unpopular, especially
with the Iconoclasts, who cherished in the persons of the
victims the memory of their father, Constantine V. Finally,
to arouse public opinion against her son, the Empress de-
vised one last scheme, the most Machiavellian of all.

Constantine VI, as is well known, did not love his wife,


although she had borne him two daughters, Euphrosyne and
Irene. And he kept mistresses. After Irene’s return to the
Palace, he soon developed a lively affection for one of the
Empress-mother’s maids of honor. Her name was Theodota.
She belonged to one of the great families of the capital, and
was related to some of the most celebrated men of the Ortho-
dox party, Plato, Abbot of Sakkudion, and his nephew
Theodore. Irene complacently encouraged her son’s passion
for her lady-in-waiting, was she herself who urged
and it

him to divorce his wife and marry the young girl; for she
knew quite well the scandal that such a step would arouse,
and the help it would afford to her plans. Constantine listened
eagerly to her advice; and there then began in the Palace a
very curious intrigue to get rid of Mary— an intrigue to which
I must later return, for it is altogether characteristic of con-
84 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
temporary Byzantine customs. In the end, despite the Patri-
arch’s opposition, the Emperor put,his wife in a convent,
and, in September 795, married Theodota.
Irene’s expectations were realized. From all Byzantine
Christendom, even from the farthest provinces, there went
up a cry of horror at this adulterous marriage. The religious
party were utterly scandalized and made an uproar; the
monks, fanning the flame, thundered against the debauched,
bigamous Emperor, and clamored at the weakness of Tara-
sius, the Patriarch, who, with characteristic diplomacy, al-

lowed such abominations to exist. Irene quietly helped and


encouraged their revolt, “because,” as a contemporary
chronicler says, “they were resisting her son and bringing
shame upon him.” One should read the ecclesiastical writers
to see to what a paroxysm of fury the religious party at-

tained in their righteous wrath against the disobedient and


shameless son, against the debauched and corrupt Prince.
“Woe to thee,” said Theodore of Studion, quoting the words
of the Preacher, “woe to thee, O land, when thy king is a
child!” Constantine kept his head, and exerted himself by
means of compromise to allay this terrific outburst. The prin-
cipal center of opposition being the monastery of Sakkudion
in Bithynia, he went on pretext of a holiday to Prusa, the
watering-place, and from there made all sorts of courteous
overtures to themonks of the celebrated monastery. In the
hope of placating them by such a mark of consideration, he
even paid them a visit. But nothing came of it. “If we have to
shed our blood,” said Theodore of Studion, “we will shed it

gladly.”
In the face of this intransigence the Emperor was so mis-
guided as to lose patience, and he determined to employ force.
Arrests were made; some of the religious were beaten with
rods, imprisoned, or exiled; the remainder of the community
IRENE (( 85
was dispersed. But such rigorous punishments served only
to complicate the situation. The monks everywhere fulmi-
nated against the tyrant, “the new Herod”; and in the very
Palace the Abbot Plato came and insulted him to his face.
Constantine had himself in hand. To the abbot’s invectives he
answered coldly: “I have no desire to make martyrs,” and let
him have his say. Unfortunately for him, he had already
made too many. Public opinion was exasperated, and Irene
knew how to profit by it.
During the court’s sojourn in Prusa, the Empress-mother
had played her cards very cleverly, and circumstances were
as favorable as could be desired. Theodota, the young Basi-
had had to return to the Sacred Palace for her accouche-
lissa,

ment, and Constantine, who was devoted to her, became


restless in her absence.Therefore when, in October 796, he
was told that she had borne him a son, he made haste to de-
part for Constantinople. He thus left the ground clear for
Irene’s intrigues. By gifts and promises and by her personal
charm, she quickly won over the principal officers of the
guard to her side, and persuaded them to consent to a coup
(TÊtat making her sole Empress. The conspirators, acting as
usual under Stauracius’s orders, arranged to await a favor-
able moment. But there was still one reef upon which the
whole scheme might suffer shipwreck. If Constantine were to
achieve some brilliant military success, it would probably
serve to restore his tottering prestige; and, as a matter of
fact, in March 797, he had just begun the campaign against
the Arabs. His mother’s friends did not scruple to turn the
expedition into failure by means of a lie very like treason,
and the Emperor was obliged to return to Constantinople,
having neither encountered the enemy nor accomplished any-
thing.
The crisis was drawing near. On the 17th of July 797,
86 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Constantine was returning from the Hippodrome to the
Palace of St. Mamas. The traitors surrounding him thought
their chancehad come, and attempted to take him prisoner.
He, however, succeeded in escaping, and jumping into a boat
hurried across to the Asiatic shore, counting on the fidelity
of the troops of the Anatolic Theme. Irene, who upon the
news of the attempted arrest had immediately taken posses-
sion of the Great Palace, was terrified and lost her head;
seeing her friends waver, and learning that the people were
inclined to favor Constantine, she decided to humble herself
and send some bishops to him to intercede for her, when sud-
denly the passion for supreme power inspired her to play a
last card. Many of the courtiers had compromised themselves
very deeply with her in the plot; she threatened to denounce
them to the Basileus and to turn over to him the incriminat-
ing documents. Terrified at this, and seeing no other means
of averting certain destruction, the conspirators plucked up
their courage and seized their unfortunate sovereign. He was
brought back to Constantinople and shut up in the Sacred
Palace; and there, in the Purple Pavilion where he had been
born, the executioner came by his mother’s orders and put
out his eyes. However, he did not die. He was kept in seclu-
sion in a splendid residence where later his wife Theodota,
who had stood bravely by him during the crisis, was allowed
to join him. She even bore him a second son, and thus he
passed the remaining years of his life in quiet obscurity. But
his days as Emperor were over.
Very few mourned the unfortunate Prince. The religious
party in their narrow fanaticism looked upon his disgrace as
the righteous, divinely ordained punishment of his adulter-
ous marriage, as the due reward of his stern treatment of the
monks, memorable example whereby, says Theodore of
as a
Studion, ‘‘even Emperors will learn not to violate God’s laws.
IRENE (( 87
nor to unchain impious persecutions.” Pious souls once more
acclaimed with gratitude and admiration the enfranchise-
ment wrought by the Most Christian Empress Irene. The
chronicler Theophanes, in spite of his devotion to the Basi-
lissa, alone seems vaguely to have felt the horror of her crime.
“For seventeen days,” says he, “the sun veiled himself and
gave forth no light, so that vessels went astray upon the sea;
and all men said that it was by reason of the Emperor’s blind-
ing that the sun forbore to shine; and thus ascended the
throne Irene, mother to the Emperor.”

V
dream was realized. From henceforth she seems to
Irene’s
have been drunk with success and power. For she dared to
do an unheard of thing, a thing Byzantium had never seen
before and was never to see again: she, a woman, assumed
the title of Emperor. At the head of the Novels that she
issued, she styled herself proudly: “Irene, great Basileus and
Autocrat of the Romans.” Upon her coins and upon the ivory
diptychs that have preserved her portrait ^
she appears in
all the pomp and circumstance of sovereignty. Thus, and
more splendidly still, she showed herself to her people. On
Easter Monday of the year 799, she returned from the
Church of theHoly Apostles to the Palace in solemn proces-
sion, in a golden chariot drawn by four white horses, each
led by a high official. Wearing the splendid imperial robes
that glittered with purple and gold, she, like the Consuls of
Rome, threw money by the handful to the assembled multi-
tude. It was her apotheosis, and the climax of her splendor.
At the same time, adroit as ever, she nursed her popu-
^ One preserved in Vienna, the other in the Bargello at Florence.
is

Cf. E. Molinier, loc. cit., tome i, pp. 81—4.


88 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
larity and strengthened her power. Her brothers-in-law, the
Caesars, whose ambition survived their disgrace, intrigued
against her once more. She put down their attempts cruelly

and exiled them to distant Athens. To her friends the monks,


on the other hand, she was attentive and beneficent, building
them new monasteries and endowing restored ones lavishly.

Owing to her favor, the great monastic establishments of


Sakkudion in Bithynia and of the Studion in the capital

attained to unprecedented prosperity. Finally, to conciliate


the people, she undertook a whole series of liberal reforms—
large remissions of taxation, reform of the financial ad-
ministration, a lowering of customs duties both at frontiers
and at ports and of taxes upon foodstuffs and articles of

manufacture; and she pleased the poor by her charitable


foundations. Constantinople was enchanted, and hailed her
as its benefactress.
Nevertheless, veiled intrigues were in progress at court
around the aged sovereign; her favorites were wrangling
over the succession. At her death the throne would be va-
cant, for only two daughters were born on Constantine Vi’s
first marriage. As for the children of his second marriage,
the elder son, Leo, had died a few months after birth, and the
second, born after his father’s downfall, was considered a
bastard, the issue of an illegitimate connection, and disquali-
fied for the throne. The two eunuchs who governed the
Empire, Stauracius and Aëtius, both hoped to obtain the
power for their relatives, whom they helped to high positions.
Irene’s failing health, moreover, seemed to warrant the ap-
proaching fulfillment of their hopes. Jealous to the end,
nevertheless, of her supreme power, and keenly suspicious of
anyone who appeared to threaten her crown, the old Basilissa
held tenaciously to the throne her crime had won.
For more than a year the Sacred Palace was the scene of
IRENE (( 89

continual denunciations and violent quarrels, of sudden


downfalls and unexpected returns to favor. Aetius in-

veighed against the plots and ambitions of Stauracius, and


Stauracius stirred up revolts to ruin Aetius, while between
the two drifted Irene, disturbed and irritated, now punish-
ing, now pardoning. There is something really tragic in this

struggle between the old, worn-out Empress, clinging des-


perately to her throne, and the all-powerful minister, ill like-

wise and spitting blood, in the care of physicians and on the


brink of death, but conspiring still, and hoping for the crown
against all hope. He was the first to succumb, about the mid-
dle of the year 800. While was wasting
the Byzantine court
its time in such fruitless quarrels, at that very moment, in St.

Peter’s in Rome, Charlemagne was restoring the Empire of


the West.
It is said that a grandiose ideawas entertained by the
Teutonic Cæsar and the aged sovereign of Byzantium—
namely, a marriage that would unite their monarchies under
their joint rule, and restore even more gloriously and more
fully than in the time of Augustus, of Constantine, or of
Justinian, the ancient unity of the Orbis Romanus. It does
not seem probable, but, at all events, negotiations were set
on foot to establish a modus vivendi between the two States.
Frankish ambassadors were present in Constantinople when
the final catastrophe occurred in which Irene was over-
thrown.
As the old Empress grew more feeble, the intrigues be-
came keener and bolder. Aetius, all-powerful since the death
encouraged his brother and endeavored
of his rival, openly
to assure him the support of the army. Others of the great
nobles were aroused against the favorite’s haughtiness and
insolent ambition, and one of the ministers, Nicephorus, the
Grand Logothete, took advantage of the general unrest to
90 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
conspire in his turn against the Basilissa. The Iconoclastic
party silently prepared its revenge. On the 31 st of October
802 the revolution broke
, out. “God, in his wisdom that
passeth understanding,” says the pious Theophanes, “per-
mitted it to happen, in order to punish the sins of mankind.”
Irene was taking a holiday at her favorite residence, the
Eleutherian Palace. The conspirators— among whom were
former friends of Aetius who had become discontented with
the favorite, former intimates of Constantine VI, several
Iconoclastic officers eager for revenge, high civil officials,
courtiers, and even some relatives of the Empress, all of
whom she had loaded with gifts— took advantage of her ab-
sence. At
ten o’clock in the evening they appeared at the
gates of the Sacred Palace and showed the guards of the
Chalce forged orders, purporting to come from the Basilissa,
in which she commanded Nicephorus to be proclaimed Em-
peror without delay, so that he might help her to withstand
the intrigues of Aetius. The soldiers allowed themselves
to
be persuaded, and surrendered the Palace.
In every Byzantine revolution the Palace was the essential
point which had to be gained at the outset, as the token
and
symbol of victory. And, as a matter of fact, the night had not
passed before messengers had announced to the whole city
Nicephorus’s achievement and the success of the coup (TÊtat.
No resistance was offered. At the same time, Irene was taken
by surprise and arrested at Eleutherion, sent heavily guarded
to Constantinople,and shut up in the Sacred Palace; while
on the following morning in St. Sophia, the
new Basileus
caused himself to be crowned in haste by the
Patriarch Tara-
sius, who seems to have forgotten
his benefactress. Never-
theless,nothing was settled. Irene was popular,
and the
mob, recovering from their first surprise, were
openly hostile
to the conspirators. They insulted the new master and cursed
IRENE (( 91

the Patriarch; and many remembering the protesta-


people,
tions of loyalty with which the plotters had tricked the Em-
press, taxed them vigorously with their ingratitude. They
sighed for the old order that had been overthrown and for
the prosperity it had brought, and dreaded what the future
might have in store. The multitude, unable to believe what
had happened, wondered if they were not the victims of a
nightmare. Consternation and grief were universal, and the
cold, foggy autumn morning made the dawn of the new reign
even more desolate.
A woman of real energy might perhaps have profited by
this situation: Irene did not. Between ambition and piety, the

two sentiments that divided her soul and had governed her
life, piety this time proved the stronger. Not that her down-

fall in any way weakened her courage, for she showed no

weakness; but in the face of an accomplished fact, “as a wise


and God-fearing woman,” to quote a contemporary, she
yielded without a murmur. Nicephorus, on the day after his

coronation, went to visit her, his eyes filled with hypocritical


tears, and, showing her, with his customary feigned good
nature, the black shoes he wore instead of the imperial red
buskins, assured her that his hands had been forced, and al-
most apologized for being Emperor. But Irene, with Chris-
tian resignation, humbled herself before the new Basileus as

before God’s Anointed, blessing the mysterious decrees of


Providence, and acknowledging her sins as the cause of her
downfall. She made no reproach and uttered no complaint.

Upon Nicephorus’s request, she even surrendered him her


wealth, asking only that she should be allowed free use of
the Eleutherian Palace.
The usurper promised all and assured her
that she asked,

that during her life she should be treated “as becomes a


Basilissa.” But he lost no time in forgetting his promises.
92 ;; BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
The aged sovereign was removed from Constantinople and
exiled at first to the monastery she had founded on the island
of Prinkipo. But even there she seemed too near. In Novem-
ber 802, despite the unusual severity of the winter, she was
sent to Lesbos. There she was kept closely guarded, and no
one was allowed to approach her — to such an extent were her
intrigues and the tenacity of her ambition still feared. In this
captivity she died miserably, in the month of August 803,
deserted by all. Her body was brought back to the monastery
on Prinkipo, and where she was
later to Constantinople,
buried in the Church of the Holy Apostles, in the mortuary
chapel where so many Emperors slept.
Irene was so pious and orthodox a sovereign that the
Church has forgiven her everything, even her crimes.® The
Byzantine chroniclers of her time call her the Blessed
Irene, the New Helen, ‘‘she who fought for the true faith
like a martyr.” Theophanes mourns her loss as a catastrophe,
and looks back upon the years of her reign as upon an era of
unusual prosperity. Theodore of Studion, a saint, addressed
the basest flatteries to her, not finding words rapturous
enough to describe “thewholly good sovereign,” “so pure a
spirit, so holy a soul,” who by her piety and her desire to
please God had delivered her people from slavery, and whose
deeds “shine like stars.” Irene deserves of history less in-
dulgence and more justice. One can understand, and, if one
wishes, forgive, the error of sincere folk whom party spirit
has blinded in regard to her, but one must beware of sharing
their error. Rightly regarded, this famous sovereign was a
politician, ambitious and devout, whom the passion for power
® It
must, however, be noted that some Byzantines felt the
horror of
Irene s crime keenly enough, and tried to
relieve her of the responsibility
of it. The George the Monk, writing in the ninth century, de-
chronicler
cides that Constantine was blinded “without her being present, or even
being privy to her ministers’ plans.”
IRENE (( 93

drove to crime, and whose achievements were totally insuffi-

cient to compensate for the horror of her deed. For by her


intrigues, she reopened in Byzantium for a period of eighty

years, to the great detriment of the monarchy, the era of


palace revolutions to which for nearly a century her glorious
predecessors the Iconoclastic Emperors had put an end.
V

THE BLESSED
THEODORA
I

n the year 829, Michael II the Amorian, Emperor of


I Byzantium, died, leaving the throne to his son, Theoph-
ilus. The new sovereign was unmarried; and at first, there-
fore, the Empress-dowager Euphrosyne took the place in
the court ceremonies reserved by etiquette for the
Augusta.
But Euphrosyne detested the world. Daughter of the
un-
fortunate Constantine VI, who was so cruelly
blinded by
order of his mother Irene, and of his first
wife, Mary, she
had retired after the downfall of her family
to one of the
convents of Prinkipo. There she had lived in
quiet seclu-
sion until, not without some scandal,
the Basileus Michael
had taken the beautiful nun, whom he loved
passionately,
out of her convent and set her upon
the throne of the Caesars’
But as soon as her husband was dead,
Euphrosyne’s one
wish was to return immediately to some
holy retreat; she
therefore bent her endeavors to finding a wife for
all
the
young Emperor, her step-son, without delay.

94
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 95

In accordance with the traditional custom of the Byzantine


court, messengers scoured the provinces to find the most
beautiful girls in the Empire and to bring them to Constan-
tinople;and they were gathered together in the great Pavilion
of the Pearl so that from among them Theophilus might
choose the future Empress. He first selected the six most
attractive, but, finding himself unable to decide, postponed
his definite choice until the morrow. On the following day he
appeared among the girls holding, like Paris among the
three goddesses, a golden apple, to be given to her whom he
should choose, and thus equipped he began his inspection.
He stopped in front of a very lovely, highborn maiden named
Kasia, and being rather embarrassed, perhaps, and not quite
knowing how to start conversation, began sententiously
with the following dubious compliment:

A woman was the fount and source


Of all maii^s tribulation.

Kasia was witty, and retorted undismayed :

And from a woman sprang the course

Of many's regeneration.^

This answer ruined her chances. Theophilus was terrified


by her quick repartee and her emancipated point of view,
and, turning his back upon her, gave the apple and the Em-
pire to an equally beautiful candidate, Theodora.
In characteristic Byzantine fashion, Kasia consoled her-
self for the loss of the throne by founding a convent to which

she retired; and, being a clever woman, passed her time com-
posing religious poems and secular epigrams that have come

^ This metrical translation is taken from J. B. Bury, A History of the


Eastern Roman Empire from the Fall of Irene to the Accession of Basil I
{A.D. 802-867), 1912, p. 82 and note (2). [Translator’s note]
BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
down to us and that are not without interest. Meanwhile her
had been crowned with great ceremony in
successful rival St.
Stephen’s Church in the Palace of Daphne, and, as usual, all

her family shared her good fortune. Her mother, Theoctista,


received the much coveted dignity of Patrician of the Girdle,
her three sisters were married to high dignitaries, and her
brothers, Petronas and Bardas, moved rapidly from one
honor to another. They were destined to show but little grati-
tude to her whose unforeseen elevation and sisterly affection
had brought them to the very steps of the throne.
The new Empress was an Asiatic, born in Paphlagonia of
a family of officials. Her relatives were pious folk, much at-
tached to the worship of the images, against which the suc-
cessors of the most pious Irene had resumed the struggle,
and it seems that her family had given proof of considerable
Having been brought up in such an en-
zeal for their faith.
vironment, Theodora was naturally devout and entertained
great respect for the holy icons; wherefore at first she was not
a little disconcerted by the court life into which her marriage
had suddenly translated her.
The Iconoclastic controversy had been reopened about
twenty years before, and was perhaps even bitterer than in
the eighth century, since to the religious question a political
motive had been added: the State advancing the right of
interference in matters ecclesiastical, and the Church de-
fending its liberties. Michael II had persecuted his opponents
openly and unscrupulously, and Theophilus, an intelligent,
masterful, energetic Prince, followed his father’s example
and continued his policy.Theodora tried in vain to use her
influence in her friends’ favor and to temper by her entreaties
the rigor of the persecution. Theophilus was not a very good-
natured monarch; when he frowned and raised his voice, his
wife became terrified and dared not press the point,
and she
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 97
herself was obliged carefully to dissimulate her sentiments
and her private sympathies. She had to conceal under her
clothes the holy images that she insistedupon wearing, she
had to take innumerable precautions in hiding away the for-
bidden icons in chests in her room, and she sometimes ran
considerable risk in performing her secret devotions.
One day the Emperor’s jester, a dwarf who used to amuse
the whole Palace by his malicious witticisms, surprised the
Empress at her prayers. Being of an inquisitive turn of mind,
he asked to see the objects that so absorbed her attention.
“These are my dolls,” said Theodora. “They are pretty, and
I love them dearly.” The dwarf ran as fast as he could and
told the Emperor about the beautiful dolls that the Basilissa
kept under her pillow. Theophilus instantly understood what
was going on, and, furious at finding his orders flouted in his
Palace, hurried off to the Gynaeceum and began to make a
violent scene. But Theodora was a woman, and knew how to
get herself out of the difficulty. “It is not what you suspect at
all,” she said to her husband. “I was simply looking at myself

in the mirror with my attendants, and your dwarf thought


that the faces he saw reflected were religious images, and
stupidly went off and told you so.” Theophilus quieted down,
or pretended to be convinced, but Theodora lay in wait for
the taleteller. A few days later she had the dwarf soundly
whipped for some peccadillo, and then warned him never
again to talk about dolls in the Gynaeceum. And when, after
drinking, the Emperor would occasionally revert to the sub-
ject and question the dwarf, the would make a signifi-
latter

cant gesture, putting one hand on his mouth and the other
upon that part of his person which had been flogged, and say
hurriedly: “No, no. Sir, let’s not talk about dolls.”
In the high society of the capital there was a general con-
spiracy in favor of the icons. The old Empress Euphrosyne,
98 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
in the convent where she was spending the last years of her
life, shared Theodora’s sentiments, and whenever the small

daughters of the Basileus came to pay her a visit, she talked


constantly to them about the holy images. Theophilus, who
suspected as much, always questioned the children on their
return, without, however, obtaining any definite information.

But one day the youngest of the imperial Princesses gave it

away. After telling her father about the lovely presents they
had received at the convent and the wonderful fruits they had
eaten, she went on to explain that her grandmother had a
chest all full of beautiful dolls, that she often touched them
to the children’s foreheads, and made them kiss them de-
voutly. Theophilus once more became angry and forbade his
little daughters to visit the old Basilissa any more. But even

among the courtiers many, including statesmen, held the


same beliefs as the two Empresses. Ministers and privy
counselors were quietly but deeply devoted to image worship,
and matters had reached such a pass that even the astrolo-
gers, whom Emperor was in the habit of consulting,
the
prophesied openly to him the approaching overthrow of his
work. He himself felt it so strongly that on his deathbed he
made his wife and his Prime Minister, the Logothete The-
octistus, swear a solemn oath not to alter his policy, nor to
interfere with his friend the Patriarch John, who had been its
chief instigator. Final precautions have rarely been so use-
less.

II

The successor of Theophilus, his son Michael III,


was a
child; in 842, at the time of his father’s death, he was not
more than three or four years old. So, like Irene, Theodora
assumed the regency during the minority of the young sov-
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 99
ereign. She retained the principal ministers of the late reign,
the Logothete Theoctistus, who had great influence with her,
and the Magister Manuel. Both were devout men, secretly
attached, like the Basilissa herself, to image worship; and
being, moreover, men of sense, who were rightly worried at
the long continuance of a useless and dangerous conflict,
they naturally entertained the idea of restoring Orthodoxy.
Nevertheless, in spite of their suggestions, the Empress
seems at first to have hesitated. Theodora had loved her hus-
band very much, she was devotedly attached to his memory,
and dreaded, furthermore, the difficulties of the undertaking.
But all the courtiers did their best to convince her; her
mother and brothers were constantly giving her advice. In
vain the Basilissa objected, saying: “My husband, the late
Emperor, was a wise man; he knew what was expedient; we
really cannot ignore his wishes.” The danger of the situation
was pointed out to her, the unpopularity she would incur if
she were to persist in carrying out Theophilus’s policy; she
was worried by suggestions of a revolution in which her son
might lose his throne. Her piety, moreover, prompted her to
heed the advice that was given her so freely. She yielded.
A synod was assembled at Constantinople. But in order
that it should accomplish its task satisfactorily the Patriarch
had first to be removed. John, whom Theophilus had made
Patriarch in 834, had been the Emperor’s tutor. He was an
intelligent, active, energetic man, and had lent his powerful
aid to the sovereign’s purposes; wherefore the opponents of
the Iconoclastic party detested him. They represented him as
a magician, nicknaming him Lecanomantis, or the Sorcerer,
the new Apollonius, the new Balaam. They circulated the
most horrid stories about him: how he had been able to de-
stroy the Emperor’s enemies by magic; how he had come
by night, muttering mysterious charms, and cut off the head
100 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
of the bronze serpent in the Hippodrome. And how in his
suburban house he had fashioned a subterranean and dia-
bolical cave, where in the company of fallen women, gener-
ally of wonderful beauty— several of whom by a refinement
of scandal were said to be nuns consecrated to God— he con-
jured up demons by impure sacrifices and questioned the
dead to learn the secrets of the future. But, whether or not
this gossip was well founded, John was a man of high intel-
ligence and strong will, and therefore very embarrassing. To
get rid of him, the Emperor ordered him either to consent to
the re-establishment of Orthodoxy or to resign; and it seems
that the soldiers sent to convey this ultimatum did it rather
roughly. At all events, the Patriarch was deposed and shut
up in a monastery; and when, in a fury at his overthrow, he
ventured to display his temper by mutilating the images in
the monastery, the Regent ordered him to be severely
flogged.
One of the victims of the former administration, Metho-
dius, was put in his place, and a general reaction began at
once. The bishops undertook the restoration of image wor-
ship; those who had been exiled and proscribed were called
home and received in triumph; prisoners were set at liberty
and honored as martyrs. Upon the walls of the churches reli-
gious pictures reappeared, and once more the figure of
Christ, solemnly replaced over the Chalce Gate, bore wit-
ness to the piety of the masters of the Imperial Palace. At
last, on the 19th of February 843, clergy, court, and people,

united in a solemn and magnificent ceremony. All night long


in the church of Blachernae the Empress prayed devoutly
with the priests. In the morning a triumphal procession
wound through Constantinople; amid an enthusiastic crowd
Theodora, surrounded by bishops and monks, went from
Blachernae to St. Sophia and gave thanks in the Great
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 101

Church to the Almighty. Adherents of the defeated party


were made to march in this procession that celebrated their
downfall, carrying candles and bending low under the anath-
emas that were hurled at them. That evening, the Basilissa
gave a banquet to the prelates at the Sacred Palace, and re-

joiced with them over the success of her undertaking. This


was the Feast of Orthodoxy. And thereafter, in recollection of
this great event and in memory of the Blessed Theodora, the
Greek Church held a stately festival every year on the First
Sunday in Lent to celebrate the restoration of the images and
the discomfiture of their enemies. It is still celebrated with
pious and grateful devotion.
In the revolution even the dead had a place. The remains
of the illustrious confessors Theodore of Studion and the
Patriarch Nicephorus, who had suffered for their faith and
had died in distant exile, were brought back in triumph to

the capital. The Empress and the entire court considered it

an honor to go, candle in hand, to receive the venerated relics,

to escort with reverence the reliquary borne on the shoulders


of priests, andaccompany it through an enormous multi-
to

tude, to the Church of the Holy Apostles. By way of contrast


the tomb of Constantine V was violated, and, regardless
of his Imperial Majesty, the remains of the great opponent of
the images were cast into the gutter; his sarcophagus of
green marble was cut up into thin slabs and used to decorate
one of the rooms in the Palace.
The Byzantine historians to whom we owe these details

have unfortunately omitted to explain how this great revolu-


tion could have been accomplished so quickly, and, to all ap-
pearance, without encountering very serious difficulties. It

would seem that the most important factor was the universal
weariness that resulted from the interminable struggle. But
another consideration may have induced statesmen to favor
102 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
the decision that Theodora succeeded in carrying out. Al-
though from the doctrinal point of view the Church was com-
pletely victorious, it was obliged in return to renounce those
leanings toward independence manifested by some of its
most illustrious defenders. It was now absolutely subject to
the State; imperial control in religious matters was more
complete than ever before. To this extent, notwithstanding
the re-establishment of Orthodoxy, the policy of the Icono-
clastic Emperors had borne its fruit.

For the great work that she accomplished, Theodora has


been canonized by the Eastern Church. In carrying out her
task, however, she was troubled by many pangs of con-
science. One thing worried her above all others.As we
know, she had loved her husband passionately, and she was
unable to endure the thought that he was included in the ter-
rible anathemas that had been hurled against the persecutors

of the images. Therefore, when the Fathers assembled in


the synod came to beseech her favor to restore the holy icons,
she in turn made a request of them— namely, that they should
absolve the Emperor Theophilus. And when the Patriarch
Methodius objected that, while the Church had the incontest-
able right to pardon living penitent sinners, it could do noth-
ing for a man well known to have died in mortal sin, Theo-
dora invented a pious falsehood. She asserted that in his last
moments the Basileus had repented of his errors, had de-
voutly kissed the images that she had offered to his lips, and
had commended his soul like a good Christian into the hands
of God. The bishops readily accepted this edifying
story,
realizing that it was the price of the restoration of Orthodoxy;
and at the Regent’s request they decided to offer prayers for
a whole week in all the churches of the capital for the repose
of the dead Emperor’s soul. Theodora herself took part in
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 103

these devotions, and trusted that she had thus won the mercy
of God for the sinning but penitent Prince.
Legend in later times added many details to the touching
story of Theodora’s love for her husband. It was told how the
Empress had learned in terrible dreams of the fate that
threatened him. She had beheld the Virgin with Christ in her
arms, enthroned among the angels, summoning the Basileus
Theophilus before her tribunal and having him cruelly
flogged. On another occasion she had dreamed that she was
in the Forum of Constantine when suddenly a great mob
surged into it, and a procession of men carrying instruments
of torture passed through, dragging in their midst the
wretched Theophilus, naked and in chains. Theodora had
followed the crowd to the square in front of the Palace, be-
fore the Chalce Gate. There she had beheld, seated upon a
throne, a tall man of terrible aspect, in the awful guise of a
judge. The Empress, throwing herself at His feet, implored

mercy for her husband, and the man answered: “Woman,


great is thy Because of thy piety and thy tears, and be-
faith.

cause of the prayers of My priests, I pardon Theophilus,


thy husband.” And He commanded the Emperor to be re-
leased. Simultaneously, the Patriarch Methodius made an
experiment of his own to satisfy himself as to the designs of

Providence. Upon the high altar of St. Sophia he laid a roll


of parchment whereon he had written the names of all the
Iconoclastic Emperors; then he went to sleep in the church
and saw in a dream an angel who told him that the Emperor
had found mercy with God; and he affirmed that when, upon
awaking, he had removed the parchment from the holy ta-
ble, the place where he had written the name of Theophilus

had become white again, in token of pardon.


Several men, however, proved more implacable than God.
104 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Lazarus, one of the most celebrated painters of icons, had
had his right hand cut off by order of the deceased Emperor;
and although, according to the legend, his hand had miracu-
lously grown again, the martyr cherished a bitter hatred for
his torturer. And to all that the Emipress said, he answered
obstinately: “God is not so unjust as to forget our sufferings
and honor our persecutor.” At the court banquet with which
the Feast of Orthodoxy ended, another confessor proved no
This was Theodore Graptus, so called be-
less intractable.

cause Theophilus had had four defamatory verses stamped


on his forehead with red-hot irons. The Empress, anxious to
flatter the martyrs, asked the holy man who had inflicted so
horrible a torture upon him. “For this inscription,” he replied
solemnly, “theEmperor your husband shall answer to me at
God’s judgment-seat.” At this unexpected reply, Theodora
burst into tears, and, turning to the bishops, asked if it was
thus that they intended to keep their promises. Fortunately
the Patriarch Methodius intervened, and not without some
difficulty managed to calm the irascible confessor and to reas-
sure the Empress. “Our promises stand,” said he. “And if
they weigh lightly upon some, that is of no importance.”
What is important, however, is the evidence that these
anecdotes afford, both of the various considerations of policy
and humanity that entered into the restoration of Orthodoxy,
and of the compromises which the holy bishops and the most
pious Theodora arranged with equal facility with their con-
science.

Ill

“Orthodoxy,” says a chronicler of the time, “is the greatest


virtue.” Theodora possessed this virtue in its fullness.
But
she had other qualities as well. Byzantine historians praise
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 105

her political astuteness, her energy, and her courage. They


put into her mouth heroic speeches, such as the one that
stopped an invasion begun by the Bulgarian King: ‘‘If you
triumph over a vv^oman, you will reap no glory thereby;
but you are beaten by one, you will be the laughingstock
if

of the whole world.” At all events, she governed well during


her fourteen years of rule. Her government had, to be sure,
a religious color. She was very proud of having restored Or-
thodoxy, and was no less anxious to combat heresy; by her
order the Paulicians were given their choice between conver-
sion and death, and, as they refused to yield, blood flowed
freely in the parts of Asia Minor where they were established.

The imperial inquisitors who were sent to crush their resist-

ance did wonders: they succeeded in putting more than one


hundred thousand of them to death by torture— a serious mat-
ter, destined to have still more serious consequences. For by
throwing these desperate men into the arms of the Moham-
medans, the imperial government was preparing many trou-
bles for itself in the future.
But ways the Regent’s pious zeal inspired her to
in other
happier undertakings; it was she who laid the foundations
of the great missionary enterprise which a few years later
carried the Gospel to the Khazars, the Moravians, and the
Bulgars. She had also the glory of inflicting several lasting
defeats upon the Arabs, and of repressing vigorously the in-

surrection of the Slavs of Hellas. But her chief concern was


the financial administration of the Empire. She is said to

have had a talent for money-making, and an amusing anec-


dote is told in this connection. One day, as the Emperor
Theophilus was standing at a window of the Palace, he saw
a large and splendid merchant-vessel entering the Golden
Horn. Upon inquiring the name of the owner, he was told
that it belonged to the Empress. He said nothing; but the
106 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
next day, as he was going to Blachernae, he went down to
the harbor, had the vessel unloaded, and ordered the cargo
to be set on fire. Then, turning to his friends, he remarked:
“You were not aware that the Empress my wife had made a
merchant of me! Never before has a Roman Emperor been
a shopkeeper.” Whether or not the story is true, Theodora
managed the wealth of the State as successfully as her own.
When she stepped down from the throne, she left a large bal-
ance in the Treasury. And on this account she would doubt-
less have been reckoned a great sovereign, had it not been for
court intrigues and palace rivalries, always of rapid growth
under a woman’s government, and for the miseraMe son that
Heaven had sent her.

IV

During the reign of Theophilus, the Imperial Palace, for


so many centuries the residence of the Byzantine Basileis,
had acquired new splendor. The Emperor was fond of build-
ing, and to the old constructions of Constantine and of Justin-
ian had added a series of magnificent edifices, luxuriously
decorated with the most elegant and exquisite ornaments.
He loved pomp and splendor, and, to enhance the magnifi-
cence of the Palace receptions, he had ordered miraculous
products of the goldsmith’s and the mechanic’s arts. Among
them were the Pentapyrgion, a celebrated golden cabinet in
which the crown jewels were exhibited; the golden organs
that were played on days of solemn audience; the golden
plane-tree standing near the imperial throne, on which me-
chanical birds fluttered and sang; the golden lions crouching
at the Prince’s feet, which at certain times rose up and
lashed
and roared; and the mysterious golden griffins
their tails,
which seemed to watch over the ruler’s safety as in the pal-
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 107

aces of Asiatic kings. Furthermore, he had entirely renewed


the imperial wardrobe— the beautiful costumes glittering
with gold that the Basileus wore in the court ceremonies, the
splendid vestments of golden tissue studded with precious
stones in which the Augusta arrayed herself. He was a pa-
tron of letters, science, and art. He had showered favors upon
the great mathematician, Leo of Thessalonica, and in the
Palace of Magnaura had founded a school where that scholar
imparted the teaching that was one of the glories of Byzan-
tium. He himself. Iconoclast though he was, had become
very tolerant of the confessor Methodius from the moment
that he proved his ability to solve certain scientific problems
in which the Emperor was absorbed. Arabic architecture
was much to his taste, and, as he was very anxious to replace
religious painting by a freer, more secular style, he had
turned the Byzantine art of his time into new channels. Ow-
ing to his efforts and intelligent protection, court life in the

marvelous Sacred Palace, full of the refinements of splendor


and rare luxury, with its incomparable pavilions and ter-

races, its gardens grandly opening upon the luminous reaches


of theMarmora, had taken on a new effulgence. But now that
the Emperor was dead, this glorious Palace was the scene
of quarrels and intrigues.
Under the regency of Theodora, the real head of govern-
ment was the Logothete Theoctistus. He was a man of no
great merit, an incapable and always unfortunate general, a
statesman of but moderate acumen, by temperament cold,
melancholy, and harsh. He was unsympathetic and unloved,
and maintained himself in power by the Empress’s favor.
Apartments had been assigned to him in the Palace itself.
He exercised an enormous influence over Theodora, and
scandalous reports were current in Byzantium concerning
his relations with her. He was known to be ambitious, and
108 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
people remembered the feverish haste with which he had left
the army in Crete at the false news of a palace revolution, in
order to observe events in the capital. He was suspected of
aspiring to the throne, and it was even reported that Theo-
dora approved his desires, and that she intended either to
marry him herself or to give him one of her daughters in mar-
riage. It was said that, in order to smooth his path to power,
she was quite prepared, like the great Irene, to dethrone and
blind her own son. At all events, being deeply devoted to the
Regent and having unbounded influence over her, the Logo-
thete did his best to arouse her distrust against all the coun-
selors who shared the power with him.
By his intrigues he speedily rid himself of rivals. The
Magister Manuel, tutor with Theoctistus of the young Mi-
chael III, was accused of conspiring against the imperial
family and was forced to resign office. The Empress’s broth-
ers, Petronas and Bardas, were more formidable, especially
the latter, whose great intelligence was combined with a total
absence of scruples and morals. With Theodora’s own con-
sent,Bardas was, on some pretext, exiled from court, and the
Logothete imagined that his own power was definitely estab-
lished. He had not realized that he should have to reckon
with the young Emperor.
For Michael III was growing up, and as he grew he
showed himself utterly worthless. In vain his mother and the
minister had done their utmost to give him an excellent edu-
cation; in vain he
had been entrusted to the best masters, sur-
rounded by the most carefully chosen companions— legend
includes among
the Prince Imperial’s comrades Cyril, later
the Apostle of the Slavs. All had been useless, for
Michael
was fundamentally corrupt. He was now fifteen or sixteen
years of age, and cared chiefly for horses, hunting,
racing,
shows, and athletic contests, and he even stooped to the
point
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 109

of making an exhibition of himself before his associates by


driving a chariot in the palace hippodrome. His private life

was still worse. He frequented the lowest society, spending


part of his nights in drinking; and he had an acknowledged
mistress, Eudocia Ingerina.
Theodora and Theoctistus decided that the only thing to
be done was to find him a wife as soon as possible. Palace
envoys once more searched the provinces for the most beauti-
ful girls in the Empire, and brought them to Constantinople;
from among them, Eudocia, a girl of the Decapolis, was
chosen and at once crowned Basilissa. But in a few weeks,
Michael tired of his wife and of marriage, returned to his
former habits, his friends, and his mistress, and launched
once more into excesses. All the ridiculous and odious tales
that Byzantine historians tell about Michael III must be ac-
cepted with reserve; for the chroniclers of the Macedonian
dynasty were all too anxious to excuse and justify the assas-

sination by which Basil I won the throne. But, notwithstand-


ing this reservation, undoubted facts testify to the insanity of
the wretched Emperor’s behavior. Constantly surrounded by
actors, debauchees, and clowns, he and his unworthy famil-
iars amused themselves by playing grotesque or filthy jests,

he scandalized the Palace with his shocking practical jokes,


and he respected neither his family nor his faith. A favorite
amusement was to dress himself and his friends as bishops.

One took the part of the Patriarch, and the others represented
metropolitans; he himself assumed the title of Archbishop of
Colonaea, and thus they went masquerading through the
city, singing disgusting songs and parodying the holy cere-

monies. One day, in imitation of Christ, Michael went to dine

at the house of a poor woman, all aghast at receiving the


Basileus so unexpectedly. Another time, meeting the Pa-
triarch Ignatius in the streets with his clergy, the Emperor
110 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
improvised a sort of vaudeville entertainment, and with his
retinue of actors he accompanied them for some distance,
singing them licentious songs to the sound of cymbals and
tambourines.
His mother was the next victim of his disgusting jokes.
He sent her word one day that the Patriarch was calling at
the Palace, and that she would doubtless like to receive his
blessing. The pious Theodora came in haste, and in the great
Golden Triclinium found the prelate in full canonicals sitting
on a throne beside the sovereign; his cowl was pulled down
over his face, and he apparently was lost in deep thought.
The Regent fell at the holy man’s feet and begged him to
remember her in his prayers, when all of a sudden the Pa-
triarch got up, made afew pirouettes, presented his back to
the Empress . . . one must consult the chroniclers to dis-
cover what he emitted Then he turned
in Theodora’s face.
around and remarked: “You can hardly say. Madam, that
even in this we have not tried our best to do you honor.”
Then, throwing back his cowl, the Patriarch proved to be
none other than the Emperor’s favorite jester. Michael burst
into fits of laughter at this charming pleasantry, while
Theo-
dora called down curses upon him, saying: “You wicked
child! Godhas this day withdrawn his help from you!” and
left the room in tears. But, in spite of so
many evidences of
boorish impropriety, his tutors dared not interfere,
and,
whether from excessive indulgence, or because they hoped to
curry favor, were careful not to reprimand him.
But it was Bardas, chiefly, who tolerated his nephew’s
amusements and so acquired an ascendancy over him.
Through the good offices of his friend, the Lord Chamber-
lain Damianus, he had succeeded in having
the Emperor re-
call him from exile, and very soon
ingratiated himself into
Michael’s favor. Naturally, he detested Theoctistus,
who
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 111

stood in his way, and he was constantly playing upon the


Basileus’s distrust of the minister. He hinted that the Logo-
thete was preparing some coup d^Êtat, and he did not hesitate
to slander his sister, the Regent Theodora, by presenting her
conduct in the worst possible light. He succeeded so well that
an unimportant incident ( had refused advance-
the minister
ment to some friend of the sovereign’s) grew into a violent
quarrel between Michael and Theoctistus. This was in 856.
Bardas took advantage of it to inflame Michael’s bitterness
still further; he told him that he was being kept out of poli-

tics, and nettled by cynical remarks. “So long as


his vanity
Theoctistus and the Augusta are together,” he used to say,
“the Basileus will be powerless”; and he contrived to per-
suade the Emperor that his life was threatened. A plot was
formed against the Logothete. A great number of the cour-
tiers were won over to Bardas’s side, the Prince agreed to

everything, and even a sister of the Empress joined with


Bardas, her brother, against Theodora and her favorite.
Thus the conspiracy succeeded without great difficulty.
One day, when in the discharge of his duties, Theoctistus
was coming with papers in his hand for an audience with the
Regent, he discovered Bardas in the gallery of the Lausiacus,
which led to the Empress’s apartments. Bardas did not rise

at his approach, but looked him up and down most insolently.

A little met the Emperor, who for-


further on, Theoctistus
bade him to go to the Augusta, and ordered the Logothete to
make his daily report to him. As the minister hesitated in as-
tonishment, the Basileus dismissed him roughly. But as he
was leaving, Michael cried out to the chamberlains in wait-
man!” Thereupon Bardas threw himself on
ing: “Arrest that
the Logothete, who fled; Bardas caught up with him,
knocked him down, and drew his sword to prevent anyone
from coming to the poor man’s rescue. It does not seem.
112 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
however, as if the death of Theoctistus had been an essential
part of the program; at first, the Emperor simply com-
manded that he should be taken under close guard to the
vestibule of the Scyla, there to await his commands. Unfor-
tunately for the Logothete, the noise had alarmed Theodora,
who came running, in disordered attire, her hair disheveled,
demanding the release of her favorite, inveighing against
her son and her brother, and crying that she forbade anyone
to put Theoctistus to death. It was perhaps her eagerness for
his safety that cost him his life. Michael’s companions feared,
if he were allowed to live, that the Regenthim would restore
to power, and that he would then take cruel vengeance
upon
his enemies; for safety’s sake they decided upon his death.
In
vain some of the guard officers who had remained faithful to
him defend him; in vain the poor wretch hid under
tried to
the furniture, attempting to avoid his fate. A soldier
bent
down and with a thrust of his sword ran him through the
belly. Bardas finished him off.

The assassination of the Prime Minister was a direct blow


at Theodora, and she took it as such. In the midst of the
tumult she had heard menacing voices crying out against
her; people had shouted to her to beware, that it was the day
of murders. Moreover, in her wrath she refused all excuses
and consolation. Savagely, tragically, she invoked the
all

vengeance of Heaven upon the murderers, but chiefly


upon
her brother Bardas, and openly prayed for their
death. By
taking this unyielding stand she made herself
irksome, and
Bardas, whose ambitions she hindered, decided
to get rid of
her. First, her daughters were taken
away and put into a con-
vent, in the expectation that she
would soon follow them
there of her own free will. As she still hesitated, she was or-
dered to retire to the convent of Gastria.
Not wishing to
trouble the State by a useless resistance,
she nobly resigned
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( lis

the power, after having delivered officially to the Senate the


moneys which under her sound financial administration had
been deposited in the Treasury. It was the end of her political
career.
In the convent where she found refuge, Theodora lived
piously with her daughters for many long years. She forgave
her son, over whom she seems later to have regained some
influence, but always remained bitterly opposed to Bardas,
whom she justly held responsible for the death of Theocti-
stus. To such a pitch did she carry her hatred that she, the
pious. Orthodox Empress, plotted against the brother she
loathed, and tried, with the help of some of her friends at
court, to have him assassinated. She failed in the attempt,

and seems to have been rather severely punished for it. It


was doubtless on this occasion that all her property was con-
fiscated, and that she was deprived of the honors attached to

her imperial rank. But to console her for her disgrace, fate
was up an avenger, destined to satisfy her hate even
to raise

beyond her hopes. This was Basil, the illustrious founder


of the Macedonian dynasty.
VI g^g^

THEOPHANO

n the Byzantine Empresses, Theophano is almost


series of
I as celebrated as Theodora. Since M. Gustave Schlum-
berger in a charming work set himself to evoke her pic-
turesque, fascinating personality, and to tell the story of her
romantic forgotten Princess has suddenly resumed
life, this

her place in history and in fame. Writers of renown, like


Maupassant, graceful writers like the Vicomte de Vogüé,
have been carried away by the charm of this beautiful crea-
ture,“who disturbed the world as much as Helen, and even
more.” " Such novelists, indeed, as Hugues le Roux have
de-
scribed “this young woman of supernatural loveliness,
con-
taining in the delicate perfection of her harmony the
power
that troubles the world.” We
too, therefore, must find room
in our portrait gallery for “this great sinner,” as
M. Schlum-
berger calls her, whose charms had so fatal an influence,
and who was destined to be loved by three successive Em-
^ E. M. de Vogüé, Regards historiques et littéraires, p, 189 .

114
THEOPHANO (( 115
perors.” It must be admitted at once that many points in
connection with this mysterious, enigmatic Empress are still

obscure, and from the outset we must resign ourselves to a


large measure of ignorance. When the sources are silent,
imagination, however ingenious, has, I think, no right to sup-

plement them; in taking such liberties with the text we run


the risk of writing fiction rather than history. Now, Byzan-
tium is in no sense what M. de Vogüé calls it— “a fairy-

land, a country virgin and unknowable.” It is a very real


country, which one can and should endeavor to understand
in a scientific spirit. Studied thus, Theophano may appear to
some less picturesque than she is usually portrayed, but I
hope that she will at least be more convincing.

Whence came famous Empress, who, toward the end


this

of the year 956, married the only son of the Basileus Con-
stantine VII, Romanus, the young heir apparent? Little is
known. The court chroniclers, in their concern for the fair

name of the dynasty, assert that she sprangfrom a very old


and very noble family, and that the Emperor and his wife
were overcome with joy at finding so well-born a bride for
their son. But if the historians less favorable to the Mace-
donian house are to be believed, the parentage of the future
Basilissa was more modest. Her father, Craterus, of La-
far
conian origin, was an obscure plebeian who kept a public
house in one of the slums of the capital. She herself, before
her marriage, was called Anastasia, or more familiarly, Ana-
staso; it was only on drawing near the throne that she re-
ceived the more high-sounding name of Theophano, “to in-
dicate,” say her panegyrists, “that she was manifested and
chosen by God.”
116 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
In one respect at least she was worthy of her name: her
beauty was radiant, superhuman, divine. “By her beauty
and her elegance,” says a contemporary, “she surpassed all

the women “Her beauty,” says another chron-


of her time.”
icler, “was beyond compare, a miracle of nature.” It was

doubtless by means of it that she fascinated Romanus. But


where did he meet her? how did he win her? We do not
know. Did she owe her extraordinary good fortune to one of
those beauty shows that were commonly held in Byzantium
when a Prince was to be provided with a wife, and in which
the fairest girls of the monarchy were inspected by the Em-
peror and his relatives? I think it not unlikely. Or had there
been some love affair between the beautiful plebeian and the
young heir to the throne, that ended in marriage? The ad-
ventures of Theodora prove that such things were possible,
and Romanus’s character as we know it does not exclude the
possibility.

He was a handsome
big, fellow, broad-shouldered,
“straight as a cypress.” He had beautiful eyes, a clear com-
plexion, and an amiable countenance; his speech was soft
and persuasive. He was made to please, and he loved amuse-
ment. Being a great hunter and fond of every kind of sport,
he was always doing something; his vigorous constitution
appreciated the pleasures of the table, and other pleasures as
well. He was unfortunate in his companions and ill advised
by them, thought only of larks and adventures, and re-
warded ill the great pains his father had taken with his edu-
cation. The old Emperor Constantine VII, who was so cere-
monious and so pious, had tried his best to impart his quali-
ties to his son. “He had taught him,” says the chronicler,
“how a Basileus should speak, walk, stand, smile, dress, sit
down.” And after these lessons he would say gravely to the
young man: “If you follow these precepts, you will reign
THEOPHANO (( 117
many years over the Roman Empire.” For the political and
diplomatic instruction of his heir, Constantine VII had, fur-
thermore, composed very learned treatises— and most valu-
able they are to us— on Themes and on the Administra-
the
tion of the Empire. But Romanus v^as eighteen years old and
not at all anxious to become a statesman. In any case, as his
father adored him, there were certainly no great difficulties
made about his marriage with Theophano, whatever her ori-

gin. Soon after the marriage, in 958, the young wife bore her
husband a son, the future Basil II, and thereby strengthened
her position at court and increased her influence in the Pal-
ace. When Constantine VII died in the month of October
959, Theophano, of course, ascended the throne with Ro-
manus II. At that time she was eighteen years of age, and the
young Emperor twenty-one.
This young woman’s character is by no means easy to as-
certain. The court chronicler whom I have already quoted
says with unqualified praise: “She was fair of body, lovely of
face, and utterly pure of soul.” Her most recent historian, on
the other hand, insists that she was “profoundly vicious and
profoundly corrupt,” and that this fascinating enchantress,
this “crowned was altogether “shameless and lascivi-
siren,”

ous.” These are hard words and ugly names, considering the
little we know of her. But it should be observed, however,

that among her contemporaries and even more among later


chroniclers, she had a well-established reputation as a sinis-
ter, ill-omened woman. One historian says that, in order the

quicker to ascend the throne, she and her husband poisoned


the Emperor her father-in-law. Other writers say that, when
her husband died, it was common talk in the capital that
Theophano had administered poison to him. If other reports
are to be believed, she rid herself thus of a Prince of the fam-
ily of Romanus Lecapenus who seemed likely to become a
118 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
possible rival and pretender to the throne, and thus like-

wise she is upon her lover John


said to have revenged herself
Tzimisces for having abandoned her. Armenian chroniclers
go so far as to say that the “infamous Empress” intended to
poison her own sons. But all these tales, told by people not
living at court, and dating for the most part from one or two
centuries after her time, are of small significance. Some of
these ugly rumors are flatly contradicted by the facts; others
seem really too incredible. Besides, we must not forget that
when Theophano actually made up her mind to commit a
crime— a thing which happened at least once in her life— it
was not by poison that she did the deed, but frankly and
openly by the sword.
This observation must not be taken as an attempt on my
part to rehabilitate Theophano. But there are plenty of
known facts to lay at her door without swelling the indict-
ment unnecessarily by the addition of vague epithets, and
assertions that cannot be proved. As I see her, she is above
all else ambitious, with a lust for power and influence, and
capable of anything, even crime, to hold the throne to which
she had attained. She is often intriguing, sometimes violent
and passionate, unscrupulous always; when her interests, dis-
likes, or fancies are involved, she is dissimulating and perfid-
ious. On ascending the throne, she exercised great influence
over Romanus and would allow no one else to share it with
II,

her. Not only were all the favorites of the preceding reign
dismissed and all the principal personnel of the administra-
tion changed: the young Empress’s first act, when she had
become mistress in the Palace, was to send away her mother-
in-law, the Basilissa Helen, and her five sisters-in-law.
These were charming Princesses, who had been admira-
bly educated by an adoring father. Under the government of
Constantine VII, they had even taken part from time to time
THEOPHANO (( 119
in affairs of State. One of them, Agatha, the old Emperor’s
favorite, often acted as his secretary, and the various depart-
ments and the officials v^ere aware of her influence. This
did not suit Theophano’s book. She therefore extracted an
order out of the feeble Romanus inviting them to enter a con-
vent. In vain their mother pleaded for them; in vain the
young girls, clinging closely to one another, begged with
tears to be spared. All was to no purpose. The Basilissa Helen
alonewas allowed to dwell in the Palace, where she died in
sorrow a few months later. Her daughters were obliged to
bow to Theophano’s inflexible will and enter the cloister,

and, by a refinement of cruelty, were even separated from


one another. The Princesses made a last vain resistance.
When the Patriarch Polyeuctes had cut off their hair, and
they had been clad in the religious habit, they protested, pull-
ing off their sackcloth garments and insisting on eating meat
every day. Romanus finally allowed them the same fare and
the same state that they had enjoyed in the Sacred Palace.
They were nonetheless forever dead to the world, and Theo-
phano had won.
Must we believe that, because she acted thus to such near
relatives, she next poisoned her husband? “Most people sus-
pect,” says Leo Diaconus, a contemporary, concerning the
death of Romanus H, “that poison was administered to him
in the Gynaeceum.” This terrible accusation clearly demon-
strates what the people of her time thought Theophano ca-
pable of; and it is certain that a woman who could have her
second husband assassinated in order to marry a third, might
just as well have had the first poisoned so as to marry the
second. Nevertheless, the historian’s accusation, grave as it

is, seems in this case utterly absurd. In the first place, the

chroniclers have given us a perfectly satisfactory explanation


of the premature death of the young Emperor, exhausted in
120 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
his youth by the love of pleasure and excesses of all kinds.
And the very writer who brings poison into the affair men-
tions elsewhere that the Basileus died of internal complica-
tions resulting from a wild ride. But, above all, what object
could Theophano have had in getting rid of her husband?
She was Empress, she was all-powerful; she was, further-
more, on the best of terms with Romanus, to whom, in their
six and a half years of married life, she had borne four chil-

dren— only two days before his death she had given birth to
her daughter Anna. Why should she have poisoned the Ba-
sileus, when by leaving her alone with infant chil-
his death,
dren, would expose her, more than any other conjuncture, to
the sudden loss of the power she loved? Theophano was too
intelligent to run such a risk groundlessly.
But it is worthy of special observation that in the facts just
cited there is really nothing that can be characterized as vi-
cious, wanton, or lewd. So long as Romanus II lived, there is
every reason to believe that his young wife’s conduct was ir-
reproachable. After his death she married, chiefly for rea-
sons of State, a man some thirty years her senior, but such an
event is neither rare nor extraordinary in the lives of sover-
eigns or even of private citizens; and, without laying stress
on the point that it was perhaps Theophano’s only means of
saving the throne for her sons, at least she can hardly be
blamed for believing that supreme power was worth some
sacrifice. The only serious accusation that one can make
against her is not that five years later she deceived this old
husband younger lover — for, however deplor-
of hers with a
able, this is not an exceptional occurrence— but that
when
she wanted to marry her lover she did not hesitate to rid her-
self of the Basileus,
her husband, by a horrible murder. It
must be added, moreover, that she made bitter expiation for
her crime.
THEOPHANO (( 121

II

At the time of Romanus IPs sudden death, on the 15th of

March 963, Theophano was twenty-two years of age. She


was left alone with four children, two boys and two girls.
Without delay she assumed the regency in the name of the
two young Porphyrogeniti, Basil, aged five, and Constan-
tine, aged two; but the situation was a singularly difficult

one for a woman, and even more so for an ambitious woman.


She found an all-powerful minister in office, the Parakoimo-
menos Joseph Bringas, who had governed despotically dur-
ing Romanus’s reign, and who might be tempted to get rid
of the Regent in order to have the power to himself during
the long minority of the young Basileis. And, on the other
hand, head of the Asiatic army, she found a victorious
at the

general, whose ambitions she might well fear, the Domestic


of the Scholae, Nicephorus Phocas.
Nicephorus Phocas was at that time the best-known and
most popular man in the Empire. He belonged to a great

aristocratic family of Cappadocia, he was the descendant of


a long line of illustrious generals, and by splendid victories
he had still further enhanced his prestige and his fame.
Crete, which had fallen to the Arabs fifty years before, he

had reconquered; beyond Taurus, into Cilicia, he had carried


the imperial standards; the great city of Aleppo he had just
taken by storm, thus breaking the pride of the Hamdanid
Emirs of Syria. Being an admirable soldier, an able tacti-
cian, and an incomparable general, who knew the way
to

talk to his men and make them follow him anywhere, he was
the idol of the soldiers, all of whose fatigues and dangers he
shared. “He lived for the army,” one of his biographers says

of him. Nor was he less popular in Constantinople. When,


122 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
on returning from the Cretan expedition, he had celebrated
a triumph in the Hippodrome, he had astonished the city by
the splendors of the stately procession, “in the course of
which all the wealth of the barbarians seemed to flow into
the circus in an immense and never-ending flood.” The re-
cipient of as many honors “as in olden times the generals of
Rome had received,” immensely rich, maintaining in his
Asiatic domains retinues of vassals passionately devoted to
his person, he was loved and admired by all. He seemed the
only leader capable of defending the Empire against the
Saracens, and Romanus H
on his deathbed had given explicit
directions that he should be continued in undisturbed posses-
sion of his command.
Whereas to a statesman such a man might seem a formi-
dable danger, it should be remarked that in the eyes of a
young woman this victorious general had none of the attrib-
utes of a hero of romance. Nicephorus Phocas, in
963, was
fifty-one years of age, and not beautiful to look
at. He was a
little man, rather with a powerful body set on short legs,
fat,
and he had, furthermore, a large head, a very dark, sun-
burned skin, and long black hair; his nose was aquiline, his
beard short and grizzled, and his black eyes, under
their
heavy eyebrows, were thoughtful and sad.
Liudprand,
Bishop of Cremona, who came on an embassy to his
court,
says that he was of unusual ugliness, “as black of skin as a
Negro, and terrifying to one who might chance
upon him in
the dark. Furthermore, he was hard
and austere, melan-
cholic in disposition and habitually
taciturn. Since the loss of
his wife, and the death of his only
son in an unfortunate ac-
cident, he had become an ardent
devotee of religion and mys-
ticism. He had taken a vow of
chastity, he no longer ate
meat, he slept on the ground like an ascetic
in the hair shirt
of his uncle Malinus, a religious
who had died in the odor of
THEOPHANO (( 123

sanctity, and he took pleasure in the society of monks. For


his spiritual director, he had chosen Athanasius, the future
founder of the oldest monastery on Mt. Athos, and, feeling
unable to do without his advice, kept him with him even in
camp. In the society of this holy man he conceived like him a
longing for the religious and thought very seriously of
life,

retiring from the world. He was actually having a cell con-


structed for his own use in the monastery that Athanasius
was building on the Holy Mountain. Ascetic and warlike,
hard, sober, stern, money-loving but unworldly, capable both
of clemency and of perfidy, he, like many of his contempo-
raries, united in his complex personality the most unex-

pected contrasts, and under his cold exterior was profoundly


passionate.
It is very hard to tell whether or not he was ambitious.
With devoted and victorious troops at his command, Nice-
phorus Phocas was in a position to risk everything in the
crisis arising from the death of Romanus II; and the tempta-
tion to revolt was the stronger because his own personal
safety seemed to demand the step. The general knew that

Bringas hated him, and that he had everything to fear from


the all-powerful minister. At first, however, as a loyal and
pious soldier concerned chiefly with the war against the infi-

del, he made no move. And his final determination to

take sideswas almost entirely due to Theophano.


One must beware of introducing too many romantic
tQuches into the story of the relations between Nicephorus
Phocas and the fair Empress. It is certain that during the
lifetime of Romanus H there was neither affection nor in-

trigue uniting the Basilissa and the Domestic of the Scholae.


But after her husband’s death, the Regent soon understood
that, among the many perils threatening her, the general

was a real power, whom she could make use of to offset the
124 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
ambitions of Bringas. She saw that in order to retain the
throne she would have to win over Nicephoms to her side,
and, being an attractive woman, she doubtless felt that it

would not be a difficult task. In any case, was due to the


it

Empress’s and in spite of


initiative, the Prime Minister’s op-
position, that Phocas was summoned to the capital, and it

seems that he was not long in falling a victim to her charms


and in espousing her cause. “It was well known in Byzan-
tium,” says M. Schlumberger, “that the exquisite sovereign’s
intoxicating charm had made an ineradicable impression
upon the simple soul of the austere Domestic of the Scholae.”
It may be imagined indeed, though contemporary
evidence is
slight, that, while at
Nicephorus’s relations with the
first

Regent had been confined to business and routine, he soon


gave evidence of his love and declared himself ready to do
anything to win her. There are no grounds for believing that
Theophano reciprocated his affection— indeed, she never
loved him; but she fully realized the great power that
he
wielded and the use she could make of it to further her inter-
ests and her ambition. For political reasons she encouraged
his passion, just as later, for the same motives, she married
him.
It must also be observed that, during his stay in Constan-
tinople, another and no less decisive reason was added to
that of Theophano’s charms to overcome
Nicephorus’s hesi-
tancy. This was the revelation which he
had of Bringas’s im-
placable hatred. Of course, the
Prime Minister had been un-
able to refuse the general a new and
splendid triumph. But
the increasing popularity of Phocas
disturbed the statesman,
who is said, furthermore, to
have suspected that a plot was
being hatched by the Domestic of the
Scholae and the Re-
gent. In vain Nicephoms, with
the tortuous diplomacy so
dear to Byzantine hearts, tried to calm
the apprehension of
THEOPHANO (( 125

the Parakoimomenos by announcing openly that his one de-


sire was to embrace the religious life. Bringas was
not de-

ceived. Blinding seemed to him the surest way of getting rid


of his rival. Phocas, fortunately for himself, when he was
summoned to the Palace on some pretext, was either suspi-
cious or else had received a friendly warning, for he took ref-
uge in the Great Church and besought the Patriarch’s protec-
Polyeuctes had his faults; he was obstinate, unyielding,
tion.

narrow-minded, and shortsighted; but he was courageous


and outspoken, and he disliked the Prime Minister. He hur-
ried off to the Sacred Palace, insisted that the Senate should
be convoked without delay, and expressed himself with such
energy and directness that Nicephorus was continued in his
command with extraordinary powers, in spite of Bringas’s
Scholae immediately left the
ill will. The Domestic of the

city and went to his headquarters at Caesarea: he was mas-


ter of the situation.
In these intrigues and counter-intrigues Theophano did
not appear openly. It is, nevertheless, highly probable that
she helped her ally to the utmost of her ability, and backed
the intervention of the Patriarch Polyeuctes with all
her

might. Similarly in the events that followed, when, in July


himself; when,
963, circumstances obliged Phocas to declare
more and more threatened by Bringas’s hatred, and fearing
for his life, the general unwillingly allowed
himself to be

proclaimed Basileus by his troops, and in the camp at Cae-


sarea put on the purple buskins; and when at last, in August
963, he appeared before Constantinople,
and a popular
revolution, sweeping away Bringas and his friends,
opened

the gates of the capital to the usurper, Theophano


played no

and seemed willing to let events take their course.


visible part
But, as a matter of fact, if Nicephorus Phocas had become
ambitious, and if then, in spite of his hesitations and scru-
126 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
pies, he had decided
assume the purple, the love that the
to
beautiful Empress had inspired in his breast had figured
largely in his resolve.And likewise, during the tragic days of
August 963, when the mob “in a fury of madness” was
charging the Minister’s soldiers and destroying his palace,
and when the Patriarch Polyeuctes and the former Parakoi-
momenos Basil were in apparent charge of the movement in
favor of the pretender, we may well believe that, in the depths
of the Gynaeceum, Theophano had come to a private under-
standing with the leaders of the revolt. Although her name
is nowhere mentioned, this intriguing,
ambitious woman was
the very soul of the great events that had just taken place.
However it may have been, on the morning of the 16th
of August 963, Nicephorus Phocas made his solemn entry
into Constantinople. On horseback, in the imperial robes of
state,he passed through the Golden Gate amid the acclama-
tions of the entire city, hailed by the people as
the savior of
the Empire and of Christianity. “The State insists that Nice-
phorus be Basileus!” cried the enthusiastic mob as he
went
by. “The Palace awaits Nicephorus! The army
calls for Nice-
phorus! The world looks to Nicephorus! Such are the wishes
of the Palace, the Army, the Senate, and the
People! Lord,
hear our prayer! Long live Nicephorus!” Riding
up the
Mesé, he reached the Forum of Constantine, where,
in the
Church of the Theotokos, he devoutly said
his prayers;
thence he walked in procession, the Holy
Cross in front, to
St. Sophia, where he was received by the Patriarch, and
there he went, holding lighted candles,
to prostrate himself
before the holy altars. Then, ascending
the ambo with Pol-
yeuctes, he was solemnly crowned
Basileus of the Romans,
as a colleague of the two young
Emperors, Basil and Con-
stantine. This done, he entered the Sacred Palace.
To com-
plete his happiness there remained
only the sweetest recom-
THEOPHANO (( 127

pense of his ambitions, the hope of which had armed him


and led him forth: there remained only to wed Theophano.
Certain chroniclers say, however, that the Empress was at
first obliged by the new master to leave the Palace. If that
is

true, it can have been nothing but a ruse, for the two allies

had had an understanding months past. There is


for several

not the slightest doubt that Nicephorus was passionately in


love with the young woman, and reasons of State, further-

more, suggested such a marriage as a sort of legitimation of


his assumption of the purple. Theophano, though, according
to some writers, unenthusiastic over this new marriage, felt

it be her only means of retaining the power, and was there-


to

fore quite willing. The two partners thus had little difficulty
in persuading one another. On the 20th of September 963,

in the New Church, the marriage was solemnly performed.


Nicephorus was at the pinnacle of joy. He took a new in-

terest in life. He utterly forgot his austerities, his mystical

dreams, and his promises, all in the happiness of possessing


Theophano. But, unlike him, his friends the monks had not
forgotten the past. When Athanasius, in his solitude on
Athos, heard of the imperial marriage, he hurried off to Con-
stantinople, frustrated in his hopes and deeply offended. On
being received by the Emperor, he treated him with his usual
freedom and reproached him harshly for having broken his
word and for having caused a scandal. Phocas exerted him-
self tocalm the monk. He explained that it was not for his
own pleasure that he had accepted the throne, and swore
sister; he
that he intended to live with Theophano as with a
promised that as soon as affairs of State should permit he

would join the brothers in the monastery. To these fair words


he added splendid gifts, and Athanasius returned somewhat
mollified to the Holy Mountain.
In Constantinople the astonishment caused by the
mar-
128 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
riage was no and the scandai greater. The Patriarch
less,

Polyeuctes was, as we have seen, a virtuous, austere man,


uncompromising toward the things of this world, from
which he was completely detached, concerned solely with the
duties and interests of the
Church, whose guardian he was,
and endowed with unconquerable courage, inflexible obsti-
nacy, and formidable frankness. His first act on becoming
Patriarch had been severely to reprimand the Emperor Con-
stantine VII, so pious a man and with such respect for
sacred
things. This time his ardent, unbending temperament
showed itself more harshly still. It was not that he felt the
slightest hostility toward Nicephorus, nor that he intended
to oppose him as a usurper; in the revolution of 963 he
had
given evidence of his devotion to Phocas, and his attitude
had
helped not a the overthrow of Bringas and in the suc-
little in

cess of the Domestic of the Scholae. But, on


the ground of
canon law, he considered intolerable the marriage of
the
Basileus, a widower, with a Princess likewise
widowed;
and when Nicephorus, in accordance with his privilege
as
Emperor, attempted to pass through the iconostasis at
St.
Sophia to receive communion, the Patriarch stoutly for-
bade him approach the altar and, as penance for his sec-
to
ond marriage, laid this inhibition on him for the
space of a
year. The Emperor, despite his irritation, had to give way be-
fore the Patriarches uncompromising firmness.
Soon another difficulty arose. Polyeuctes learned
that Nice-
phorus had stood godfather to one of Theophano’s
children.
Now, according to ecclesiastical law, a spiritual
relationship
of this kind
was an absolute impediment to the marriage that
had been contracted; and the Patriarch,
without mincing
words, gave the Basileus his choice
between repudiating
Theophano and the interdict. For so pious a
man as Phocas
such a threat was peculiarly serious.
Nevertheless, the flesh
THEOPHANO (( 129

was weak: Nicephorus refused to separate from Theophano,


and thus did not pause at precipitating a grave quarrel be-
tween State and Church. At last, however, an arrangement
was effected. A priest came forward and swore that the god-
father of the imperial child had been Bardas, the Emperor’s
father, and not Nicephorus himself. Polyeuctes saw through
the falsehood, but as he was abandoned by all, even by his
clergy, he yielded to necessity and professed to believe what
he was told. In his distress he did not even insist that the
Emperor should carry out the penance which had been im-
posed on account of his second marriage. But the Basileus
was none the less extremely irritated by this attack upon his
prestige and upon his love. He never forgave Polyeuctes
for his unseasonable interference, and Theophano was no
less bitter toward the prelate. The Emperor and his wife
never succeeded in living the matter down; a few years later
Liudprand, echoing the stories that were current in Con-
stantinople, declared outspokenly that Nicephorus’s mar-
riage was incestuous.

Ill

A marriage so ill begun ran


assorted and so inauspiciously
great risks of coming to grief. And this indeed was the swift
result. Here again detailed information upon the private life

of the imperial household during these six years is of the

scantiest; and the part that Theophano, with her usual cau-
tion and cleverness, played in it must be rather inferred from
hints than ascertained from direct testimony. We have to
content ourselves with a general view of the situation and of
the tragedy in which it ended.
Madly in love with Theophano and intoxicated with her
radiant beauty, Nicephorus, to quote the reserved, laconic
ISO )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
phrase of Leo Diaconus, did “more than was proper.” This
serious, austere, parsimonious man loaded the beautiful
Princess with sumptuous gifts, marvelous garments, and
splendid jewels; he surrounded her with all the refinements of
the most dazzling luxury; he presented her with a fortune in
estates and villas. “Nothing was too costly,” says M. Schlum-
berger, “nothing too beautiful to give his beloved Empress.”
He was totally unable to tear himself away from her. When,
in 964, he left to rejoin the army, he took Theophano along
with him, and for the first time, perhaps, in the course of his
long military career, interrupted a campaign to return the
sooner to her.
But this old soldier had nothing of the courtier. After a
brief interval of passion, war, his old love, reasserted her
supremacy over him; every year he left for the frontier to
fight Arabs, Bulgars, or Russians, and now he no longer
took Theophano with him. Furthermore, he prided himself
on being a conscientious Emperor, and so, little by little, the
once-beloved Prince became more and more unpopular. The
people, groaning under the weight of taxation; the clergy,
whose privileges Nicephorus diminished; the monks, whose
enormous landed property he tried to reduce, did not hide
their discontent. The Patriarch was in open opposition to
the Emperor. Rioting broke out in the capital. Nicephorus
was and stoned by the mob, and, in spite of the ad-
insulted
mirable composure which he displayed on this occasion, he
would have lost his life if his friends had not dragged him
away in the nick of time. Lastly, he became a prey to the
same religious mysticism that had troubled him in the past;
he became melancholy, and would no longer sleep in his im-
perial bed, but lay down in a corner on a panther-skin with a
purple pillow on it, and he resumed wearing the hair shirt of
his uncle Malinus. He was anxious, disturbed, and preoc-
THEOPHANO (( 131

cupied; he feared for his safety, and turned the Palace of the
Bucoleon into a fortress. Undoubtedly, he still adored Theo-
phano, and was more subject to her soft, hidden influence
than was prudent or reasonable. But the contrast between
the rough soldier and the elegant Princess was too pro-
nounced. He wearied her, and she was bored. The conse-
quences were serious.
Nicephorus had a nephew, John Tzimisces. He was forty-

five years of age, short, but well built and very elegant. He
was white of skin, with blue eyes, a halo of light-golden hair,
a reddish beard, a delicate and beautiful nose, and a bold
look— a man who feared nothing and nobody. Being likewise
strong, clever, agile, open-handed, and magnificent, and a bit
of a rake into the bargain, he was very fascinating. Theo-
phano in her boredom naturally found him pleasant; and it
was now that passion led her on to crime. Tzimisces was am-
bitious; he was vastly irritated, moreover, at the disgrace
which had befallen him: as the result of an incident of war,
the Emperor had degraded him from his post of Domestic of
the Oriental Scholae and had invited him to retire to his es-
tates, and his one thought was to revenge himself for an out-

rage that he deemed unmerited. Theophano, for her part,


was utterly weary of Nicephorus; their former understand-
ing had been succeeded by dislike and suspicion, and the
Empress even affected to fear that her husband intended to
make some attempt upon the lives of her sons. She was still
more impatient at being separated from her lover, for Tzi-
misces seems to have been the great and probably the only
real love of her life. In these circumstances, she surrendered
herself gradually to the contemplation of a most revolting
crime.
Nicephorus, since his return from Syria, at the beginning
of 969, had been a prey to dark forebodings. He had a feeling
122 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
that plots were being hatched against him in the dark. The
death of his aged father, the Caesar Bardas Phocas, had in-
creased his melancholy. However, he still loved Theophano.
The latter perfidiously used her influence to have Tzimisces
recalled to court. She pointed out to theEmperor how annoy-
ing it was to have to forego the services of such a man; and
very cleverly, in order to prevent Nicephorus from becoming
suspicious at too open an espousal of John’s cause, talked of
marrying him to one of her relatives. The Basileus, as usual,
gave way to his wife’s wishes. John returned to Constanti-
nople; and, owing to channels of information skillfully con-
trived by Theophano in concert with some of her household,
the two lovers met in the Palace itself, unknown to Nice-
phorus, and prepared their plot. No less was planned than
the assassination of the Basileus. Among the discontented
generals John readily found accomplices; many conferences
were held between the conspirators and between Tzimisces
and the Empress; at last, thanks to the many ramifications of
the Gynaeceum, armed men were smuggled into the Palace
and hidden in the Augusta’s apartments.
Leo Diaconus, who has left us a very striking account of
the drama, says that it was now December. The mur-
early
der had been set for the night between the 10th and the
11th. The day before, several of the conspirators, dressed as
women, had, with Theophano’s aid, entered the Sacred Pal-
ace. This time the Emperor was mysteriously warned,
and
he gave orders to one of his officers to search the women’s
quarters; but, whether the search was carelessly carried out,
or whether by deliberate intention, no one was discovered.
Meanwhile, night had fallen; they awaited only the coming
of Tzimisces to strike the blow. The conspirators
became
apprehensive; if the Emperor were to lock himself in his
room, if they had to break open the door and he were to
THEOPHANO (( 133

awake, would it not min everything? Theophano, with re-

volting composure, took upon herself to overcome this ob-


stacle. At a late hour she went to see Nicephorus in his apart-
ments and chatted pleasantly with him; then, on pretext of
having some young Bulgarian women staying in the
to visit

Palace, she went out, saying that she would be back presently
and asking him to leave the door open: she would close it on
her return. Nicephorus agreed, and when he was left alone,
said his prayers and fell asleep.
It was about eleven o’clock at night. Outside, snow was

falling, and on the Bosphorus the wind was blowing a hur-


ricane. In a little boat John Tzimisces reached the deserted
strip of shore under the walls of the imperial castle of the

Bucoleon. By means of a basket fastened to a rope, he was


hoistedup to the Gynaeceum, and at the head of the conspira-
tors went to the sovereign’s bedchamber. They had a mo-
ment of fright, for the bed was empty. But a eunuch of the
Gynaeceum, who was acquainted with Nicephoms’s habits,
pointed out the Basileus lying asleep in a corner on his
They rushed furiously
panther-skin. at him, whereupon he
awoke and jumped up. One of the conspirators with his
sword split open the Emperor’s head to the eyebrows. The
wretched man, drenched in blood, cried out: “Mother of
God, help me!” The murderers, paying no heed, dragged
him to the feet of Tzimisces, who abused him indecently
and tore out his beard. At this they all fell upon the poor
creature, who was now in the last throes. Finally John, with
a kick, turned him over and, drawing his sword, struck him
a great blow on the head; another of the assassins finished
him off. The Emperor fell dead, bathed in his blood.
At the noise of the struggle, the soldiers of the guard hur-
ried to the scene, but arrived too late. They were shown by
torchlight at a window the severed, bleeding head of their
134 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
master. This tragic sight stifled at once all thought of resist-

ance. The people followed the Empress’s example and pro-


claimed Tzimisces Emperor.

IV

Theophano, who had arranged everything, who had, as


it were, led the assassins by the hand, expected to profit

greatly by the murder. But history contains some examples


of poetic justice, as the Basilissa was shortly to learn.
Once more the Patriarch Polyeuctes gave evidence of his
indomitable energy. He had been openly at odds with the
dead sovereign. Nevertheless, when John appeared at the
gates of St. Sophia to assume the imperial crown in the Great
Church, the prelate inflexibly refused him admittance on
the ground that he was stained with the blood of his relative
and master, and gave him to understand that he would be
denied access to the holy place until the murderers had been
punished and Theophano driven from the Palace. As be-
tween the throne and his mistress, Tzimisces did not hesi-
tate a moment. He impudently denied that he had had any

share in the crime; and, the better to clear himself, complied


with the orders of Polyeuctes, betraying his associates and
sacrificingTheophano. She had dreamed of marrying the
man she loved, and of sharing with him the power so dear to
her; but it was her lover himself who decided her downfall.
He exiled her to one of the convents of Proti, in the Princes’
Islands.
But, with allher energy, and with the knowledge that she
was still beautiful— she was scarcely twenty-nine— Theo-
phano refused to resign herself to disgrace. A few months
later she escaped from prison and took refuge in St. Sophia.
Was it that she counted on her lover’s affection? Was it that
THEOPHANO (( 135

she hoped that, after the had been sur-


initial difficulties

mounted, Tzimisces in gratitude would take her back again?


Did she flatter herself that the very sight of her would win
him over? It is indeed probable. But the all-powerful minis-
ter who directed the policy of the new reign, the Parakoimo-
menos Basil, made short work of the fascinating Empress’s
attempt. Disregarding the sanctity of the place, he had her
dragged away from the Great Church and decided to send
her to a more distant exile in Armenia. All that she could ob-
tainwas permission to see a last time before departing the
man for whom she had sacrificed everything, and who was
abandoning her. This final interview, at which the Parakoi-
momenos took the precaution of being present, seems to have
been extraordinarily Theophano reviled Tzimisces
violent.

unmercifully, and then, in a paroxysm of rage, fell upon the


minister with her fists. She had to be dragged out of the audi-
ence chamber. Her life was over.
What became of her in her melancholy exile? What suf-
ferings did she endure in the distant convent wherein she
dragged out her life, far from the splendors of the court, far

from the elegance with the bitterness of


of the Sacred Palace,

her frustrated hopes and the regret of her lost power? No one
knows. At all events, if she had been guilty, she paid dearly
for her crime. Six years she languished in her solitude, until
Tzimisces’s death. She was then, in 976, recalled to Constan-
tinople by her sons, who had now become the actual rulers.

But, whether her pride was broken and her ambition burnt
out, or whether, as is more likely, the Parakoimomenos Basil,

who was still all-powerful, had made it a condition of her re-

turn, she seems never again to have taken any part in affairs
of State. She died in obscurity in the Palace, the date of her
death being unknown. And thus to the very end, this ambi-
tious, fascinating, perverse Princess remains to some extent

an enigma and a mystery.


mm VII

ZOÈ THE
PORPHYROGENITA
I

n the month of November 1028, Constantine VIII, Em-


I peror of Byzantium, realizing that he was very ill, and
being moreover nearly seventy years of age, decided that it
was time to settle the succession to the throne. One may, per-
haps, be astonished that, as the last male representative of
the Macedonian dynasty, he had not previously thought of
arranging so important and necessary a matter. The truth is
that all his life Constantine VIII had never thought of any-
thing at all.

Having been from childhood the colleague of his brother


Basil II, he had lived for fifty years in the shadow of this en-
ergetic and mighty sovereign, taking no interest in public
matters and accepting only the advantages and pleasures of
power. Then, when Basil’s death had left him sole ruler of
the Empire, he had been unable to abandon his old, accus-
tomed habits, and had continued as before to lead his own
life to the neglect of all else. He was a great spendthrift, and

136
ZOË THE PORPHYROGENITA (( 137

had squandered with open hands his brother s patiently ac-


cumulated savings. A devotee of pleasure and of the table
he excelled in ordering a dinner, and occasionally conde-
scended to invent a sauce to suit himself — he had entered
with such fervor into these amusements that he had become
so gouty as hardly to be able to walk. In addition, he
adored
circus
the Hippodrome, was passionately interested in the
contests,and doted on animal fights and on spectacles. He
loved gambling, and when once he had the dice in his hands,
everything else, the reception of ambassadors, business that
needed his attention, was all forgotten. At such times he even
nights in
forgot his chief pleasure, the table, and spent whole
play. One can understand between so many absorbing
that,

occupations, it had slipped his mind that he was the last


male

of his race, and that his sole heirs were his


three unmarried

daughters.
Their names were Eudocia, Zoe, and Theodora. Concern-
ing the eldest, Eudocia, history has little to say.
She was a
woman of simple tastes, moderate intelligence, and equally
moderate looks : an illness in early childhood had ruined her
convent,
beauty for ever. While quite young she entered a
and is heard of no more. Her two sisters were totally
differ-

ent and very much more interesting, but they


had both, by a
curious chance, been left to grow old in the obscurity of the

Gynaeceum. Neither their uncle Basil, who nevertheless


liked them well enough, but who seems to
have had a certain

contempt for women — he himself had never


married nor
to find husbands
their father Constantine, had ever bothered
for them. In 1028 they were very old maids: Zoe
was fifty,
and Theodora but little less.
ripe Princesses that,
It was upon these two somewhat

afterthe death of Constantine VIH, the throne


would de-
But although, since the foundation of the Macedonian
volve.
1S8 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
house, the hereditary principle had made sufficient progress
in Byzantium for no one to take umbrage at the Empire pass-
ing to women, the Basileus thought that in the circumstances
a man would not be out of place in the Palace, and hastily
sought a husband play the part of Prince Consort for his
to
favorite daughter Zoe, whom he considered the better suited
to the throne. He upon an Armenian nobleman, Constan-
hit
tine Dalassenus, and had him sent for. But Constantine
was
far from the capital, on his estates, and time was short.
Then,
changing his mind, the Emperor turned to the Praefect of the
City, Romanus Argyrus. He was ahandsome man, of good
family, over sixty years of age; unfortunately, he was mar-
ried and loved his wife, who adored him. This did not deter
Constantine VHI. When
he wanted anything, he employed
expeditious means and unanswerable arguments: he
gave
Romanus the choice between divorce and blinding, and to
hasten his surrender and, above all, his wife’s, pretended
to
be furiously angry and ordered the Praefect’s immediate
ar-
rest. Thereupon Romanus’s wife, in great distress, realized
that, if she wished to save her husband,
she had only to dis-
appear; so she hastily entered a convent, and
Romanus mar-
ried Zoe. Three days later Constantine VHI
died contented,
and his two daughters and his son-in-law ascended
the
throne.
For nearly a quarter of a century Zoe the
Porphyrogenita
was destined to make the Imperial Palace hum
with her scan-
dalous behavior; and the story of her life
is certainly one of
the raciest in Byzantine history, and one of the most famil-
all

iar. Whereas we are so ill


informed about the majority of the
Empresses who reigned in the Sacred Palace
that we can
with difficulty form even the slightest
notion of them, Zoe
stands forth in the full light of day.
She has had the good for-
tune— for us— to have as biographer one of the most intelli-
ZOË THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 139

gent and remarkable men that Byzantium ever produced,


namely Michael Psellus.
Knowing the Empress well, and acquainted, in his capac-
ity as Grand Chamberlain and minister, with all the court in-
trigues, interested in everything that took place, eager for
every bit of gossip, and very indiscreet and loquacious into
the bargain, Psellus has, with admirable complaisance and
often with extraordinary freedom of language, revealed
everything he saw or heard. There is no secret hidden from
him, no detail, even the most intimate, that he has not in some
way become acquainted with; and as he had a deep fund of
wit, humor, and malice, the story he tells is one of the raciest
and most pungent to be found anywhere. Doubtless, we must
not take all he says literally: at times he makes a wdde detour
around the facts, when politics, in which he played a great
But with practically this one
part, are too directly involved.
exception he is very trustworthy, and since his natural idle
curiosity, always on the watch for the slightest event, im-
pelled him early in life to be observant, he is usually perfectly
informed. And then it is such good luck to find, among so

many dry, boring chroniclers, one who can both use his eyes
and write, a master of the difficult art of portraiture, an in-
comparable teller of spicy tales. It has been said, without too
much exaggeration, that Psellus reminds one of Voltaire,
and, as a matter of fact, he touched on everything and wrote
of everything. Besides his history, we have hundreds of little

treatises from his pen on the most diverse subjects: speeches


and verses, letters and pamphlets, philosophical treatises,
works on physics, on astronomy, on physiology, and even on
demonology. And like Voltaire he touches everything with a
caustic wit, a malicious humor, and a universal curiosity. By
the boldness of his conceptions and the originality of his
ideas, Psellus was one of the most eminent men of his time;
140 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
by his love of classical antiquity and of Platonic philosophy,
he, living in the eleventh century, is a kind of forerunner of
the Renaissance.
His character was, undoubtedly, not the equal of his intel-
lect. His mediocrity of soul, his love of intrigue, his servile

flatteries, his rapid and scandalous changes of side, and his


childish, unhealthy vanity, show that Psellus is but too per-
fect a specimen of the court and of the corrupt Byzantine
life

society in which he lived. But, on the other hand, he helps us


so well to understand it all that he is really invaluable. In our
narrative we shall have constantly to return to his book; and
to must often refer the reader when his anecdotes, though
it I

always amusing and witty, become much too embarrassing


to translate.

H
At the time when Zoë, with her husband Romanus,
ascended the throne of Byzantium, she was, we are told, still
perfectly charming, despite her fifty summers. Psellus, who
knew her well, has drawn a very interesting portrait of her.
She seems have resembled her uncle Basil: she had large
to
eyes under heavy eyebrows, a slightly aquiline nose, and
beautiful fair hair.Her complexion and her whole body were
of dazzling whiteness; she was of incomparable grace and
most harmoniously proportioned. “Anyone not knowing her
age,” says Psellus, “would have taken her for a young girl.”
She had not a single wrinkle: “Every part of her,” says the
historian, “was firm and in good condition.” She was of me-
dium height, but slender and well made, and she had a very
elegant figure. And although later in life she grew somewhat
fatter,her face remained to the end remarkably young. At
the age of seventy-two, when her trembling hands and her
ZOÉ THE PORPHTROGENITA ff 141

bent back betrayed her age, “her face,” says Psellus, “was
radiant with youthful beauty.” She had a regal manner and a
bearing truly imperial. But she was not overfond of the trou-
blesome demands of ceremonial. Being very careful of her
beauty, she preferred simple dresses to the heavy, gold-
embroidered gowns decreed by etiquette, the massive dia-
dem and the splendid jewels. “She clothed her beautiful
body,” says her biographer, “in filmy garments.” On the

other hand, she was devoted to perfumes and cosmetics, and


imported them from Ethiopia and India; and her apartments,
in which great fires were kept burning all the year round for
the preparation of the salves and lotions that her women
made for her, had the appearance of a laboratory. And there
it was that she preferred to spend her time; she did not care
much for fresh air, for walking in the gardens, or for any-
thing that might sully her borrowed loveliness and impair a
beauty that she was already obliged to take great care of.
Zoë was moderately intelligent, absolutely ignorant, lively,
enthusiastic, and irritable. Gaily and thoughtlessly she de-
cided matters of life and death, quick to take sides and to
change them; with but little logic or stability of mind, she
treated affairs of State with the same frivolity as the amuse-
ments of the Gynaeceum. In spite of her beauty she made
a sufficiently incapable sovereign, since she was rather silly,

very vain, childish, capricious, volatile, and quite open to


flattery. compliment delighted her. She was enchanted
A
when one spoke of the antiquity of her lineage or of the glo-

ries of her uncle Basil, and even more enchanted when one
spoke of herself. And it became a game among the courtiers

to make her believe that no one could look at her without be-

ing immediately struck dumb with amazement. She was ex-


travagant with regard to herself, absurdly generous to oth-

ers, and affected an insane prodigality; but on occasion she


142 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
could be inexorable and cruel. Like all her contemporaries
she was pious; but it was an exclusively external piety, of the
kind that burns incense before icons, and lights candles on
altars. Public matters bored her, nor did women’s work inter-

esther either. She did not care for embroidery, weaving, or


spinning, but would sit idle for hours at a time, fatuously.
One can thus understand that her active, untiring uncle
Basil, though fond of her, must have rather despised her.
This blonde, soft, silly creature had, moreover, none too
good blood in her veins. As the granddaughter of that Ro-
manus II who died young from the results of fast living, and
of the notorious Theophano, and daughter of such an idler as
Constantine VIII, she had every right to the amorous tem-
perament which she was soon to manifest. Very proud of her
beauty, convinced that she was irresistible, furious at having
had to waste the best years of her youth in the Gynaeceum,
full of unsatisfied desires, and fascinated by the call of the un-
known, she was now, at the age of fifty and more, to fill court
and town with her scandalous behavior, and with such pas-
sion and with so little restraint that her contemporaries were
often in doubt as to her entire sanity.
Romanus Argyrus, finding himself married to a woman so
headstrong and so eager for new sensations, felt that he owed
it to himself, to Zoe, to the late Emperor his father-in-law,
and to the State, to produce an heir to the throne as soon as
possible. And at this point already, I am obliged to refer the
reader to Psellus to learn by what means— both magical and
physiological— by what learned combinations of unguents,
massage, and amulets, Romanus and Zoe set to work to real-
ize their desire. But, whilst engaged in these
exercises, the
Emperor soon awoke to the fact that he was sixty,which was
considerable, and that the Empress was fifty, which was ex-
cessive; and so, leaving his wife and considerations of State
ZOË THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 143

in the lurch, he devoted himself to the government of the Em-


pire.

The lady had not reckoned on such treatment. Deeply


wounded in her pride, to begin with, at being thus scorned,
Zoe had other grounds for discontent, unconnected with
either vanity or considerations of State; as a crowning mis-
fortune, and as if to cap the climax, Romanus in forsaking

her society had had the idea of putting an immediate stop to


her ridiculous extravagance. Furiously angry, and feeling
more keenly than ever a longing for adventures, Zoe cast
about for consolation and found it without difficulty. She sin-
gled out Constantine, the High Steward, and after him an-
other Constantine, of the great house of Monomachus, whose
relationship to the Emperor had gained him admittance to
the Palace. They both pleased her for a while on account of
theirgood looks, their charm, and their youth; but their favor
was not of long duration. Soon Zoe’s choice settled upon an-
other lover. Among the intimates of Romanus III was a eu-
nuch named John, an astute, corrupt man and a great favor-
ite of the Emperor. This John had a brother named Michael,

a remarkably handsome fellow with sparkling eyes, a clear


skin, and a fine figure, whom the poets of the time unani-
mously praise for his captivating charm. John presented him
at court: he pleased the Emperor, who took him into his serv-

ice;and he pleased the Empress even more, so that she sud-


denly developed an overwhelming passion for him. And, as
Psellus says, “since she was incapable of controlling her de-
sires. /
she knew no rest until the handsome Michael had
reciprocated her affection.”
There followed a thoroughly amusing little comedy in the
Palace, which Psellus has maliciously related. Hitherto Zoe
had heartily detested the eunuch John; but now, in order to
have excuses to talk with the man she loved, she treated him
144 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
with cordiality, and sent for him to inform his brother that he
would always receive a warm welcome from his sovereign
whenever he should appear in her presence. The young man,
not in the least understanding this sudden and extraordinary
kindness, came Zoe
some embarrassment, worried and
to in
blushing, to bow and scrape. But the Princess encouraged
him; she smiled at him pleasantly, relaxed the sternness of
her awful brow, and even alluded in discreet terms to her sen-
timents. Schooled, however, by his brother, Michael finally
understood. He grew audacious; from loving attitudes he
passed to kisses; soon he became more daring still, “less fas-
cinated perhaps,” says the impertinent Psellus, “by the lady’s
overripe charms than flattered in his pride by the glory of an
imperial adventure.” Zoe was very seriously in love, and
committed every kind of imprudence. She was to be seen
kissing her lover in public and sitting with him on the same
couch. Naturally, she delighted in decking her favorite like an
idol; she covered him with jewels and fine clothes, and show-

ered him with magnificent presents. She went even further;


one day she conceived the idea of making him sit upon the
Emperor’s very throne, crowned and sceptered, and pressing
him close to her, called him by the most loving names “My:

idol, my flower of beauty, joy of my eyes, consolation of my


soul.” One of the inmates of the Palace, happening to enter
the room, nearly swooned shock of this unexpected
at the
scene; but Zoe, unabashed, ordered him to prostrate
himself
at Michael s feet, saying: “He is henceforth
Emperor; one
day he will be so in very truth.”
The knew of their liaison. Romanus was, of
entire court
course, the only one who perceived nothing.
Some of his inti-
mate friends and his sister Pulcheria, who hated the
Em-
press, thought their duty to enlighten him.
it But the Em-
peror refused to believe it, and being a good-natured Prince
ZOË THE PORPHYROGENITA rr 145

called Michael and asked him what truth there


to his study,

was in the tale. Michael protested that he was the innocent


victim of odious calumnies, and the Basileus was convinced
and liked him even better than before. As a mark of his confi-
dence he went so far as to permit him to enter the imperial
bedchamber itself; at night, when he was in bed alongside of
Zoe, he used to call the young man to his bedside and ask him
to rub his feet. “Is it conceivable,” says a prudish chronicler,

“that in doing so he never touched the Basilissa’s feet?” Ro-


manus did not bother about that, for he was not a jealous
Emperor.
He could reassure himself, furthermore, if he so desired.
The handsome Michael suffered from an unpleasant disease:
he had attacks of epilepsy. “Such a man,” remarked the Em-
peror, “really could neither love nor inspire love.” In the long
run, however, Romanus was unable to doubt his misfortune,
but being a philosopher he preferred to pay no attention. He
understood Zoe, and knew that, if he were to remove Mi-
chael, he would run the undoubted risk of seeing her plunge
into fresh and more numerous adventures; and considering a
single intrigue less injurious to the imperial dignity than a
succession of blazing scandals, he systematically shut his
eyes to the proof. “And the Empress’s liaison,” says Psellus,
“was publicly established and acquired an almost legal

status.”
Romanus, meanwhile, was failing visibly in health. He ate

little and and his character was undergoing a


slept badly,

change. He became violent, irritable, and disagreeable; he no


longer laughed; he distrusted everyone and grew angry over
nothing, and was in fact wasting away. He insisted on per-
forming conscientiously his duties as Emperor; but under his
splendid robes of state he looked a dying man; his face was
sunken, his skin was yellow, his breath came short and pant-
146 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
ing, and his hair fell out by the handful. It appears that Mi-
chael and Zoe had been administering V slow poison to the
unfortunate monarch— though he scarcely bothered them at
all-in order to rid themselves of his troublesome presence.
But the poison did not enough to satisfy the amo-
act quickly
rous Empress. Consequently, on the morning of Holy Thurs-
day, when the Emperor was in his bath, at the moment of
dipping his head under the water, as he always did, some
servants, who had received orders, held him in that position
rather longer than was necessary. He was taken out fainting
and three-quarters suffocated, and laid on his bed, breathing
with difficulty and unable to speak. When later he regained
consciousness, he tried to convey his meaning by signs; but,
seeing that no one understood him, he closed his eyes sadly
and soon expired. At this occurrence Zoe did not even take
the trouble to hide her feelings. On learning of the accident
she hurried to the imperial bedchamber to see for herself
what her husband’s condition was, and did not consider it
worth while to be present at the end. She had more important
things to think of.

HI

Zoe’s sole aim was to secure the throne for Michael. In


vain the courtiers and the old servants of Constantine VHI
exhorted her to think it over, to give the crown only to the
worthiest, and above all not to put herself too much into her
new husband’s power. She thought only of her lover. The eu-
nuch John, astute politician that he was, pressed her to de-
cide quickly. “We are all lost,” thought he to himself, “if
there any delay.” Without waiting, therefore, on the night
is

between Holy Thursday and Good Friday, Zoe sent for Mi-
chael to come to the Palace. She made him don the imperial
ZOE THE PORPHYROGENITA (( 147
robes, and, putting the crown on his head, sat him on the
throne beside herself and commanded all those present to rec-
ognize him as their lawful sovereign. The Patriarch, sum-
moned at dead of night, came in haste. He expected to find
Romanus, but instead discovered Zoë and Michael in robes
of state in the great Golden Triclinium; and the Empress
asked him to marry her without delay to the new Basileus.
The prelate hesitated; so, in order to convince him, they made
him a splendid present of fifty pounds’ weight in gold, and
promised him a like sum for his clergy. He yielded to these ar-
guments and obeyed. On the morrow the Senate was con-
voked to render homage to the new master and to pay their
last respects to the old. And while, with face uncovered, ac-
cording to the custom, Romanus HI was being carried away,
unrecognizable and already decomposing— Psellus, who saw
the procession pass, has left a striking account of it— in the
Sacred Palace the great dignitaries were prostrating them-
selveshumbly before Michael and kissing the upstart’s hand.
Zoë had not remained a widow twenty-four hours.
The soul of the new government was the Emperor’s
brother, the eunuch John. He was a man who thought and
acted with rapidity, hard and haughty of mien, a remarkable
politician, and a first-rate financier. He had an excellent
knowledge of public affairs, and was in close touch with all
that went on in the capital and in the State; and he pursued
the realization of his ideas and ambitions even in the noise of
feasts and the tumult of banquets. Amid the glow of festivi-
ties he kept close watch upon his companions, and had the val-
uable power of remembering precisely what those around
him had when he himself had been in-
said in their cups, even
toxicated. Thus he inspired a wholesome terror, and was
feared more perhaps when drunk than when sober. He was
absolutely devoted to his brother, whom he adored, ambi-
148 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
tious for him alone, and put at his service his intelligence, his

ability, and his deep knowledge of men. It was he who had


previously thrown Michael into Zoë’s arms; but now that,

thanks to her, Michael had become Emperor, he considered


gratitude to the Basilissa altogether superfluous. The Basi-
leus after his coronation had been at first very friendly to

Zoe, obeying her least wish and seeking every opportunity to

please her. But under his brother’s influence his attitude soon
changed. “It is impossible for me,” says Psellus, “either to
praise him or blame him for it. I certainly do not approve of
ingratitude toward one’s benefactress; and yet I cannot blame
him for fearing lest he should meet the fate of her first hus-

band.” Michael knew Zoe too well not to distrust her.


He began by exiling all on whom she had formerly be-
stowed her favors. Next, on his brother’s advice, he took mat-
ters into his own hands and commanded the Empress to con-

fine herself to the Gynaeceum, and to refrain in future from


appearing in the official processions. At the same time, he
took away her eunuchs and the most faithful of her women,
and in their place put some ladies of his own family to spy
upon her. An officer devoted to Michael was appointed Mas-
ter of Ceremonies to the Empress, and soon she was kept un-

der such strict surveillance that she was allowed to receive no


one unless it were known in advance who he was and what he
had to say to her. She was forbidden even to leave her apart-
ments, to take a walk, or to go to the baths without the Em-
peror’s express permission. Zoe was exasperated at such
treatment, but had no means of resistance. So she put on the
best face she could and simulated unalterable sweetness and
perfect resignation; she bore without complaint the outrages
and humiliations that were meted out to her, never reproach-
ing Michael, inveighing against nobody, and gracious even
ZOÉ THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 149

to her very gaolers.But after all that she had done for her for-
mer lover, the blow was as hard as it was unexpected.
The most difficult thing for her to bear was the fact that
Michael himself, whom formerly she had loved so well, now
kept away from her in horror and refused even to see her.
Apart from some embarrassment at having repaid her kind-
ness with such ingratitude, he felt his illness to be gaining
upon him; his epileptic fits became worse and more frequent,
and he was in constant fear of a seizure in Zoë’s presence.
Furthermore, as he was not a bad man, he suffered from re-
morse and tried to make expiation for his sins. All his time
was spent in the society of monks; in the Palace he sur-
rounded himself with ascetics, clad in rags picked up in
the streets, and as penance he slept humbly at their feet,
stretched out on a board with his head upon a stone. He built
hospitals and churches; and he had a special devotion for De-
metrius, the great saint of Thessalonica, and for Cosmas and
Damian, the physician-saints, who bore the reputation in By-
zantium of being able to cure the most incurable diseases.

But nothing served to allay his sufferings or his restlessness.

Therefore his spiritual directors, to whom he had confessed


his follies and his crimes, ordered him to refrain from all

physical connection with his wife. And he piously followed


their directions.
Zoë, cut off from all that she loved, finally revolted. She
knew that she was popular in the capital both as a woman
and the lawful heir to the monarchy, and also on account of
her lavish munificence. She rebelled, therefore, against the
treatment which she was receiving. Soon she went even fur-
ther, and is said to have attempted to have the Prime Minis-
ter poisoned, hoping that, once removed from his baneful in-

fluence, Michael, whom she still loved, would submissively


150 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
return to her. Her attempt was a failure, and its only result
was to increase her troubles. This state of affairs lasted until
the Emperor’s death. Michael’s health was steadily deterio-

rating, and was still further impaired by the reaction follow-


ing the burst of energy with which he had overcome the
revolted Bulgarians. He felt himself at the point of death.
Overwhelmed with remorse and anxious at least to end his
life piously, he had himself transported in the month of

December 1041, to a monastery that he had founded, where


in accordance with a widespread Byzantine custom he put
on the black monastic habit in order to die in the odor of
sanctity. When news was brought to the Imperial
this

Gynaeceum, Zoe, wild with grief, and anxious to see for the
last time the husband and lover whom she could not forget,

despite her dignity and in the face of all etiquette ran on foot
to the monastery to bid him a final farewell. But Michael

was eager to die in peace, and he coldly refused to receive


the woman who had loved and lost him. Soon afterward he
passed away.

IV

For some time past, the eunuch John had foreseen this
event and had taken the necessary steps. The death of Mi-
chael IV, by necessarily restoring to Zoë the fullness and the
free exercise of imperial power, would certainly be the ruin
of all the hopes that this exceedingly ambitious man had
formed for his relatives. He had therefore suggested that his
brother should associate with him in his lifetime one of their
nephews, likewise named Michael, and take advantage of
Zoë’s popularity to give the upstart a legal investiture and
smooth his path to power. It had therefore been suggested to
the aged Empress to adopt this young man; and, strangely
ZOE THE PORPHYROGENITA (( 151

enough, in spite of the insults which she had been sub-


to
jected, Zoe had been only too delighted to comply with her
husband’s wishes. In the Church of Blachernae, in the pres-
ence of the assembled people, she had solemnly declared be-
fore the holy altars that she took her husband’s nephew to be
her son, after which the new Prince Imperial had received the
title of Caesar and the rank of heir apparent.

Like all his family, Michael V was of very humble origin.


His father had even been a calker in the port, and that is why
the inhabitants of the capital, always ready for a jest, soon
gave the young Caesar the nickname of Michael Calaphates,
or the Calker. He himself was an unpleasant sort of person,
bad, ungrateful, untruthful, with a private grudge against all

his benefactors. His uncle, the Emperor Michael, who knew


him well, cared very little for him, and, notwithstanding that
he had brought him to the steps of the throne, excluded him
from affairs of state and from the court. His uncle, the eu-
nuch John, though nephew professed great respect for
his
him, likewise regarded him with distrust. He was destined
amply to justify all the misgivings that he inspired.
The power was transmitted peacefully, however, when
Michael IV died. Zoe, weak of character and old, was “very
easily led,” as Psellus puts it, and did whatever she was
asked. Her former enemy and persecutor, the eunuch John,
had only to show her great respect; he threw himself at her
feet and said that without her the State was powerless; he
swore that, if her adopted son were to ascend the throne,
he would be Emperor only in name, and that all the actual
power would be in her hands. She was fascinated by this
i
clever comedy and enchanted at the unexpected compliments
land at the influence that she enjoyed once more, and, there-
fore, she characteristically consented to everything. Michael
!
V was proclaimed Basileus.
152 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
The new Emperor repaid ill all who had helped him rise.
He began by getting rid of his uncle John, and gave his place
as Prime Minister, together with the title of Nobilissimus, to

another of his uncles, Constantine. Then he decided that Zoe


was in the way. Like Michael IV, he too at first had shown
great respect to his adoptive mother. “She is my Empress,”
he used to say in speaking of her; “she is my sovereign. I am
wholly devoted to her.” But soon he thrust her aside; he di-

minished her allowance, refused her the honors due to her


rank, and kept her in the Gynaeceum under strict guard, tak-
ing away her women and openly ridiculing her. His compan-
ions kept telling him that he had better dethrone the aged
Princess if he did not wish to suffer the fate of his predeces-

sors. Michael thought himself strong enough to carry out the

scheme; he imagined that he was popular in the capital-


had not the people at the recent Easter festivities welcomed
him in the streets with such unbounded enthusiasm that the
road beneath his horses’ hoofs was spread with priceless
rugs? Believing in his star, proud of what he was daring to
undertake, scorning all advice, on the 18th of April 1042, he
determined to turn his benefactress out.

On Sunday night, Zoe was arrested in her apartments on


the pretext that she had tried to poison the Emperor, and not-
withstanding her cries and protests, was put hastily, with
only one servant, aboard a vessel and taken to the neighbor-
ing island of Prinkipo. Upon her was shut
arrival there, she
up by the Basileus’s orders in a convent, and forced to wear
the habit of a nun, and her long gray hair was cut off and
carried to Michael as evidence that his wishes had been exe-
cuted. Having thus got rid of the Empress and believing her
forever dead to the world, the Emperor convoked the Senate
and solemnly pronounced her dethroned. But he had not
counted upon the traditional devotion of the people to the
ZOÈ THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 153

Macedonian house. As soon as the news spread through the


city, there was great disturbance; everywhere there were sor-

rowful faces, angry looks, anxious talk, and stormy gather-


ings, which the guard soldiers had great difficulty in dispers-
ing. The women, in particular, showed intense excitement,

and filled the streets with their cries. Moreover, when the

Praefect of the City appeared in the Forum of Constantine to

read the imperial proclamation announcing the event, he had


hardly finished before a voice cried out, bluntly: “We don’t

want the Calker to be our Emperor! We want the lawful heir-


ess, our mother Zoë!” At these words, there went up a great

shout: “Death to the Calker!” The revolution had broken out.


The people armed themselves in haste with anything that
came handy, and the mob went surging through the city.
Prisons were broken open and houses burned or pillaged.
Soon the Palace was attacked. On the advice of his uncle Con-
stantine, who with the people of his household had bravely
come to the aid of the Basileus and had organized the de-
fense,Michael decided to make a concession to the rioters.

Zoë was hurriedly brought from her convent to the Sacred


Palace, in dire apprehension as to her fate. In the greatest
haste, without giving her time even to remove her religious
habit, she was taken to the imperial box in the Hippodrome,
where she and Michael appeared before the rebellious mob.
The excitement of the people on beholding the Empress de-
spoiled of the imperial robes, far from diminishing, grew
more intense. In vain the Emperor tried to address the rebels;
he was answered by insults and stones, and, returning with
the aged Princess to the Palace, the wretch thought only of
flight, until his uncle Constantine inspired him with fresh

courage and prevailed upon him to resist.


Meanwhile, in St. Sophia, an unexpected occurrence had
infused new strength into the revolt.
154 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Zoë, as we have had a sister, Theodora. Although
seen,
she had been associated in the Empire since the death of Con-
stantine VIII, this Princess, in spite of occupying asomewhat
less exalted position than her elder sister, soon became a nui-

sance to the latter, who detested her. She was at first kept in
the Palace under secret surveillance; later she was accused of
conspiring against established authority, and on this pretext
was sent away from court and banished to the convent of the
Petrion. Then, a few months afterward, on the ground that
otherwise it would be impossible, as a chronicler says, to put
an end “to intrigues and scandals,” Zoë went in person to the
convent and in her own presence had Theodora’s hair cut off.
The Princess’s public life was to all appearances over. She
seems have accustomed herself without much difficulty to
to
her lot, satisfied with the external honors that the Emperor
Romanus, her brother-in-law, permitted her out of kindness
to retain, and in her cloister she was gradually forgotten. Mi-
chael IV had treated Zoë— that is to say,
treated her as he
badly enough. As for Michael V, he does not seem even to
have suspected that, apart from Zoë, there was left any lawful
descendant of Constantine VIII, and he would have been put
to it for an answer had he been asked whether Theodora was
alive or dead.

The revolution of 1042 suddenly restored this forgotten


nun to the highest rank. When Michael V
overthrew his ben-
efactress, the insurgents, in casting around for a legitimate
heir with which to oppose the usurper, remembered Theo-
dora. She had retained some friends, furthermore, among her
father s former servants and even in the Senate. These poli-
ticians realized that the doting, volatile Zoë was quite capa-
ble,once restored to power, of receiving again into full favor
the man who had dethroned her; and they felt it necessary,
if
the revolution were fully to accomplish its end, to associate a
ZOË THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 155

more energetic Empress with the old, indulgent Basilissa.

They therefore hurried to the convent of the Petrion and of-


fered the Empire to the nun, and, when she hesitated and re-

sisted, the mob carried her off almost by force. The imperial
mantle was thrown over her shoulders; she was lifted upon a
horse, and, surrounded by drawn swords, amid the cheers of

the populace, was taken across the city to St. Sophia. The
Patriarch, who was devotedly attached to the Macedonian
house, awaited her there in order to proclaim her. The rioters

now had an Empress.


This was on Monday evening. The first act of the new gov-
ernment that had been formed in the Great Church was to
proclaim the dethronement of Michael V and to appoint a
new Praefect of the City. But so long as the Palace held out,
allwas still to win. During the whole of Tuesday, fighting
went on around the imperial residence, and in the bloody as-
saults upon it more than three thousand were killed. But at
evening, the besiegers managed to break in the doors, and,
while the mob stopped to pillage, the Emperor with his uncle
the Nobilissimus and some friends had time to jump into a
boat and make their way by sea to the venerated monastery of
the Studion. There the defeated Basileus and his minister as-
sumed the monastic habit, hoping thus to save their lives.
The victorious populace were wild with joy. “Some,” says
Psellus in a curious passage, “made offerings to God, while
others cheered the Empress; the people of the lower classes
gathered in groups in the public squares, dancing, and sing-
ing ballads about the recent events.” Zoë, whom Michael V
before his flight had set at liberty, and who had immediately
resumed the power in the Palace, was no less happy, and
quite ready in consequence to grant free pardons. But, in St.
Sophia, the people of Theodora’s following were less inclined
to leniency; and the multitude, who had already forced Zoë
156 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
to recognize her sister as colleague, now clamored for the ex-
ecution of the guilty ones. Zoe tried in vain to persuade the
Senate to be merciful; in vain, from a balcony of the Palace,
she addressed the people and thanked them. When she went
on speak of the overthrown Emperor, and asked what
to

should be done to him, a universal cry went up: “Death to the


scoundrel, the villain! Impale him! Crucify him! Blind him!”
While Zoe hesitated, Theodora, confident of her popular-
ity, acted. By her orders the Praefect of the City dragged the
dethroned Emperor and the Nobilissimus, amid the jeers of
themob, from the Studion, where they had sought sanctuary,
and outside in the street, under the eyes of the spectators,
who ravened “like wild beasts” against their victims, had
them blinded. Afterward they were exiled. The revolution
was over.
was Theodora who, by her intervention, her
In this crisis it

energy, and her decision, had really saved the situation, and,
as Psellus says, “overthrown the tyranny.” In spite of herself,
therefore, Zoe had to share the fruits of victory with her sis-
ter. Indeed, rather than have this detested colleague, she
would have preferred anyone else; she would sooner have
seen, says Psellus energetically, a stableboy on the throne
than Theodora; and that was why she had tried as hard to
save Michael V as Theodora’s followers to be revenged upon
him. But Zoe had no choice. The Senate and people pro-
nounced in favor of her and she yielded. She had a rec-
sister,
onciliation with Theodora, threw her arms around her, of-
fered her half of the power, and had her brought in great
state from Sophia to the Sacred Palace. Theodora, with
St.
her usual modesty, accepted the imperial dignity only on con-
dition that her elder sister should have first place. And now
was seen an extraordinary state of affairs, unknown hitherto
in Byzantium: namely, the Gynaeceum becoming the official
ZOE THE PORPHYROGENÎTA (( 157
center of public affairs, and the Empire governed by two old
women. And, what is even more extraordinary, these two old
women made themselves obeyed.
Seldom, however, have two near relatives been more un-
like, both physically and intellectually, than these sisters.

Whereas Zoë was pretty, well-proportioned, and elegant,


Theodora, though rather younger, was ill-favored; she was
ugly, and her overlong body was wholly disproportionate to
her very small head. Whereas Zoë was lively, violent, and
flighty, Theodora was dignified, calm, and slow to decide.

Zoë threw money away by the handful, was wasteful, extrav-


agant, and ridiculously generous. Theodora kept track of ex-
penditures; she was very economical — possibly because be-
fore coming to the throne she had never had much to spend
—and loved to store up her wealth in great strongboxes; and,
having no taste for luxuries, nor being of a generous dispo-
sition, she spent little on herself, and even less on others.

Whereas Zoë was eager and passionate, Theodora was


chaste, proper, and irreproachable, and had always energeti-
cally refused to marry. She was a worthy creature, on the
whole, amiable, kindly disposed, reserved, unassertive, and
modest, and seemed made to fill the minor parts which fitted

her so well. One quality, however, she had: she was a good
speaker and liked to exercise her gift; and she was also, as we
have seen, capable of occasional bursts of energy. Taken all
in all, she, like Zoë, was mediocre, without very much char-
acter, and incapable of sustained effort. But, in spite of their
common mediocrity, the sisters were too dissimilar to care
greatly for one another or to get on well together for long.
Psellus has drawn a very curious picture of the court at
this period. Every day, in accordance with etiquette, the two
Empresses came in state costume and took their places side
by side on the throne of the Basileis. Near them stood their
158 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
councilors, and around them in a double circle were ranged
the ushers, the swordbearers, and the Varangians carrying
the heavy double-edged ax, all with eyes lowered out of re-
spect for the sex of their sovereigns. The two Princesses gave
judgment, received ambassadors, and dealt with affairs of
State, giving at times an order or an answer in low tones, and
even venturing occasionally to express their own wishes. And
civilians and soldiers gave obedience to these gentle, tactful
women.
But since, on the whole, they were both rather incompe-
regime could not be of long duration. The luxury of
tent, this

the court— for now, as by a swift change of scene, each vied


with the other in magnificence— and Zoe’s absurd prodigal-
ity, soon emptied the treasury. Money was scarce, loyalty

grew slack, and the need of a strong man was imperatively


Furthermore, the close association of the hostile sisters
felt.

was becoming embarrassing, and the court was divided into


two Zoe could think of but one way to end the situa-
parties.
tion; namely, by making a third marriage. She was at that
time sixty-four years of age.

V
Having made up her mind — and, strange as it may seem,
everyone encouraged her— the old Empress set about to find a
husband. At first she considered Constantine Dalassenus, to
whom Constantine VIII had once wished to marry her. But
this great and ambitious noble, who had been suspected
sev-
eral times of revolutionary designs, did not evince
the tact
and deference proper in a Prince Consort. He spoke out
frankly, stated his conditions, and announced sweeping
re-
forms and strong and vigorous resolves. This was not the
sort of Emperor that the Palace was seeking, and so he was
ZOË THE PORPHYROGENITA rr 159

sent back to his province. Zoë next thought of another of her


former favorites, the High Steward Constantine, who had
been driven by the jealousy of Michael IV from Constantino-
ple. From would have
the point of view of personality, he
been just the man; but unfortunately, like Romanus Argyrus
before him, he was married, and his wife was less accommo-
dating than Romanus’s. Rather than surrender her husband
to another, she preferred to poison him.
At last, after several fruitless attempts, the Basilissa re-
called tomind still another of her former friends, Constan-
tine Monomachus. As a relative by marriage of Romanus III,
he had, some twelve or thirteen years back, cut an important
figure at court, and by his beauty, his elegance, his fair

speech, and his talent for amusing the Empress, had so cap-
tivatedZoë that there had been much gossip about them.
Michael IV indeed, immediately after his accession, had
taken the precaution of exiling this compromising friend.
But Zoë had never forgotten him. She had seized the oppor-
tunity afforded by the revolution of 1042 to end his disgrace,
and had appointed him governor of Greece. She now pro-
posed to exalt him still further, and, as her choice was very
acceptable to the court, where everyone was most eager for
her to marry, she decided on him.
One of the Augusta’s chamberlains was selected to carry to
the new favorite the imperial insignia, the symbol and pledge
of his high destiny, and to bring him back without delay to
Constantinople. On the 11th of June 1042, he made his sol-

emn entry, amid the shouts of the enthusiastic multitude,

after which the marriage took place with great splendor at

the Palace. And although the Patriarch felt himself unable

personally to solemnize a third marriage that the Greek


Church condemned (Zoë, as we have seen, was twice a
widow, and Constantine had also been married twice), a
160 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Byzantine prelate was usually too much a courtier and too
thorough a politician long to withstand the powers that be.
^‘Yielding to circumstances,” says Psellus maliciously, “or,
rather, to the will of God,” after the ceremony he cordially
embraced the newly wedded pair. “Was that a truly canoni-
cal act?” inquires the writer, ironically; “or was it flattery
pure and simple? How can I tell?” Whichever it was, Byzan-
tium had an Emperor.
In appearance the new sovereign fully justified the Em-
press’s choice. He was handsome man. “As handsome
a very
as Achilles,” says Psellus. “He was a finished work of Na-
ture.” His face was attractive: he had a clear skin, delicate
features, and a delightful smile, and his whole personality ir-
radiated charm. He was admirably proportioned, with a fine
and graceful figure and beautiful, delicate hands. But re-
markable vigor lay hidden, nevertheless, under this some-
what effeminate exterior. Accustomed to every kind of bodily
exercise, an accomplished horseman, an excellent runner, a
good fighter, Constantinehad large reserves of hidden force.
Those whom it amused him to squeeze in his arms felt the ef-
fects for several days, and there was no object too hard for
him to break with his slender, well-kept hands.
He was a man of great fascination and charm. His voice
was soft and he was a good speaker. Of a naturally amiable
disposition, he was always in good spirits, ever smiling and
ready to seek enjoyment for himself and others. He was es-
good fellow, neither haughty nor vain, unaffected,
sentially a
without rancor, and eager to please everyone. And he had
other qualities as well. Although quick to anger, so that he
reddened on the slightest provocation, he had learned to con-
trol himself perfectly, and, as he was always master of him-
self, he was just, humane, and benevolent, and granted par-

don even to those who conspired against him. “I have never


ZOE THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 161

seen,” says Psellus, “a more sympathetic person.” He was


generous to the point of prodigality, and said repeatedly,
somewhat like Titus, that a day on which he had not per-
formed a humane or generous act was a day lost. As a matter
of fact, his indulgence to others bordered upon weakness, for
in order to please his favorites, he was in the habit of distrib-
uting the highest offices of State among them in the most cas-
ual way. Owing to his great desire to make everyone happy
and contented, his generosity often amounted to wasteful-
ness. He was unable to refuse anything, whether to his wife
or to his mistresses; he was always open-handed, and ever
ready for amusement, and he often remarked that it was the
duty of all loyal subjects to participate in the pleasures of the
court.
Constantine, without being a particularly learned man,
was He was quick-witted and enjoyed the society
intelligent.

of men of letters. Among his associates were such scholars as


Constantine Lichudes, Xiphilin, John Mauropus, and Psel-
lus; it was on their advice that he reopened the University
of Constantinople and added to it a law school to insure the
proper training of men for the government service. He went
even further, and, instead of assigning office according to the
birth of the candidates, instituted the merit system. In order
to make this reform effective, he promoted his friends the
scholars to high office— Lichudes became Prime Minister;
Psellus, Lord Chamberlain and Secretary of State; Xiphilin,
Chancellor; Mauropus, Privy Councilor. All this made Con-
stantine very popular. Furthermore, he was brave. This vir-
tue was, perhaps, in his case a result of the somewhat fatalis-
tic indifference which he acknowledged openly and which

induced him to dispense, even at nighttime, with a guard at

the door of his private apartments. But from whatever source


derived, his courage was undoubted, and was manifested on
162 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
many occasions. And if we consider that on the whole during
the reign of Constantine Monomachus the Byzantine Em-
pire, more than once victorious and usually at peace, pre-

served all its former prestige, we may perhaps come to the


conclusion that this monarch was by no means so bad a sov-
ereign as his detractors later asserted.
Unfortunately, his undoubted qualities were balanced by
grave defects. Monomachus loved pleasure, women, and an
easy, luxurious life. Having attained the throne by a stroke of
luck, he regarded his position as essentially a means of satis-
fying his fancies. “After escaping a violent storm,” says Psel-
lus prettily, “he had reached the pleasant coast and secure
haven of royalty, and was not anxious to put out again to
sea.” He bothered himself but little about public affairs, and
left them to his ministers. The throne was to him, as Psellus
says, only “a rest after struggle and a realization of desire.”
In the words of a modern historian: “To a government of
women, there succeeded the government of a high liver and
^
a hedonist.”
Constantine was a man of very amorous temperament, and
had always delighted which
in gallant adventures, several of
before his accession had been rather notorious. He had been
twice married and twice widowed, and had found consolation
in his love for a young girl, the niece of the second wife, a
member of the illustrious house of Sclerus, and known as
Sclerena. She was pretty and intelligent. Psellus, who knew
her, has left a very attractive account of her: “It
was not that
she was a flawless beauty; but her conversation was pleasant
because it was free from malice and slander. She was sweet
and gracious enough to have melted a rock. She had a won-
derful voice, and a melodious and almost oratorical manner
of speaking; her tongue was endowed with a native charm,
^ A. N. Rambaud, “Michel Psellos,” Revue historique^ tome iii, 1877.
ZOË THE PORPHTROGENÎTA (( les

and when she spoke, it was with indescribable grace. She


loved,” adds the man of letters, “to ask me questions about
Greek mythology, and she introduced into her conversation
what she had learned from scholars. To a greater degree than
^
any other woman, she possessed the gift of listening.”
She pleased not only Psellus, but everybody. The first time
that she took part in the imperial procession, a courtier, both
witty and educated, greeted her with a neat and delicate com-
pliment, quoting the two first words of the beautiful passage

in Homer where the old men of Troy, seated on the walls,


remark at the sight of Helen passing by in all her radiant
beauty:

Nor Greeks nor Trojans one can rightly blame


That, for a woman'' s sake so beautiful
They have alike endured so many woes.

The allusionwas ingenious and flattering; everyone caught


his meaning at once and applauded. And is not this proof of
the singular refinement of Byzantine society in the eleventh
century, a society which in some of its aspects seems to us so
barbarous, yet which is shown by this anecdote to have been
so impregnated with the great memories of classical Greece,

so endowed with acute intelligence, with literary taste, and


with graceful and delicate thoughts?
At the beginning of his liaison with Sclerena, Constantine
Monomachus would gladly have married her. But the Greek
Church, as we have seen, was very unbending in the matter
of third marriages, particularly when the parties were mere
private persons; Constantine did not dare to flout its prohibi-

tions. So she became his mistress and was the great passion of
his life. The lovers were inseparable, even in misfortune.
When Monomachus was exiled, Sclerena followed him to

2 This translation is taken from Rambaud’s article previously cited.


164 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Lesbos, putting her entire fortune at his disposal, consoling
him in his disgrace, rekindling his courage, holding out to
him the hope of future vengeance, and telling him that one
day he would become Emperor and that then they would be
married and never part. Without regret or hesitation, the
lovely young woman spent seven years on that distant island,
and naturally, when chance raised Constantine to the throne,
he never forgot her who had loved him so well.
Even in Zoe’s arms his thoughts were of Sclerena. He
managed so cleverly that, in spite of the Empress’s notorious
jealousy and in spite of the prudent advice of his friends and
of his sister Euprepia, he was able to recall his mistress to
Constantinople. From the very evening of his marriage he
had spoken of her to Zoë, skillfully, of course, and with dis-
cretion, as a person to be treated with consideration on ac-
count of her family; soon he persuaded his wife to write invit-
ing Sclerena to come to the Palace, assuring her at the same
time of her goodwill. The young woman, who strongly sus-
pected that the Basilissa did not care for her in the least, was
not wholly convinced that this invitation was all it purported
to be; but she adored Constantine, and so she returned. The
Emperor immediately had a splendid palace erected for his
favorite,and every day, on pretense of watching the progress
of the work, spent many hours with Sclerena. The people of
his suite, who during these visits were given an abundance of
food and drink, thoroughly approved of the meetings; and
when, in the midst of the official ceremonies, the courtiers
gathered from the sovereign’s bored manner that he wanted
to go to his mistress, they vied with one another to find ways
forhim to escape to his beloved.
Soon their connection was openly avowed. The Emperor
provided Sclerena with a household and a guard and made
her wonderful presents: he sent her, for example, on one oc-
ZOË THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 165

casion an enormous bronze cup, beautifully engraved and


filled to Every day he made her a new
the brim vrith jewels.
present, for which he emptied the Treasury. At last he
treated her as his recognized and lawful wife. In the Palace
she had her apartments, to which Constantine resorted freely
at any hour, and she received the title of Sebaste^ which gave

her rank immediately after the two aged Empresses.


Zoe, contrary to the general expectation, took the affair
very philosophically. “She had reached an age,” Psellus in-

discreetly remarks, “at which one is no longer very sensitive


to wrongs of this nature.” She was growing old, and was
changing considerably in the process. She cared no longer for
dress, had ceased to be jealous, and in her old age was turn-
ing pious. She spent many hours now at the feet of the holy
images, enfolding them in her arms, talking to them, calling
them by the most endearing names; dissolved in tears, she
rolled before the icons in an ecstasy of mystical passion, giv-
ing toGod what remained of the love that she had so lavished
upon others. Therefore she consented without much difficulty
to the most extraordinary arrangements. She gave Constan-
tine his liberty, authorizing him to cease all intimate relations
with her, and an document to this effect, called the
official

Contract of Friendship, was signed by husband and wife and


duly registered by the Senate of the Empire. Sclerena had a
recognized position at court, figured in the official proces-

sions, and was addressed by the titles of Sovereign and Basi-


lissa. Zoe looked on delighted and smiling; she kissed her
rival affectionately, and between his two wives Constantine
Monomachus was a happy man. For the convenience of the
household, a delightful arrangement was arrived at. The im-
perial apartments were divided into three sections. The Em-
peror occupied the central part, while Zoe and Sclerena took
those to right and left respectively. By tacit agreement Zoë
166 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
in future never visited the Basileus except when Sclerena was
not with him and she could be sure of finding him alone. And
this tactful contrivance seemed to everyone a miracle of in-

genuity.
The people of the capital alone looked unfavorably upon
this curious association. One day, when Constantine was go-
ing to the Church of the Holy Apostles, a voice from the
crowd called out as the Emperor was leaving the Palace:
“We want Sclerena for Empress! We don’t want our
don’t
mothers Zoé and Theodora put to death on her account!” The
multitude joined in and a tumult arose; and, had not the aged
Porphyrogenitae showed themselves on a balcony of the Pal-
ace and calmed the people, Monomachus might well have
lost his life.

To the day of her death, Constantine remained faithful to


Sclerena. When a sudden illness carried her off, he was in-
consolable. Weeping like a child, he made public manifesta-
tion of his grief, had her buried with great magnificence, and
built her a splendid tomb. Then, being a man, he cast about
for other mistresses. After several passing fancies, he fell in
love with a Alan Princess who was living as a hostage
little

at the Byzantine court. She does not seem to have been very

pretty, but she had what in Psellus’s judgment were two


great points, a very white skin and wonderful eyes. As soon
as the Emperor became aware of the existence of this young
barbarian, he gave up all his other conquests for her, and his
passion grew so strong that, when Zoe died, after having pub-
licly announced her as his mistress, he thought seriously of

making her his lawful wife. However, he did not dare take
the step for fear of the thunders of the Church and the re-
proaches of his sister-in-law, the strait-laced Theodora. But
at least he bestowed on his favorite the title of Sebaste, as

he had formerly done on Sclerena; he surrounded her with


ZOË THE PORPHYROGENITA (( 167

imperial pomp and circumstance, and showered her with


jewels and gold. And the little Circassian might be seen, her
head and throat covered with gold, golden serpents around
her arms, great pearls in her ears, a girdle of gold and jewels
about her small waist, presiding like a typical harem beauty
over all the Palace festivities. For her and for her parents,
who came every year from distant Alania to pay her a visit,

the Basileus squandered whatever sums remained in the

Treasury, and he presented her to everyone as his wife and


the lawful Empress. She was destined, moreover, greatly to
sadden the last days of the sovereign who was so infatuated

with her charms.

VI

Thus, toward the middle of the eleventh century, during


the reign of Constantine Monomachus and Zoë, the Byzan-
tine court presented a very curious appearance.
In leading the life he loved, the Emperor soon exhausted
He was no longer the handsome, elegant, robust
his vitality.
Monomachus of former days. He suffered much from stom-
ach trouble, but chiefly from gout. The attacks were so vio-
lent that his twisted, deformed hands could not hold any-
thing, and his tortured, swollen feet were unable to support
him. Sometimes at audiences he was incapable of standing;
on such occasions he received stretched upon a bed. But even
this position soon became intolerable, and his servants had
constantly to shift him from one side to another. Frequently,
even talking caused him pain. But his appearance was par-
ticularly distressing when he was obliged to take part in offi-
cial processions. He had himself lifted upon a horse, and he

set forth between two sturdy attendants who kept him from

falling off. All along the way stones were carefully removed
168 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
to save him from sharp, painful shocks; and thus the Basileus
proceeded, his face distorted, gasping for breath, letting drop
the reins that he was no longer able to hold. It must be put to
Constantine’s credit that he bore his troubles bravely, always
smiling, always jovial. He used to say in jest that God must
have afflicted him thus in order to curb his too fiery passions,
and he diverted himself with philosophical reflections upon
his sufferings. Moreover, as soon as he felt better, he denied
himself neither his pleasures nor his mistresses.
Close by the sovereign lived the two old Porphyrogenitae,
whose age had somewhat weakened. Zoe spent her
intellects
time in making perfumes, shutting herself up summer and
winter alike in her overheated rooms, and never tearing her-
self away from her favorite occupation except to burn incense

before her beloved images and to question them about the fu-
ture; whileTheodora counted over and over again the money
that she had stored away, taking little interest in other mat-
ters, a chaste and sanctimonious virgin. Around them re-
volved the acknowledged mistresses, Sclerena, the little Alan
Princess, and others, courtiers and favorites— often people of
low origin— with whom the Emperor was infatuated and
whom he raised to the highest offices in the State. And all
these gentry had an excessively good time and did their best
to amuse the Basileus.
For Constantine loved gaiety. Anyone who wished to com-
mand some important matter found that the
his attention in
best and indeed the only way to get him to listen was to begin
with an amusing remark. Serious looks frightened him, but a
clown could win his favor in a minute. He was, in fact, di-
verted chiefly by broad jests, heavy practical jokes, and ex-
travagant puns. Music, singing, and dancing, bored him; he
preferred amusements of a different nature and often in ques-
tionable taste. Psellus relates some of these pleasantries,
and
ZOE THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 169

it must be admitted that, however entertaining they may


have been in the eleventh century, today they seem very fee-

ble. For example, one of the Emperor’s greatest delights was


to hear someone stammer and exhaust himself in vain at-

tempts to enunciate distinctly. The story is told of a courtier


who achieved an enormous success in the Palace by imitating
perfectly an affliction of this kind and relapsing gradually
into inarticulate cries and distressing stutters. His pleasing
talent so enraptured Constantine that he became the sover-

and was henceforth in the habit of visit-


eign’s prime favorite,
ing the Emperor without ceremony at any time, holding his
hands, kissing him on the mouth, sitting down laughing be-
sidehim on his bed, and sometimes going to him even at night
to wake him up and tell him some more or less amusing tale,
usually taking the opportunity of extracting from him some
favor or gift.

As he was free to go wherever he liked, the buffoon in-

truded even into the Imperial Gynaeceum, and amused the


court intensely with the stories that he told there. He in-

vented tales about the virtuous Theodora herself, saying that


she had had children, relating the affair with many obscene
and ending by mimicking the Princess’s imaginary
details,
accouchements^ imitating her groans and the wails of the
newborn child, and putting into the aged and respectable sov-
ereign’s mouth all sorts of improper remarks. Everyone was
convulsed with laughter, even Theodora herself, and this fel-
low became the hero of the Gynaeceum. Only the sober-
minded were somewhat pained, but like good courtiers fol-
lowed where the others led. “We were obliged to laugh,”
says Psellus bitterly, “though there was better cause to weep.”
Relying on the universal indulgence, this extraordinary
favorite became bolder. He fell in love with the young Alan
Princess, and, as he was an amusing fellow, seems to have
170 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
made a conquest of the little barbarian. But his head was
turned by his good fortune, and, being really seriously infatu-
ated, he conceived the idea, in a burst of jealousy, of assassi-
nating the Emperor, his rival, and taking his place. One eve-
ning he was discovered, dagger in hand, at the door of
Monomachus’s bedchamber. He was promptly arrested, and
the next day was brought to trial before a court of justice pre-
sided over by the Basileus. But now we come to the amusing
part of the story. When Constantine beheld his dear friend in
chains, his weak indulgence overcame him and his eyes filled
with tears. “For goodness’ sake, free the man,” he exclaimed.
“It distresses me to see him in that condition.” Then he gen-
tly asked the prisoner to be frank, and say what had impelled
him to crime. The fellow answered that it was owing to an
overpowering desire to wear the imperial insignia and to sit
upon the throne of the Basileis. At this, Constantine burst
into laughter and immediately gave orders that his fancy
should be indulged. Then, turning to his favorite he said:
“Now I am going to put the diadem on your head and clothe
you in the purple. I ask of you nothing in return but to be
your own agreeable self for the future.” At this all present,
even the judges, were unable to retain their gravity, and a
great banquet sealed the Emperor’s reconciliation with his
friend.
The man was encouraged by the indulgence shown him,
and naturally continued his attempts upon the sovereign’s
mistress. In the presence of the entire court and even under
the Emperor’s very nose, he smiled and made signs to her.
But Constantine merely laughed at such conduct. “Just look
at the poor creature!” said he to Psellus. “He is still in love,
and his past misfortunes have not taught him a lesson.” He
himself was a “poor creature” after Moliere’s heart.
Whilst the frivolous Emperor wasted his time in these idi-
ZOË THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 171

ocies— the expression is Psellus’s— whilst he squandered the


revenues of the State in absurd prodigality, in magnificent
buildings, and in childish and ruinous caprices, neglecting
the army, begrudging the men their pay, and reducing the
strength, the most serious events were in preparation. Two
storms were already looming over the horizon and were soon
to burst upon the Empire— the Normans in the West and the

Turks in the East. Within the monarchy, the discontent of


the military party, weary of the weakness of the civil author-
ity and irritated at the disgrace of its most illustrious gen-

erals, w^as manifesting itself in dangerous leanings toward

revolutionary pronunciamentos. And, taking advantage of


the heedlessness of Monomachus, an ambitious Patriarch,
Michael Cerularius, was completing the separation between
Byzantium and Rome.

VII

In 1050, at the age of seventy-two, the long and tumultu-


ous life of Zoe the Porphyrogenita came to an end. Constan-
tine Monomachus, her husband, who for eight years, as we
have seen, had been sufficiently detached from her, felt that
he had done his duty in mourning her conscientiously. He
even tried to find a place for her among the saints, and did his
best to detect the performance of all kinds of miracles at her
tomb, so as to prove to everyone that her soul was with the
angels. This was doing a great deal of honor to a sensual and
passionate old woman who had so disturbed the court and
the capital with her scandalous marriages and love affairs.
Monomachus, however, did not insist very strongly upon this
attempted beatification; he soon consoled himself, as we have
seen, and found Zoe’s death an auspicious occasion for an-
nouncing his most recent favorite. Furthermore, he died a
172 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
few years on the 11th of January 1055, in the monas-
later,

tery of St. George of Mangana which he had founded, and to


which he had retired toward the end of his life.
Now, for the last time, Theodora, Zoe’s sister, appears
upon the scene. After Zoe’s third marriage, Theodora had
lived at court, nominally associated in the Empire, but play-
ing in fact a very unimportant part. At the most, since the
Empress’s death, she had acquired a little more influence,
and her brother-in-law Monomachus seems to have stood in
terror of the old lady’s lectures. But this last descendant of
the Macedonian dynasty appeared, nevertheless, to count
for so little that Monomachus, regardless of her undoubted
rights to the throne, had considered nominating another as
his successor. Then it was that once again there stirred in
Theodora’s veins the fiery blood and the proud energy of the
great Emperors her ancestors. While Constantine Monoma-
chus lay dying, she resolutely took possession of the Great
Palace, strong in her right of birth and in the prestige which
the sufferings of her long had given her among the peo-
life

ple. The guard regiments pronounced in her favor and the

Senate followed their lead. Thus, at the age of seventy, the


old Princess firmly seized the power.
Warned by her sister’s example and knowing how little a
Basilissa could count on the gratitude of the men whom she
associated with her, Theodora, to the general amazement,
refused to take a husband. She insisted upon governing alone,
and, as she was sensible enough to allow herself to be guided
by a capable minister, she seems to have governed well. Her
green old age, furthermore, excited universal admiration.
Her figure was straight and her mind alert; she was able to
work seriously with her advisers and to make the long
speeches in which she delighted. She gladly let her friends
ZOË THE PORPHTROGENITA (( 178

the monks persuade her that her days were destined to ex-
ceed the allotted span of human life.
But in the long run, everyone in the capital and in the Em-
pire tired of this feminine government that had lasted now
formore than twenty-five years. The Patriarch Cerularius,
who had become since the schism the Pope, as it were, of the
Eastern Church, said openly that it was a shame that a
woman should govern the Roman Empire. The military

party, discontented at the position that the bureaucracy oc-


cupied in the State, and exasperated at the insulting distrust
with which the court regarded the generals, were growing
restless. And many good citizens who, like Psellus, prided

themselves on their patriotism, recalled the glorious days of


Basil II and passed severe judgement on these Princesses
whose ridiculous prodigality, childish vanity, fantastic ca-
prices, and limited intelligence, had prepared the ruin of the
monarchy and sown the germs of fatal decay in the healthy
body of the Empire. Everyone wanted a man and a soldier.
Theodora was fortunate enough to die before the storm burst.
She passed away on the 31st of August 1056.
VIII

ANNA COMNENA

n the month of December 1083, the Empress Irene Ducas,


I wife of Alexius Comnenus, was awaiting the birth of
her child in the apartment of the Sacred Palace known as
the Purple Pavilion, designated by ancient tradition as the
birth chamber of the imperial children, whose title of
Porphyrogenitus derived from it. The Empress’s time was
near, but the Basileus, detained by the war against the Nor-
mans, was still absent from Constantinople, and the young
woman, feeling the onset of her first pains, was moved to
make a charming gesture. Tracing the sign of the cross over
her belly, she said: “Not yet, little child, wait until your
father comes home.” Irene’s mother, a wise and reasonable
woman, was very angry when she heard this: “And how do
you know when your husband will come home? Supposing
he does not return for another month? How will you hold
back your pains from now until then?” But the young woman
was proved right in the event. Three days later, Alexius re-

174
ANNA COMNENA (( 175

turned to his capital, just in time to receive his newborn


daughter into his arms. And in this way, with something
marvelous about her from the moment of her birth, came into
the world Anna Comnena, one of the most celebrated, one of
the most remarkable of all the Princesses who ever lived at
the court of Byzantium.
The birth of this miraculous child was welcomed with
extreme joy. Besides providing an heir to the Empire, the
event set a radiant seal on the highly political and wholly un-
sentimental marriage that six years earlier had united
Alexius and Irene, and strengthened the latter’s influence at

court, which up had been somewhat tenuous.


until then

Irene’s parents, “wild with joy,” were highly gratified. A


display of unusual extravagance, both in the official cere-

monies with which it was customary to celebrate the birth of

the imperial children, and in the gifts made on this occasion

to the army and to the Senate, testified to the general satisfac-


tion of the populace. The imperial diadem was placed on the
head of the little Princess while she was still in her cradle;
her name figured in the ritual acclamations with which the
Byzantine sovereigns were saluted; and at the same time she
was affianced to the son of the dethroned Emperor Mi-
chael VII, young Constantine Ducas, whose eventual rights
of succession Alexius Comnenus, in usurping the power, had
been obliged to guarantee out of respect for legitimacy. So,
from her earliest childhood, Anna Comnena, born to the
purple, could dream of the day when she would sit as Em-
press on the glorious throne of the Caesars.
Her mother, Irene, and her future mother-in-law, the
Basilissa Mary of Alania, both took a share in her upbring-

ing. And all her life she kept the glowing memory of those

early years, which later seemed the happiest of her whole


life. She adored her mother, who for her part always showed
176 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
a special predilection for her eldest daughter, and she had a
profound admiration for Mary of Alania, that beautiful
woman with the elegant figure, the snow-white skin, and the
charming blue eyes. Many years later, she recalled with emo-
tion the affection shown her by this exquisite Princess,
worthy of Apelles’ brush and Phidias’ chisel, and so beauti-
ful that all who beheld her were enraptured. “Never,” writes
Anna Comnena, “were such perfectly harmonious propor-
tions seen in a human body. She was an animated statue,
an object of admiration for everyone with a sense of beauty;
or rather, she was Love embodied, and come down to Earth.”
The little girl loved her future husband, the young Constan-
tine, no less tenderly. He was nine years older than she, and

a charming little boy, fair-haired and rosy cheeked, with


wonderful eyes “that shone beneath his brows like jewels set
in gold.” “His beauty,” says Anna Comnena somewhere

else, “seemed to be of Heaven and not of Earth.” And in-

deed, he was destined to die prematurely, when he was barely


twenty years old, before the marriage on which his little
financée was building so many ambitious hopes could be
realized. To the end of her Anna Comnena fondly
life, treas-
ured the memory of this young man to whom she had given
her childish adoration, and whom theEmperor Alexius had
loved as his own son. A great many years later, when she
thought of this Constantine Ducas, “marvel of nature,
masterpiece formed by the hand of God and resembling a
scion of that golden age extolled by the Greeks,” tears would
come into the eyes of the old Princess and she would have
difficulty in controlling her emotion.
In this atmosphere of tenderness and affection little Anna
Comnena, cherished and beloved, was brought up. To com-
prehend what she was, it will perhaps be helpful to consider
ANNA COMNENA (( 177
the education given a Byzantine Princess at the end of the
eleventh century.
Seldom was the taste for literature, and above all for the
literature of antiquity,more widespread than in the Byzan-
tium of the Comneni. This was the period that produced
scholars such as Tzetzes, who commented on the poems of
Hesiod and Homer with stupendous erudition, and John
Italus, who resumed Psellus’s studies of Platonic philosophy

—to the great scandal of the Orthodox Church; the period in


which the best writers of the time, imbued with the antique
forms, prided themselves on imitating in their works the
most illustrious Greek authors, and in which even the lan-
guage itself underwent a process of refinement in the effort
to reproduce, by a slightly mannered purism, the sober Attic
grace. In such a renascence of classical culture, an Imperial
Princess, particularly one as remarkably intelligent as Anna
Comnena, could no longer content herself with the rather
summary education formerly given to Byzantine women.
She had the best teachers and she took advantage of their
instruction. She learned all there was to be learned in her
day: rhetoric, philosophy, history, literature, geography,
mythology, medicine, and the sciences. She read the great
poets of antiquity, Homer and the lyricists, the tragic drama-
tists and Aristophanes, historians like Thucydides and Polyb-
ius, orators such as Isocrates and Demosthenes; she read
the treatises of Aristotle and the dialogues of Plato, and
from these famous writers she learned the art of eloquence
and “the very essence of Hellenism.” She was capable of
quoting freely from Orpheus and Timotheus, Sappho and
Pindar, Porphry and Proclus, the Porch and the Academy.
The arts of the quadrivium held no mystery for her; she
knew geometry, arithmetic, music, and astronomy. Her mind
178 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
was familiar with the great pagan gods and the beautiful
legends of classical Greece; Herakles and Athena, Cadmus
and Niobe, came naturally to her pen. She was equally well
instructed in the history of Byzantium and in geography,
and she had some interest in the ancient monuments; more-
over, she was able, when necessary, to discourse on military
matters and to discuss with physicians the best methods of
treating illnesses. Lastly, this Byzantine seems even to have
known Latin, a rare enough accomplishment in the East of
her day.
She was not only a well-educated woman: she was a
learned woman. Her contemporaries agree in praising the
elegance of her Attic style, the power of her mind and its

capacity to solve the most obscure problems, the superiority


of her natural genius and the diligence with which she culti-

vated her gifts, her taste for books and for learned discourse,
the universality of her attainments. And indeed, one has
only to glance through her book. The Alexiade, to find in it

the marks of distinction. Despite a certain preciosity of


style, a deliberately mannered purism in the language, an
occasional pedantic and pretentious passage, the work bears
the stamp of the superior woman and the writer of real talent
that Anna Comnena unquestionably was. She had given
promise of all this as a child. Like every Byzantine, she was
an expert in matters of religion, and well versed in the Holy
Scriptures. Yet hers was a scientific rather than a religious
mind. She professed a high regard for literature and history,
convinced that through them alone even the most illustrious
names could be saved from oblivion. On the other hand, her
reason rejected the supernatural, the idle calculations of
astrologers, the false predictions of soothsayers. She had in-
vestigated their so-called science, partly because she wanted
to delve into everything, but chiefly to prove its vanity and
ANNA COMNENA (( 179

foolishness. And, pious though she was, she had little taste
for theological discussions, whose subtleties and fine distinc-
tions she considered rather otiose. She was attracted above
all by history, by its gravity and importance, and by the

magnitude of the historian’s task.


Such was Anna Comnena’s intellectual training. Her
moral formation was no less carefully supervised. Several
years earlier, under the influence of the strict Anna Dalas-
sena, mother of the Emperor, the tone of the Byzantine court
had undergone a great change. This serious-minded and
rigidly moral Princess had resolutely put an end to the in-
trigues of the Gynaeceum, to the scandalous love affairs that

in the past, in the time of Zoë the Porphyrogenita and of


Constantine Monomachus, spread their corruption through-
out the Sacred Palace. With a firm hand she had put things
in order,and under her stern supervision the imperial resi-
dence had assumed a monastic air. It resounded with the
chanting of pious hymns, and its inhabitants led an exem-
plary and methodically regulated life. Probably the Basileus
Alexius, who did not love his wife, allowed himself some
minor peccadilloes, but he was careful to keep up appear-
ances, he would have blushed at the idea of installing an
accredited mistress in the Palace, and the general tone of his
court was one of unrivaled decorum. In such an environ-
ment, and under the influence of a grandmother whom she
profoundly admired, Anna Comnena quite naturally de-
veloped into a young girl of perfect breeding, serious, chaste,
mindful of all the proprieties, irreproachable in speech and
behavior.
But to see in this Princess no more than a woman of intel-

ligence, well educated and well bred, would be to have an in-


complete idea of her. She was much too fully aware of what
she was, of her high birth as well as her intellectual superi-
180 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
ority, not to be a woman of great ambition. And in any case,
she came of ambitious stock. Her grandmother, Anna Dalas-
sena, who by sheer tenacity and force of will had placed her
family on the throne; her father, the Emperor Alexius, so
clever, so crafty, so persevering; her mother, Irene, whose
spirit was at once masculine, courageous, and intriguing-
all these were immensely ambitious. And Anna had too pro-
found an admiration for them all not to follow blindly the
examples offered by their lives to her youthful spirit. More-
over, very proud of having been born to the purple, very
proud of being the eldest child of Alexius and Irene, very
proud of the imperial title bestowed on her in her cradle, she
deemed anything lower than her lofty dignity as a Porphyro-
genita beneath her consideration. Her pride, personal, an-
cestral, and national, was immeasurable. In her eyes Byzan-
tium was still the mistress of the world, of whom all the
other nations should be the hum.ble vassals, and her throne
the finest of all the thrones of the world. One should see how
scornfully this Byzantine Princess speaks of the Crusaders,
of those ill-bred barbarians whose rough, outlandish names
she apologizes for introducing into her history, offended in
her literary vanity by feeling the rhythm of her prose dis-
rupted by these alien vocables, and in her imperial pride by
being constrained to waste time over men who bored and dis-
gusted her. Anna Comnena was very much a Princess, and
the ceremonious world in which she spent her life could only
have served to strengthen her natural tendencies. But her
self-willed, authoritative, and ambitious spirit was to be
strangely warped by her sense of her worth and rank.
Hers was by no means an arid soul, however. One detects
in this learned and ambitious woman a hint of sensibility,

even of sentimentality, that is both touching and, on occasion,


amusing. And I do not speak only of her great affection for
ANNA COMNENA (( 181

her parents. She herself recalls rather drolly, with reference


to the miracle attending her birth, that even in her mother’s
womb she was a docile and obedient child. Elsewhere she
declares that for her beloved parents she unhesitatingly ex-
posed herself to the greatest vexations, to the gravest dan-

gers, “risking for their sakes her position, her fortune, and
even her life,” and that many of her calamities owed their

origin to her unusually strong affection for her father,


Alexius. Here we have family sentiments that are worthy of
infinite respect, but Anna, as we shall see, did not think it

at all advisable to extend these sentiments to her relatives in


general. Yet— and this is more piquant— there was room in

her heart for other affections; this précieuse^ this prude, this
pedant, was, like Moliere’s Arsinoé, attracted by the ele-

mental. She has told us how, in 1106— when she had been
married for several years — she was looking out of the Palace
windows one day with her sisters, when a procession passed
by leading a conspirator, Michael Anemas, to execution. At
the sight of this handsome soldier, so attractive and so un-
fortunate, she was moved that she did not rest
so strongly
until she had v/rung a pardon for him from her father, the
Emperor; and so fired was she by this wild idea that she
dared— she who was so respectful of etiquette and good man-
ners— to disturb Alexius in his oratory, while he was saying
his prayers before the holy altar. Ten years earlier, when she
was still a young girl, only fourteen years old, she had ex-
perienced an emotion of the same kind, and yet more pro-
found. This was when one of the leaders of the First Crusade,
the splendid Bohémond, Prince of Taranto, disembarked at
Byzantium in 1097. One should read in The Alexiade Anna
Comnena’s enthusiastic description of this red-haired giant
with the broad shoulders and narrow waist, the sparkling
blue eyes, and the terrific, exploding laugh, this hero at once
182 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
formidable and seductive, so eloquent, jso supple and adroit
of mind, and physically so well made that he seemed to have
been constructed according to the “canon” of Polyclitus. “In
all the Roman Empire,” she writes, “there was no man who

could be compared with him, either Greek or barbarian. He


seemed to be the embodiment of valor and love, and he was
second only to my father, the Emperor, in eloquence and the
other gifts that nature had showered upon him.” Such are

the terms used by this Byzantine Princess to describe the


barbarian from the West more than forty years after Bo-
hémond appeared before her, like a sunburst, for the first

time. And in the entire Alexiade no man, other than the


Basileus Alexius himself, has been honored by Anna
Comnena with more flattering or a more finished portrait.
a
It is only fair to add that if Anna Comnena liked and ad-

mired fine specimens of manhood, it was in all honor, as be-


fitted the chaste and honest woman that she was. But in the

depths of her being, there was a wealth of tenderness ready


and waiting for opportunities to expend itself. She never
ceased to grieve for the fiancé of her childhood, the young
Constantine who vanished so prematurely, and whose death
dealt, aswe shall see, a cruel blow to her vast ambitions.
Afterward, when she was married, in 1097, to that great

nobleman Nicephorus Bryennius, her tender and sensitive


heart knew how to transform a union that was purely a mat-
ter of politics into a union of love. And indeed Bryennius was
the right husband for her. Like her, he was scholarly; like
her, he loved literature: “he had read all the books, he was
versed in all the sciences”; and like her, he took pleasure in
writing, and wrote well. A magnificent soldier, a clever
diplomat, an eloquent orator, he was handsome man
also a
with a graciousness that was something more than royal,
“a bearing that was almost divine.” Anna Comnena adored
ANNA COMNENA (( 183
‘Tier Caesar,” and never got over losing him. When Bryen-
nius returned to Constantinople in 1156, seriously ill, she
nursed him v^ith admirable devotion. At his death, not long
afterward, she inherited the pious task of continuing the his-
tory that his faltering hand had been unable to finish; and
since she was, in her old age, a little plaintive and given to
lamenting, she could not pen the name of her adored husband
without watering it with abundant tears. The death of Bryen-
nius was, if she is to be believed, the great tragedy of her
life, the constantly bleeding wound that slowly brought her
to her grave. And it is true that, as long as her husband lived,
the ambitious Princess used every means to push him, and
herself with him, to the sovereignty, and that in losing him
she lost her last remaining chance to take her revenge on
destiny. But if the bitterness of her grief was not unmixed
with the bitterness of disappointment, in other respects her
tears were sincere. This Princess openly cultivated in her
heart a little flower of sentimental tenderness that she man-
aged to keep alive even in the desert of politics. And it is by
no means an unimportant factor in her personality, that this
learned and ambitious woman should also have been an
honest woman who loved her husband very dearly.
If we try to piece together the scattered fragments of in-
formation that we possess concerning this Byzantine Prin-
cess, and picture her as she really was, this is more or less
what we see. Physically she resembled her father, Alexius,
and probably she was, like him, of medium height, very dark,
with beautiful, lively eyes, sparkling and heroic. Mentally,
she was remarkably intelligent, aware of her intellectual
superiority and proud of it; she was admirably educated, she
loved books, and scholars, she took pleasure in all mental
activities, and when she took up writing, it was with un-
questionable talent. But it was her ambitious and headstrong
184 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
spirit, her soul of a Porphyrogenita, haughty, proud of her
birthand eager for sovereignty, that was to sway her destiny.
She had, as she herself says somewhere, a soul of diamond
capable of surmounting any possible misfortune and inca-
pable of renouncing any project, any cherished dream, once
they had taken form in her imagination. Accustomed to ac-
tion very early in life— for she had not been brought up as a
little queen, in luxury and idleness— energetic, tenacious,
daring, she allowed no obstacle to deter her from pursuing
any goal she wanted to attain, and there were times when she
forgot, in the heat of the pursuit, to listen to the promptings
of that tender heart on which she prided herself. With all

this, she was honest, and a good and affectionate wife. But
before everything, born to the purple. Empress from her
cradle, she was regal. Ambition filled one half of her life;

literature consoled the rest, though rather inadequately,


for her disappointments and grievances made her profoundly
unhappy. But the originality and interest of Anna Comnena
lie precisely in this fact: namely, that she was at once a
political and a literary figure in the complex Byzantium of
her lifetime.

II

Anna Comnena has written: was only eight years old


‘T
when my misfortunes began.” It was in 1091, and this is

what happened to her. Eldest daughter of the Emperor


Alexius, betrothed to Constantine Ducas, the heir apparent,
Anna Comnena thought herself sure of the throne, when, in
1088, the Empress Irene presented her husband with a son.
Alexius was overjoyed to have a male descendant at last, and,
of course, the line of succession was changed. The Basileus,
formerly so full of consideration for the mother of Constan-
ANNA COMNENA (( 185

tine Ducas, so anxious to please her in every way, grew cool


toward her. A man of his word, he probably had no intention
of making any change concerning the projected marriage be-
tween the princely children; but he saw fit to take the little
Anna Comnena out of the hands of her future mother-in-
law, and this separation was the child’s first great sorrow. A
few months later, a more serious event took place. Alexius s
son John, aged three years, was formally proclaimed heir to
the Empire. It was the end of whatever hopes his sister may
have cherished. Anna Comnena did not lose her fiancé, but
her fiancé lost his rights of succession, and was relegated to
an inferior position until his death in 1094. And when the
Princess married Nicephorus Bryennius in 1097, he too,
despite the title of Caesar accorded to him, ranked below the
heir apparent, and the same applied to her as his wife.
So for Anna Comnena, the birth of a brother was the great
misfortune of her life. It was because of her dreams of shar-
ing a throne with young Constantine Ducas that she so
tenderly cherished his memory. It was because the “dark
boy with the big forehead and the thin cheeks,” who
little

was her detested brother, had suddenly come to ruin her


ambitions that she hated him so savagely. It was because she
hoped to regain the throne through, and with, Nicephorus
Bryennius, that she loved him so much. And it was because
seniority,
she believed herself qualified to reign, by right of
that as long as Alexius lived she plotted, agitated, and
used

all her influence to push forward her husband, Nicephorus,


with the aim of recovering the power that she considered her-
self unjustly deprived of. This was the
constant goal of her

ambition, the justification for all her acts; this one, tenacious,

dream filled her whole existence and explains it up until
she
the day when, having finally failed to attain her goal,
understood that she had, at the same time, wrecked her life.
186 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
In this struggle for the crown that went on between Anna
and her brother, all the members of the imperial family took
sides.Andronicus, one of Alexius’s sons, sided with his sister;
the other, Isaac, with his brother; as for their mother, Irene,
she had a strange dislike for her son John. She thought him
frivolous, unbalanced, and morally corrupt, in all of which
she did him an injustice. She had, on the contrary, a great
admiration for her eldest daughter’s intelligence; she asked
Anna’s advice in everything and treated her opinions as
oracles. Moreover— and was unusual— she adored her
this
son-in-law. She thought him eloquent, scholarly, and en-
dowed with all the qualities requisite for a statesman and a
sovereign. The two women resolved to oust the legitimate
heir;and as Irene exercised a strong influence over the Em-
peror now that he was older, and already ailing, they could
hope to see their plans realized. Soon, thanks to these in-
trigues, Bryennius was all-powerful at the Palace, and it was
rumored that nothing was done without his approval. The
shrewd courtiers were zealous in their efforts to please him;
at the betrothal of his eldest son, Alexius, to the daughter of a
Prince of Abasgie, the official orators extolled in pompous
epithalamiums the qualities of the young bridegroom, who
seemed destined to the Empire, and the glory of his parents.
Attention was obligingly drawn to the Prince’s striking re-
semblance to hisgrandfather the Basileus, whose name he
bore. The education that he and his brother, John Ducas, had
received under the direction of the eminent mother given to
them by Heaven, was enthusiastically extolled. It seemed, in
short, that all was going as it should, and that Anna Comnena
was going to get what she wanted. But the Emperor still re-
served his final decision, and this was where matters stood
when, in the course of the year 1118, Alexius became seri-
ANNA COMNENA (( 187

ously Then began the tragic drama that was enacted


ill.

around him as he approached his death.


If one reads in The Alexiade the account of these August

days in 1118 when the Emperor was dying, one finds in


these very beautiful pages, vibrating with sincere emotion,,
no trace of the unrestrained rivalries and burning passions
that clashed about his deathbed. One finds helpless physi-

cians uselessly busying themselves with their patient andy


like Molière’s physicians, talking only of purging and bleed-
ing. We see the stricken women weeping and lamenting,
and vainly striving to ease the last hours of the dying man.
The Emperor’s wife and daughters encircle the bed. Mary
tries to pour a little water down the swollen throat of the
patient, and when he grows faint, she revives him by making
him inhale essence of roses. Irene sobs, having lost all the
energy that sustained her at the beginning of the crisis-

anxious, despairing, she questions the doctors, she questions


her daughter Anna, and her state is such that one wonders
whether she will be able to survive the death of her husband.
Anna, given over to grief, “despising,” as she writes, “phi-
losophy and eloquence,” holds her father’s hand and sorrow-
fully notes the faltering of his pulse. And now comes the
moment of death. To hide the final spasms of agony from
Irene, Mary discreetly places herself between her mother
and the Emperor. Suddenly Anna feels that the pulse has
ceased to beat. She remains silent for a time, her head bowed,
then, covering her face with her hands, she bursts into sobs.
Irene, realizing what has happened, utters a long cry of
despair; she throws her imperial headdress on the ground
and, seizing a knife, she cuts off her hair almost to the roots;
she throws her purple buskins and puts on boots of plain
off

black; from the wardrobe of her daughter Eudocia, recently


188 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
widowed, she borrows mourning garments and a black veil
with which she covers her head. In relating the events of this
tragicday many years later, Anna Comnena asks herself
whether she is not the victim of a dreadful dream, and why
she did not die at the same moment as her adored father, why
she did not kill herself on that day when “the torch of the
world,” Alexius the Great, was extinguished, the day on
which, as she expresses it, “his sun went down.”
In all this beautiful account, there is not a word that could
lead one even to suspect the intrigues and ambitions at work
in that sickroom. Irene, in her despair, has no thought for the
diadem or the power; Anna, at her side, despises all the
glories of this world. There is not aword about the coveted
succession, nor about the last desperate efforts made to over-
throw the established order. There is a discreet allusion to
the haste with which John Comnenus left his father’s death-
bed to go and take over the Great Palace; a casual passing
mention of the disturbances in the capital; and that is all.
One must consult the other chroniclers of the time to see
what the lamentations of these women concealed; Irene’s
violent attempts to make Emperor disinherit his son in
the
favor of Bryennius, and her fury when John Comnenus,
having wrested the imperial ring from the dying man — or,
more likely, having simply received it from him— had him-
self hurriedly proclaimed Emperor in St. Sophia and took
possession of the Great Palace. This occasioned an outburst
of wild rage on the part of these ambitious women. Irene
urged Bryennius also to proclaim himself Emperor, and to
take up arms against his brother-in-law. Then she threw
herself on the Emperor’s agonizing body, crying out to him
that his sonwas stealing his throne while he still lived, and
entreating him at last to recognize Bryennius’s rights to the
crown. But Alexius, without replying, smiled and lifted his
ANNA COMNENA (( 189

hands heaven in a vague gesture. Irene, exasperated, burst


to
into reproaches: “All your life,” she screamed, “you have
been a deceiver, using your words to conceal your thoughts,
and you are just the same even on your deathbed.” Mean-
while, John Comnenus asked himself how he ought to act
toward his mother, his sisters, and Bryennius, on whose part
he feared an attempted coup d'Êtat. And when, toward
nightfall, Alexius’s agony came to an end, in this turmoil of
ambitions and anxieties no one had time to bother about the
dead man. His body was left almost entirely unattended,
and early on the following day it was hastily buried, without
any of the customary funeral pomp.
Anna’s plots had failed: her brother was Emperor. For
the proud Princess thiswas a terrible and unexpected blow.
For so many years she had lived in the hope of inheriting the
Empire. She considered the throne legitimately and essen-
tially hers, she thought herself so superior to her detested
younger brother. Now, all her dreams had crumbled. The
audacity of John Comnenus and the hesitancy of Bryennius
had overturned at a single stroke the whole edifice of intricate
schemes so cleverly constructed by Anna and Irene. The
daughter of Alexius was inconsolable, and her frustrated
ambition, obliterating all other sentiments, kindled in her
heart the fury of Medea. The year had not run its course be-

fore she attempted to seize the power by means of a plot to

assassinate her brother John. But Bryennius, whose char-


acter was rather weak and who, in any case, was not really
ambitious, hesitated at the last moment. He seems to have
doubted the legitimacy of his wife’s claims, and he said flatly
that he thought his brother-in-law had every right to the

throne. His scruples and his weakness paralyzed the zeal of

the other conspirators, and thanks to his procrastination the


plot was discovered. The Emperor prided himself on his
190 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
clemency. He would not hear of any executions, and con-
tented himself with confiscating the property of the conspira-
tors. Not very long afterward, on the advice of his Grand
Domestic, Axouch, he restored Anna’s fortune to her in its
entirety. To be reminded by her brother in this way, with a
slightly disdainful magnanimity, of the family ties and affec-
tions that in a moment had completely forgotten,
of folly she
was the supreme humiliation for this proud Princess.
An anecdote, related by the chronicler Nicetas, shows how
furious Anna Comnena was over this last failure. When she
saw her whole enterprise brought to nothing by the shilly-
shallying of Bryennius, she, so chaste and proper, swore at
her husband like a trooper. Cursing his cowardice, she de-
clared that nature had made a pretty mess of things, clothing
her masculine spirit with a woman’s body and Bryennius’s
timid and indecisive soul with a man’s. Decency obliges me
to paraphrase the actual terms she used,
which were very
different, much coarser and more vigorous. But Anna
Comnena must indeed have felt cruelly stricken, to have
stooped, literary and well-bred as she was, to utter words of
such crudity.

Ill

Anna Comnena was only thirty-six years old, but her life
was over. She survived the collapse of her great ambitions
by twenty-nine years, consecrating herself wholly, as she says
somewhere, “to God and to books.” This long last chapter of
her existence was, for her, mortally sad. She was over-
whelmed by loss after loss. After her father Alexius, whose
death, as she well knew had meant for her the end of every-
thing, she saw one after the other, her mother Irene,
die,
"‘the glory of the East and the West,” her favorite brother
ANNA COMNENA (( 191

Andronicus, and 1136, her husband, Nicephorus


finally, in

Bryennius; and for her, each one of these deaths meant one
more stage in her decline. In a state of semi-disgrace after

the failure of her final conspiracy, she lived a life of retire-

ment far from the court, often in the convent founded by her
mother Irene, in honor of Our Lady of Grace. The former
intimates of her father, the courtiers who had danced attend-
ance on her in the past, now avoided her for fear of displeas-
ing the new Sadly she enumerated the ingrates she
ruler.

encountered. At the same time, she saw the brother she hated
securing his seat on the throne. All this embittered her soul.
During the lifetime of her husband, in whom the Emperor
had not lost confidence, and to whom he had given an im-
portant position in the State, Anna Comnena had still
counted for something. But after the death of Bryennius, and
particularly during the reign of her nephew Manuel, silence
closed around her, and she suffered terribly because of it.
Every day she became more gloomy and morose; she saw
herself more and more as the victim of an unjust fate. On
every page of her book, she speaks of the misfortunes with
which her life had been filled, almost from the day of her
birth in the Purple Pavilion. It was in vain that she affected

to strike a gallant pose, to repeat with the poet, at each fresh


blow from fate: “Bear this, my heart, thou hast already borne
worse ills.” She could never achieve real resignation. When
the old Princess recalled the brilliant beginnings of her life,
the radiant years of her youth, and her imperial hopes; when
she evoked the phantom procession of all those who had
accompanied her happiness, her young financé Constantine
Ducas, the beautiful Empress Mary, the incomparable
Alexius her father, Irene her mother, her husband, and many
others; whenshe compared with these vanished glories her
present solitude, the ingrates who forgot her, the old friends
192 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
who neglected her, the near relatives who treated her badly
and made everyone shun her, she could not restrain her tears.
Her embittered soul, full of rancor, took pleasure in the
enumeration of her misfortunes. “I swear by God and his
divine mother,” she writes, “that from my cradle sorrows and
adversities have overwhelmed me one after another. I say
nothing of my bodily ills, that I leave to the domestics of
the Gynaeceum. But to enumerate all the troubles that have
assailed me from the age of eight on, all the enemies who
have earned me the malice of men, would take the facility of
Isocrates, the eloquence of Pindar, the vehemence of Pole-
mon, the muse of Homer, the lyre of Sappho. There is no
misfortune, great or small, that has not befallen me. Always,
today as in former days, the torrents of the storm have
crushed me, and even as I write this book, I am overwhelmed
by a sea of tribulations, wave following upon wave.” Then
come tart, and transparent, allusions to “the powers that be”
who leave her to live “in her corner” and do not permit even
the most obscure persons to visit her. “For thirty years, I
swear it by the blessed souls of the dead Emperors, I have
not seen or received any of my father’s old friends; many are
dead, many avoid me
out of fear, following the changes in
policy.” Elsewhere she declares that her misfortunes could
move not only all sensitive beings, but even stones; draping
herself in her sorrow, posing as a great martyr, she is amazed
that she herself has not been changed into an inanimate
object by so great an accumulation of misfortunes, like
the
famous mourners of pagan mythology; and recalling the
tragic figure of Niobe, she counts herself equally, if not more,
deserving of being turned to stone.
It must be admitted that these tears are somewhat exces-
sive, and that, no matter how sincere, they end by being
rather irritating. Besides, there is every reason to believe that
ANNA COMNENA (( 193

in the account of her misfortunes, as with everything else


that concerned herself, Anna Comnena, whether consciously
or not, exaggerates, and depicts events under a light that is

more tragic than true. In the last years of her life, this aged
Princess, this survival of a past era, with the name of her

father Alexius always on her lips, may have been rather


tiresome, and something of a nuisance to her young nephew
Manuel and the brilliant courtiers surrounding him. But she
could, perhaps, have lived on good terms with her brother,
the Emperor John, had she made the effort. As we have
seen, this gentle and merciful Prince harbored no resentment
against his sister’s husband for having been the instrument
of her ambitious plans. He treated her sons with similar
kindness. He had the marriages of these two young men
celebrated even though their mother had been concocting
plots against him on the eve of the wedding festivities. We
know, too, how he forgave Anna for conspiring against his
life, hoping by this chivalrous magnanimity to awaken some

remorse in her troubled soul and revive in it some feelings of


affection. At all events, even in her retirement, the Princess’s
life was less isolated than she wished to admit; her patronage
was sought, which proves that she was not without influence.

And no matter how sad, how melancholy may have been


Anna Comnena’s last years, it must not be forgotten that she
herself blame, rather than destiny. But it must have
was to

been peculiarly hard for her to go on living with her defeat


until the age of sixty-five; indeed, it must have been torture
for this ambitious woman to see the triumph of her ad-
versaries andbe aware, during these thirty years, that
to

there was no further part for her to play. But she had brought
this on herself.
Her supreme consolation in retirement was the literature

beloved of her youth. She had a little court of scholars.


194 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
grammarians, and monks; and she poured all her sorrows, all

her regrets, all her bitterness, all her memories, into a fine
book. The Alexiade.
Knowing all that we now know about the author, we can
easily guess what manner of work this was. Of course, Anna
Comnena loftily credits herself with the serene impartiality
of the historian.She remarks somewhere, that “whoever un-
dertakes to write history must free himself equally from pas-
sion and from hatred, must know how to praise his enemies
when their conduct calls for it, and to blame his closest rela-
tives when their faults make it necessary.” She is no less
boastful of her regard for truth. “It may perhaps be said by
my readers,” she writes, “that my language has been modi-
fied bymy natural affections. But I swear by the dangers
that my father the Emperor faced for the sake of the Ro-
mans, by the feats that he accomplished, by all that he suf-
fered for Christ’s people, that I do not write this book in
order to flatter my father. Whenever I shall find him to have
been in the wrong, I shall sternly reject my natural impulses
and adhere She has taken care to list meticu-
to the truth.”
lously the various sources from which she has drawn the
content of her history. She consulted the memorandums of
her father’s old comrades in arms, dipping into the simple
and truthful memoirs in which, without regard for art or
rhetoric, theyhave related their exploits and those of their
master, the Emperor. She then combined what they told
with all that she herself had seen, with all that she had
gathered from the talk of her father, her mother, and her
uncles, and with everything reported by the Emperor’s great
generals, who witnessed the glories of his reign and played a
part in them. She stresses the unanimity of all this testimony,
and the obvious sincerity with which it was given, “now that
all flattery, all lies, have disappeared with the death of
ANNA COMNENA (( 195

Alexius, and people, having nothing to gain by flattering the


vanished ruler, but only the one now in power, give us the
naked facts, and describe events exactly as they happened.”
And it is true that Anna Comnena was genuinely concerned
with collecting accurate and circumstantial information. Be-
sides the oral traditions, she consulted the archives of the
Empire and copied records of capital importance, she tran-
scribed in her book the authentic texts of certain diplomatic
documents, of certain private letters, and she carried her
concern for documentation so far that, to relate the story of
Robert Guiscard, she made use of a Latin source, which has
been lost.

But in spite of all this. The Alexiade arouses uneasiness


and suspicion This so-called history is a mix-
in the reader.

ture of satire and panegyric. And it is easy to understand


why. When, after the death of Bryennius, the Princess made
ither task to continue the historical work begun by her hus-
band, and to record the reign of Alexius for posterity, she
felt the quite natural temptation to paint in rosy colors the
period in which she had been happy, in which her hopes had
been high, and the future smiling. In exalting the great figure
of Alexius, it did not entirely displease her to lower a little,
by inevitable comparison, the successors of this foremost of
the Comneni. She also noted, not without some secret satis-
faction, what she believed to be the signs of a rapid and ir-
remediable decadence. “Today,” this lettered woman writes
somewhere, “historians and poets and the lessons one can
learn from them are despised as being of no value. Dice and
other such amusements, that is the great interest.” Things
were not at all like that in the old days at the court of Alexius,

the pious and illustrious Emperor whom his daughter does

not hesitate to proclaim greater than Constantine, and to


associate with the holy company of Christ’s apostles. The
196 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
very excess of this praise is enough to indicate the tenor of

this book to which Anna Comnena has given the significant


title of The Alexiade^ a title for an epic poem in honor of a
legendary hero.
We must not forget that Anna Comnena was very much
a Princess, very Byzantine, and therefore incapable of fully
understanding the events of her time or of judging her fellow
men with real impartiality— as witness her enduring preju-
dice against the Crusaders, her preconceived hostility toward
them, with the sole exception of Bohémond. Nor must we for-
get that she was a woman, and consequently had a liking for
the decorative, for exterior magnificence, which sometimes
concealed from her the true heart of things; that she was a
passionate woman, consumed by hatreds and resentments,
and lastly, a learned woman, a literary stylist in love with fine
phrases. All this, though it may diminish the strictly histori-
cal value of Anna Comnena’s work, does not by any means
make it less interesting. As a psychological study. The
Alexiade is a document of the first importance; and from a
more general standpoint it is a wholly remarkable book. And
that the last ambition of this stateswoman who was also a
woman of letters should have been to live on, beyond the
tomb, by what she believed to be the best in herself, her mind
and her thought, is a characteristic touch not devoid of
grandeur.
Anna Comnena died in 1148, at the age of sixty-five. A
contemporary who knew her well has praised her large,
lively eyes which revealed the quickness of her thought,
the depth of her philosophical knowledge, and the truly im-
perial superiority of her mind, and he concludes, by
wittily,
saying that had she been known to ancient Greece she would
have added “a fourth Grace to the Graces, a tenth Muse to
the Muses.” She was, to say the least, an altogether remark-
ANNA COMNENA (( 197

able woman, one of the finest feminine intellects ever pro-

duced by Byzantium, and far superior to most of the men of


her time. And whatever one may think of her character, there
is something melancholy about the unfulfilled existence of
this Princess who had every right to be ambitious.
IX

IRENE DUCAS

T oward the end of the year 1077 Alexius Comnenus, the


,

future Kmperor, who at that time was merely an ambi-


tious noble, realized that a brilliant marriage would do more
than anything else to help him attain the throne to which he
aspired. Among the great families of the Byzantine aristoc-
racy, none was more illustrious than that of the Ducae. Their
lineage could, according to the genealogists, be traced
back
to Constantine the Great, by whom, it was asserted,
the first
of their line had been appointed “Duke” of Constantinople,
from which title the family name of his descendants derived.
Whether or not these claims were justified, there is no doubt
that in the latter part of the eleventh century
the Ducas
family, wealthy, powerful, respected, was one
of the most
celebrated in the monarchy. It had provided Byzantium
with
several Emperors,and one of its scions, Michael VII, was
now on the throne. There was no love lost between the

198
IRENE DUCAS (( 199

Comneni and the Ducae; Isaac, the first Basileus from


the Comneni family, had been succeeded by a Ducas, and the
similarity of their ambitions, combined with their equal
had set
rights to the throne, the fires of dangerous hatreds
burning between their two houses. It seemed, therefore, to
all sensible people, genuinely interested in preserving the
public peace, that would be highly advantageous to unite
it

through marriage the two rival families, thereby unifying


their interests and their aims for the future. Moreover, the
subtle politician in Alexius Comnenus was quick to recognize
how powerfully such an alliance would support his ultimate
ambition. This is why, at the end of the year 1077, he over-
came his mother’s opposition and married the young Irene
Ducas, daughter of Andronicus, Grand Duke of the Anato-
lian Scholae, Protovestiarius, Protoproedros, and grand-
daughter of Caesar John Ducas. And for the same reason,
when Alexius overthrew Nicephorus Botaniates in 1081,
everyone agreed that the revolt of the nobles and of the army
through which the new Emperor was set on the throne “de-
parted from lawfulness only to reinstate the law”— to repeat a

well-known phrase. Born a Comnenus, related by marriage


to the Ducae, Alexius, in reclaiming the Imperial crown,
even at the point of the sword, was actually restoring it to its

rightful heirs, whose representative he was. In revolting


against his sovereign, says a contemporary writer, “not only
was he blameless, but he accomplished an act that all
thoughtful people must commend.”
From had now de-
his purely political marriage Alexius
rived the maximum advantage. He was Emperor. And he
apparently saw no reason why he should prolong his grati-
tude to a Princess for whom he felt no love. Indeed, ill-

advised by his mother, who savagely hated the Ducae, he had


200 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
no sooner achieved his victory than he began to think of
divorcing his wife; for he was infatuated, according to the
chroniclers, with the beautiful Empress Mary of Alania,
wife of his predecessor. To ensure that the name of Irene
should be associated with that of Alexius in the imperial
acclamations, it was necessary for the Admiral, George
Paleologus, to declare with brutal directness: “It is not for
you, a Comnenus, that I have worked, but for Irene,” and to
order his sailors to acclaim the young Princess. It took all

the stubborn tenacity of the Patriarch, who was devoted to


the house of Ducas, to bring Alexius to the point of having
Irene solemnly crowned Empress— a week after he himself
had been anointed. It is easy to guess what the imperial
marriage must have been like under these circumstances;
what strained and difficult relations must have existed be-
tween this hostile couple, associates drawn from two rival
families, and both aware of the inimical ambitions they rep-
resented.
How, from this secret hostility, there sprang up little by
little a friendship between Alexius and his wife; how the
young Empress, at first disdained and kept at a distance,
imperceptibly came to exert a decisive influence on her hus-
band, one of those psychological enigmas in history that
is

invite an attempt at solution. Since Irene’s life also affords


us a glimpse of the religious and monastic life in remote
twelfth century Byzantium, we may judge it worthwhile,
and not without interest, to try to reconstruct the figure of
this woman, apparently unassuming and discreet but in
reality a schemer, clever, cunning, and consumed by ambi-
tion— until the day when she was to seek in the cloister, as
her daughter Anna Comnena sought in literature, consola-
tion for her frustrated hopes.
IRENE DUCAS (( 201

When Ducas became Empress of Byzantium, in


Irene
April 1081, she was not yet fifteen years old. She does not
appear to have been pretty. Anna Comnena, who professes
a lively admiration for her mother, has not succeeded in
presenting her to us as a finished beauty, for all her efforts
to paint her in flattering colors. She was tall, harmoniously
proportioned, and graceful in all her movements; she had
beautiful ivory-tinted arms, which she liked to show off,
and charming sea-green eyes. But her complexion was a
little too florid and the strong color in her cheeks was notice-

able even from a distance. “Her face,” says Anna Comnena,


“which was radiant as the moon, was not round, like the
faces of Assyrian women, nor long, like those of the Scythi-

ans; it was an almost perfect oval.” According to another of

her panegyrists, her beauty was of the spirit, interior rather

than exterior. And view of the fact that Irene cared little
in

for dress, that, in the words of a contemporary, “she pre-


ferred to shine with the radiance of her virtues than to deck
herself out in gorgeous, golden-fringed apparel,” that she
used no artifice to enhance her looks, “as ultra-feminine
women do, thereby insulting their Divine Creator,” and that
the art of cosmetics, so dear to Cleopatra, seemed to her both
useless and vain, one can well believe that Alexius Com-
nenus, flighty by nature, had no particular inducement to
stay faithful to his wife, and that notwithstanding the seven
children, three boys and four girls, he had by her, he was
more or less indifferent to her, and consoled himself in nu-
merous love affairs that strongly aroused her jealousy.
Irene cared no more for society than she did for personal
202 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
adornment. She had a deep distaste for appearing in public
arrayed in all the paraphernalia of the imperial ceremonies,
and when her rank made such appearances obligatory, she
displayed a blushing embarrassment. Naturally taciturn, she
would drift through the court festivities in silence, cold
and mysterious as a marble statue (the simile is Anna
Comnena’s). All told, she appears to us as a modest and
discreet young woman, a little shy, a little secretive, crushed
between an unloving husband and a hostile, domineering
mother-in-law.
Simple her tastes, Irene took no pleasure in surround-
in
ing herself with a large retinue; magnificence, pageantry,
and pomp, repelled her profoundly. She lived by preference
in her private apartments, where, withdrawn into her self,
she spent her days in reading and meditation. Her panegyr-
ists compare her now to Athena ^^descended from
heaven,
splendid and unapproachable,” now to the perfect woman
described by Solomon; and they add that she assiduously
cultivated the wisdom “that Plato calls the only beauty of the
soul.” Her private life was in fact dedicated to essentials;
she divided her time between works of charity and the study
of the Scriptures. The writings of the Fathers of the
Church
held particular charm for her; it was not unusual for her to
come to table still holding in her hand some pious book
in
which she was absorbed; and when her daughter, Anna
Comnena, more inclined to science than to theology, ex-
pressed surprise at her great interest in such books,
and
asked what pleasure she could take in these abstract
and
subtle theorieswhich make one dizzy,” Irene answered with
a smile: “Sometimes, like you, I am intimidated
by these
books, nevertheless am
unable to tear myself away from
I
them. Wait and see: when you have had your fill
of other
books, you will discover the charm of these.” But the Em-
IRENE DUCAS (( 203

press, highly intelligent and remarkably well educated, did


not limit her reading to religious works; she was equally
interested in secular literature, and was a patroness of writ-
ers. Above all, however, her piety was great and her charity
indefatigable. Very generous, especially with the religious
in whom she took such delight, her hand was always open,
that “munificent hand” lauded by one of her panegyrists. She
gave liberally to all, to every beggar, to every miserable out-
cast she happened to see. And to these, the humble and down-
trodden, this woman, and reserved,
ordinarily so distant
made herself easily accessible; with them she felt no em-
barrassment, her tongue was loosened; she even went so far
as to preach to them on occasion, and point a moral. She
liked to speak of regeneration through work; she counseled
her protégés not to abandon themselves to indolence, “not to
idle from door to door begging for alms.” Kindly by nature,
she increased the value of her gifts by the manner in which
she bestowed them.
In this partly voluntary seclusion, Irene Ducas passed
twenty years of her life, and she must have suffered at times
from the subordinate position into which she had been ma-
neuvered; for she loved the husband who neglected her, and
she was aware that her natural qualities were great enough
to fit her for a more distinguished role. Her daughter has said

of her that she had a masculine spirit, courage, intelligence,


presence of mind, and business ability. Another contem-
porary extols her capacity for reflective thought, her sense of
justice, her wise counsels, her adroit and supple mind, and

above her courage, “which surpassed that of any man,


all,

and was the one point on which she renounced her womanli-
ness in favor of a more masculine virtue.” Finally it must be
said that she was exceedingly proud of her birth, of her

family’s renown, of the rights that were her due. It is not


204 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
surprising that such a woman should, when the opportunity
came, have suddenly revealed herself as an immensely ambi-
tious politician.
In point of fact, the young Empress’s position at the court
was imperceptibly strengthening all the time. She had con-
solidated it to begin with by providing the Emperor with
heirs to the throne; later, the marriages contracted by her
daughters served to reinforce her influence, through the
power she exercised over one, at least, of her sons-in-law.
Then, the retirement of Anna Dalassena, in liberating the
Basileus from the subjection in which his imperious mother
had held him for so long, left the door open for other coun-
sels. Little by little, as he advanced in age, Alexius turned
to Irene of his own accord. His passions
had calmed, his
taste for adventure was almost extinct, and he suffered from
gout, from cruel attacks of pain that only the Empress knew
how to assuage with gentle and expert massage. At last the
hour had come for which Irene had waited so patiently.
Very soon she became indispensable to Alexius. He formed
the habit of taking her with him wherever he went, on his
travels, even on his campaigns, and as much for the sake of
the affectionate care she bestowed upon him as for the wise
political advice that she was able to give him. Also, perhaps,
mistrusting her passion for intrigue, he thought it wiser not
to abandon her absence to the promptings of an ambi-
in his
tion that she no longer tried to conceal. Although she sin-
cerely loved the Emperor her husband, Irene, aware of her
influential position, now aspired beyond it. Her immediate
purpose was to share the actual governing power, to rule the
Empire according to her own ideas. For the future, she
wanted above all to settle the order of succession. Her plan
was to pass over the legitimate heir, her son John, and trans-
mit the throne to her favorite daughter, Anna Comnena, and
IRENE DUCAS (( 205

Anna’s husband, Nicephorus Bryennius, whom she admired


for his intelligence, his eloquence, his cultivated mind, and
his literary gifts. It is likely that storms broke out in the im-
perial household over this subject,and that Irene complained
about having to accompany the Emperor everywhere and al-
ways. But Alexius refused to listen; and as, apart from every-
thing else, the Empress’s skillful supervision protected him
more effectively than any amount of precautions against the
plotting of his enemies, he would not consent at any price to
the absence from his side of “this unsleeping guardian, this
always open eye.”
In vain did Irene’s political enemies jeer at the Emperor’s
newly developed attachment to his wife. In his own tent, even
on his table, Alexius would find abusive lampoons advising
him to send back to the Gynaeceum this Empress whose
presence encumbered the camps. Nothing had any effect.

Every day the Emperor became more subject to the influence

of Irene, because, as Anna Comnena says, “she was quick to

discern the essential in everything that happened, and


quicker still to uncover enemy intrigues.” And so, adds the
imperial chronicler, “my mother was, for my father the Basi-
leus, an open eye in the night, a vigilant guard by day, the
best antidote for the dangers of the table, the salutary cure
for the perils that may lurk in a repast.” In this role Irene
maintained the delicate and discreet reserve of her young
womanhood. She was never seen or heard, yet her presence
was felt. To was revealed only by a litter, drawn
the army, it

by two mules and flying the imperial flag. Her “divine body”
remained invisible, and more even than in the Sacred Palace
she deliberately shrouded her activities in mystery.
When necessary, however, she was not in the least afraid

to “brave the eyes of men.” In danger, or in grave emergen-


cies, she could give good proof of her courage, her presence
206 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
of mind, her decisiveness. Early one morning, when the
army was encamped in Asia Minor, news came that the
Turks were near. But Alexius was still asleep. Irene ordered
the messenger not to disturb him, and as she had already
risen, she pretended to busy herself with her usual occupa-
tions, notwithstanding her anxiety. Soon, another messenger
announced that the barbarians were advancing. The Em-
press, mastering her fears, stayed calmly at the Emperor’s
side. Disregarding the danger, the imperial couple were
about to take their places at table when suddenly a man
covered with blood came in and collapsed at the Emperor’s
feet, demonstrating the imminent peril and the presence of
the enemy at the gate. Even then Irene remained impassive,
“like the woman of the Scriptures.” Her fears were
prudent
only for the Emperor. When, finally, she was persuaded to
consider her own safety and fly before the impending battle,
she went reluctantly, “continually turning to look back at her
husband.” So it was not without reason that the Emperor
now called her, “his dear soul, the confidante of his plans,
the consoler of his ills.” Thus, little by little, she became all

powerful.
We have seen earlier how the ambitious Empress tried to
take advantage of her influence, and what conspiratorial
webs were spun around the death bed of Alexius. We have
likewise seen with what solicitude she nursed the dying man
to the end, how, in the hope of wresting his recovery from

God, she spared neither prayers nor alms, what courage she
displayed during this unhappy time, “fighting like an Olym-
pian athlete against the sorrow that overwhelmed her,” and
also with what tenacity she strove to gain her ends and how
great was her despair and anger when she saw that she had
been vanquished. Nevertheless, she was better able to resign
herself to the inevitable than was her daughter Anna Com-
IRENE DUCAS (( 207

nena. She took no part in the plot that the latter hatched
against her brother John, and she remarked on this occasion,
not without irony: “One should seek to make an Emperor
only when the throne is vacant; once there is a sovereign, he
should not be overthrown.” Irene was happier than her
daughter, in that she tasted the joys of supreme power for
ten full years after her early self-effacement. And when, after

the death of Alexius, she retired into a convent, when, in the


words of a contemporary, “like an eagle with golden wings,
she took flight for celestial spheres,” she could tell herself

that all said and done her life had not been unsuccessful.

II

At the time when she exercised an all-powerful influence


over Alexius Comnenus, Irene and her husband were as-
sociated in a pious undertaking. In the western part of Con-
stantinople, in the district of the Deuteron, not far from the
present site of the castle of the Seven Towers, husband and
wife built two adjoining monasteries, one for men, in the
name “who loves humanity” (Philanthropos) and
of Christ ^

the other for women, under the protection of the Virgin “full
of grace.” The Empress had decided to construct this holy
house for diverse reasons. First and foremost, she wanted to

show in this way her Madonna, who had, she


gratitude to the
said, protected her and overwhelmed her with favors
throughout her life, who had privileged her to be born of “a
race naturally pious and inclined to virtue,” who had given
her the benefit of an admirable education, and elevated her to
that “summit of human happiness” the throne, who had, in-
deed, extended her divine hand to all those whom Irene loved
—her husband, her children, her grandchildren, granting to
208 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
the Basileus great and fruitful victories in his wars against
the barbarians, to the members of the Royal family miracu-
lous recoveries from sickness, and to the Empire constant
support and unequaled prosperity. Moreover, like all Byzan-
tines, Irene believed the prayers that go up to God from the
lips of monks and nuns to be particularly efficacious, and
consequently she expected the Foundation to procure all

sorts of benefits for the good government of the monarchy


and for the peace of Christendom.
But to these spiritual motives were added some more
human considerations. One of the Empress’s daughters,
Eudocia, had made an unfortunate marriage. Her husband,
lacking all respect for the imperial birth of his young wife,
treated her with contempt, and was scarcely less insolent to
his mother-in-law, the Empress, with the result that when,
finally, Eudocia fell ill,
had been deemed necessary to break
it

up this ill-assorted union. The husband had been turned out


of the Palace, the wife had become a nun. Now the immedi-
ate purpose of the new convent was to provide for this im-
perial recluse an asylum worthy of her rank. But in this
Byzantium so fertile in revolutions no one could ever be
sure of the morrow; one day the Princesses of Irene’s family
might find themselves obliged to seek in a cloister refuge
from the storms of life; and Irene had to consider what her
own future would be in the event that the Emperor should die
before her. So shehad erected next to the monastery another
dwelling, more comfortable and luxurious, for the use of the
imperial women. This was known as “the Princes’ Dwelling”
or as “the House of the Rulers.” Just outside the enclosure
of the monastery and independent of the convent, these
buildings were, however, in easy communication with the
cloister and partook of its sacred character. Thus, while
Alexius, in the monastery of Christ, was preparing a tomb
IRENE DUCAS (( 209

for his mortal remains, Irene, next to the convent of the


Virgin, was arranging a refuge for her old age.
It was to this refuge that she withdrew after her husband’s

death. At that time the dwelling reserved for the Empress


was enlarged. It was a veritable palace, with vast courtyards,
porticos, several baths, even a special church, dedicated to
St. Demetrius. Accompanied by her women and a large
retinue of servants, Irene installed herself there with her
favorite daughter, Anna Comnena, who occupied an apart-
ment looking out on the garden of the Monastery of Christ,
and Anna’s daughter, who had been widowed when quite
young, and who, like the Empress, was named Irene Ducas.
There, among her children, in the vicinity of the religious
whom she had always loved, re-enfolded in the pious atmos-
phere of her youth, the old Empress lived until her death,
which seems to have taken place in 1123. During this period,

however, she was by no means entirely divorced from the


world. She delighted in entertaining, and she maintained a
little court of literary men who sang her praises or consoled
her in loss and sorrow. She continued to take an interest in
things of the mind, and in particular she encouraged her son-
in-law, Nicephorus Bryennius, whose literary talent she had
always appreciated, to write the history of her lamented hus-
band, the great Alexius Comnenus. This work has come
down to us. In his preface, Bryennius lauds “the very wise
spirit” of her who imposed on him this heavy task, “the
herculean force” that constrained him to accept it. Irene

seems to have enjoyed this inspirational role, through which


she satisfied her desire to extol at one and the same time the
separate glories of the Ducae and the Comneni. Her contem-
poraries proclaimed her, even in her presence, as “the siren of
Caesar,” and there is reason to believe that the compliment
did not displease her.
210 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES

III

In the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris is preserved the


charter of foundation, the typikon^ drawn up by the Empress
for her convent. It is signed, in purple ink, by Irene herself,
“Empress of the Romans, faithful in Christ our Lord.” In it,

she has enumerated, in lengthy detail, the buildings that she


has had constructed, and the revenues with which she has en-
dowed the convent; she has minutely defined the multifarious
duties that she prescribes for her religious, the Rule they
must follow, the rigid discipline to which they will be sub-
ject; and lastly, she has determined, with precision, and in
a singularly authoritative manner, everything that has to do
with the administration of the convent funds and properties
and with the safeguarding of its independence. This curious
document, which is no less than sixty pages long, is, there-
fore, extremely interesting, as much for what it tells us about
the psychology of Irene Ducas, as for the light it sheds on
the monastic life of her time.
One is struck, to begin with, by the peculiar mixture of
pious phraseology and sound judgment, of mystical exalta-
tion and executive precision, dry, detailed, dictatorial. It is
the same contrast that we have already encountered in the
personality of the Empress, passionately religious and in-
clined to sermonize, yet so lucid and so daring in the conduct
of her life and the pursuit of her ambitions.
The Founder’s first concern is to ensure a scrupulous re-
spect for morality in her convent. In the early twelfth cen-
tury, Byzantine monastic life was in great need of reform,
and it is not without reason that Irene is afraid “that the
serpent, the age-old seducer, may find in the pious congrega-
tion some new Eve, into whose ear he will murmur his deadly
IRENE DUCAS (( 211

sophisms, luring her down into the nets of Hell.” Ardently,


therefore, she entreats the Virgin to guard the nuns against
temptation, “to endow these feminine souls with virile vir-
tues.” But prudently she takes every precaution to keep them
out of danger. The convent will be strictly closed against all
intrusion from without. No man will be given entry, no alien
eye will get a chance to surprise the nuns in the pious inti-

macy of their cloister. The Empress carefully prohibits the


construction anywhere near the convent of terraces from
which the curious could look down into its courts. Even
the eunuchs attendant on the great ladies permitted to visit
the convent must stay outside the cloister wall. Even choris-
ters are excluded from this model convent. At most, and only

out of necessity, the presence of two priests will be tolerated,


on condition that they are eunuchs; and both the confessor
and the almoner of the community must be in this reassuring
category of persons.
So much for the inside. Irene ordered no less strictly the
relations that her nuns were liable to have with the outside
world. On this point, the doctrine of the Church was singu-
larly rigid. “The monk,” said the Fathers of the Church,
“must no longer have any earthly family.” In practice, how-
ever, a few concessions to “human weakness” had to be made.
Consequently, the mother, sister, and sister-in-law of a re-

ligious were authorized to come to the convent once or twice


a year to take a meal with her in the common refectory, and
should she happen to be sick, they might stay in the convent
for two whole days. As for the father, brother, and brother-
in-law, they might see their cloistered relative only at the

outer gate, to which, if she were sick, she would be carried in


a litter, man must not enter the cloister on any pretext
since a
whatsoever. And in any event, these interviews must be brief,
and must take place in the presence of an aged and venerable
,

212 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES


nun. Inversely, if one of the religious should have a relative '

in the town who was gravely ill, she might pay him a visit,
but accompanied by two other nuns of an age and bearing;
that would command respect, and she must at all costs return
to the convent before nightfall. To check the slightest in-
clination toward irregularity in the matter of comings and
goings, the gate-sister, an old woman of proven virtue, kept
constant watch at the gate, and every evening, to make things
doubly sure, she delivered the keys into the hands of the
Superior. Nothing could be done in the house without the
authorization of the Superior, which does not mean, however,
that she herself was exempt from the common Rule. When
she had to discuss the business affairs of the convent, when
she was obliged to see the managers or the farmers of the
community estates, she betook herself to the inner entrance
door of the convent, escorted by two or three old nuns who
were witnesses to the interview. In short, every effort was
made to keep strangers out of the enclosure. As a great con-
cession, those women for whom the sanctity of the house
could be an inspiration were allowed a visit. In this, the
Founder on the wisdom of the Superior, but with the
relied
reminder that these visitors must always be women of un-
impeachable morals, and that their visits should never ex-
tend beyond the two-day limit. Even the Princesses of the
imperial family, even those among them who were the special
patronesses of the convent, were not, as a general rule, per-
mitted to remain for any length of time, nor did they have
the right to enter whenever they pleased.
It was not Irene’s intention to found a large community;
she believed that numbers tend to hamper the strict applica-
tion of a Rule. She specified that there should be only twenty-
four religious and ten lay-sisters, and in no case must the
total number go above forty. At the head of the community
IRENE DUCAS (( 213
was placed a Superior, who was chosen in a curious fashion.
The nuns agreed on the nomination of three candidates, of
whom one was to be chosen. The three names were written
on three identical pieces of paper, each with the formula:
“O Lord Jesus Christ, Who knowest all hearts! Through
the mediation of Our Lady, immaculate Virgin full of
grace, show unto us. Thy humble servants, whether Thou
judgest our sister, so and so, worthy of the
Hegu- office of

men.” The papers, carefully sealed, were placed upon the


altar on Saturday evening; the community passed the night
in prayer, and the next morning, after the liturgy, the priest
took one of the papers from the altar, and thus God desig-
nated her whom He willed to direct the community. Once in-
stalled, the Superior exercised an absolute authority over
material as well as spiritual matters, and was within her it

jurisdiction to debar a religious from the community without


explanation, if she saw fit. She herself was not accountable to
anyone for her actions, and she could be deposed only for
serious dereliction of duty. In this event, the imperial pa-
troness of the convent, who had, ex officio^ supervised the
election of the Abbess, would intervene to expel her from
office. But such cases were altogether exceptional.

The Abbess was aided in her administrative work by a


whole series of assistants, whom she herself appointed, and
dismissed, at will. There was the (TKevo(f)vXaKLaaa who had
charge of the relics, ornaments, and archives, and the
eKKXrjaLCLpxtaaa who had the care of the church, and whose
duty it was to see that the candles were lighted and the
sacred chants properly performed. One sister was assigned
to take in the provisions, another had charge of the wine; the
cellarer preserved the produce of the monastic estates; the

rpaxefapta kept order in the refectory; the function of the


cTrto'Try/xoj^apxto’o’a was to maintain the discipline of the com-
214 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
munity, and in particular to prohibit frivolous talk and to
punish idleness, “which is the source of evil.” Two ipyodor piai
were responsible for distributing the work; two Ôoxetaptat took
care of the clothing and the cash; finally, there was the gate-

sister,appointed guardian of the door. Each of these func-


tionaries had her own special task, and the duties of each
were outlined in minute detail by the Founder. Everywhere
a concern for exactitude, for precise and accurate account-
ing, is to be found; the condition of things at the moment of

assuming charge of them, the pattern of comings and goings,


everything must be ascertained with meticulous attention.
Finally, Irene enjoins everyone to practice the strictest econ-
omy, and there are passages that show to what a point she
urged the zeal for thrift. Should it be necessary to buy cloth
for thecommunity, a time must be chosen when prices are
low as a result of a glut on the market. And on feast days,
when the candelabras are furnished with new candles, those
already begun must be carefully kept, and burned to a finish

on ordinary days.
Inherently practical, Irene was above all anxious to create
a well-organized, well-directed house; everything else came
second. We find a very interesting proof of this in the care
she takes to calm the scruples of those among her nuns who
might think the occupations prescribed for them in the Rule
rather too down to earth, and might be apprehensive, lest in

giving themselves up to these duties too continuously, and


on that account neglecting the Offices, they should com-
promise their eternal salvation. “Prayer,” she tells them, “is
a beautiful thing, a very beautiful thing; for it allows us to
talk with God, and it lifts us from Earth to Heaven. But
charity is far superior, far better.” Now, to labor for the
material good of the community is to perform a work of
charity. “We are fearful, you say, to neglect the Offices.
IRENE DUCAS (( 215
Have no fear, A sincere confession will always ensure you
absolution for this fault, provided that your neglect was not
caused by laziness. That what you have to fear.
is That is
what you must guard against. If you have in no way sinned
through slothfulness, rejoice in consecrating yourselves to
the duties with which you are entrusted.”
Such being the Founder’s attitude, it is not surprising that
the Rule for reciting the Offices occupies a relatively small
place in her dispositions. She concentrates her attention on
details of a material order. To uphold the regimen of the
cenobitic life, which is, and must always be, the Rule of the
convent, the dormitory and the refectory will be common to

all the religious, and manual work will be done in common,


while one of the sisters reads aloud from a pious book “that
will keep away frivolous, useless, and guilty thoughts.” To
ensure a rigorous discipline, nothing is left to chance. Irene
settles the number and the form of the reverences to be made
in the church, the order in which the sacred chants are to
succeed each other at the signal of the eKKKrjaLcipxicraa. She
ordains that in the refectory, which the community will enter
singing psalms, no one may utter a word except in answer to
a question from the Superior, and that all shall lend an at-
tentive ear to the pious reading “which rejoices and nourishes
the soul.” The rpaire^apia sees to it that no one fails in this
respect, she is to reprimand severely any nun who fidgets or
whispers, and if the offense is repeated, the culprit is to be
sent away from the table. It is forbidden to ask a neighbor
for anything at table, even for water. It is forbidden to claim
any kind of precedence “for fear of vainglory.” Everywhere
we find the same rigidity. No private conversations, no idle
strolling, no rivalries or quarrels, no intimate friendships
either, no clandestine meetings. Irene has anticipated every-
thing, provided for everything, forbidden everything.
216 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Even by her. The menus
the daily diet has been settled
are hardly sumptuous. On Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays,
and Sundays, two dishes will be served to the nuns, fish and
cheese. On Mondays they will eat dried vegetables cooked in
oil and shellfish. On Wednesdays and Fridays they will be
given dried vegetables boiled in water, and a few fresh vege-
tables. Meat never appears on the convent bill of fare. To
make up for this, wine is apportioned quite liberally; it serves
to sustain the sisters fatigued by the Lenten vigils, and to

revive their exhausted bodies during the heat of summer.


For this purpose even vintage wines are stored in the convent
cellar. And from time to time pious people “who love Christ”
may ameliorate the harsh diet of the convent with a few
sweetmeats. The regimen of the three great fasts is, of
course, more severe and prescribed with equal exactitude.
One injunction is constantly repeated: it is forbidden to eat
anything between meals. “It was forbidden food,” writes
Irene, “that originally made us subject to death and deprived
us of Paradise, and it is the Devil, author of evil, who intro-
duced it into the world.”
Nevertheless, here too some concessions are made to hu-
man weakness. The Empress does not wish her nuns to wear
themselves out by an excess of exhausting vigils. She pre-
scribes a special regimen for the sick, who are to be given a
private cell and better food. All the same, they are exhorted
not to take advantage of their state of health to make inju-
dicious demands and to ask for unusual dishes “of which,
perhaps, they have not even heard tell, much less seen or
eaten.”
Rather than go into the minute details defining the cere-
monial of the great feast days and determining the number of
lamps, candelabras, and candles that shall enhance the splen-
dor of these solemn occasions— one of which is celebrated
IRENE DUCAS (( 217

with special pomp, that of the death, or, as the Byzantines


say, the Falling Asleep of the Virgin— I prefer to mention
some other, more characteristic, points, which do credit to
the Founder’s practicality. A physician is attached to the
convent, despite the fear that every masculine presence
awakened Empress; furthermore, the convent is pro-
in the

vided with installations that will bring water there in abun-


dance, and the nuns are required to take a bath at least once
every month. In this concern for hygiene, rare enough in the
Middle Ages, we recognize once again the practical, rather

mystical, spirit that presided over the Foundation.


All told, however, a Rule so austere, involving so many
obligations, could weigh too heavily on certain souls. And so
the Empress has judged it necessary to exhort her nuns not
to be discouraged or incensed by their burden, but rather to
accept it joyfully, remembering that after all, thanks to the
wise provision of their Founder, they are free from all ma-
terial cares.

IV

When was regulating the moral life of her nuns, the


she
Empress was at the same time taking measures to assure the
future of her work.
Byzantine monasteries, at the beginning of the twelfth
century, were exposed to certain disagreeable eventualities.
All too often, to the detriment of their material prosperity
and moral health, they were given by the secular au-
their
thority as benefices to some powerful personage in recom-
pense for political or military services. The beneficiary, in-
stalling himself in the monastery “as in his own home,”
squandering the revenues on himself, neglecting the sacred
things, in no time ruined the fortune as well as the discipline
218 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
of the house. With him, the worldly life entered the holy
retreat; guests were entertained there, profane ditties were
sung, and, especially in the nunneries, the presence of a lay
beneficiary, constantly in conversation with the Abbess, and
constantly concerned with worldly matters, was an ever
present cause of demoralization.
Irene was aware more than
of these dangers, Alexius,
anyone, having been prodigal of such donations, and she was
determined to protect her Foundation from them. She in-
tended to preserve for its original purpose the fortune with
which she had endowed the convent, and to safeguard its

independence against all attempts to encroach upon it. Ac-


cordingly, she prohibited absolutely the gift, exchange, or
sale, of any properties belonging to the convent; at most, in
certain well-defined circumstances, certain movable objects
might be parted with to raise money in case of need, but this
clause was hedged around with a hundred and one restric-
tions, to prevent its abuse and to close every possible loop-

hole. The Empress likewise urged a watchful supervision


over all that had to do with the administration of the convent
properties. A Steward was in charge of this, and his function
was to tour the various properties, examine the accounts of
the sub-managers and farmers, control the payments of reve-
nue — whether in money or in kind, and draw up a report on
everything for the Superior. In the last resort, it was she who
ruled on the temporal as well as on the spiritual plane. She
appointed and dismissed the employees who administered
the domains, received them in person to hear their statements
of administration, audited their accounts with the
Steward
and endorsed them. The convent was, in fact, wealthy. And
it was even accumulating
savings in a reserve fund. But, of
course, new
donations were well received and strongly en-
couraged, whether they came from religious, who, on mak-
IRENE DUCAS (( 219

ing their profession, brought with them a voluntary offering


to the convent, or whether they sprang from the munificence
of pious laymen. Irene foresaw these future bounties and
decided how they were to be used. They were not to be
wasted in futile spending, on, for example, the improvement
of the daily meals; they must serve, above all, to increase the
distributions of money and food that were made to the poor
every day at the convent gate. On this particular point, as on
every other, Irene has left nothing to chance. On ordinary
days, the beggars were to be given bread and leftovers from
the dinner table; on feast days, and especially on those days
when the memorial anniversaries, the ixvr]ixb(Tvva^ of the emi-
nent patronesses of the convent were celebrated, the distribu-
tion was more lavish, and to the bread was added wine and
money.
The Empress took other measures to ensure the inde-
pendence of her Foundation. She formally forbade the dona-
tion of her convent to a private beneficiary under any pretext
whatsoever, its annexation to another convent or charitable
institution, its subjection to any authority, ecclesiastical or

secular: it must remain in perpetuity “free and self-govern-


ing.” “If,” she writes, “at any time, or in any manner, anyone,
an Emperor, a Patriarch, or the Superior herself, ever at-
tempts to appropriate this convent and place it in other hands,
may he be anathema.” In this epoch, as we know, monasteries
were frequently misappropriated. To avert this danger, the
Empress specifies that the Abbess alone shall be qualified to

exercise authority over the community; and to guarantee


still more securely the autonomy of her convent, it is placed
under the special protection of a Princess of the imperial
family.
Originally, this protective duty was entrusted to Irene’s
daughter Eudocia, the Princess who had entered religion.
220 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
But she died prematurely in 1120, whereupon Irene herself
assumed the position and the rights of protectress, which, at
her death, would devolve successively on her favorite daugh-
ter, Anna, her second daughter, Mary, and her granddaugh-

ter, Irene Ducas, and then be transmitted from generation to

generation of the female descendants of Anna Comnena.


But while assuring her convent of this protection, the Em-
press also had every intention of defending it against the
smallest tendency to encroachment on the part of the pro-
tectress, whose powers she was careful to restrict. Their
limits are minutely defined in the typikon. The Princess
protectress may not interfere, in any capacity, with the in-
ternal administration of the convent. She shall watch over
the election of the Abbess, whom she may, if need be, depose.
It is her function to deal with any scandals that may come to
trouble the peace of the community, but above all, her duty is

to uphold the privileges and prerogatives of the convent


against the outside world. To spare her all temptation to
meddle what does not concern her, Irene rules that she
in
may not by any means visit the convent at all hours, when-
ever she feels inclined. The Empress exempts from this rul-
ing only her “beloved daughters, the Porphyrogenitae Anna
and Mary, and her beloved granddaughter, the Lady Irene
Ducas.” These three may enter the convent whenever they
please, they may even take their meals there, with the nuns,
but at no time may they be accompanied by more than two or

women. Irene shows the same exceptional in-


three of their
dulgence toward her sons and sons-in-law, who may, under
certain circumstances, be admitted to the convent. In this
case, they are to
remain in the exterior narthex of the church
during the Divine Liturgy. When the community shall have
withdrawn, they may go inside, and even, in the presence of
two or three old sisters, converse with the Superior and make
IRENE DUCAS (( 221

their devotions to the Virgin full of grace. And this leads us


to the curiously interesting information that the typikon
furnishes with regard to the Empress herself and her atti-

tude toward her family.

V
In founding her convent, Irene Ducas seems above all to
have had in mind its eventual use to her and her family, and
this gives to the Foundation a rather special character. The
Empress has foreseen the possibility that some of the im-
perial Princesses would be led to the cloister, if not by voca-
tion, then by revolution, and she has made certain provisions

with regard to them. If, after the “more brilliant life” they
have led in the world, the existence common to the other nuns

should seem to them a little too hard and austere, they shall

bring their case before the confessor of the community, and


their way of life shall be modified to suit their rank. Instead
of the common dormitory, they shall have a private apart-
ment, larger and more comfortable; instead of the common
table, they shall eat in their own rooms and their fare shall

be more elaborate; they may also have two women to serve


them. Further, they may receive their male relatives when-
ever they wish, on the sole condition that these interviews
shall take place in the passage leading to the main door. They
may, if it pleases them, go into the town, provided they are
accompanied by a sister of mature age; they may even be
authorized to spend one or two days outside the convent and,
should one of them have a dying kinsman, to remain at his
side until the end. The same indulgences apply in the case of
noble ladies wishing to retire to the convent; they too may
have private rooms and serving women. But if they should
take advantage of this privilege to provoke any scandal, if.
BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
in particular, they should receive the nuns in their private

apartments or disturb the community with gossip, these


noble pensioners will be relentlessly expelled.
It is interesting to see how private reasons, the desire to
reconcile the monastic life with the tastes of persons who
would probably be ill suited to it, have led the Founder to re-

lax the rigors of the Rule, and transform the convent into a
sort of “noble chapter house,” of a more or less private nature.
This solicitude for her imperial relatives appears on every
page of the document, and certain passages throw an inter-
esting light on Irene’s family affections.
The Princess’s first thought is for herself. She requests
that perpetual prayers be said for her intention, and the anni-
versary of her death celebrated. She is no less solicitous with
regard to her husband, the Emperor Alexius, who was as-

sociated with her in this pious enterprise. She affectionately


wishes him many long years of life, and glorious victories
over his enemies. Her relationship with him is one of such
confidence and intimacy, that she is at pains to have him
participate in the government and patronage of the convent:
“To an exceptional man,” she writes, “should be accorded
exceptional honors.” Another passage offers even more in-

teresting data concerning Irene’s inmost feelings and the


hierarchy of her affections.
It was the custom in the Greek Church to solemnize the
death anniversaries of the patrons of a religious community
with a commemorative ceremony, the iJLPrjfjLoawa. In the mag-
nificently illuminated church, a special liturgy was recited,
and prayers were offered for the dead, after which an un-
usually abundant and elaborate repast was served to the
members of the community, and at the gate of the convent
alms were distributed to the poor. Irene has meticulously
indicated all the members of her family for whom this com-
IRENE DUGAS (( 223

memoration must be held. She has not only made provision


for those who have already died— her father and her mother,
her father-in-law and her mother-in-law— she has also set
forth what it will be fitting to do one day for her, and for
those of her relatives who, like her, were still in the world
at the time. For each case she has made precise dispositions,

graduating the honors and the expenditure according to the

individual, and one cannot help finding these variations in

treatment amusing as well as informative.


For herself and for Alexius, she wants things done in great

style. The distributions to the poor shall consist of bread


made with ten modii (four hundred pounds) of wheat, plus
eight measures of wine, and twelve nomismata, or silver
pennies. For her sons and daughters, Irene reduces the ex-
penditure by half, though for her youngest daughter, Theo-
dora, she reduces it almost by three quarters. This is because
Theodora made a rather foolish match. She married Con-
stantine Angius, a handsome youth of rather mediocre birth,
whose face was his only fortune, and probably the Empress
had not quite forgiven her daughter for marrying be-
Anna
neath her so improvidently. Of Irene’s sons-in-law,
Comnena’s husband, Nicephorus Bryennius, and Mary
Comnena’s husband are treated like sons; but Theodora’s
husband, like his wife, is accorded only second-class honors.
For him, as for her two daughters-in-law, the wife of the
Sebastocrator Andronicus, and the wife of Caesar Isaac,
Irene reduces the expenditure to one quarter of that allowed
for herself and Alexius. Eudocia’s husband is, of course, left

out altogether. Of the Basilissa’s grandchildren, only one


figures in this names: Irene Ducas, the daughter of
list of
Anna Comnena, who was evidently her grandmother’s favor-
ite. Indeed, the Princess’s obvious predilection for her eldest
daughter Anna, and for Anna’s family, is everywhere appar-
224 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
ent. It is to Anna that she bequeathes the Palace next to the
monastery; Anna’s daughter, Irene, who will inherit it at
it is

her mother’s death. And it is Anna and Irene who will suc-
ceed the Empress as Patronesses of the convent. The Basi-
her attempt to place her favorite daughter on
lissa failed in

the throne when Alexius died. Now she tries to console her by
these proofs of favor and special affection.
Thus, even in her retirement, Irene Ducas’s willful spirit

asserted itself. There is further testimony to her imperious


turn of mind. She reserved for herself absolute authority in
all that concerned the foundation of her convent. She nomi-
nated the Abbess and the Steward; she assumed for her life-

time the patronage of the convent and the command of it. To


compensate herself for spending so much money on it, she
claims the right, as Founder, to dispose everything, for the
future as well as the present, according to her wishes. And
she uses her prerogative. She prohibits any changes, even
improvements, in the buildings put up by her. She prohibits
the renting or the transfer of the Palace that serves as a resi-
dence for the imperial Princesses. She forbids the modifica-
tion, inany respect, of the Rule she has established. The
typikon is to be respected by all “as much as the Divine
laws,” and, so that no one shall be ignorant of it, she ordains
that it shall be read aloud once every month.
Her drawn up, Irene addresses a long sermon
regulations
to her nuns, urging upon them the strict observance of the
Rule, piety, obedience, detachment from worldly possessions,
the perpetual effort toward good. “It is not,” she says, “for
luxury and ease that you have left the world, but to gain, by
fighting with all your strength, the rewards promised in the
Gospels.” After this, with seeming humility, she asks the
sisters to grant her the help of their prayers, so the Empress,
in return for her pious Foundation, may merit the mercy of
IRENE DUCAS (( 225

God and But even in this request, Irene’s


eternal salvation.
spirit of domination emerges. “Even if we are no longer
bodily present,” she writes, “be mindful of our presence
in

spirit.”

So we see that she was in her last days what she was all
generous,
her life, on the throne and in retirement: pious,
their
fond of the nuns and having a special confidence in
prayers, but very much a Princess, authoritative and
imperi-

ous, anxious to impose her will in spiritual as


well as in tem-

poral matters. And we are better able to understand


why the
apparently shy and self-effacing young woman that Alexius

Comnenus married, ended by attaining the influence on the

worldly scene that she deserved by right of her


qualities,
ex-
and that her ambition craved. She offers an interesting
century,
ampleof the Byzantine Princesses of the twelfth
women at once lettered and political, rather grave and aus-
but of impeccable moral behavior, and endowed
with a
tere,

solemn grace that is not without beauty.


BERTHA OF
SULZBACH

Crusade had brought the East and the West


ince the First

S into more intimate relations with each other, Byzantium


had become a great European power. The successive expedi-
tions undertaken for the recovery of the Holy Sepulcher, the
foundation of the Frankish States of Syria, had, in multiply-
ing the contacts between Greeks and Latins, awakened the
ambitions of the latter, kindled their desires, excited their
animosity, and established for them new interests. The
Greeks had been made to grasp the necessity of giving up
their accustomed attitude of haughty disdain toward the
“barbarians,” and of making allowance for these new nations
that were coming into existence. To be sure, no real sympa-
thy was born of this reconciliation; a certain curiosity, how-
ever, an obscure awareness of their mutual need, drew to-
gether these two worlds that for so long had ignored each
other. In the twelfth century, the great Eastern Empire,
emerging more and more every day from its isolation, was

226
BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 227

involved in all the important transactions of European poli-

tics. In fact, Constantinople was actually one of the centers


for these transactions, particularly during the reign of Man-
uel Comnenus.
In the first half of the twelfth century, the monarchy of

the Basileiswas threatened by a grave danger. The powerful


kingdom that the Normans had founded in Southern Italy
and in Sicily was setting its ambitious sights beyond the
Adriatic; Roger II, like Robert Guiscard and Bohémond, had
dreams of aggrandizing himself at the expense of the Em-
pire of Constantinople. To cope with an adversary of this
stature, the Byzantines needed an ally, and they looked for
one in the direction of Germany, whose persistent ambitions
with regard to Italy qualified it more than any other State to
neutralize the efforts of the enterprising Sicilian sovereign.
As early as 1135, and again two years later, in 1137, Greek
ambassadors were sent to Germany to pave the way to an un-
derstanding. In 1140, a new mission came to Conrad III,
bringing him more specific offers. To set a definite seal on
the projected alliance, the Byzantine court proposed to unite
the two dynasties by a marriage, and requested that a ‘‘young
girl of the blood royal” should be sent to Constantinople, there

to become the wife of the Sebastocrator Manuel, fourth son


of the Emperor John Comnenus.
Conrad III of Germany was an exceedingly proud man.
Aspiring to the title of Emperor, he considered himself an
equal of the Basileus and claimed equal honors. Moreover,
aware that the Greek Empire was of Roman origin, he
thought that the Byzantine monarchy owed to the Germanic
Holy Roman Empire the same respect that a daughter owes
to her mother. Infatuated with his own power, he boasted
of

the submission in which he held the entire West. Such ideas


were so sharply wounding to Greek vanity that the conclu-
228 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
sion of an alliance seemed no easy matter. Fortunately, Con-
rad himself felt the need of support against the growing am-
bitions of Roger IL So he responded to the overtures made
to him through the Byzantine envoys, and proposed to give
Bertha of Sulzbach, in marriage to
his wife’s sister. Countess
Prince Manuel. After lengthy negotiations, an agreement
was finally reached, and toward the end of the year 1142, a
Byzantine ambassador went to Germany to fetch the young
fiancée.
She was given the most welcome in Constanti-
brilliant

nople. A contemporary writer, Theodore Prodromus, or one


of the other numerous official versifiers at the court of the
Comneni, has described in a poem written for the occasion,
the splendors of the reception that greeted the newcomer. He
has told of the grand procession that escorted the German
Countess, the crowd that lined the way, decked out in festi-

val attire, the magnificently decorated streets, the organs that


played as she went by, the perfumes and aromatics that were
scattered under her feet— all the refinements of luxurious
ceremonial that Byzantium delighted in on such occasions.
The imperial Princesses themselves took the trouble to meet
this “flower of the West,” as the poet puts it, “that the Em-
peror was planting in the imperial garden.” And this seems
to have given rise to a curious incident. Among youngthe
women assembled to greet the German Countess, was the
wife of the heir apparent, Alexius, eldest son of the Emperor.
She was garbed in deep blue discreetly relieved by touches
of purple and gold. Struck by this color, which stood out
darkly against the more brilliant attire of the others, the for-
eigner asked the identity of this “religious” who spoke in
such an imperious tone. Byzantine superstition was quick to
interpret this as an evil omen; and the premature death of
Prince Alexius shortly afterward justified the prognostic.
BERTHA OF SULZBACH ff 229

In 1143, Manuel’s two older brothers, Andronicus


and
other,
Alexius, were suddenly carried off, one after the
within a few weeks. Thus, Manuel inherited the Empire,

having been named heir to the throne by his dying father in

place of his eldest son, Isaac. Now, for a Byzantine Basileus,


the time, an
lord of one of the most brilliant sovereignties of
alliance with a simple German Countess was rather less
to have
than mediocre. In addition, Constantinople seems
affected by
been a little shocked by the disdainful manners
Conrad III. In the poem we spoke of just now, Prodromus
retaliated sharply to the German pretentiousness. He made
it
King” Conrad, that, for all his
quite clear to the “glorious
alliance with the
glory, the supreme honor for him was this
house of the Comneni. He proclaimed the new
Rome incon-
testably superior to the old: “If the latter,”
he wrote, pro-
the bride-
duced the bride, it is the former that gives us
groom, and as we all know that man is superior to woman, it

same relationship should obtain between the


follows that the
the Emperor
two Empires.” For these and other reasons,
arranged
Manuel was in no hurry to celebrate the marriage
for him. He made the young woman
who was destined to be
nuptials.
his wife wait almost four years for the
toward
As it happened, Byzantine policy was swerving
Sicily just at this time. A marriage was being considered be-
sons, and rela-
tween a Greek Princess and one of Roger’s
Finally, however, Man-
tions with Germany were strained.
alliance, and in 1145 an
uel decided to revive the Germanic
the Em-
ambassador was sent to Conrad HI to announce
the mar-
peror’s intention of solemnizing in the near future

riage arranged in 1142. But the King of Germany was made


to feel how greatly he was being
honored, and the Greek en-

voy was so insufferably arrogant that the


German sovereign
apology from
had to turn him out, and demanded a public
230 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
him. Wounded to the quick by this kind of treatment, Con-
rad was not to be outdone in insolence. Writing to Constanti-
nople, he arrogated to himself the title of Emperor of the
Romans and disdainfully addressed his message to his “dear
brother, Manuel Comnenus, illustrious and glorious King
of the Greeks.”
They ended, however, by coming to an agreement, since
both parties had their own reasons for desiring it. A Ger-
man ambassador went to Constantinople, and his chief, the
Bishop of Wurzburg, arranged things to the general satis-
faction of everyone. In January 1146, Bertha of Sulzbach
married the Emperor Manuel Comnenus, and took, on as-
cending the throne, the Byzantine first name of Irene (the
Greek word for peace) ^
probably as a symbol of the re-
established peace between her new country and that of her
birth.

What could have been this foreigner’s impressions, at the


time of her arrival in Constantinople, of the new world to
which she was banished? An attempt to find out may prove
rewarding, and, to help us, we have at our disposal a number
of rather curious descriptions of the Byzantine capital as
it
was in the middle of the twelfth century. One of them is par-
ticularly worthy of our attention, since it is the work of a
Westerner, Eudes de Deuil, who visited the city of the Ba-
sileis in 1147, just after the marriage
of Irene and Manuel.
The imperial city had great prestige in the West, a pres-
tige that seems to have been justified. On
account of its de-
lightful climate, its fertile soil, and
enormous wealth,
its
Constantinople appeared to the Latins as a city beyond
com-
pare. It is the glory of the Greeks,” says
Eudes de Deuil,
rich in repute, and even richer in reality.”
( GraecoruTti
BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 231

gloria^ jama dives et rebus ditior.) The chronicler never tires


of praising the splendor of the palaces, the magnificence of
the churches, and the host of precious relics preserved in
them. He is equally impressed by the picturesque view from
the city walls, at whose base large gardens extend far out
into the countryside, and by the viaducts that provide the
capital with a fulland constant supply of fresh water. But
besides the public buildings, Eudes de Deuil— and herein
lies the great interest of his description— has managed to see

the city itself, and it strikes him as peculiarly dirty, malodor-

ous, and dark. It is an Oriental city, with covered, arcaded


streets. Above these low structures the magnificent dwellings
of the rich rear their towers into the open sky, but in the
depths, where the sun never penetrates, lives a wretched,
poverty-stricken populace, exposed by want to every tempta-
tion. There is no security whatsoever. Robbery and murder
are everyday occurrences. “In Constantinople,” says the his-
torian, “there are almost as many thieves as there are poor.”

The police, impotent, never interfere; no one bothers to obey


or to enforce the law; the guilty go unpunished. To this

Western pilgrim, twelfth century Byzantium seems a mon-


strous city, overpopulated, seething and alarming, excessive
in everything, in its opulence as well as in its vices.
This is not, as one might think, the libel of a Latin unable
to see any good in the Greeks. A testimony of the same date,
and time of Byzantine origin, shows us the imperial city
this

from the same point of view. The most frequented streets


are rendered impassable by pools of mud, which the rains

transform into quagmires. In this “Tartarus,” in these “in-


fernal lakes,” both people and beasts are bemired, and some-
times even drowned. Travelers who have crossed both moun-
tains and rivers without mishap, on arriving in port, are

“shipwrecked in the center of town.” To extricate them from


232 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
their predicament, regular salvage operations have to be un-
dertaken, it is necessary to wade waist deep into the mud to

unload the beasts of burden and then haul them out of the
swamp with the aid of ropes. And this is not By night,
all.

other perils are added to those of the open sewers. The un-
lighted streets become the roving ground of thieves, and of
the stray dogs that pullulate in Constantinople to this day.
Respectable citizens shut themselves up in their houses. No
help be expected in case of accident or attack; no one an-
is to

swers the cries of the victims, who can only let themselves
be plundered.
But an Empress had little opportunity to see these ‘‘sights
unfitting for a sovereign” ( àtSaaiXevTop ) . The Constan-
tinople she knew was that of the imperial residences, and
in particular the Palace of Blachernae,which became in the
twelfth century the usual home of the Basileis. It was situ-
ated at the point of the Golden Horn, and its triple façade
commanded views of the sea, the city, and the countryside.
The exterior was magnificent, and the interior even more so.
On the walls of the great colonnaded galleries glittered mo-
saics set in gold and executed with “admirable artistry.”

They represented in blazing colors the exploits of the Em-


peror Manuel, his wars against the barbarians, all that he
had done for the good of the Empire. The floors were richly
paved with mosaics. “I do not know,” writes a contemporary,
“what contributes most to its beauty and its worth, the clev-
erness of the art or the value of the materials used.” Every-
where was the same luxury, which it delighted the Em-
perors of the Comnenian dynasty to increase, and which
made of the Palace of Blachernae one of the marvels of
Constantinople. Foreigners who were permitted to visit it

have left us dazzling descriptions: “Its exterior beauty,”


BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 233

writes Eudes de Deuil, “is almost beyond compare, and that


of the interior far surpasses anything that I can say about it.

On every side one sees gilding and paintings in variegated


colors; the court is paved in marble with exquisite skill.”

Benjamin de Tudele, who visited Constantinople some


years later, expresses the same admiration. “In addition to
the Palace inherited by Manuel from his ancestors, he has
had built, beside the sea, another, called Blachernae, whose
walls, and whose pillars too, are covered with gold and silver
on which he has had depicted his own wars as well as those of
his forefathers. In this Palace he has had made a throne of
gold embellished with precious stones and ornamented with
a crown of gold suspended by chains that are likewise of
gold. The rim of this crown is studded with pearls and with
priceless diamonds whose glittering fires almost suffice to

illumine the dark without the help of any other light. An in-
finite number of other things are to be found there
that would

seem incredible one were to describe them. To this Palace


if

are brought the annual tributes, both in gold and in


garments
filled to
of purple and scarlet, with which the towers are
bursting. So for beauty of structure and abundance of riches,
this Palace surpasses all the other palaces of the world.”
An Empress also knew the exquisite residences to which
the Basileis went to spend a cool summer. At the foot of the
Palace of Blachernae was the beautiful park of Philopation,
a vast, walled enclosure, where the air was kept
perpetually

cool by running waters, and where the great woods


stocked

with game provided the pleasures of the hunt. Here the Em-
peror had constructed a charming country seat, and the
whole formed what Eudes de Deuil describes as “the Greeks
paradise.” Elsewhere, by the sea of Marmora, there were
splendid villas, where the Emperors had revived the oriental
I

234 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES


luxury “of Susa and Ecbatana,” and where Manuel, weary
from his wars, sought rest and relaxation in the refinements
of the table and in the pleasures of music.

Another aspect of Constantinople known to an Empress,


was the Hippodrome and its festivals, still one of the basic
pleasures of the Byzantine people in the twelfth century.
There, as in the time of Justinian, the horse races and the
athletic games took place, interspersed with all kinds of di-
versions, such as coursing with hares and dogs, and feats of

acrobatics and tightrope dancing, and fights with wild


beasts, bears, leopards, and lions. There too, according to
Benjamin de Tudele, were given “great pageants every year
on the birthday of Jesus of Nazareth. Figures representing all

the nations of the world, in their national dress, are brought


before the Emperor and the Empress. I do not believe,” adds
the traveler, “that such magnificent games are given any-
where else on earth.” They were very much appreciated at
Constantinople, and the court’s delight in them was scarcely
less than that of the crowd, always “eager for novel sights.”
Finally, an Empress knew the churches of the capital; the
splendor of the Divine Liturgy celebrated in St. Sophia,
“admirable and divine edifice,” as the historian Nicetas Aco-
minates puts it, “miraculously erected by the hands of God
Himself, as His first and last work, inimitable church, ter-

restial image of the celestial dome.” And no doubt the Ger-


man Princess was moved, as were most foreigners, by the
beauty of the Greek liturgical chants, by the harmonious
mingling of the voices— the shrill tones of the sopranos and
the grave accents of the chanters— and by the no less har-
moniously rhythmic gestures and genuflections. No doubt,
like most foreigners, she also appreciated the superb presen-

tation of the sumptuous dinners given at the Imperial Palace,


excellent meals, beautifully served, accompanied by all kinds
BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 235
of entertainments, and, says a contemporary, “equally be-
guiling to the ears, the mouth, and the eyes.” The magnifi-
cence of the costumes must have delighted her too, as well as
the pageantry of the ceremonial and all those refinements of
splendor that made the Byzantine court a unique marvel of
opulence and elegance.
One thing, however, disconcerted those who visited Con-
stantinople for the first time. It was the indolence of the com-
mon people, of the “inert masses” accustomed to living on the
imperial bounty; and the Latins felt little affinity for this race
of “sly and crafty character and corrupted faith.” Fortunately
the new Empress found in Constantinople many of her own
compatriots to console her for the failings of her subjects. In
twelfth century Byzantium there was quite a colony of
Germans. Merchants were established there, German sol-

diers served in the Imperial Army, and they were nu-


merous enough to warrant a request from Conrad that a spe-
cial church should be allocated to them. There were also
many customs, more or less recently introduced to Constan-
tinople, to remind the foreigner of her far-off country. At the
time of the Comneni, the Greek Church celebrated in its

sanctuaries certain festivals that were curiously reminiscent


of those Western diversions of the same period, the Festivals
of the Fools, or of the Ass.

Itmust be admitted that the Emperor Manuel Comnenus


showed himself, at least in the early days of his marriage,
very anxious to please the young woman he had espoused.
This Byzantine Prince had, as we know, a lively admiration
for the Latins. He liked them for their chivalrous ways, their
fine swordsmanship, their magnificently reckless courage.
He delighted in their tournaments and enjoyed entering the
236 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
lists himself. He welcomed Westerners to his court, and
placed so high a value on their services that Greek patriots
were sometimes shocked by the degree which he favored
to

these semi-barbarian foreigners who “spat more expertly than


they talked,” and who, “completely uneducated, pronounced
the words of the Greek language as roughly as the rocks and
stones echo the flute songs of the shepherds.” Through his
association with these Westerners, Manuel had learned all

that courtly custom imposed on the perfect knight. He knew,


for instance, that it was a point of honor for a newly married
Latin to distinguish himself by some great exploit; and emu-
lating his Western models, he strove to merit the love of his
lady by fine feats of swordsmanship. He seems to have suc-
ceeded. Irene greatly admired her husband’s valor, and pub-
licly declared that even in Germany, where they were experts
in the matter of courage, she had never met with a better
knight.
While Manuel was perfecting himself in Western man-
ners to win his wife’s admiration, she, on her side, was striv-
ing to acquaint herself with the beauties of Greek literature,
and aspiring to play a role in which the majority of the
Comneni women had delighted, that of Royal friend and
patroness of letters. She made up her mind to study and to
understand Homer, and she enlisted the help of one of the
most illustrious grammarians of the day. It was for her that
Tzetzes wrote his Allegories on the Iliad, in which he ex-
plained to his imperial pupil the subject of the poem, and
the history of the principal personages in it, not omitting
erudite notes on the life of the poet. And in his dedication of
his book Empress, he admiringly described her as “a
to the
lady very much in love with Homer” {b/jiripiKcoraTr} Kvpia).
This was in 1147. A little earlier, Tzetzes had likewise dedi-
cated to Irene a first edition of his Chiliades, and it seemed
BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 237

that the German Princess, in her circle of grammarians and


rhetoricians, had become wholly Byzantine.
Despite their reciprocal good intentions, however, the im-
perial couple soon became disunited. The fault seems to have
been on both sides. Irene, for her part, wearied of her role of
literary patroness, and quarreled with Tzetzes over a petty
matter of money. The grammarian himself tells us that his
promised remuneration was at the rate of twelve gold pieces
for each notebook filled with his learned dissertations. To
demonstrate his zeal, he chose paper of an unusually large
format and covered the pages with unusually close script, so
that, as he says, a single one of these notebooks was worth
ten. He imagined that he would be recompensed proportion-
ately.Not at all. The Empress’s comptroller claimed that
Tzetzes’s work should be paid for according to the prear-
ranged and when the unfortunate man of
tariff, letters com-
plained, the comptroller retaliated by refusing to pay him
anything. Furious, Tzetzes appealed to the Empress herself.
Irene, who did not understand these Byzantine subtleties,
sent the unhappy scholar packing. He revenged himself by
telling the whole story; further, he destroyed the first edition
of his Chiliades, and, tired of working for nothing, he cut
short his learned commentary on the Iliad at the fifteenth

Book and went in search of another patroness. The Em-


press’s venture into the world of the literati had not been very
successful.
This would not have mattered much had Irene not failed
in another direction as well; she could not adapt herself to
the customs of her new country. The Empress was, it seems,
an attractive woman. Archbishop Basil of Achrida, who gave
her funeral oration, says that “by her tall figure with its

harmonious proportions, and the bloom and beauty of her


coloring, she could have evoked a sensation of pleasure even
238 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
in the insentient.” Over and above all this, she was endowed
with manifold virtues, “whose fragrance,” says her panegy-
rist, “rejoiced both God and man.” Pious, gentle, absolutely

honest, and extremely charitable, always ready to console the


unfortunate and to “extend her beneficent hands to all the

world,” she certainly had high moral qualities. But she to-
tally lacked elegance. “She took less care,” says Nicetas,

“over the beautifying of her person than over the perfecting


of her soul.”She cared nothing for dress, she did not paint her
face or make up her eyes, and she was rather contemptuous
of those “foolish women” who preferred art to nature. “She
wished,” says the chronicler, “to shine only with the radiance
of her virtues.” She combined this with a certain German
stiffness, according to Nicetas (ro fjLrj eiriKKives Wvlkop) ^
and a
disposition predominantly serious and haughty. This was
hardly the way to hold a passionate young man like Manuel,
a young man greedy for pleasure, gay gatherings, and flirta-
tions, given to all amusements natural to one of his age
the
and ready for any adventure that happened to take his fancy.
Besides, Irene did not give her husband any children. In
1147, when the Emperor deposed the Patriarch Cosmas, the
latter, in his fury, had cursed the womb of the Empress pub-

licly in the synod, and declared that she would never give

birth to a male child. Facts seemed sadly to justify the pre-


diction. During six years, despite the prayers of the most il-

lustrious monks on her behalf, despite the gifts and honors


with which she overwhelmed the Church in the hope of thus
ending her sterility, Irene gave no heir to the Empire. And
when, at last, a child was born was a girl,
to her in 1152, it

Mary. Later, she had another child, but again it was a girl,
who died, moreover, at the age of four. Manuel was strongly
affected by all this, and, firmly convinced that it was the re-
BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 239
suit of the Patriarch’s curse, he was annoyed with his wife
for proving the prelate right.
So, for many reasons, Manuel tired rather quickly of his
wife. To be sure, he courteously allowed her to retain all the
outward honors of her rank, her court, her guard, all the
trappings of supreme power. But he broke with her com-
pletely. After numerous love affairs, he ended up by taking
an accredited mistress. This was his niece, Theodora, and he
was all more attached to her because, luckier than Irene,
the
she gave him a son. After that there was nothing he would
not give her. Like his legitimate wife, she had a court and a
guard, and she shared, almost to the diadem, all the preroga-
tives of supreme power. The Emperor wantonly squandered
money on her; as Nicetas says, “seas of wealth were poured
out at her feet.” Proud and arrogant, she accepted both the
homage and the money. Following their master’s example,
the courtiers flocked around her, neglectful of the legitimate
Empress.
Irene does not seem to have made any attempt to break out
of her isolation. She lived her own, separate, life, and filled it

with good works, helping the widows, protecting the or-

phans, providing penniless young girls with husbands and


dowries, visiting the monasteries and enriching them. She
liked to help others, and her panegyrist had said of her charm-
ingly “that she counted it a grace to be asked for her aid and
gave the impression of entreating one to entreat her.” Con-
verted to Greek Orthodoxy at the time of her marriage, and
very pious, she enjoyed the society of priests and religious,
and showed them infinite respect. All the same, in this East-
ern court, she remained very Western and very German.
Basil of Achrida, in the funeral oration he delivered in her
honor, could not resist bringing up the fact that she was “a
240 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
foreigner, born under other skies, ignorant of our civiliza-
tion and our customs, the daughter of a proud, arrogant, and
stiff-necked people,” and he felt obligated to sing the praises
of Germany, of this “powerful and dominant” nation that,
more than any other Western people, “commands but will
not be commanded.” In speaking thus, the prelate showed
that he had penetrated into the depths of the Empress’s soul.
Indeed, she never forgot her native country. When the

second Crusade brought her brother-in-law. King Conrad,


and a Latin army to Constantinople in 1147, she was de-
lighted.While the Greeks watched with dismay the alarm-
ing cloud from the West break over the Empire, while the
gaping Byzantines marveled to see women in the Crusad-
ers’ ranks, clothed and armed modern Amazons
like knights,

riding astride their horses like men, Irene was intent on pre-
paring a good reception for her compatriots. When the pride
of the Greek Emperor threatened to clash with the pride of
the German King, she did her best to dissipate whatever
trouble had arisen between the rival Princes. And since the

pretentions of Conrad, irreconcilable with Byzantine eti-

quette, did not permit of a personal meeting between the


two sovereigns at this time, it was thanks to the influence of

the Empress that they maintained a tolerable relationship.


Manuel and Conrad bombarded each other with courtesies.
The Emperor sent to the Latin camp an abundance of provi-
sions and valuable gifts, to which the King responded with
rich presents.
A little later, when the French army appeared below the
walls of Constantinople, Irene maintained the most pleasant
relations with the wife of Louis VII, Eleanor of Guyenne.
But it was particularly after the disasters experienced by the
Crusaders in Asia Minor that the Empress’s good will to-

ward her compatriots became apparent. After his defeat on


BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 241

the Meander, Conrad III had retreated with the remnant of


his troops to Ephesus, where he fell ill. Irene went with Man-
uel to visit him. She brought him back to Constantinople on
the imperial dromond, and the Basileus, who was skilled in
medicine and in surgery, insisted on caring for him with his
own hands. When Conrad III, his vow to the Holy Sepulcher
finally fulfilled, again passed through Constantinople, he re-
ceived the same warm welcome. The Byzantine court was
openly interested in an alliance with Germany, to counter-
balance the unconcealed hostility of the Normans in Sicily

and of the French in France. Marriages were in the making


between the two Royal houses, Henry of Austria, half brother
to the King of Germany, was marrying one of the Emperor’s
nieces, and the poets of the imperial court were pompously
extolling this union. A little later it was proposed that Con-
rad’s son should marry another of the Emperor’s nieces;
this was a political move in which the hand of the Empress is
unmistakable, and an interesting letter written by Con-
rad HI He confides to her the task of
to Irene confirms this.

choosing a bride for his son from among the Princesses of the
imperial family, ^fihe one who seems to you, who have
brought them up, to excel in character and in beauty.” ( Quae
moribus et forma noscatur a te, quae eas edueasti, precel-
lere. ) The marriage never took place, but the closest alliance
continued to exist between the two States. When, in 1150,
Roger H and Louis VH
thought of forming a comprehen-
siveWestern block against Byzantium, it was the categorical
opposition of the German King that defeated the project. In
remaining a good German, Irene had by no means rendered
a disservice to the country of her adoption.
With Conrad HI in 1152, the bond between
the death of
the two countries slackened. But the Empress never lost her
fond interest in all that concerned Germany. With uncon-
242 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
cealed sympathy she followed from afar the progress of her
nephew, Conrad’s young son; she sent him gifts and made
sure that hewas equipped as a knight. With the passing of
time she seems to have come closer to Manuel, and to have
given him valuable assistance in affairs of State. Basil of
Achrida speaks of the “conformity of feeling,” the “spiritual
affinity” that existed between the spouses. In this he was no
doubt exaggerating in the usual manner of funeral orators.
But there is evidence that on more than one occasion Irene
successfully intervened with the Emperor to obtain the re-
lease of captives, or pardons for those condemned to death,
and that she willingly undertook to bring such appeals be-
fore the Basileus. In 1158 she rendered him a more signal
service, in saving him from a plot hatched against him; and
if what her panegyrist states is true, namely that the “Arch
Despots of Persia,” who had experienced her beneficence,
wished to honor her tomb with magnificent oblations, we
may safely conclude that she exercised some influence on the
foreign relations of the monarchy.
Fair-minded, endowed with good sense, presence of mind,
and a very clear idea of what ought to be done in given cir-

cumstances, her advice must have been valuable indeed. And


we can well believe that when she died rather suddenly, in
1160, of a malignant fever, Manuel felt her loss keenly.. But
we can also believe that Basil of Aehrida’s picture of the
grief-stricken Emperor filling the Palace with his moans,
incapable of pulling himself together, is a trifle over-
dramatized, and that Nicetas exaggerates when he writes
that theEmperor was driven to despair, as if one of his limbs
had been torn away from him, and that he passed his period
of mourning in a “state of collapse— half dead.” Be that as it
may, he gave his wife, who seems to have been universally
regretted, magnificent obsequies. She was buried in the Mon-
BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 243

astery of the Pantocrator, which was founded by John Com-


nenus to be the royal burial place of the dynasty, and where
Manuel had made ready his own sepulcher. Furthermore,
he commissioned a fine funeral oration in honor of the dead
Empress, which has come down to us, and in which Basil of
Achrida, Archbishop of Thessalonica, lauded in the tradi-
tional manner, and not without personal emotion, the quali-
ties and virtues with which the Empress had been adorned.

Afterward, the Emperor lost no time in consoling himself.


Anxious, says Nicetas, to have a son to carry on his line, and
no doubt susceptible as always to feminine charm, he an-
nounced as early as 1161 his intention of remarrying. From
all the brides that were offered to him, from among the

daughters of all those Princes and Kings who desired him as

an ally, he chose “the most beautiful Princess of her time,”


Mary of Antioch, whom he married in 1161. Irene the Ger-
man had been very quickly forgotten.
AGNES OF FRANCE

A 11 his life the Emperor Manuel Comnenus had a strong


i~\ liking for the Latins, and twenty years after his death,
the memory of this openly avowed predilection was found by
the chronicler Robert de Clari to be still alive in Constantino-

ple. He tells us, in his naïve phraseology, of the warm wel-


come and good treatment accorded to the Westerners by the
Basileus, in spite of all the Greek reproaches. “I command
you,” he said to his courtiers, “that no one among you shall
make so bold or be so rash as to complain of my liberality,
or of my liking for the French. Because I do like them, and
I trust in them more than in you, and I shall give them yet

more than I have given them.”


This natural sympathy was reinforced by serious reasons
of policy. Manuel sensed the invincible strength of the young
Western nations. He knew them to be arrogant, unmanage-
able, always ready for war. He also knew of the old hatreds
they fostered, the grudges they nursed, against the Byzan-

244
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 245

tines. He was always afraid that a coalition would unite


them against the Empire, and “that their common accord,” as
he says, “would submerge the monarchy as a suddenly swol-
len torrent devastates farmlands.” So he applied himself to
circumventing this dangerous coalition by every possible
means, encouraging division between the European powers,
supporting Italy’s resistance to Barbarossa, attracting with
generous commercial concessions the merchants of Ancona,
Genoa, Venice, and Pisa, ceaselessly striving form an al- to

liance with one of the great Western States. It was in this


way that he came, early in his reign, to rely on Germany.
Later, near the end of his life, he inclined toward an alliance
with the French. At that time he was in open enmity with the
Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, and looked in every direc-
tion for support against him. That of King Louis VII seemed
particularly advantageous, and he assiduously sought a
means of establishing friendly relations with this Prince. The
idea, moreover, was already in the As early as 1171 or
wind.
1172, Pope Alexander III, with whom Manuel was on ex-
ceedingly good terms, had perceived the value of a Franco-
Byzantine alliance, and had advised Louis VII to unite the
House of France with that of the Comneni by a marriage. So
when the Greek Emperor decided to make definite proposals,

he found the way prepared.


In 1178, Philippe of Alsace, Count of Flanders, return-
ing from Palestine, broke his journey at Constantinople. The
Basileus gave him the usual magnificent reception, and dur-
ing the course of conversation with the Latin Prince, he dis-
closed his project. “The Emperor asked him,” relates the
chronicle of d’Ernoul, “if the King of France had no mar-
riageable daughter, and the Count replied that he did have
one, but small she was, and young. To which the Emperor
Manuel replied that he had but one son, who was a young
246 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
child, and that, if the King would send him he his daughter,

would marry his son to her as soon as she should come, and
he would permit both to wear the diadem he should be Em- :

peror and she Empress. Of this the Emperor spoke, and


asked the Count to convey it to the King, for a nobler man
he could not find or send. And he would send with him his
most valiant men to bring the damsel back, if the King
would confide her to them.
“The Count replied that he would gladly deliver the mes-
sage and thought to obtain a favorable reply. So the Em-
peror had his emissaries make ready to go, gave them suffi-
cient gold and silver for their spending, and sent them to
France with the Count. When they came to France, the
Count went to the King and delivered the Emperor’s
message.
“With which the King was pleased and joyful, seeing he
could not marry his daughter better. He equipped her most
nobly and most richly (as befitted the daughter of such an
exalted man as the King of France) and handed her over to

the emissaries, and they brought her to Constantinople, to


the Emperor.”
This child “small and young” was named Agnes of
France. The second daughter of Louis VII and his third wife
Alix de Champagne, she was the younger sister of Philippe-
Auguste. When she left Paris in the spring of 1179 to em-
bark on the Genoese vessel that was to take her to Constanti-
nople, she was barely eight years old. Transplanted at such
a tender age to a new country, quickly forgotten in distant
Romania by an apparently indifferent family, she was ob-
liged, more than others, to adjust herself to the country of her
adoption. There she was destined to lead a remarkably
strange and dramatic life, to witness important events, even,
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 247
at times, to play an important part in them; and for this rea-
son her obscure figure merits the illumination of history/

At the time of Agnes’s arrival in the Imperial City, in


1179, the reign of Manuel Comnenus v^as nearing its end.
But despite the sorrows of his last years, the Emperor main-
tained his high confidence in himself, and his court its accus-
tomed elegance and pomp. The betrothal of the heir to the
Caesars’ throne and the daughter of King Louis VII was
celebrated on the 2nd of March 1180, amid pageantry and
feasting. As the young Alexius was only eleven years old, the
marriage was put off until later, but from the moment of her
betrothal, the little fiancée was treated as a future Empress,
and in accordance with custom she discarded her French
name of Agnes for the more Byzantine one of Anna.
A few months September 1180, Manuel’s death
later, in

cast all the burdens and responsibilities of supreme power on


the shoulders of the two children. The circumstances were
was pregnant with danger.
peculiarly difficult, and the future
The Emperor had died without making any dispositions, so
the worst happened very quickly. A Basileus who was a
minor, “who still had need of a nurse and a tutor,” and who,
for want of a proper education, was both incompetent and
unstable; a Regent, Mary of Antioch, surrounded by the
wrong people, mistrusted, loved too much by a few, detested
by many; a favorite, insolent and mediocre, whom his rivals
suspected of aspiring to the throne; such were the leaders
^ du Sommerard, Deux princesses d'Orient au XIF
Cf. L. siècle^ Paris,

1907. In this book there is a pleasing biography of Agnes of France, a


too romantic at times for a historical work, but interesting, even
little

though the author has failed to make use of certain important texts con-
cerning the psychology of his heroine.
248 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
of government. It 'was enough to unleash the ambitions of
all concerned: those of Mary, the Emperor
Manuel’s daugh-
ter, a passionate, violent woman, whose hatred for
her step-

mother, combined with an almost masculine energy, carried


her to the utmost limits of audacity; those of Alexius, Man-
uel’s bastard son, who thought he had a claim to the throne;

those, above all, of the formidable Andronicus Comnenus,


whose adventures had so disturbed the previous reign.
Against these dangers that threatened from every side,
those in power were without support and without strength.
Even the members of the imperial family, the greatest per-

sonages of the State, dissatisfied and worried, thought only


of their own interests. “There was no longer any concern for
the public welfare; the Councils of State were unattended.”
The outcome of this lamentable situation, and the tragedies
that, one after another, covered the capital and the Palace
in blood, are well known. Mary Comnena upholding the re-
volt against her brother and undergoing a regular siege in
St. Sophia; Andronicus elevated in his turn, soon to be ac-
claimed by the populace as lord of Constantinople and asso-
ciate of the young Basileus; the favorite overthrown, im-
prisoned, blinded; then, in the words of Nicetas, “the

imperial garden despoiled of Mary Comnena and


its trees,”

her husband poisoned, the Regent, Mary of Antioch, con-


demned and ruthlessly executed, the young
for high treason
Alexius finally deposed and strangled, and Andronicus Com-
nenus seizing the throne such were the events of these tragic
:

years. Events of which Agnes of France was the horrified


witness.
The little Empress was twelve years old when the death of
the young Emperor left her lonely and abandoned in a for-

eign city— the defenseless pawn of its new master. Androni-


cus could think of no better way of consolidating the power
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 249

he had usurped than to marry the fiancée of his predecessor,

and despite the gap between their ages (Andronicus was


over sixty), their marriage was celebrated in St. Sophia at
the end of 1182, and consummated. Even in this Byzantium
accustomed to crimes, the affair caused a scandal. “This old
man, nearing his end,” wrote Nicetas, “was not in the least
ashamed to unite himself with the young and beautiful bride
intended for his nephew; this dawn was embraced by the
twilight; this rosy-fingered maiden who exhaled the perfumes
of love was possessed by the used and wrinkled man.” Public
opinion in Europe was no less outraged by the event. Agnes’s
family alone seemed not to care; there is no evidence that
Philippe-Auguste felt any qualms regarding the fate of his
sister.

What even more surprising, the Princess herself seems


is

to have accepted her fate with equanimity. The


explanation

of this singularity may lie in the fact that her marriage


with

the old sovereign was primarily a political union, and that


Andronicus, engrossed with his innumerable mistresses, sel-
dom inflicted himself on his wife. She had all the exterior
gratifications of supreme power, the pleasure of figuring in

the ceremonies, of having her likeness reproduced on


monu-
ments, in full imperial regalia, beside her husband. And
it

is not impossible that she, like so many others, succumbed to

the charm of the great seducer that Andronicus undoubtedly


was. In the final tragedy that brought death to the Basileus,
she was with him, side by side with his favorite mistress,
and
the two women, arrested with the Prince when attempting
to

flee, made desperate efforts to save him from his fate. This
was During the
in 1185. two years that she was married to
Andronicus, the young woman had seen some strange sights,
flute-players were
in this court where the courtisans and the
in better standing with the ruler than his
statesmen, and in
250 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
those villas on the Bosphorus where, with his beautiful mis-
tresses, Andronicus enjoyed in rural peace the delights of

passionate and voluptuous living. It seems that Agnes of

France was not too scandalized by She was, perhaps,


all this.

the final conquest of this Andronicus Comnenus, so intelli-


gent, so persuasive, so witty, supple, and charming, on whose
lips, as Nicetas puts it, Hermes had rubbed the “moly,” the
magical herb that seduces hearts.
It is not known what happened to the young woman dur-
ing the turbulent days that followed the fall of Andronicus.
But there is every reason to believe that as soon as order was
established, Agnes, widow two Emperors, regained, un-
of
der the rule of Isaac Angius, all the prerogatives that Byzan-
tium accorded to its sovereigns. Farther on, we shall see that
she remained in possession of her marriage settlement, and
it is probable that she lived in one of those Imperial Palaces
that offered a retreat to Princesses fallen from power. It was
there that a new adventure came to her.
Theodore Branas belonged to one of the greatest families
of the Byzantine aristocracy. His father, Alexius, who was
reputed to be the finest general of that epoch, had been one
of Andronicus Comnenus’s most faithful servants. His
mother was a niece of the Emperor Manuel, who liked to
proclaim her “the most beautiful of women” and was pleased
to call her “the ornament of his family.” Thus related to the
fallen dynasty, the Branae could have no sympathy for the
government of Isaac Angius. In 1186, Alexius Branas re-
volted against the Emperor and met his death, weapons in
hand, under the walls of Constantinople. And although The-
odore served in the imperial army, he could feel nothing but
hate for his father’s murderer. Was this what drew him to
Agnes, who was, in a sense, heiress to the rights of the Com-
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 251

neni? We do not know. At all events, in 1190 the intimacy


between Branas and the young woman, who was then nine-
teen years of age, began to be talked about in Constantinople.
A little later, in 1194, the Western chronicler, Aubry de
Trois-Fontaines, specifies things in these terms: “The Em-
press, sister of the King of France, was kept by Theodore
Branas, and although she remained in possession of her
marriage settlement, he considered her as his wife; but he
had not solemnized the union with a nuptial ceremony, be-
cause, according to the custom of the country, such a mar-
riage would have meant the forfeiture of her dowry.” In any
case, the liaison was openly admitted, and before long it was
universally accepted, the more so because Theodore Branas,
having done much to overthrow Isaac Angius in 1195, held
a high position at the court of the new Emperor Alexius.^
Through this more or less morganatic union, whose bonds
were further strengthened by the birth of a daughter, Agnes
had become more Byzantine than She had, as we shall
ever.

see, completely forgotten her native tongue; she had


lost all

recollection of a family which had never shown the smallest


interest in her. There is not even any evidence that she
met
with her sister Margaret, widow of the King of Hungary,
when the former journeyed to the Holy Land. And in 1203,

when the arrival of the Barons of the Fourth Crusade


brought her suddenly face to face with her compatriots,
there is every reason to believe that she was completely
“deracinated.”

We know how Irene Angia, the Byzantine Princess placed


on the German throne by her marriage, persuaded her hus-
^ Alexius III, brother of Isaac Angius. [Translator’s note]
252 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
band Philipp of Swabia to take up the cause of her brother,
the young Alexius,^ whose power had been usurped; and how
the German Caesar aroused the interest of the Venetians, and
of the Crusaders then assembled in Venice, in the restoration
of his brother-in-law’s rights. But the expedition destined to

deliver the Holy Land was not diverted to Constantinople for

this reason alone. The economic interests of the Venetian

Republic, the attraction of the Byzantine capital and its

splendors, the prospect of plunder and pillage offered by such


an enterprise to this band of adventurers, the old grudges
still alive in Latin hearts, all these things contributed to the

decision of the Doge and the Crusader Barons. Another con-


sideration mass of holy relics possessed by Constanti-
was the
nople. We know what a prominent place such precious rel-
ics occupied in the public and the private life of the Middle

Ages, and what a high value was set upon those of Western
origin. Byzantium was full of these sacred treasures, which
were somewhat ostentatiously offered to the dazzled view of
visitors in the Palace, the Imperial Chapel, St. Sophia, and

other churches. So the Latins saw the imperial city as a vast


museum, an enormous reliquary, predestined to stock the
sanctuaries of the Western world. And in view of the im-
portance of relic-hunting to the conquerors, one may well be-
lieve that this bait had a lot to do with the grave decision that,
despite the express prohibition of the Pope, turned in the
direction of Constantinople so many pious people, so many
churchmen, eager to reap these rich and holy rewards of
victory.
This is not the place to tell of the Fourth Crusade. It will
suffice to recall how the Latins, who reached Constantinople
the 23rd of June 1203, saw that in order to put the young
^ Alexius IV, son of Isaac Angius. [Translator’s note]
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 253

\lexius back on his throne they would have to use force. On


^

;he 17th of July, the assault was made. The usurper, Alex-

us III, panic-stricken, fled precipitately, and the populace


:*einstated Isaac Angius. The Emperor’s first care was to

:ome to terms with the Crusaders. He ratified all the prom-


ises made to them by his son; he welcomed them as “the ben-
efactors and the preservers of the Empire”; most important
he poured the wealth of the capital into their hands,
Df ail,

and this first occupation of the city, which lasted no more


than a few days, served only to increase the covetousness of
the W esterners.
It is here that we rediscover Agnes of France, in a scene

that reveals the evolution effected in her. Among the great

Barons of the Latin army were several close relatives of the


young Empress. Count Louis of Blois was her nephew;
Count Baudouin of Flanders had married her niece. On the
other hand, Theodore Branas, her lover, had been a leader of
the defense, one of the last loyal supporters of the Basileus
Alexius III. Agnes seems to have shown without hesitation
where her sympathies lay. Robert de Clari relates that the
Crusaders, having some vague recollection that a French
Princess, a sister of their King, had been married a long time
ago in Constantinople, inquired, as soon as the pretender was
installed in the Palace, whether this lady, “whom
they

called,” says the chronicler, “the Empress of France,” was


still alive. they were told that she was, and that she
“And
was married; that a man of high position in the city— by the
name of Vernas (Branas)— had espoused her; and that she
was living in a palace close by. There, the Barons went to

see her, they saluted her, and made great promises to serve

Alexius IV was reseated on the throne in 1203 with his father


^
as co-

ruler. [Translator’s note]


254 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
her well. Agnes showed much displeasure, and seemed
greatly wroth that they had come there, and that they had
crowned Alexius, nor would she speak to them. But she had
an interpreter speak, and the interpreter said that she knew
no French. With Count Louis, however, who was her
nephew, she entered into communication.”
In the course of the twenty-four years during which the
little Princess exiled in Byzantium had been forgotten by her
French relatives, she too had forgotten her birthplace. She
was interested now only in Byzantine concerns, in the deep-
seated hatred of the Branae for Isaac Angius, and like any
Greek, she resented the untimely and fatal interference of
these foreigners in the affairs of the monarchy. In view of
this, Robert de Clari’s anecdote is highly significant; it

proves to what a point Agnes of France was alienated from


her native land.
What followed was hardly calculated to reconcile her with
her compatriots. We know that the Greeks and the Latins
did not agree for long. We
know how the apparently good
relations between them broke down during the course of the
winter spent by the Crusaders under the walls of Constanti-
nople, and how, after a national revolution had overthrown
the weak and contemptible occupants of the throne, the
Westerners made up their minds to conquer Byzantium for
themselves. We know the atrocities that were committed,
over a period of several days, in the city taken by storm. At
the time of the assault (the 12th of April 1204) Agnes of
France, with other noble ladies, had sought refuge in the for-
tified Palace of the Buculeon. The Marquis Boniface de
Montferrat arrived in time to save the Princess and her com-
panions from any disagreeable experiences, but one can imag-
ine how she felt on seeing her capital pillaged, the palaces
ransacked, the churches devastated, St. Sophia defiled and
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 255
profaned, the panic-stricken population fleeing in all direc-

tions, and the incomparable city of Constantinople delivered


up to the brutalities of a licentious soldiery. Robert de Clari’s
ingenuous account reveals what the Latins gained from their
deplorable undertaking. “Since the world was created,” he
says, “no possessions so great, so noble, so rich, were seen or
won, neither in the time of Alexander, nor in the time of
Charlemagne, nor before, nor after; and I do not believe that
in all the forty richest cities of the world there was so much
wealth as was found in the heart of Constantinople. And to

this the Greeks bear witness, that two parts of the riches of
the world were in Constantinople, and the third part scat-
tered over the world.” At the sight of all this satisfied cupid-
ity, of the insolence of these bandits without respect for any-
one or anything, Agnes, like Nicetas, must have wept bitterly
over the ruin of the imperial city, and thought that the Sara-
cens would have been more merciful than the Crusaders.

Nevertheless, when her kinsman. Count Baudouin of


Flanders, was seated on the throne of the Caesars, when a
Latin Empire had replaced the monarchy of the Basileis,
the consciousness of her French origin seems to have re-
awakened in Agnes’s heart. This final change in her was to
have rather curious consequences.
Nicetas speaks somewhere, not without bitterness and sor-
row, of those Greeks “who, for the sake of a few territories,

made peace with the Italians, whereas they should have


wished to war with them.” Among “these
be perpetually at

servile spirits, whose ambition armed them against their own


country,” was the lover of Agnes of France, Theodore Bra-
nas, who probably joined the new régime at the instigation

of his mistress. She had, in fact, reaped an unexpected benefit


256 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
from the establishment of the Latin Empire. Aubry de Trois-
Fontaines reports that was brought to the attention of Bra-
it

nas “that he was depriving the Empress sister of the King of


France of the nuptials to which she was entitled,” and he was
persuaded to regularize the situation by a wedding. We may
well believe that Agnes, out of gratitude for this, reconciled
her husband with those to whom she owed it.
In any case, Theodore Branas became, from that time on,
one of the most faithful supporters of the new Empire. Ville-
hardouin says of him: “He was a Greek who stood by them,
and no other Greeks but he stood by them.” This rare devo-
tion was suitably rewarded. The Emperor conferred on Bra-
nas the Feudal Lordship of Apros, where, at the head of
several Latin contingents, he served his new master as a

loyal vassal. Then, in 1206, when his town of Apros had


been taken by the Bulgarians and demolished, the great
Greek lord had the opportunity to fill an even greater role.
He was very popular in the province of Thrace, which he
had governed in the past for the Basileus, and particularly
in Adrianople, his place of origin. The people of this region,
horrified by the Bulgarian excesses, offered him their sub-
mission, and proposed to constitute, under his authority, a
vassal Principality of the Latin Emperor. “In this way,” as
Villehardouin says, “the Greeks and the Franks could be
friends.” Henry of Flanders, who was governing for his
brother Baudouin, who had been taken prisoner by the Bul-
garians, adroitly seized the opportunity. In 1206, he formally
ceded in fief to Branas and to “the Empress his wife” Adri-
anople, Didymoticus, “and all the appurtenances thereof.”
The was made out in
act of investiture the name of the “noble
Caesar Theodore Branas Comnenus,” a resounding title that
heightened the new overlord’s prestige with the Greeks. A
detacfijjtent of Latin knights remained in Adrianople to help
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 257

him defend his Principality. And so, says Villehardouin, “the

pact was made and concluded, and a peace made and con-

cluded between the Greeks and the Franks.”


In reconciling the conquerors and the conquered, Agnes of
France had done what she could to consolidate the establish-

ment founded by the Latins. And no doubt she carried on in


her Principality the work of reconciliation that she had initi-
ated. Theodore Branas kept his promises. To the last day of
his life he faithfully served the Emperor and the Empire. In
his domain, moreover, he was almost a King, and in this
wholly Greek environment, Agnes of France must have con-
tinued to live like a Byzantine Princess.
Very little is known about her last years. One detail, how-
ever, seems to indicate that she turned more and more back
to France. It was to a Frankish Baron, Narjaud de Toucy,
that she married her daughter in 1218 or 1219. Another
Frenchman, Guillaume de Villehardouin, son of the Prince of
Achaia, was later to marry her granddaughter, and her
grandson Philippe de Toucy liked to boast of his French
origin and his relationship to the French Royal Family. Join-
ville relates that he came to Palestine to visit Saint Louis,

“and told the king that he was his cousin, being descended
from one of King Philippe’s sisters, who had been wife to the
Emperor himself.” And as late as the beginning of the four-

teenth century,Marino Sanudo was speaking of “the daugh-


ter of the French King” who became Empress of Byzan-

tium, and who had afterward married a Baron of the Greek


Empire.
Thus, many years which took place in
after her death,

1220, the West remembered Agnes of France, Empress of


the East, whose destiny was assuredly one of the most re-
markable among those of the many Latin Princesses mar-
ried in Constantinople. More than any other, she hi „ been
258 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
“deracinated” by circumstance; more than any other, she
had become a Byzantine, in language and in feeling. And
yet, when circumstances brought her, a quarter of a century

later, once more face to face with her compatriots, her af-

fection turned back to her native land— after a moment of

hesitation. The wife of a great Greek nobleman, she did not


join with him the party of patriots who were tenaciously re-
sisting the foreigners; she did not emigrate with him to
Nicea, or anywhere else. On the contrary, she won her hus-
band over to the side of the Franks, made of him a Feudal
Lord of the new Empire, and proposed that he should recon-
cile, if possible, the two enemy races. Born a daughter of

France, dying in a Greek Principality under the suzerainty


of a Latin Emperor, after founding with Theodore Branas a
family that was to be wholly French, she thus harmoniously
united her deathbed and her cradle, despite the intervening
storms of her adventurous life.
XII

CONSTANCE OF
HOHENSTAUFEN

At Valencia, in Spain, in the little church of St. John the


Jr\. Hospitaler, one may see in the chapel dedicated to St.
Barbara a wooden chest on which is engraved this inscription

in Spanish: “Here lies the Lady Constance, august Empress


of Greece.” Who is this little-known sovereign of the Byzan-
tineEmpire, and what strange destiny brought her so far
from the East, to live and die beneath the Iberian sky? Hers
is a story at once romantic and melancholy; a curious episode
in the history of the twelfth century and the relations then
existing between the East and the West.^

About the year 1238, great events were brewing in Eu-


rope. In the East, John Ducas Vatatzes, the Greek Emperor
^ Schlumberg-er was the first to draw attention to this forgotten
M. G.
Princess, in an interesting article: “Le Tombeau d’une impératrice byzan-
tine à Valence,” Revue des Deux Mondes, 15 mars 1902. We
are greatly
indebted to this interesting memoir.

259
260 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
of Nicea, was contending more and more successfully against
the weak Latin Empire of Constantinople; and in the West,
Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, was resuming once again his
relentless war against the Papacy. Now, Baudouin II, Em-
peror of Constantinople, protégé of the reigning pontiff and
sustained solely by him, was, for this reason, automatically
against the great Swabian Emperor, and the policy of Freder-
ick II was, of course, to strive for ascendancy here too, and
thus put his irreconcilable enemy Pope in check. To this
the
end he did not hesitate, although he was a Roman Catholic
and a Latin, to enter into an alliance with the schismatic
Greeks against a Catholic Latin State.

This is not surprising when one remembers the free and


powerful mentality of this last of the Hohenstaufens. Initi-

ated from his childhood in Sicily to the splendors of Greek


and Arabian civilization, learned, and as devoted to science as

any Renaissance humanist, and in addition extraordinarily


attracted by the violent and voluptuous ways of the Moslems,
this Prince with the cosmopolitan and secular soul had un-
dertaken to tear the world from the grasp of the Church, not
only by destroying the temporal power of the Papacy, but
alsoby breaking down the spiritual ascendancy of Rome. To
put an end forever to the useless folly of the Crusades, to
make peace with Islam, to transfer the supreme rule of
Christendom from the Pope to the Emperor, these were some
of the dreams cherished by modern ruler. His
this almost
enemies affirmed that he no longer believed in God, that he
denied the immortality of the soul, that he proclaimed the
supremacy of reason over blind faith, saying that “man
should believe only that which exists in the natural order,
and can be proved by reason,” It is understandable that such
a man, his mind freed from outworn scruples, should have
felt no embarrassment in allying himself with schismatics
CONSTANCE OF HOHENSTAUFEN (( 261

and infidels, if their support could help him against his


great adversary the Papacy.
This v^as the source of his involvement 'with the Byzan-
tine court at Nicea. Frederick II promised Vatatzes that he
would clear the Latins out of Constantinople and restore it
to its legitimate ruler. In return, the Greek Emperor prom-
ised to consider himself the vassal of the Western Emperor
and to reunite the two Churches. It is hard to determine to
what extent these promises were sincere. In the pact that was
concluded, the Greeks saw chiefly a means of depriving the
Pope of a strength that the latter was endeavoring to enlist on
his side. Whatever the case, the two parties were in agree-

ment. As early as 1238, the Basileus putGreek troops in


Italy at the disposal of the Swabian Emperor. Very soon
the

relations between the two sovereigns became still closer. In


1244, a daughter of Frederick II was married to the Greek
Emperor at Nicea.

In 1241, John Ducas Vatatzes had lost his first wife, Irene

Lascaris. Before long, ^^weary of his solitude,’ as a contempo-


rary puts it, he thought of remarrying, and he asked
his

hand of his daughter. She was named Con-


great ally for the
stance, and she was born of Frederick’s liaison with
Bianca

Lancia, who was also the mother of the famous Manfred. The
Emperor gladly consented to a union that strengthened his
alliance with the Greeks; and notwithstanding a
remarkable

disparity in age between the prospective bride and


bride-

groom — in 1244 John was fifty-two and Constance a very


young girl— the marriage was decided upon.
It caused a prodigious scandal in the West,
especially in

the Pontifical party. At the Council of Lyons, a little later.

Pope Innocent IV did not hesitate to include among the rea-


262 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
sons that seemed to him to justify his excommunication of

Frederick II the fact that he had contracted a marriage with


heretics. Before that, and for the same reason, the Pope had
solemnly excommunicated the Emperor V atatzes and all his

subjects, “impudently treating as heretics,” wrote Freder-


ick II to his confederate, “these most orthodox Greeks, by
whom the Christian faith has been spread throughout the
world,” and stigmatizing as “apostate and scandalous a na-
tion that for centuries, from its very origin, has been rich
and has carried the gospel of peace to the Latin world
in piety
governed by the Pope.” Nothing could have been more effec-
tive in consolidating the interests of the two sovereigns than
this common condemnation. “It is by no means,” said Fred-
erick II to another of his correspondents, “only our own
rights that we are defending, but those of all friendly peoples
united by the sincere love of Christ, and especially the
Greeks, our allies and friends, whom the Pope, on account of
the affection we bear them and despite the fact that they are
truly Christian, has treated with the utmost insolence, de-
scribing as impious this most pious people and as heretic this
most orthodox nation.” Vatatzes, too, while sending a con-
tingent of his troops to the Emperor, congratulated himself
on the Swabian Prince’s victories over their common enemy.
The young Princess Constance was the pledge of this politi-
cal accord, and she was to become its victim.

The marriage between the Basileus and the daughter of


Frederick II was celebrated at Broussa. According to the
text, as yet unpublished, of Theodore Lascaris’s funeral ora-
tion for his father, the Emperor Vatatzes, the Greek sover-
eign traveled in full military state from his capital city of
Nicea to the town of Broussa, where his young fiancée
CONSTANCE OF HOHENSTAUFEN (( 263

awaited him. seems that the journey was upsetting to the


It

old Prince, and that he felt far from well. But the wedding
was celebrated with no less pomp on that account. The
Greeks felt extremely flattered by this match, “of which,”
writes Theodore Lascaris, “only the foolish and ignorant can
fail to see the brilliance and the glory and the many other ad-

vantages.” Thecourt poets, therefore, vied with each other


in extolling this fine and profitable union, and all the magnifi-
cence of Byzantine pageantry was unfurled around the
young sovereign, splendor competing with splendor. Accord-
ing to custom, she changed her first name for the more Greek
appellation of Anna, and she was given a warm welcome in
the city of Nicea, a city that in the last forty years had taken
on all the aspects of a great capital, and that was particularly
dear to the Greeks, says Theodore Lascaris, “because its
name held a presage of victory.” But even this superficial
happiness was of short duration; the harmonious relations
between the imperial pair were soon disturbed by a peculiar
intrigue.
As the Empress was little more than a child, her father

had given her, when she left Italy, a large retinue of women
of her own race. Among them, in the capacity of her “guard-

ian and teacher” was an extremely attractive woman whom


the Byzantine chroniclers style “the Marchesa.” The Mar-
chesa was beautiful; particularly remarkable were her glori-
ous eyes and her exquisite grace. The Emperor had always
been a man of highly amorous disposition, and his little

Western wife, married for political motives, did not interest


him much. It was not at all difficult for the Marchesa to in-
terest him more, and, as she lent herself eagerly to the game,
and, to quote a contemporary chronicler, “bewitched the Ba-
sileus with her amorous charms and her philters,” it was not

long before she became the declared favorite and the rival of
264 ))
BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
her young mistress. Vatatzes refused her nothing.
She was
authorized to put on the imperial insignia, to wear the purple
buskins; when she rode on horseback, the saddle cloth of
her

mount, and the were purple, as for a Basilissa. She had


reins,

a brilliant suite to escort her, and wherever she went she


was
accorded the same honors as the Empress, whose subjects, in
the city as in the Palace, showed as much respect to the Mar-
chesa as they showed to the legitimate sovereign, and even a
little more. The Basileus, completely seduced, gave
in to his

mistress’s every whim. Anna was openly relegated to second


place.
The caused a certain amount of scandal at the court
affair

of Nicea. Among the Emperor’s intimates, one of the most


esteemed at that time was the celebrated writer Nicephorus
Blemmydes. Charged by Vatatzes with the education of the

heir apparent, he had, in this trusted position, won the friend-


ship of his pupil and the favor of his sovereign. He was a man

of harsh and inflexible nature, very pious, very disdainful of


everything unconnected with religion, who had drawn atten-
tion to himself by his hostility to the Latins. He prided him-
moreover, on his outspokenness, and although his free
self,

speech had earned him frequent attacks, he had always man-


aged maintain his high standing. Blemmydes resolutely
to
ranged himself against the favorite. He detested her not only
because she was a foreigner, but also because she was a
woman. In the past, when he was a young man of twenty,
he had had a romantic love affair that ended badly and left
him with an implacable grudge against the entire female sex.
So he daringly set himself to attack the Marchesa. He com-
posed satires against her, and, as this defender of morals had
by no means a light hand, he spared his enemy no insults.

‘‘Queen of shamelessness, disgrace of the world, wanton.


CONSTANCE OF HOHENST AUFEN (( 265

Maenad, courtesan,” such were some of the compliments he

paid her.
The Emperor, a discreet man, was embarrassed by all this

fuss; also, he felt occasional twinges of remorse over this love


affair inwhich he had involved himself. But he was infatu-
ated, and he calmed his scruples by telling
himself that God

would let him know when the hour for repentance had
come.
passion. As for the
In the meantime he gave himself up to his
Marchesa, she was brazen. More imperious, more
insolent
openly set her-
than ever, she put on airs with everyone, and
herself, as a chron-
self up as the Empress’s rival, considering

icler says, “true Queen and more than


Queen.” Things had

been going on like this for three or four years, when a dra-
face to face
matic incident brought the Italian Marchesa
with her enemy.
In 1248, Blemmydes was Abbé of the monastery of St.

Gregory the Thaumaturge, near Ephesus. The


favorite con-

ceived the idea of going there to defy him.


In full imperial

dress, accompanied by a stately retinue,


she invaded the mon-

astery, since one had the courage to shut the door against
no
was
her, and she entered the church while the community
priest at the altar,
celebrating Mass. With a gesture to the
to a
Blemmydes immediately brought the Divine Liturgy
stop. Then, turning to the Marchesa,
he ordered her to leave

the sacred precincts that she doubly


profaned in that she was
participate in the
unworthy, on account of her conduct, to
communion of the faithful, and that by her presence she was
religion. Before this
publicly insulting the sacred laws of
then, bursting into
violent invective, the woman recoiled,
tears, she begged the monk not to
forbid her the holy place;
give
finally, gripped by superstitious terror, she decided to
the church. But the men at arms who
accom-
in, and left
266 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
panied her were indignant at the humiliation inflicted on
their mistress. Their chief, a certain Drimys, declared that
after such an outrage the Abbé was unworthy to live, and,
suiting the action to the word, he tried to draw his sword.

But, O miracle! the sword stuck in the scabbard, and de-


spite all his efforts the officer could not pull it out. Wild with
rage, Drimys insulted, threatened, stormed. Blemmydes,
impassive, declared that he would rather die than violate the
law of Christ. Finally, their respect involuntarily aroused by
so much courage in the face of danger, the assailants with-

drew, but complaints were immediately brought to the Em-


peror against the insolent monk who had dared to stand up
to the favorite. Incited by her friends, the Marchesa de-
manded vengeance, affirming that in her person imperial
majesty had been affronted. Drimys, for his part, de-
itself

clared that there was sorcery in the whole affair, that only a
spell could have kept his sword in its scabbard, and he de-

manded the punishment of the magician. Blemmydes began


to feel anxious regarding the outcome of his audacity.

There is in existence a kind of circular addressed by him


at this time to all monks in the Empire, in order to ascer-
the
tain, as far as possible, what the general opinion was con-
cerning this incident. In it he recounted every detail of the
affair, justified the stand he had taken, and, inveighing
against the favorite in very violent terms, defined the atti-

tude incumbent upon a man of God in such circumstances


and with regard to such a woman. “He who tries to please
men,” he wrote, “is not a true servant of God,” and he con-
cluded his message thus: “For these reasons we did not hesi-
tate to turn the impious one out of the holy place, unable to
take upon ourselves to give Holy Communion to the impure
it

and immodest woman, nor to consent to cast the shining and


CONSTANCE OF HOHENSTAUFEN (( 267

splendid words of the Sacred Liturgy before one who wal-

lows in the mud of corruption.”


The Emperor Vatatzes refused, it seems, to fall in with
his mistress’s vengeful plans, despite the ardor of his passion.
He merely said, with a sigh, and with tears in his eyes, “Why
would you have me punish this just man? If I had been able
to live without shame and disgrace, would have kept the
I

Imperial Majesty above the reach of attack. But I have laid


myself open to the insults heaped upon my person and my
dignity. So I am only reaping what I have sown.”
Nevertheless, despite the Emperor’s will for clemency, the
monk was made to pay in other ways for his daring indis-

cretion. In the interesting autobiography he left behind him,


he notes: “There were many troubles and vexations.” This is
rather vague, but there is no question that in 1250 the Abbé
Blemmydes was somewhat in disgrace. Just then, very luck-

ily forhim, the Papal ambassadors arrived in the East, and


the need for the eloquent dialectic and theological erudition
of the learned Greek in discussions at the conference of Nym-
phaeon, served to restore his credit. So on the whole, Blem-
mydes managed to escape the disagreeable consequences to
which he had laid himself open by contending with the
powerful favorite, “whose name alone,” he wrote, “inspires
terror.”
What did the Empress Anna, so openly neglected, think
of all these explosive happenings? We
do not know. In any
case, her father, Frederick II, does not seem to have paid any
attention to the affair— if the rumors of it so much as reached

his ears. We still have several very interesting letters, writ-

ten in the year 1250, in Greek, by the Emperor Frederick to


his “very dear son-in-law.” He expresses to Vatatzes his
“complete sympathy and his sincere affections”; he tells him
268 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
of the victories won by his armies in Italy, “because we
know,” he says, “that Your Majesty rejoices with us in all
our successes and advances.” Full of confidence in himself
and in the future, he adds: “We inform you that, guided
and upheld by Divine Providence, we are in good health,
that we defeat our enemies every day, and that we are bring-
ing all our concerns to the desired outcome.” He goes on to
congratulate the Greek Emperor on his triumphs over the
Latins, and to put him on guard against the political in-

trigues of the Papacy.


One should see with what bitter violence Frederick II in-

veighs against “these pastors of Israel, who have nothing to

do with the Bishops of the Church of Christ,” and against


their head the Pope, whom he calls “the father of lies.” All

this because Innocent IV had just sent a diplomatic mission


to Nicea, in the hope of breaking up the alliance between the
two Emperors and re-establishing the union between the
two Churches. Although Frederick II affected great satisfac-
tion in the “strong and unshakable love” cherished by Vatat-
zes for “his father,” he was not without apprehension con-
cerning the result of these proceedings. So he carefully
warned the Greek sovereign that was not at all “in the in-
it

terests of the Faith” that this mission was coming to him, but
solely “tosow dissension between father and son.” And as
Vatatzes, momentarily seduced by the Papal propositions,
had decided to enter into negotiations with Rome and was
sending ambassadors to Italy, Frederick II added: “Our
Majesty wishes, very paternally, to censure the conduct of
his son” who, “without the consent of his father,” has made
such a grave decision; and, with the reminder that he had
some experience in Western matters, he remarked ironically
that he would never permit himself to make a decision in
matters pertaining to the East without first consulting Va-
CONSTANCE OF HOHENST AUFEN (( 269

tatzes, whose knowledge of them was far superior to his.

Therefore, he said that he intended to receive the envoys


of

the Basileus before they went any further. This


he did. When
the South
they disembarked in the AVest, he detained them in
of Italy until further orders.
about the
In these wholly political letters, there is nothing
Empress Anna. At most, Frederick mentions her briefly m
his excommunication by the Pope on account
of
recalling
that had united
the marriage, however ^^legal and canonical,
the Basileus to “our very gentle daughter.”
So despite the
infidelities of Vatatzes, despite, even, the
Papal intrigues,
sovereigns, and the
cordial relations existed between the two
that
Emperor’s strong insistence on the close bond of kinship
united a father-in-law with his son-in-law was
obviously de-
from this
signed to consolidate it. In point of fact, however,
on the bond began to weaken, perhaps because
the
moment
Princess Anna failed to interest her husband. And it was to

dissolve altogether very soon after the


death of the great

Swabian Emperor in December 1250.


the
Having regained their liberty through this event,
negotiations were
Greek ambassadors joined Innocent IV and
agreement in 1254.
begun, which culminated into a definite
Basileus
By this covenant, the Pope gave carte blanche to the
in return,
with regard to the Latin Empire of Constantinople;
effect the union of the
the Greek Emperor promised to
Churches. To reunite Christendom, Innocent
IV did not hesi-
the policy established by the Fourth
Crusade.
tate to sacrifice
did not
To reconquer the capital of the Empire, Vatatzes
of the Greek Church.
hesitate to sacrifice the independence
parties completely abandoned a traditional
Each of the two
policy, thereby making the issue one of singular importance.
In any case, it marked the end of the
Greco-German alliance
that the marriage of 1244 had
prepared and consecrated.
270 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
A little earlier, however, in 1253, perhaps because the
Marchesa had disappeared, perhaps because in growing up
the young Empress Anna had gained some influence over her
husband, a curious thing happened at the court of Nicea.
After the death of Frederick II, one of the first acts of Con-
rad IV, his legitimate son, was to banish the Lancia, the
maternal relatives of Anna and Manfred, and it was at
Nicea that the exiles sought refuge. John Vatatzes offered a
warm welcome to his wife’s uncle, Galvano Lancia, and to
her other relatives; in fact, he extended his protection to them
so unequivocally that Conrad took it as a personal offense,
and complained strongly of the Basileus’s attitude. On this
count he sent a special ambassador to the East, Marquis
Berthold of Hohenburg, whose mission, and whose haughty
attitude,was remembered by the people of Nicea for a very
long time afterward. The Greek Emperor ended by giving in
to his demands. But we can assume that Vatatzes’s displeas-

ure over this put the finishing touch to his break with the
Hohenstaufens, and threw him into the aims of the Pope.
The rupture, once achieved, was definitive. Contrary to
what one might have supposed, Conrad’s successor, Man-
fred, when he ascended the throne in 1254, made no attempt
at reconciliation with his sister’s husband. Indeed, he showed
himself very ill disposed toward the Emperor of Nicea. So
much so, that when the time came
John Vatatzes to die,
for
on the 30th of October 1254, the alliance dreamed of by
Frederick II was no more than a memory.

We can well believe that under the circumstances the


widowed Anna would have liked to return to her native land.
Her position at the court of Nicea had, in fact, become very
difficult since the death of her husband. Theodore II Lasca-
CONSTANCE OF HOHENSTAUFEN (( 271

ris, who succeeded him, was extremely hostile to Latins in


general, and, as the son of his father’s first wife, he particu-
and treated her badly. Further,
larly disliked his stepmother,
as the policy of Manfred became more and more hostile to
the Greeks, the new Basileus, seeing in the sister of the
Sicilian King a valuable hostage, thought it wise to keep her
in his hands, and took the extra precaution of holding her in

semi-captivity. Thus, although she was isolated and out of


favor in a distant country, she was yet unable to leave it. And
matters were the same after the death of Theodore Lascaris,
when Michael Paleologus had usurped the throne and recon-
quered Constantinople in 1261. The only change in Anna’s
situation was that, though still virtually a captive, she left
Nicea with the court and returned to Byzantium. It was there
that a last love came to the daughter of Frederick II.

The youngsovereign had of course kept up, in conformity


with Byzantine etiquette, the rank and way of life proper for
an Empress. She made only very modest use of her privi-
leges.“She adorned her existence,” says a chronicler, “with
the beauty of her virtues, and the purity of her morals gave
an added radiance to the grace of her countenance.” But de-
spite this voluntary self-effacement, she did not go unno-
ticed.At that time she must have been about thirty years old,
and she was very pretty. The new Emperor, Michael Paleo-
logus, became aware of it, and fell madly in love with the for-
lorn young woman. As we know, it was the custom for a
Byzantine usurper to appropriate the widow of his predeces-
sor, considering good way of legalizing the usurpation.
it a

But when Michael Paleologus decided to declare himself, he


found that he had met his match. Anna rejected his overtures
with haughty disdain, declaring that never could she, widow
of an Emperor and daughter of Frederick II, lower herself
by becoming the mistress of a man whom she had counted
272 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
among her subjects in the past. The suitor was not at all

discouraged by this contemptuous dismissal. When after

further entreaties, Paleologus saw all his attempts rebuffed,


he told himself that there was only one way to satisfy the
tyrannical passion that was burning him up, and aggravat-
ing the Princess’s contempt. Since she would not become his
mistress, he proposed that she should become his wife.
As a matter of fact, Michael was already married, and his
wife Theodora was a charming person of good family and
irreproachable morals. Moreover, she adored her husband,
to whom she had given three sons. It was difficult to find a
pretext for divorcing such a woman, and she was not likely
to be complacent. The subtle Emperor then called politics to
his aid. He explained to his Council the grave dangers that
were threatening the Empire, the preparations the Latins
were making to retake Constantinople, the notorious inferi-
ority of the Byzantine forces compared with those of their
adversaries. Already the Bulgarians were on the verge of
joining the coalition, and further, it was greatly to be feared
that Manfred of Sicily would also associate himself with the
league in order to avenge his sister. So there was good reason
for drawing closer him through a marriage; in this way
to
he could be detached from the enemy side, and the Greek
Emperor would be remarkably strengthened by the support
of this powerful Prince who could not but be the friend and
ally of his sister’s husband. And Michael concluded that for
the good of the State he should divorce his wife and marry
Anna.
It is certain that at this time the Pope, Venice, and the
Prince of Achaia, were forming an alliance against the Greek
Empire, that Manfred, renewing the great Eastern ambi-
tions of the Hohenstaufens, was frankly hostile to the Byzan-
tines, and that policy as well as love dictated to Michael
CONSTANCE OF HOHENST AUFEN (( 273

Paleologus a marriage that would have allied


him with the
son of Frederick II. Besides, ever since 1259,
he had realized
tried in vain to get
the advantage of such an alliance and had
into the good graces of the King of Sicily. He failed this time,
legitimate wife,
too, but for different reasons. Theodora, his
s plans. She
put up a desperate opposition to the Emperor
he, indignant,
interested the Patriarch in her cause, and
threatened Michael with the lightning of the
Church if he
pretexts apart
should persist in his plans, and “tore his fine
like spider webs.” Faced with
excommunication, the Basileus
something
gave in; he realized that he was up against
stronger than himself. In any case, since
he really did see
of the Prin-
the value of conciliating Manfred, he made use
Anna to do so, but not in the way he had planned. He
cess
brother.
gave her her liberty and sent her back to her
Alexius Strate-
In 1262, a Byzantine general, the Caesar
gopoulos who hadretaken Constantinople from the Latins,
Epirus, father-in-
had fallen into the hands of the Despot of
been sent to the
law and ally of the Sicilian King, and had
or 1263, it was pro-
latter in the West as a trophy. In 1262,

posed to release exchange for the Princess Anna. Mi-


him in
Manfred. But it did
chael agreed with alacrity, to please
he hoped, to an alliance with the Hohenstaufens.
not lead, as

In this way, after an absence of almost


twenty years, Anna
to be involved
Constance returned to her native country, only
in further disasters. In 1266,
Urban IV sent Charles of An-
catastrophe of Beneyento
jou against Manfred, and soon the
mercy of the victor.
put the Empress and all her family at the
were thrown into
But whereas Manfred’s wife and sons
prison, Annahad the good luck to seem less dangerous. They
Spain, to live with
let her go free, and in 1269, she retired to
274 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
her niece Constance, wife of the Infante Don Pedro of Ara-
gon. was there that she finally found peace
It after her many
adventures. She finished her life piously, as a religious in the
convent of St. Barbara in Valencia; and as a token of her
gratitude to this austere community, she left to them in her
will a miraculous picture of their patron saint, and a remark-
able relic, a fragment of the rock from which sprang the
water used to baptize St. Barbara. This seems to have been
all that she brought back from her long sojourn in the East.

However, in that far-olf time when she married John Va-


tatzes, theGreek Emperor had assigned her a dowry; he had
given her three towns and numerous castles, with a revenue
amounting to three thousand bezants. She bequeathed all her
rights over these domains in the East to her nephew Don
Jaime II, who was later to avail himself of them. As for her,
she died in obscurity in the year 1313, at more than eighty
years of age.
In the fate of these Western Princesses, Bertha of Sulz-
bach, Agnes of France, Constance of Hohenstaufen, who
went and thirteenth centuries to reign over
in the twelfth
the Byzantine Empire, there is something melancholy that
imparts a pathetic charm to their indistinct, their almost ob-
literated figures.Banished far from their native land by the
game of politics, almost always remaining foreigners in the
new world to which fate had consigned them, these exiled
Princesses sadly proved the impossibility of a mutual under-
standing between the Greeks and the Latins of their day.
Though they were involved in important historical events,
it was chiefly as victims. But the fact that their lives were
linked with those of the Comneni, Manuel and Andronicus,
theEmperors of Nicea, and the last of the Hohenstaufens, is
enough to make them interesting still. They witnessed great
things, even if they but rarely controlled them. The splendors
CONSTANCE OF HOHENSTAUFEN (( 275

of twelfth centuryByzantium, the tragedies of palace revolu-


tions, the Fourth Crusade and the founding of a
Latin Em-

pire in Constantinople, the Eastern policy of


Frederick II
outlines of
light up with a magical radiance the wavering
these forgotten Princesses. But more than anything else,

their historyshows what a gulf the Crusades succeeded in


did
creating between the East and the West. Never, perhaps,
efforts to
these two worlds make more frequent and honest
impress each other, to understand each other, to unite. And
fail so
never, despite their reciprocal good will, did they
utterly in their attempts.
XIII

YOLANDA OF
MONTFERRAT

Y olanda of Montferrat was a descendant of the Marquis


Boniface, and she
her marriage to Andronicus
was eleven years
II, in
old at the time of
1284. This would seem to
have been a somewhat mediocre alliance for a Basileus. But
a Basileus was no longer the brilliant match of earlier times.
What with the Pope’s disapproval of any union with a schis-
matic, and the undeniable decadence of the Greek monarchy,
a Byzantine marriage seemed to the Latins of that day infi-
nitely less of an honor than it had to their fathers. And in this
particular case there was an added drawback. Andronicus
was a widower and had two sons from his first marriage, the
elder of whom, Michael, was already designated to the
throne. So the children of a second marriage would, in ac-
cordance with Byzantine custom, be relegated to the status of
Under these circumstances, most of the
private individuals.
great European rulers would have hesitated to marry a
daughter to the Emperor. Aware of this, the court of Con-

276
rOLANDA OF MONTFERRAT (( 277

stantinople restrained its ambitions and made the best of Yo-

landa. Moreover, this alliance, modest though it w^as, offered

an important advantage. The young v^ife had rights over the

Latin Kingdom of Thessalonica, and her marriage, in trans-

ferring these rights to the imperial family, established legiti-


mate grounds for opposing the claims of the West. For
similar motives, Andronicus II tried, a little later, to marry
his eldest son, Michael, to Catherine of Courtenay, heiress of
the Latin Emperors of Constantinople. In this manner, by
gathering into their own hands the various rights that could

have been invoked against them by their rivals, the Paleologi

strove to secure their power.


The little Italian girl, who took the Greek name of Irene

on becoming Empress, was pretty, elegant, and slender. She


fascinated Andronicus, who was barely twenty-three, and
very soon he loved her to distraction. She gave him three sons
one after the other, John, Theodore, Demetrius, and a daugh-
ter, Simone, not counting several children who died at birth.

And the older they grew the more acutely she suffered over
her inability to secure for them the exalted position of which
she dreamed. Very proud of her race, very ambitious for her-
self and her family, Irene could not admit that
her sons

should be sacrificed for the children of the first marriage,


whom she detested. Imbued with Western ideas, she de-

manded the equal division of the imperial inheritance be-


tween all the Emperor’s descendants; or at least, that her
own sons should be compensated with vast endowments.
And being of a violent and imperious temper, as greedy for
power as she was for money, she exercised no caution in her
methods of solicitation. She was aware of her husband’s great

passion for her, and she exploited it in the hope of bringing


Andronicus round to her point of view. To obtain the suc-
cession for her sons, or at least a share of the inheritance.
278 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
she pestered him day and night with complaints, recrimina-
tions, objections; and as the Emperor would not give in, the

young woman made use of all the means at her disposal;


now tears, declaring that if he refused her she could not live,
now coquetry, playing an artful game of “bedroom politics.”
The Emperor finally wearied of these perpetual scenes; his
great love lessened, and he ended by partially forsaking this
wife who was too tiresome by far.
Furious, Irene then left the court and fled to Thessalonica,
and from there she vociferated against the Emperor, telling

all comers, “without respect for God, without fear of men,”


the details of her married life, in terms, says a chronicler,
“that would have caused the most shameless courtesan to
blush.” She recounted these trumped up tales to the women
who surrounded her, to the nuns who came to visit her, and
she wrote them in letters to her son-in-law, insulting and ridi-
culing poor Andronicus, who was too dumbfounded to pro-
test. “Nothing,” sententiously remarks a contemporary, “is

so excitable and so prone to calumny as the imagination of a


woman.” With her tongue “more clangorous than a bell,”
she disturbed everything, confused everything, “and God
Himself and all the waters of the sea,” writes Pachymerus,
“would not have sufficed to wash clean of her insults and her
calumnies the unfortunate man against whom she had vent
her anger.” The Emperor was understandably annoyed by
all these stories. But he was a good-natured man, so he did

allhe could think of to appease his wife’s fury. He loaded her


with money, he offered her an exaggerated share in the gov-
erning power, he strove, in the hope of hushing up the scan-
dal, to satisfy her smallest whims. But she stubbornly re-
fused to be placated, harshly demanding that first of all the
future of her sons should be assured. All the same, knowing
very well that she would not have the last word on this sub-
rOLANDA OF MONTFERRAT (( 279

ject, she worked on her own to establish them brilliantly,

through arranging advantageous marriages for them. This


became a source of new difficulties in the imperial family.

Andronicus had a minister, Nicephorus Choumnus, of


whom he was very fond. He thought of marrying his son
John daughter of his favorite, who was, moreover,
to the
extremely wealthy. The idea that one of her sons should take
a wife who was not of a princely family infuriated Irene. She
had very different dreams for his future; she was planning to
unite him with the widow of the Prince of Achaia, Isabella

de Villehardouin, which would have the advantage of bring-


ing the whole of Latin Morea back into the hands of the
Paleologi; and she thought of establishing for him, with
Aetolia, Arcanania, and Epirus, an independent State. There
were heated disputes over this between the imperial pair. The
Basileus declared that he was the father, and that his author-
ity in the home should supersede that of the mother. Irene

protested, insisted. Finally, however, Andronicus lost his


temper. In 1304 he married John as he wished and gave
him Thessalonica to live in and govern as a sort of Viceroy.
The young man did not enjoy it for long: he died four years
later, leaving no children.
For her second son, Theodore, Irene took no less trouble.
She dreamed of marrying him to the daughter of the French
Duke of Athens, and of giving him the means of forming a
Principality for himself. The project failed. But just at the

right moment another opportunity came along. In 1305, the


Empress’s brother, John of Montferrat, died, bequeathing
his States to his sister. Irene transferred the rights to
her son,

who was thus enabled to fulfill his mother’s wish and attain
the status of a sovereign Prince. In his Piedmontese
Mar-
quisate, Theodore quickly transformed himself. He became
completely Italian. He married an Italian girl, the daughter
280 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
of the Genoese Spinola, he adopted the religion of the Latins,
their habits, their dress. He cut off his Byzantine beard and
kept his face clean-shaven like the Westerners. Thus meta-
morphosed, he reappeared from time to time in Constanti-
when he had debts that he knew his parents
nople, usually
would be weak enough to pay. And occasionally, remember-
ing that he was the son of the Basileus, he advanced some
claims to the imperial succession. But he was so fully expatri-
ated that his accession would have caused a scandal in the
East, and Andronicus rightly considered such a hope com-
pletely unrealizable.
Irene was equally solicitous for her third son, Demetrius,
and even for her son-in-law, the Krai of Serbia, Stephen Mi-
loutin. About 1298, a purely political marriage had united
this sovereign with the young Princess Simone. This Slav,

who had already been married three times, had repudiated


his first two wives one after the other, and was now beginning
to get tired of the third. The Byzantine court decided then
that would be profitable to annex him by a marriage with a
it

Greek, and Andronicus proposed his sister Eudocia, the re-


cent widow Lazes”— which was the dis-
of a “Prince of the
dainful title given by the Byzantines to the Emperors of
Trebizond. The Serbian could not have been more delighted.
The canonists had in fact shown him that as long as his first
wife was living his other marriages had been invalid, and
that, his first wife having just died, most conveniently, he
was now absolutely free. It was Eudocia who would not hear
of it. She was, it seems, an inconsolable widow, and, besides,
she was a trifle suspicious of the Slav’s versatility. Failing
her, Simone was chosen, though she was only six years old.
The betrothal was celebrated, and the child, following the
usual custom, was sent to Serbia, there to be brought up and
to await her marriage in the house of her future husband. But
YOLANDA OF MONTFERRAT (( 281

this passionate Slav, who hadodd years and deplorable


forty
morals (he had successively had relations with two of his
sisters-in-lawO lacked the patience to wait as long as he
should have, with the result that his young wife lost all hope
of everbecoming a mother.
Irene, however, held no grudge against her son-in-law. She
loaded him with gifts and silver, and was pleased to receive
him at Thessalonica,her usual place of residence. Since her
maternal pride craved above all that her daughter should cut
a fine figure in the world, and have the air of an Empress, she
saw to it that the Byzantine chancellery accorded the Serbian
Prince the right to wear a cap studded with precious stones,
almost the same as that worn by the Basileus. Every year she
sent him one of these badges of honor, each a little more mag-
ornamented than the last. Then there were gifts of
nificently
gorgeous raiment for him and for her daughter. She emptied
the imperial coffers for this foreign Prince. At this time she

hoped that Simone would have children, who might one


still

day reign over Byzantium. When she was obliged to re-


nounce this hope, her perpetually active imagination imme-
diately started forming other plans. As the Serb could not
have a son, she persuaded him adopt one of his brothers-
to

in-law as his heir. First, she sent him Demetrius, armed with
plenty of money to facilitate his welcome. But the young man
did not feel at home among the Slavs, and he returned to Con-
stantinople. Then Theodore was sent. But he, even more
than his brother, felt out of his element, and he went back to
Italy.

For that matter, Simone herself was not very happy in her
wild Kingdom. True, her husband adored her, but with a
barbarian’s love, violent, jealous, suspicious. AVhenever she
would le?ve to spend a few weeks in Constantinople, he
would be in a state of constant anxiety, and no sooner would
282 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
she depart, than he would demand that she be sent back to
him without delay. And it was not without real terror that the
young woman would return, knowing him to be uncontrol-
lable in his moments of anger, and capable of anything. In-
deed, on one occasion her fear was too much for her, and,
instead of leaving, she fled to a cloister, to the great embar-
rassment of those whose duty it was to take her home. They
had to reason with her, and compel her, almost brutally, to
relinquish her nun’s habit and to go back to her terrible
spouse. She was delivered from him only by his death, after
which she hastened back to live in Constantinople, where we
will rediscover her a little later.
The last of Irene’s children, Demetrius, was not much hap-
pier than his brothers and his sister. His mother had suc-
ceeded in obtaining for him the governorship of Thessalon-
ica, with the title of Despot. There he was to be involved in
all the strife that was soon to trouble the imperial family. As
a good son, he sided with his father against his nephew.
Prince Andronicus, whose victory could have cost him dear.
Accused of lèse-majesté^ he escaped the death penalty only
thanks to the affection of his sister Simone, who intervened
on his behalf with the judges. From then on he disappears
from history.

One sees with what intrigues Irene’s ambitious and rest-


less spirit kept the court of Andronicus II constantly seeth-
ing. The Emperor, amiable, educated, and a fine orator, was,
despite his proud bearing, incorrigibly weak, and he let
everything go to pieces. Moreover, he was surrounded by the
most incredible dissension, which was fostered and aug-
mented by the children of his first marriage.
The youngest was named Constantine, and he held the
YOLANDA OF MONTFERRAT (( 283

title of Despot. His first wife, whom he lost after a short time,
was George Muzalomcus.
a daughter of the Protovestiarius
Left a widower without children, he took for mistress a
cham-
bermaid, by whom he had a son. But he left her before very
appointed
long. Then, at Thessalonica, where he had been
Governor, he met a charming woman named Eudocia. Beau-

tiful, elegant, well read, she was, say her contemporaries,


“another Theano, another Hypatia.” Unfortunately for the
Despot, she was married to Constantine Paleologus, and
she

had every intention of remaining virtuous. Her resistance


merely served to inflame the Prince’s passion. To please
her,
and
he parted with his son, whose presence annoyed her,
sent the boy back to his mother. Wasted effort:
Eudocia did
not give way. At last, however, she became a widow; where-
upon Constantine married and thereafter lived only for
her,

her. As for his bastard son, old Andronicus


happened to take
a liking to the abandoned child, whom he
removed from the
mother’s care, brought up, initiated into the management
of

public affairs, and adored. Although the young


man was ut-
terly mediocre, without intelligence, without
education— not

even a good soldier; although, in the vigorous


words of Can-
tacuzene, he was “good for nothing,” the Emperor could not
He called him into the Council at
get along without him.
every opportunity — apparently with the intention of giving
him governmental experience, and, it seems, actually enter-
making him Emperor. This was to have
tained the idea of
quite serious consequences.
The eldest son of the first marriage, Michael,
had early
II. From his
been designated to the throne by Andronicus
union with an Armenian Princess several children
were born,
like his grand-
of whom the eldest was named Andronicus,
father. This Andronicus the young, as he
was called, was an
active, restless man, fond of hunting,
racing, and revelry. He
284 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
found it hard to endure the sedentary life of the Byzantine
court, and was bored to death by its complicated ceremonial.
Carefree and frivolous, he thought of nothing but dogs,
horses, and women. His favor could best be won by a gift of a

fine hunting dog or some valuable bird. But more than any-
thing else, he loved pleasure, reckless spending, and amorous
adventures, being a great libertine and almost wholly with-
out scruples. In spite of all that, he had at first been the favor-
ite of his grandfather, who preferred him to all his other chil-
dren and grandchildren, and had sacrificed them all to him.
The had been that the child,
result of this excessive affection
very badly brought up by the Emperor, had become the
young man we know, whose ways now frequently provoked
and perturbed the Basileus. “If ever that boy comes to any-
thing,” he said to one of his cronies, “may I be stoned, and
after I am dead, let them disinter my corpse and throw it into
the flames.”
While he was deeply humiliated by his grandfather’s re-
proaches, Andronicus the young did not mend his ways. He
made out bills of exchange in the name of the Basileus, which
the Genoese bankers of Galata took upon themselves to ac-
cept; he demanded money and endowments; above all, he
scandalized the capital by exploits worthy, in some cases,
of a Cesare Borgia at his worst. The Prince had a mistress.
Aware that she deceived him, he posted armed men along the
road to waylay his rival. But the man who was murdered by
the assassins was his own brother Manuel, who was walking
by chance along the street of the ambush. Andronicus’s fa-
ther, Michael, suffered so mortal an anguish over this horri-
ble crime that he died; and his grandfather, Andronicus H,
was strangely troubled by it. The fact was that Andronicus
the young would stop at nothing when a woman was at stake.
Neither kinship nor religion prevented him from casting a
YOLANDA OF MONTFERRAT (( 285

covetous eye on his young aunt, Simone, w^ho had entered a


convent after the death of her Serbian husband, and from try-

ing to seduce her. Neither friendship nor policy stopped him


when he succumbed to the charms of the wife of Styrgiannes,
his partisan.But it is only fair to add that, with all his faults
and vices, he was intelligent, that he possessed the qualities
of a statesman, and that he had great ambition, all of which
made him very popular. So much so, that he was potentially
dangerous to the public peace, and capable of shaking the
Empire to its foundations— which, in fact, he did.
Meanwhile, the old Emperor, instead of making Androni-
cus heir to the throne after the death of his father, punished
him by passing him over in favor of his uncle Constantine,

the Despot, and reducing him to the status of a private indi-

vidual, to his great dissatisfaction. Later, when circum-


stances forced the reluctant Basileus to give his grandson a
share in the government, he spared his young associate no
humiliation. When he came to the Palace, the old Emperor
scarcely looked at him, and would gomonths without
for

speaking to him, except to say: “Go away, and hereafter re-


main at home.” In Council, the Emperor would invite all the
other dignitaries to be seated, but would leave him standing.
And so, little by little, between the grandfather and his grand-
son the chasm was formed from which was to emerge the
war that ended in 1328 with the fall of Andronicus II.
civil

The Empress did not see the young Emperor’s triumph,


which would have been singularly painful to her. Since her
quarrel with her husband, she lived for the most part in Thes-
salonica, and, as she was frequently bored, she amused her-

self by going to stay at one country residence after another.


In the course of one of these moves she fell ill, and shortly
thereafter, in Drama, died of a fever. This was in 1317. Her
body was brought back to Constantinople and entombed in
286 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
the church of the monastery of the Pantocrator. Toward the

end of her life some of the tenderness she felt for her husband
during the early days of their marriage seems to have re-
vived; at any rate, it was to him that she willed her entire
enormous fortune. Andronicus divided it into two equal
parts; one he gave up, as a good father, to her children, and
the other he piously used to repair St. Sophia.
It was for her children’s welfare that Yolanda of Montf er-
rât had striven throughout her life; and this is what gives to
this Latin Princess, transformed by maternal love into a poli-

tician and a true Byzantine, her distinctive quality. We can


believe that this Princess, who had fought so fiercely for her
own, who had struggled so hard to establish them, doing all in
her power to overthrow their half brother Michael who stood
between them and the throne, would have worked no less val-

iantly in their interests when, after Michael’s death, the final


crisis arose that locked the old and the young Andronicus in
combat. And perhaps, energetic as she was, she would have
saved the throne for the old Emperor and realized her ambi-
tious dream for her posterity. Death did not allow this to hap-
pen. After she had gone, her children lost interest in aspira-
tions that seemed to them either unattainable or unfounded.
But at all events, Yolanda of Montf err at had, for the first
time, shown Byzantium a Western Princess interested in ac-
tion and in making a place for herself in the new world to
which her marriage had transplanted her. She would have
liked to fill an important role, to take her part in the sover-
eignty, and to some extent she had succeeded. Her example
was not to be wasted.
XIV

ANNA OF SAVOY

Einperor
At the beginnÎBg of the year 1325, the young
Andronicus, to whose coronation in St. Sophia
his
I %
grandfather had reluctantly resigned himself, was looking

for a wife. He was twenty-eight years old and a widower. A


earlier, his first wife, Irene of
Brunswick, had
few months
of
died, leavingno children, and it was vital to the interests
without delay. Great ef-
the dynasty that he should remarry
forts were made, therefore, to
console him, to make him see

the necessity of a second marriage,


and to find him a bride.
Count of
The Byzantine court finally chose a daughter of the
lived with her
Savoy, Amadeus V. She was an orphan, and
brother. An ambassador was sent to Italy to ask for her hand,
and although, at this time, a proposal had been made on the
part of a great Western sovereign (the Byzantines report
that it was the King of France) the ,
Count of Savoy decided
in favor of the Emperor Andronicus.
Highly honored by this

alliance, the Italian Prince wanted to


do things very well. He

287
288 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
equipped the future Empress sumptuously for her trip to
Constantinople, and although he was her senior and her sov-
ereign lord, he displayed the highest regard for her from the
day she was affianced to the Basileus. This was infinitely flat-

tering to Greek pride; the writers of the day noted with de-
light that not only the barbarians, but the Italians and other
heads of State still considered the Roman Empire greater and
more illustrious than all the other powers.
In February 1326, the young fiancée disembarked at Con-
stantinople with a large and brilliant retinue of women,
knights, and grooms. “Never until now,” writes Cantacu-
zene, “have Empresses arriving Romania from abroad dis-
in
played so much magnificence.” But whether as a result of the
sea voyage or of the change in climate, the young woman had
no sooner arrived than she fell ill. The wedding celebrations
had then to be postponed until the month of October. They
were suitably splendid. According to custom, the Basileus
placed the imperial diadem on his wife’s head, and, again
according to custom, the Empress changed her first name.
From then on she was called Anna instead of Jeanne, and un-
der this name she was to play a considerable role in the his-
tory of Byzantium, and to have a baneful influence on the
destiny of her new country.

Anna Savoy is a personage very difficult to judge, or


of
even to know. What information we have about her comes
almost entirely from her political adversaries, from men
who detested her both as the woman who opposed their ideas
and stood in the way and as the foreigner
of their ambitions,
who, on the throne of Byzantium, remained passionately
Latin.
Indeed, it seems that Anna of Savoy was less Hellenized
ANNA OF SAVOY (( 289

;han any other of the Princesses from the West, in an era


kvhen this factor was of prime importance. She surrounded
[lerself with a little court composed exclusively of Italians,

and she confided in one of her own countrywomen, Isabella.


Even the Greeks admit that Isabella was a highly intelligent
woman, very well educated, and endowed with all the quali-
ties that make for success in Royal circles; and, indeed, she

exercised an all-powerful influence over the Empress. This


Isabella had two sons, who were also great favorites, not only
of the Basilissa, but of the Emperor himself, to whom one,

Artaud, was particularly pleasing on account of his splendid


courage. other Italians flocked to the imperial city, and
Still

were invariably well received and kindly treated by the sov-


ereigns.“The young Emperor always had some men from
Savoy staying with him,” says John Cantacuzene, not with-
out resentment. They were such a success that under their
influence even the customs began to change. To the usual

pleasures of the court were added diversions dear to the Lat-


ins, such as jousts and tourneys, which these foreigners
made
fashionable, and these exercises were so popular that the
most noble among the Greeks wanted to try their skill at
them, and the Emperor, in particular, acquired a skdl in
them comparable to that of the finest knights of Burgundy,
France, and Germany. Of course, Byzantine nationalism was
very shocked by these novelties, and even more so by the
high

positions given to these people from abroad when so many


persons thoroughly capable of holding public office were to
be found in the country itself.

The religious question was another cause of prejudice

against Anna. she ascended the throne, the Empress


When
was converted to the Orthodox faith; but the sincerity of her
conversion was strongly doubted. She was suspected of still
adhering to the Roman dogma, of having a great respect for
290 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
the Pope, and she was believed capable of returning to Rome
one day and of secretly preparing for the submission of the
Greek Church to the Papacy. Moreover, she was on friendly
terms with the Genoese established at Galata. From this it

was easy to conclude that Anna heartily disliked the Greeks


—an inference no one failed to draw. And the Greeks ren-
dered her hate for hate. To which explain
these reservations,
in part the animosities that Anna encountered, it must be
added that she seems to have been a woman of very mediocre
caliber. Neither well educated nor intelligent, she was incon-

sistent, and incapable of any serious thought or of making

mature decisions. And too, she was violent, impulsive, jeal-

ous, and spiteful. Superstitious, she believed in the soothsay-

ers, but what was worse, her weak and credulous mind ren-
dered her accessible to every influence, amenable to anyone
who knew how to flatter her. And all her life she was sur-

rounded by a camarilla of favorites and women. “At that time,


the center of power was in the Gynaeceum,” says a contempo-
rary. The Empress, understanding nothing of State affairs,

was guided only by her There were people for


passions.
whom she nourished savage hatreds, and others for whom
she had inexplicable weaknesses. Very hardhearted, once her
anger had been aroused, she was capable of the most atro-
cious cruelties, the most dastardly murders. She took, says
Gregoras, “an extreme delight, an unspeakable pleasure, in
cruelties and blood; her heart rejoiced in them.” When she
was enraged, no one found favor in her eyes; even her con-
fessor was not immune from her attacks. At such times she
would utter the vilest insults, the most terrible threats. Then,
all at once she would grow calm, and, docile again, she would

blindly follow the lead of anyone who knew how to manage


her. But she was fundamentally unforgiving. Against those
who had once displeased her, she harbored a lasting resent-
ANNA OF SAVOY ff 291

ment that was increased by her sense of her own mediocrity

and by the natural jealousy that all superiority aroused in

her.
It must be said, in Anna of Savoy’s defense, that she felt

out of her element in this foreign world which


she did not

understand and with which she was not intelligent enough


to

She preferred to live in a perpetual dream,


integrate herself.
of the
deluding herself about the significance of events and
significance of her own actions. “She behaved,
says a con-

temporary, ^^as if the misfortunes that threatened


were tak-
her enemies,
ing place beyond the pillars of Hercules.” Even
disposition”
while drawing attention to her “jealous and evil
of the
and asserting that “because of it she became the ruin
Grego-
Empire,” grant her some extenuating circumstances.
in a completely dif-
ras observes that she had been brought up
that she was,
ferent environment, that she was a foreigner,
a woman, and a passionate woman without much
above all,

intelligence, “incapable,” he says, “of distinguishing good


from evil”; and he puts the blame for what happened less on
her than on the Patriarch and the many
other great person-

ages who unprotestingly “obeyed this


demented authority as
if they were slaves.”

Anna of Savoy’s disagreeable character did not, however,


Andronicus III, of
do much harm during the lifetime of
whom was very fond, because while her husband lived,
she
she took little or no part in the
government. But when he
June 1341, things changed abruptly. The
throne de-
died, in
volved on two minor children, John, who
was nine, and Mi-
minority their mother
chael, who was four; and during their
Basileus, to be Regent.
was, by the explicit order of the late
Now, the circumstances under which Anna of
Savoy as-
292 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
sumed power were well calculated to trouble a mother
the
anxious about the future of her sons, and to alarm a woman
who was, herself, very attracted by the idea of supreme
power.
Around the throne a thousand and one different ambitions
were at work. In the first rank of court personages at that
time, was the Grand Domestic, John Cantacuzene. He had
been the dearest and most intimate friend of Andronicus III.

In the past he had done more than anyone to secure the crown
for theyoung Emperor, and he had been rewarded by the un-
shakable trust of his master. During the whole reign he had
been the Emperor’s most devoted adviser, and the confidant
of all his thoughts. “Such,” he said later, “was the union of
our two souls that it surpassed even the friendship of an Ores-
tesand a Pylades.” Anna of Savoy declared that the Emperor
loved his favorite more than his wife and his children, more
than anyone in the world.
Even during Emperor had delegated a lot
his lifetime, the
of authority to Cantacuzene, who was later to say of himself:
“There was nothing imperial outward appearance, or
in the
in the apparel of the Grand Domestic; but in fact, there was

scarcely any difference between him and the Basileus.” Like


the sovereign, he signed his name in red ink, and his orders
were obeyed as punctiliously as those of Andronicus. Like
the sovereign, he governed all public affairs, and so highly
was he favored that in the field he and the Emperor occupied
the same tent, and often the same bed, a privilege that eti-
quette forbade even to the imperial children. Andronicus
shared everything with him, his table, his clothing, his boots,
and rejoiced to see him behaving “imperially.” He would
even have liked to proclaim this intimacy publicly, by shar-
ing the throne with Cantacuzene. In any case, he trusted him
absolutely. During an illness that he suffered in 1329, he des-
ANNA OF SAVOY (( 293
ignated Cantacuzene as guardian of the throne in the event of
his death, and solemnly confided his wife and his subjects to
his favorite’s care. Likewise, on his deathbed, his last words
had been a recommendation to the Empress always to keep
in agreement with Cantacuzene. “My end is approaching,”
he told her, “so take good care, when I have gone, not to let
yourself be induced by liesand false arguments on the part of
certain people to separate yourself from such a man in order
to follow other counsels. If that should happen, the result
could only be ruin for you, for your children, and for the Em-
pire itself.”
In these reports that we owe principally to Cantacuzene
himself, there is probably an element of exaggeration; it was
obviously in the interest of the Grand Domestic to brag about
the favor with which his late master had honored him and to
exaggerate the evidence. Nonetheless, his eminent qualities
justified this favor. The old Emperor, Andronicus II, had al-

ready noticed how quick Cantacuzene was to find the right


solution when a decision had to be made, how clever in pre-
senting it, and how active in executing it: “If I have to die
without leaving heirs,” he would say, “that is the man I
would advise the Romans to put at their head.” Very intelli-
gent, immensely able, the Grand Domestic was truly a supe-
rior man. Gregoras, who has no liking for him, declares that

he could have been “a very great Emperor, capable of bring-


ing the Empire to unparalleled prosperity.” Unfortunately,
he had great failings. He was inordinately ambitious, com-
pletely unscrupulous, and therefore extremely disquieting.
Despite his affectation of modesty, he had been preparing his
way for a long time. On the strength of his credit with the
Emperor, he strove to ingratiate himself with the Empress,
and thanks to his mother, Theodora Paleologus, an alto-

gether remarkable woman, he came to exert a real influence


294 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
over Anna. At the same time he endeavored to keep away
from her all those who might have thwarted his designs,
while he himself displayed deep devotion to her at all times,
confident that in this way he could dominate her completely.
And in point of fact, Anna declared that she loved him as
much as, and even more than, her own brother, and on the
surface a perfect understanding reigned between the wife of
Andronicus III and his favorite.
So, in the confusion that followed after the death of the
Prince, it Cantacuzene that the mourning Empress
was to
unhesitatingly confided her sons and the power. And the
Grand Domestic was to be seen acting as a real ruler. While
Anna, plunged in grief, remained in the monastery where her
husband lay dead, Cantacuzene resolutely installed himself
in the Palace with the imperial children and took the neces-
sary measures to prevent a revolution. He corresponded with
the provincial Governors, and with the financiers, sending
out more than five hundred letters a day, “and thus he main-
tained order and obedience throughout the Empire, so well
that it seemed no change had taken place and that the
as if

Basileus continued to live and rule.” It is said that he con-


ceived vast projects. He thought of reorganizing the army, of
putting the finances in order, of inaugurating a vigorous for-
eign policy against the enemies of the Empire, of restoring
the ancient splendor of the monarchy. Before this vigorous
assumption of power, all bowed down, saluting in the Regent
of today the Emperor of tomorrow. It is understandable that
such a personage and such an attitude should have aroused in
the Empress Anna justifiable misgivings, which were as-
siduously fostered by the enemies of the Grand Domestic.
The foremost of these was the Patriarch John, an ambitious
prelate, who, according to Gregoras, had no more of the
priest about him than the pastoral crook and the habit. He
ANNA OF SAVOY (( 295

had always aspired to control the State, affirming the neces-

sity of uniting the Church and the Empire, the latter, of


course, to be under the sway of the former. He was shortly
tiara
to accept the privilege of ornamenting his Patriarchal

with silk and gold, and of signing his letters and decrees with
red ink, and even to contemplate wearing purple boots, like
share
the Emperor. For the moment, however, he aspired to
the Regency, and as he flattered the Empress, he soon
ob-

tained a great and unfortunate ascendancy over her.


The Parakoimomenos Alexius Apokaukos played a simi-
lar role. Having no but supple, adroit, and schem-
loyalties,

ing, this personage had risen very quickly to the


highest posi-

tions, largely thanks to the support of


Cantacuzene, who

laughingly called him ^^my doctor,” having been extricated


by him from a number of awkward situations; and he had
also become enormously wealthy. Extremely clever in taking
advantage of circumstances, he was intelligent, active, and
naturally eloquent. “If he had applied these
outstanding

qualities to the cause of justice and truth,” says


Gregoras,

“he would have been the glory of the Roman Empire.”


But
intoxicated by his rapid rise to fortune, he thought
he was a

law unto himself. One after another he had served and


be-

trayed all sides, and always to his own advantage. Now


of the
he dreamed of governing the Empire, of disposing
him-
Crown, perhaps of sitting on the throne of the Caesars
self. But he did not allow ambition
to prevail over prudence.

At the gates of the capital, beside the sea, he had a


castle

provided with water and stocked with food and


built, well
danger,
money. He took refuge there when he felt himself in
this impregnable citadel he braved all his
enemies.
and from
flattering Cantacuzene, he detested him as a rival, and
While
Patriarch against
did not hesitate to ally himself with the
him.
296 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
Many other persons were hostile to the Grand Domestic,
and especially the Empress’s Italian favorites, who, at the in-
stigation of Apokaukos, set their mistress against Cantacu-
zene. These conspiring influences gained an easy hold on the
Empress’s weak, vacillating mind, and quickly destroyed the
concord established between her and her Counselor.
In the beginning, loyal to the wishes of Andronicus, she
had, as she said with her usual exaggeration, been convinced
that her husband’s ghost had returned to her in the person of
the Grand Domestic. “Certain as I was that the Basileus was
dead,” she declared, “when you paid me a visit, it seemed to
me that it was he who entered my apartments, just as he used
to, and when you spoke to me, it was he whom I thought to

hear.” She was soon made to change her ideas. Playing on her
“feminine credulity,” Apokaukos and the Patriarch vied
with each other in giving her proofs of the Grand Domestic’s
ambitions and demonstrating the danger in which she and
her sons stood of losing their power and even their lives. “To-
morrow,” they told her, “he will kill you all and proclaim
himself Emperor.” They succeeded so well that the horrified
Anna cut short the Novena that she had begun in the monas-
tery where her husband was buried, and, three days later,
thought it wiser to seek a more secure refuge in the Palace.
Then the intriguers brought all their secret forces into
play, to induce her to take the reins of government out of the
hands of Cantacuzene. It was explained to her that she had no
need of him, that with the co-operation of the Patriarch she
herself could govern the Empire admirably. The Regent,
flattered, listened willingly to all these suggestions. At the

bottom of her heart, Anna had always disliked the Grand


Domestic, whose superiority she sensed. Also, she was ex-
tremely jealous of his wife, Irene Asan, a quite remarkable
person who, says a contemporary, “triumphed over all other
ANNA OF SAVOY (( 297

women by the power of her happy harmony of


mind and the
her disposition.” The second-rate soul of the Empress suf-
fered by comparison, and many people of the time thought,
not without reason, that the secret envy and spite that this
aroused in Anna was the primary cause of a rupture that was
to unleash a civil war and precipitate the decline of the mon-
archy.
Upon discovering the Regent’s true feelings, the adver-
saries of Cantacuzene grew more daring. There were some
lively scenes in the Imperial Council, and the Grand Domes-
tic was openly insulted. One of the functionaries of the Pal-

ace audaciously took the floor, and declared that, if the lowest

of the dignitaries had something worth saying, he had the


right to speak before the highest. “What does this mean!” ex-
claimed the friends of Cantacuzene. “Why! If the first comer
has the right to express his opinion and impose it on those
who know better the Roman Empire will be transformed into
a democracy!” They almost came to blows. What was more
serious, neither the Empress nor the Patriarch, who presided,
intervened to stop or to censure an insolence that was obvi-
ously aimed at the Grand Domestic. The latter understood,
and tendered his resignation.
But then the Basilissa and the Patriarch, afraid of the con-
sequences of such a decision, did all they could to calm down
Cantacuzene; and on both sides the adversaries pledged
themselves by the most solemn oaths not to conspire against
one another. In spite of that, suspicion remained. “I am con-
vinced,” said the Grand Domestic, “that the Empress meant
what she But I am worried because I know her feminine
said.

vv^eakness, and how, through cowardice, she lets her mind be


easily changed, and I am very much afraid that, when I have
to go to fight the barbarians, the sycophants who stay behind

will lead her to change it.” On the other hand, manifestations


298 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
in favor of Cantacuzene were increasing. The rumored resig-
nation of the Grand Domestic brought demonstrations of loy-
alty from the soldiers for the chief they worshipped. They
even invaded the Palace courtyard to acclaim their favorite
and to hurl invectives at the Patriarch. The Empress was ter-

rified, and, to pacify her and bring his tumultuous partisans


to reason, the Minister had to go out and speak to them him-
self. “As soon as he appeared,” relates Gregoras, “the dis-
turbances subsided, the waves abated, the tempest changed
to a calm.” So much popularity with the troops did nothing to
diminish Anna’s fears.
The break between her and Cantacuzene was inevitable.
Apokaukos, whose influence at the court was growing, multi-
plied his intrigues. “Like a serpent,” says Cantacuzene, “he
hissed into the ear of the Empress and turned her from the
straight path.” No means were too low for him; flattery, brib-
ery, lies, he made use of them all. The Patriarch gave him his
cues; day and night he was at the Palace stirring up the Em-
press against the Grand Domestic, praising the devotion and
loyalty of Apokaukos. By judicious liberality, he won the
intimates of the Regent over to his side, and in this way, says
Gregoras, “he ruled the Empress as if she were a slave, and
also the Patriarch, who was not somuch taken in by his flat-
tery as frightenedby his energy.” The absence of Cantacu-
zene, who was making war in Thrace, facilitated these in-
trigues. Each of the two associates did his best for their
common goal.The prelate, “as if he held in his hands the
keys of the Kingdom of Heaven,” promised Paradise to any-
one who, by poison, sorcery, or incantation, should rid the
Empire of Cantacuzene. As for Apokaukos, certain of suc-
cess, he now aspired to an even higher destiny. He was think-

ing of kidnapping the young Emperor, spiriting him away


ANNA OF SAVOY (( 299

to his fortress, and marrying him off to one of his daughters;


and of forcing the Empress to give up to him, Apokaukos,
and his and friends, the highest Offices of State and
relatives

the administration of the 'whole Empire. And Cantacuzene


was notified, in the name of the Basileus, that he must resign
from the government, disband his troops, and retire to Didy-
moticus in a state of semi-captivity.
For a long time the mother of Cantacuzene had been ex-
tremely anxious on her son’s account. In common with most
people of her time, this woman, in other ways so intelligent,

was superstitious; she believed in omens. And it happened


that she had seen one that was very disquieting. One evening,
in accordance with the custom of the great Byzantine nobles,

she had received until a very late hour persons who wished to
speak with her or to pay their respects. Afterward she went
to watch
to the top of a tower that rose high above her palace
the moon come up over the horizon. She was standing
there,

lost in thought, when all at once she saw at the foot of the
tower an armed man on horseback, who was measuring the

height of the castle keep with his lance. Terrified, she called
her servants, and ordered them to go and find out what
this

mysterious horseman wanted. But they found no one; all the


doors through which a horseman could enter the palace
were
shut. Profoundly impressed by this apparition, which seemed
to her an alarming omen, the noble lady, says Gregoras,
“filled with sadness, was on the point of
tears.”

She was right. Her son’s fall from favor was near. By or-
dismissing
der of the Emperor, Cantacuzene received letters
him from office. At the same time, his goods were confiscated
and divided among his enemies, and all those who had in-
sulted him were rewarded. His friends, brought
down with
him in his fall, saw their houses pillaged. His mother was ar-
300 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
rested and thrown into one of the Palace prisons. There was
only one thing left for him to do— offer armed resistance and
proclaim himself Emperor. Before taking this step he wanted
once more to recall to the Regent’s memory
Emper- the late
or’s will, and the solemn oaths by which she had bound her-

self with regard to him, Cantacuzene. She answered him


only with insults. And he made his decision.
At Didymoticus, on the feast day of St. Demetrius (the
8th of October 1341), he placed the imperial crown on his
own head. To emphasize, however, the fact that he was not a
rebel, he decreed that in the acclamations saluting his name
and that of his wife, the first place should be given to the Em-
press Anna and her son John, and during the religious cere-
mony he also had mention made of the Basileus and his
mother, and even of the Patriarch John. Further, he declared
that his sole aim was to defend and consolidate the throne of
the young sovereign confided to his loyal care by Androni-
cus III; and three days after his coronation, he discarded the
purple to attire himself in white, “as is the custom when in
mourning for an Emperor.” By this he meant to demonstrate
his loyalty to the memory of a Prince whom he had loved “as
a brother,” and he continued to wear mourning for five years,
until the day when he entered Constantinople as Ruler. He
reminded the Empress once again of her husband’s last
wishes, and told her how dangerous it was for her to ally her-
self with advisors who “were pursuing only their own inter-

ests, thinking only of overthrowing the old constitution as


soon as possible, in short, of ruining the Empire.” All this
consideration, all these warnings, must have gone unheeded
in Byzantium. To the usurpation of Cantacuzene, the Patri-
arch responded with the precipitate coronation of the young
Emperor John. The civil war was beginning.
ANNA OF SAVOY (( SOI

This is not the place to relate the prolonged vicissitudes of


the struggle that lasted for more than six years and ended in

victory for Cantacuzene. We need only to grasp its essential

outlines and note its serious consequences. At the same time


we how it brought out all the weaknesses, passions,
shall see
and faults of Anna of Savoy.
To make war, money was needed. Now the Treasury was
empty, the Empire drained. The Regent used all possible
means to obtain resources. The churches were subjected to
confiscation, the holy images were sold or melted down; the
valuables of the Imperial Palace, the dishes of gold and sil-
ver, the precious jewels, were parted with; the wealth of the
great families was confiscated, and those who refused to fall

inwith this were arrested and imprisoned; in order to lay


hands on the recalcitrant, even the ancient privilege of sanc-
tuary in St. Sophia was not respected. The heaviest fiscal tyr-

anny weighed down the capital and the Empire. And what
was worse, the money collected in this way was not wholly
consecrated to the needs of the war. Anna, who was very ava-
ricious and her Counselors, took scandalous advantage of

the circumstances to enrich themselves personally. In the


general confusion, it was easy for them to cover up these mal-
feasances by juggling the accounts and recording fictitious
expenditures; it was still easier for them to misappropriate
precious objects, or to buy at absurdly low prices the most
beautiful pieces of the imperial treasure that they decreed
should be put up for sale. Anna
Savoy found a double sat-
of

isfaction in this, it gratified at one and the same time her pas-
sion for gold and her petty jealousy; if ever Cantacuzene were
to be victorious, she said, at least he would not lay hands on
all those splendors that enhance the glamor of power.
To carry on the war, neither of the two adversaries had the
slightest scruple over appealing for foreign aid. To obtain the
302 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
support of the Prince of Serbia, Stephen Dushan, Cantacu-
zene did not hesitate to offer him the strongest fortresses of
Macedonia. To obtain the support of Orkhan, the Turkish
Sultan of Nicea, he did not hesitate to give his daughter in
marriage to the infidel. Anna did as much on her side. She of-

fered to cede the v^hole of Macedonia as far as Christopolis


to the Krai of Serbia, and to give her daughter in marriage
to his son, if he would deliver Cantacuzene into her hands
alive or dead. The alliance with the Emir of Aidin was
bought with gold. For years the Turks were to be seen cross-
ing the Hellespont, penetrating into Thrace as if it were their
own and ravaging the country horribly. They plun-
territory,

dered friends and enemies indiscriminately. They carried off


and the oxen, and even the inhabitants, dragging
the flocks
them along by ropes tied around their necks. They came with
their spoils right up to the walls of Constantinople, where
Anna, deliberately indifferent to the fate of her subjects, ig-
noring the crowd of captives whose pitiful cries rose to high
heaven, received them with the greatest friendliness. What
did it matter that the land should be uncultivated and de-
serted, that thousands of Romans should be massacred or
sold like slaves, means Cantacuzene could be de-
if by this
feated? What did it matter that Stephen Dushan should
ravage Macedonia and push his conquests as far as Chris-
topolis? These were just so many fortresses that would not
belong to Cantacuzene. On this point, moreover, the two par-
tiescould not reproach each other. If Gregoras rightly brings
up the inhumanity, the cruelty, of Anna of Savoy, the hatred
that she seemed to feel for her people, we should not forget
that she was, as he says, a foreigner.
So what terms shall we
^PP^y conduct of Cantacuzene, which was no better
than that of the Empress?
While all this was going on, Anna of Savoy, in the depths
ANNA OF SAVOY (( 303

of her Palace, was allowing by her favor-


herself to be ruled

ites. With the support of the Patriarch, Apokaukos had be-

come the real master of the Empire, and the Regent, to free
her mind of all care, willingly abandoned the public welfare
to him. took advantage of this to enrich himself;
The favorite
he thought more and more of marrying his daughter to the
young Emperor; and even though his rivals attempted to dis-
credit him with the Empress, his influence at the Palace held
firm. All the same, he was uneasy, and felt himself sur-
rounded by enemies. Although he took endless precautions to
protect his person, although he never went out unescorted by
soldiers and set a guard around his house, although he had
imprisoned most of his political adversaries, he knew he was
very unpopular and he was always afraid of an insurrection.
He was not altogether mistaken. He was in process of having
a formidable prison constructed inside the Great Palace for
the incarceration of his victims. One day,when he had come
to inspect the work and hurry it on, he made the mistake of
entering, without a guard, the court where the prisoners were
exercising. Aware of his plans for them, they did not let the

opportunity pass. Armed with a stick, one of them threw him-


selfupon Apokaukos and beat him almost to death; others
joined in, and one, with a hatchet wrested from the hands of a
workman, split his head open. It was the 11th of June 1345.
Terror-stricken, the guards fled. The prisoners announced
the death of the tyrant to the capital by hanging his bloody
corpse from the battlements of the Palace, and entrenched
themselves there to await events.
Anna of Savoy was to avenge her favorite cruelly. Upon
the news murder, she had the great Palace surrounded,
of the
then she authorized the widow of Apokaukos to launch her
adherents to the attack. A crowd glutted with gold and with
wine flung itself into the assault. The order had been given to
304 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
kill everyone, some as perpetrators and others as accessories
to the crime. Unable to put up any real defense, the prisoners,
seeing the walls breached, fled into a neighboring church.
There they were pursued and pitilessly massacred, even on
the altar. Afterward, the severed heads and hands of the vic-
tims were carried through the streets of Constantinople. Ter-
ror reigned for several days. Anyone who dared to pity the

dead, to utter a single word of commiseration, even though


he was a friend or a relative of the condemned, was immedi-
ately arrested and beaten with switches, “as a traitor and an
enemy of the Empress Anna.” It is said that in her rage the
Regent even entertained the idea of leaving the bodies unbur-
ied and having them thrown into the sea. Fearing the wrath
of the populace, she gave up this idea; but she did not conceal
her joy over the cruelties and bloodshed with which the death
of Apokaukos had been avenged. Then she looked for an-
other favorite to help her resist Cantacuzene.
She was possessed by a fierce hatred for her adversary,
and was prepared to do anything rather than make peace
with him. When, in 1346, the Patriarch advised her to come
to terms with her rival, the mere suggestion was enough to
throw her into a frenzy. From then on, she looked on the
prelate as a traitor, and she did not had over-
rest until she
thrown him. She succeeded in 1347. By her order he was de-
posed without a hearing; and with the exaggeration that was
the hallmark of her every act, Anna decided to celebrate with
a great feast the downfall of the man who had for so long
been her most loyal and intimate collaborator— so much so
that it was said of them that they were “one soul in two bod-
ies.” She invited to this banquet all those who had assisted
her in getting rid of the Patriarch, “and the repast,” says
Gregoras, “was notable for the merry stories and the some-
what unseemly laughter that enlivened it. But that same
ANNA OF SAVOr ff 305
jubilation
night at cock-crow,” adds the historian, “all this
was turned to sorrow.” At that moment, Cantacuzene was
entering Constantinople.
Ithad been obvious for several months that resistance was
becoming impossible. The Regent’s new favorite, the Italian
Facciolati, realized it, and on the 3rd of February 1347,
he

opened one of the gates of the capital to Cantacuzene. Anna,


however, stubbornly refused to face the facts. Entrenched
in

the Palace of Blachernae, she wanted to go on


with the strug-
to rouse the
gle. Through her emissaries she endeavored

populace; she asked the Genoese of Galata to come to


her as-

sistance; and she replied with coarse insults and violent out-

bursts of rage to the proposals of Cantacuzene, who


invited
in return a
her to surrender with a good grace and offered her
her rank.
share in the government and all the honors due to
taken, and an
Finally, however, on seeing a part of the Palace
negotiate. After
assault about to be made, she consented to
deliberating with the last of her partisans, she
resigned her-

on their unanimous advice, to making peace. But


she
self,

had no intention of admitting that she was guilty of anything


spirit,” says
that called for forgiveness. “Her proud, hard
humili-
Gregor as, “would have considered such an admission
solemn
ating and unworthy of her.” Haughtily she demanded
to reign
promises, special pledges; she claimed the right
a colleague. It
alone, without even accepting Cantacuzene as
accept
was pure insanity. Anna should have been happy to
the offers of the conqueror; she remained
Empress, she was
even given precedence over the new Basileus.
Cantacuzene flattered himself on disarming his enemy by
means of courtesy and charm. He gave the imperial apart-
ments over to her and her son, and contented himself with the
the great
more or less ruined portion of the Palace next to
Triclinium of Alexius Comnenus. But these courtesies
ac-
306 JJ BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
complished, he set himself to take possession of the power in
earnest.As a precaution, he married his daughter, Helen, to
the young Emperor John, and, in the sanctuary of the church
of Blachernae (the recent fall of St. Sophia’s cupola had
turned the Great Church into a ruin), he had himself sol-

emnly crowned all over again.


The coronation festivities were lamentable. “Such,” says a
contemporary, “was the poverty of the Empire, that among
the dishes and cups used at the feast, there was not a single
one of gold or of silver. Part of the service was of pewter, the
rest of clay or seashells. Anyone who knows anything about
the usual customs will know by that, and by other details that
were not in conformity with etiquette, to what dire straits
everything had been reduced. I must add that the glitter of
gold and precious stones on the imperial robes and diadems
worn at this festival was, for the most part, false. The gold
had been replaced by gilded leather, the gems by bits of col-
ored glass. Only here and there could be seen stones with an
authentic sparkle, pearls whose water was not an optical illu-
sion. So utterly ruined was the antique splendor of the Roman

Empire, so utterly vanished its former prosperity, that I can-


not tell of it without shame.” The coffers of the Treasury
were empty: “there was nothing to be found in them but air
and dust.” This was the condition to which the Empress
Anna had reduced the monarchy by her rashness, her greed,
and her folly.

Anna of Savoy was defeated, and she was never to forgive


the man who had defeated her. He was well aware of this. So
his first care was to disband the Empress’s Italian court, to
send away all the foreigners and the women who had made
the Gynaeceum into a perpetual hotbed of intrigue. In addi-
ANNA OF SAVOY (( 307
don, he tried young Emperor from the evil influ-
to free the

ence of his mother by sending him to live in Thessalonica. It


was wasted effort. The Princess never forgot her grudge.
Always full of contempt for Cantacuzene and his friends, al-
ways secretly hostile, she maintained a constant opposition to
the new regime. Somewhere Cantacuzene speaks of the
friendship she displayed toward him; it is difficult to believe

that she was sincere, or that he should have thought her so.

True, she acceded to his request that she should intervene to


smooth out the awkward situation that arose in 1351 when
her son John, who also privately detested the new Emperor,
thought of repudiating his wife to marry the sister of the Ser-
bian Tsar Stephen Dushan, and begin, with foreign aid, a
war against Cantacuzene. She went to Thessalonica, says a
chronicler, and ‘‘broke up all the intrigues as if they were
cobwebs.”
She considered her son’s idea premature and that she saw
in Cantacuzene’s difficulties an opportunity to extract from
him a promise to abdicate in the near future. Like her son,
she was waiting for her revenge. She got it in 1354. With the
support of the Latins, John Paleologus took Constantinople
by surprise and forced his father-in-law to abdicate. Curi-

ously resigned, Cantacuzene, who had always been so ambi-

tious, quietly entered a monastery, and his wife, the grave


and intelligent Irene, remarked, not without irony: “If, in the

past, Ihad defended Didymoticus [where she distinguished


herself in 1342 by an admirable defense] as you have de-
fended Constantinople, we would have found salvation twelve
years ago.”
Cantacuzene, in spite of his outstanding qualities, and
Anna of Savoy, because of all the mistakes of her rule, were
largely responsible for the decadence and final ruin of the
Byzantine Empire. In unleashing, by their rivalry, an inter-
308 )) BYZANTINE EMPRESSES
minable civil v^ar, and especially in appealing for aid from
the worst enemies of the Empire, they both erred with equal
gravity; and perhaps the Grand Domestic, capable of fore-

seeing the results of his acts, is more guilty than the stupid,
heedless Empress. Never, before his day, had a Byzantine
Princess been known marry a Moslem; never before had
to

the Turks been seen to all intents and purposes permanently


established in Thrace, nor had the treasures of the churches
been used to satisfy the demands of infidels. But all that, and
more, took place. Gregoras relates that even in the Imperial
Palace, the Turks, received as friends, did exactly as they
liked; they even danced and sang during the celebration of
the Divine Liturgy, to the great indignation of the Chris-
tians. Realizing that they alone had gained by the civil war,
they felt they had the upper hand. They were proved to be
right. One hundred years later, in captured Constantinople,
in plundered St. Sophia, the crescent was to replace the cross

for centuries. The seeds of this final catastrophe were sown


during the reign of Anna many
of Savoy. In contrast to the
obscure and unobtrusive Western Princesses who moved
across the scene of the Byzantine throne, Anna wanted to,
and did, play an active role. It is to be regretted that for want
of intelligence she should have played it so disastrously.
A NOTE ON THE TYPE

The text of this book is set in Monticello, a Linotype revival of the


original Binny & Ronaldson Roman No. 1, cut by Archibald Binny and
cast in 1796 by that Philadelphia type foundry. The face -was named
Monticello in honor of its use in the monumental fifty-volume Papers of
Thomas Jefferson, published by Princeton University Press. Monticello

is a transitional type design, embodying certain features of Bulmer and


Baskerville, but it is a distinguished face in its own right.

Printed and bound by The Haddon Craftsmen, Inc.,

Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Typography and binding design by
GEORGE SALTER
A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Charles Diehl died in his native France in 1944, at the age of

eighty-five. During the course of his long and distinguished


career as a historian and teacher, Charles Diehl explored virtually
every aspect of Byzantine civilization and did much to shape the

modern image of the Byzantine Empire— an image that had been


previously distorted by the influential writings of Montesquieu
and Gibbon. His remarkably extensive knowledge of original
source material, combined with his lucid and graceful prose
style, has made him one of the most respected and widely read

authorities on Byzantium. Among the many academic honors


that crowned were honorary degrees from Harvard
his career

University and the universities of Bruxelles, Athens, and Bucha-


rest. He was Professor of Byzantine History and
Archaeology at

the Sorbonne, a member of l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles

Lettres, and a Grand Officier of the Légion d’honneur. Diehl’s


Byzantine Portraits, from which a number of the chapters of
this book are drawn, was published by Knopf
in 1928.
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CHARLES HltiiL
died in his native France in 1944, at the age of eighty-five.

During the course of his long and distinguished career as

a historian and teacher, Charles Diehl explored virtually

every aspect of Byzantine civilization and did much to

shape the modern image of the Byzantine Empire— an im-


age that had been previously distorted by the infiuential

writings of Montesquieu and Gibbon. His remarkably ex-

tensive knowledge of original source material, combined


with his lucid and graceful prose style, has made him one of

the most respected and widély read authorities on Byzan-

tium. Among the many academic honors that crowned his


career were honorary degrees from Harvard University and
the universities of Bruxelles, Athens, and Bucharest. He
»
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History and Archaeology at the
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j Officier of the Legion d’honneur.
Diehl’s Byzantine Portraits, from which a number of the
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