Ch. Diehl, Byzantine Empresses PDF
Ch. Diehl, Byzantine Empresses PDF
Ch. Diehl, Byzantine Empresses PDF
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BYZANTINE
EMPRESSES
BYZANTINE
EMPRESSES
CHARLES DIEHL
19 6 3
177:173
COJ^TEXrS
II. ATHENAIS
III. THEODORA
IV. IRENE
V. THE BLESSED THEODORA 94
VI. THEOPHANO
VII. ZOË THE PORPHYROGENITA 136
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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
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.
II
Ill
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
garden through which she went with her swite. And as the
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
IV
diplomacy.
But by no means limited the Basilissa to
official etiquette
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
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 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-
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
ATHENAIS
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-
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
II
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
Ill
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:
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
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
which the most contradictory ideas and the most violent con-
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
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.
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,
how he had fed upon that ancient and baneful science spread
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:
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
your death-warrant.
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
THEODORA
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
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
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,
Ill
;
pose, and a serene courage that never failed her even in the
IV
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
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
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
ous victims did not fare so badly on the whole, and succeeded,
in spite of short periods of disgrace, in making creditable
good. When she hated, she was not the sort of woman to stop
defects and vices. She loved money and she loved power; she
showed perhaps too^munh-famiTy^affeSr^ in providing for
IRENE
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
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.
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
II
more difficult from the fact that the writers of her time ex-
“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
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
,
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-
III
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-
IRENE (( 79
IV
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.
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-
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,
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
two sentiments that divided her soul and had governed her
life, piety this time proved the stronger. Not that her down-
THE BLESSED
THEODORA
I
94
THE BLESSED THEODORA (( 95
Of many's regeneration.^
she retired; and, being a clever woman, passed her time com-
posing religious poems and secular epigrams that have come
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
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
II
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.
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
Ill
IV
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-
her imperial rank. But to console her for her disgrace, fate
was up an avenger, destined to satisfy her hate even
to raise
THEOPHANO
114
THEOPHANO (( 115
perors.” It must be admitted at once that many points in
connection with this mysterious, enigmatic Empress are still
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
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,
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,
is, seems in this case utterly absurd. In the first place, the
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
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
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
true, it can have been nothing but a ruse, for the two allies
fore quite willing. The two partners thus had little difficulty
in persuading one another. On the 20th of September 963,
Ill
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-
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
IV
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,
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
ZOÈ THE
PORPHYROGENITA
I
136
ZOË THE PORPHYROGENITA (( 137
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-
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
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
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-
status.”
Romanus, meanwhile, was failing visibly in health. He ate
HI
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
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-
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.
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
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
and filled the streets with their cries. Moreover, when the
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.
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
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.
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
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
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-
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
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.
at the Byzantine court. She does not seem to have been very
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
VI
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
VII
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
ANNA COMNENA
174
ANNA COMNENA (( 175
ing. And all her life she kept the glowing memory of those
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
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
gers, “risking for their sakes her position, her fortune, and
even her life,” and that many of her calamities owed their
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
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;
II
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
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
Bryennius; and for her, each one of these deaths meant one
more stage in her decline. In a state of semi-disgrace after
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
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
there was no further part for her to play. But she had brought
this on herself.
Her supreme consolation in retirement was the literature
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
IRENE DUCAS
198
IRENE DUCAS (( 199
than exterior. And view of the fact that Irene cared little
in
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
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
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
that all said and done her life had not been unsuccessful.
II
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
III
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
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
IV
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
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-
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
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-
226
BERTHA OF SULZBACH (( 227
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.”
illumine the dark without the help of any other light. An in-
finite number of other things are to be found there
that would
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
world,” she certainly had high moral qualities. But she to-
tally lacked elegance. “She took less care,” says Nicetas,
licly in the synod, and declared that she would never give
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
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
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-
244
AGNES OF FRANCE (( 245
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- :
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-
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
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
;he 17th of July, the assault was made. The usurper, Alex-
see her, they saluted her, and made great promises to serve
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.
pact was made and concluded, and a peace made and con-
“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-
later, once more face to face with her compatriots, her af-
CONSTANCE OF
HOHENSTAUFEN
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.
In 1241, John Ducas Vatatzes had lost his first wife, Irene
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
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-
had given her, when she left Italy, a large retinue of women
of her own race. Among them, in the capacity of her “guard-
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
paid her.
The Emperor, a discreet man, was embarrassed by all this
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
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.
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
clared that there was sorcery in the whole affair, that only a
spell could have kept his sword in its scabbard, and he de-
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
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.
YOLANDA OF
MONTFERRAT
276
rOLANDA OF MONTFERRAT (( 277
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
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,
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.
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-
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
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-
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
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.
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-
her.
It must be said, in Anna of Savoy’s defense, that she felt
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
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-
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
ace audaciously took the floor, and declared that, if the lowest
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
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-
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
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-
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
sistance; and she replied with coarse insults and violent out-
that she was sincere, or that he should have thought her so.
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
Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Typography and binding design by
GEORGE SALTER
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CHARLES HltiiL
died in his native France in 1944, at the age of eighty-five.
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History and Archaeology at the
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