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List of Byzantine emperors

This is a list of the Byzantine emperors from the foundation of Constantinople in 330 AD, which marks the conventional start of the Eastern Roman Empire, to its fall to the Ottoman Empire in 1453 AD. Only the emperors who were recognized as legitimate rulers and exercised sovereign authority are included, to the exclusion of junior co-emperors (symbasileis) who never attained the status of sole or senior ruler, as well as of the various usurpers or rebels who claimed the imperial title.

Emperor of the Romans
Imperial
Last to reign
Constantine XI
6 January 1449 – 29 May 1453
Details
First monarchConstantine I
Last monarchConstantine XI
Formation11 May 330
Abolition29 May 1453
ResidenceGreat Palace, Blachernae Palace
AppointerUnspecified, de facto hereditary[1]
Pretender(s)None

The following list starts with Constantine the Great, the first Christian emperor, who rebuilt the city of Byzantium as an imperial capital, Constantinople, and who was regarded by the later emperors as the model ruler. It was under Constantine that the major characteristics of what is considered the Byzantine state emerged: a Roman polity centered at Constantinople and culturally dominated by the Greek East, with Christianity as the state religion.

The Byzantine Empire was the direct legal continuation of the eastern half of the Roman Empire following the division of the Roman Empire in 395. Emperors listed below up to Theodosius I in 395 were sole or joint rulers of the entire Roman Empire. The Western Roman Empire continued until 476. Byzantine emperors considered themselves to be rightful Roman emperors in direct succession from Augustus;[2] the term "Byzantine" was coined by Western historiography only in the 16th century. The use of the title "Roman Emperor" by those ruling from Constantinople was not contested until after the papal coronation of the Frankish Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor (25 December 800), done partly in response to the Byzantine coronation of Empress Irene, whose claim, as a woman, was not recognized by Pope Leo III.

In practice, according to the Hellenistic political system, the Byzantine emperor had been given total power through God to shape the state and its subjects, he was the last authority and legislator of the empire and all his work was in imitation of the sacred kingdom of God, also according to the Christian principles, he was the ultimate benefecator and protector of his people.[3]

The title of all Emperors preceding Heraclius was officially "Augustus", although other titles such as Dominus were also used. Their names were preceded by Imperator Caesar and followed by Augustus. Following Heraclius, the title commonly became the Greek Basileus (Gr. Βασιλεύς), which had formerly meant sovereign, though Augustus continued to be used in a reduced capacity. Following the establishment of the rival Holy Roman Empire in Western Europe, the title "Autokrator" (Gr. Αὐτοκράτωρ) was increasingly used. In later centuries, the Emperor could be referred to by Western Christians as the "Emperor of the Greeks". Towards the end of the Empire, the standard imperial formula of the Byzantine ruler was "[Emperor's name] in Christ, Emperor and Autocrat of the Romans" (cf. Ῥωμαῖοι and Rûm).[4]

In the medieval period, dynasties were common, but the principle of hereditary succession was never formalized in the Empire,[5] and hereditary succession was a custom rather than an inviolable principle.[1]

Portrait Name[a] Reign Notes

Constantinian dynasty (306–363)

Constantine I
"the Great"

Κωνσταντῖνος ὁ Μέγας
Fl. Valerius Constantinus
19 September 324 –
22 May 337
Born at Naissus c. 272 as the son of the Augustus Constantius and Helena. Proclaimed Augustus of the western empire upon the death of his father on 25 July 306, he became sole ruler of the western empire after the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in 312. In 324, he defeated the eastern Augustus Licinius and re-united the empire under his rule, reigning as sole emperor until his death. Constantine completed the administrative and military reforms begun under Diocletian, who had begun ushering in the Dominate period. Actively interested in Christianity, he played a crucial role in its development and the Christianization of the Roman world, through his convocation of the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea. He is said to have received baptism on his deathbed. He also reformed coinage through the introduction of the gold solidus, and initiated a large-scale building program, crowned by the re-foundation the city of Byzantium as "New Rome", popularly known as Constantinople. He was regarded as the model of all subsequent Byzantine emperors.[6]
Constantius II
Κωνστάντιος
Fl. Iulius Constantius
22 May 337 –
3 November 361
Born on 7 August 317, as the second surviving son of Constantine I, he inherited the eastern third of Roman Empire upon his father's death, sole Roman Emperor from 353, after the overthrow of the western usurper Magnentius. Constantius' reign saw military activity on all frontiers, and dissension between Arianism, favoured by the emperor, and the "Orthodox" supporters of the Nicene Creed. In his reign, Constantinople was accorded equal status to Rome, and the original Hagia Sophia was built. Constantius appointed Constantius Gallus and Julian as Caesares, and died on his way to confront Julian, who had risen up against him.[7]
Julian "the Apostate"
Ἰουλιανὸς ὁ Ἀποστάτης
Fl. Claudius Iulianus
3 November 361 –
26 June 363
Born in May 332, grandson of Constantius Chlorus and cousin of Constantius II. Proclaimed by his army in Gaul, became legitimate Emperor upon the death of Constantius. Killed on campaign against Sassanid Persia.

Non-dynastic (363–364)

Jovian
Ἰοβιανός
Claudius Iovianus[b]
28 June 363 –
17 February 364
Born c. 332. Captain of the guards under Julian, elected by the army upon Julian's death. Died on journey back to Constantinople.

Valentinianic dynasty (364–379)

Valentinian I
Οὐαλεντινιανός
Valentinianus
26 February –
28 March 364
Born in 321. An officer under Julian and Jovian, he was elected by the army upon Jovian's death. He soon appointed his younger brother Valens as Emperor of the East, while he himself ruled in the West. Died of cerebral haemorrhage in 375.
Valens
Οὐάλης
28 March 364 –
9 August 378
Born in 328. A soldier of the Roman army, he was appointed Emperor of the East by his elder brother Valentinian I. Killed at the Battle of Adrianople.
Gratian
Γρατιανός, Gratianus
9 August 378 –
19 January 379
Born on 18 April/23 May 359, the son of Valentinian I. Emperor of the West, he inherited rule of the East upon the death of Valens and appointed Theodosius I as Emperor of the East. Assassinated on 25 August 383 during the rebellion of Magnus Maximus.

Theodosian dynasty (379–457)

Theodosius I
"the Great"

Θεοδόσιος ὁ Μέγας
19 January 379 –
17 January 395
Born on 11 January 347, in Spain. Aristocrat and military leader, brother-in-law of Gratian, who appointed him as emperor of the East. He reunited the whole Empire after defeating Eugenius at the Battle of the Frigidus, on 6 September 394. The last emperor to rule both halves of the Empire.
Arcadius
Ἀρκάδιος
17 January 395 –
1 May 408
Born in 377/378, the eldest son of Theodosius I; proclaimed Augustus on 16 January 383. On the death of Theodosius I in 395, the Roman Empire was permanently divided between the Eastern Roman Empire, later known as the Byzantine Empire, and the Western Roman Empire. Theodosius' eldest son Arcadius became emperor in the East while his younger son Honorius became emperor in the West.
Theodosius II
Θεοδόσιος
1 May 408 –
28 July 450
Born on 10 April 401, the only son of Arcadius; proclaimed Augustus on 10 January 402. Succeeded upon the death of his father. As a minor, the praetorian prefect Anthemius was regent in 408–414. He died in a riding accident.
Marcian
Μαρκιανός, Marcianus
25 August 450 –
27 January 457
Born in 396. A soldier and politician, he became emperor after being wed by the Augusta Pulcheria, sister of Theodosius II, following the latter's death. Died of gangrene.

Leonid dynasty (457–518)

Leo I "the Great" and "the Butcher"
Λέων ὁ Μέγας / Μακέλλης
7 February 457 –
18 January 474
Born in Dacia c. 400, and of Bessian origin, Leo became a low-ranking officer and served as an attendant of the Gothic magister militum, Aspar, who chose him as emperor on Marcian's death. He was the first emperor to be crowned by the Patriarch of Constantinople, and the first one to legislate in Greek.[8] His reign was marked by the pacification of the Danube and peace with Persia, which allowed him to intervene in the affairs of the West, supporting candidates for the throne and dispatching an expedition to recover Carthage from the Vandals in 468. Initially a puppet of Aspar, Leo began promoting the Isaurians as a counterweight to Aspar's Goths, marrying his daughter Ariadne to the Isaurian leader Tarasicodissa (Zeno). With their support, in 471 Aspar was murdered and Gothic power over the army was broken.[9]
Leo II "the Little"
Λέων ὁ μικρός
18 January –
November 474
Born 468, he was the grandson of Leo I by Leo's daughter Ariadne and her Isaurian husband, Zeno. He was raised to Augustus on 17 November 473. Leo ascended the throne after the death of his grandfather on 18 January 474. He crowned his father as co-emperor and effective regent on 29 January, dying shortly after.
Zeno
Ζήνων (Ταρασικοδίσσας)
November 474 –
9 January 475

August 476 –
9 April 491
Born c. 425 in Isauria, originally named Tarasicodissa. As the leader of Leo I's Isaurian soldiers, he rose to comes domesticorum, married the emperor's daughter Ariadne and took the name Zeno, and played a crucial role in the elimination of Aspar and his Goths. He was named co-emperor by his son on 29 January 474 and became sole ruler upon the latter's death, but had to flee to his native country before Basiliscus in 475, regaining control of the capital in 476. Zeno concluded peace with the Vandals, saw off challenges against him by Illus and Verina, and secured peace in the Balkans by enticing the Ostrogoths under Theodoric the Great to migrate to Italy. Zeno's reign also saw the end of the western line of emperors. His pro-Monophysite stance made him unpopular and his promulgation of the Henotikon resulted in the Acacian Schism with the papacy.[10]
Basiliscus
Βασιλίσκος
9 January 475 –
August 476
General and brother-in-law of Leo I, seized power from Zeno and crowned himself emperor on 12 January. Zeno was restored soon after. Died in 476/477
Anastasius I "Dicorus"
Ἀναστάσιος ὁ Δίκορος
11 April 491 –
9 July 518
Born c. 430 at Dyrrhachium, he was a palace official (silentiarius) when he was chosen as her husband and Emperor by Empress-dowager Ariadne. He was nicknamed "Dikoros" (Latin: Dicorus), because of his heterochromia. Anastasius reformed the tax system and the Byzantine coinage and proved a frugal ruler, so that by the end of his reign he left a substantial surplus. His Monophysite sympathies led to widespread opposition, most notably the Revolt of Vitalian and the Acacian Schism. His reign was also marked by the first Bulgar raids into the Balkans and by a war with Persia over the foundation of Dara. He died childless.[11]

Justinian dynasty (518–602)

Justin I
Ἰουστῖνος, Iustinus
9 July 518 –
1 August 527
Born c. 450 at Bederiana (Justiniana Prima), Dardania. Officer and commander of the Excubitors bodyguard under Anastasius I, he was elected by army and people upon the death of Anastasius I.
Justinian I "the Great"
Ἰουστινιανὸς ὁ Μέγας
Petrus Sabbatius Iustinianus
1 August 527 –
14 November 565
Born in 482/483 at Tauresium (Taor), Macedonia. Nephew of Justin I, raised to co-emperor on 1 April 527. Succeeded on Justin I's death. Attempted to restore the western territories of the Empire, reconquering Italy, North Africa and parts of Spain. Also responsible for the corpus juris civilis, or the "body of civil law," which is the foundation of law for many modern European nations.[12]
Justin II
Ἰουστῖνος, Iustinus
14 November 565 –
5 October 578
Born c. 520. Nephew of Justinian I, he seized the throne on the death of Justinian I with support of army and Senate. Became insane, hence in 573–574 under the regency of his wife Sophia, and in 574–578 under the regency of Tiberius Constantine.
Tiberius II Constantine
Τιβέριος Κωνσταντῖνος
Tiberius Constantinus
5 October 578 –
14 August 582
Born c. 535, commander of the Excubitors, friend and adoptive son of Justin. Was named Caesar and regent in 574. Succeeded on Justin II's death.
Maurice
Μαυρίκιος Τιβέριος
Mauricius Tiberius
14 August 582 –
27 November 602
Born in 539 at Arabissus, Cappadocia. Became an official and later a general. Married the daughter of Tiberius II and was proclaimed emperor on 13 August 582. Named his son Theodosius as co-emperor in 590. Deposed by Phocas and executed on 27 November 602 at Chalcedon.

Non-dynastic (602–610)

Phocas
Φωκᾶς, Focas
23 November 602 –
5 October 610
Subaltern in the Balkan army, he led a rebellion that deposed Maurice. Increasingly unpopular and tyrannical, he was deposed and executed by Heraclius.

Heraclian dynasty (610–695)

Heraclius
Ἡράκλειος
5 October 610 –
11 February 641
Born c. 575 as the eldest son of the Exarch of Africa, Heraclius the Elder. Began a revolt against Phocas in 609 and deposed him in October 610. Brought the Byzantine-Sassanid War of 602–628 to successful conclusion but was unable to stop the Muslim conquest of Syria. Officially replaced Latin with Greek as the language of administration.
Constantine III[c]
Ἡράκλειος Κωνσταντῖνος
Heraclius Constantinus
11 February –
25 May 641
Born on 3 May 612 as the eldest son of Heraclius by his first wife Fabia Eudokia. Named co-emperor on 22 January 613, he succeeded to throne with his younger brother Heraklonas following the death of Heraclius. Died of tuberculosis, allegedly poisoned by Empress-dowager Martina.
Heraclonas
Ἡρακλεωνᾶς, Heraclius
11 February –
c. 5 November 641
Born in 626 to Heraclius' second wife Martina, named co-emperor on 4 July 638. Succeeded to throne with Constantine III following the death of Heraclius. Sole emperor after the death of Constantine III, under the regency of Martina, but was forced to name Constans II co-emperor by the army, and was deposed by the Senate in September 641 (or early 642).
Constans II
"the Bearded"

Κώνστας ὁ Πωγωνᾶτος
Heraclius Constantinus
c. 5 November 641 –
15 July 668
Born on 7 November 630, the son of Constantine III. Raised to co-emperor in summer 641 after his father's death due to army pressure, he became sole emperor after the forced abdication of his uncle Heraklonas. Baptized Heraclius, he reigned as Constantine. "Constans" is his nickname. Moved his seat to Syracuse, where he was assassinated, possibly on the orders of Mizizios.
Constantine IV
"the Younger"

Κωνσταντῖνος ὁ νέος
Constantinus
September 668 –
c. 10 July 685
Born in 652, co-emperor since 13 April 654, he succeeded following the murder of his father Constans II. Erroneously called "Constantine the Bearded" by historians through confusion with his father. He called the Third Council of Constantinople which condemned the heresy of Monothelitism, repelled the First Arab Siege of Constantinople, and died of dysentery.
Justinian II
"the Slit-nosed"
Ἰουστινιανὸς ὁ Ῥινότμητος
Iustinianus

(first reign)
c. 10 July 685 – 695 Born in 669, son of Constantine IV, he was named co-emperor in 681 and became sole emperor upon Constantine IV's death. Deposed by military revolt in 695, mutilated (hence his surname) and exiled to Cherson, whence he recovered his throne in 705.

Twenty Years' Anarchy (695–717)

Leontius
Λεόντιος
695 – 698 General from Isauria, he deposed Justinian II and was overthrown in another revolt in 698. He was executed in February 706.
Tiberius III Apsimar
Τιβέριος (Ἀψίμαρος)
698 – 705 Admiral of Germanic origin, originally named Apsimar. He rebelled against Leontius after a failed expedition. Reigned under the name of Tiberius until deposed by Justinian II in 705. Executed in February 706.
Justinian II "the Slit-nosed"
(second reign)
c. 21 August 705 –
4 November 711
Returned on the throne with Bulgar support. Named son Tiberius as co-emperor in 706. Deposed and killed by military revolt.
Philippicus Bardanes
Φιλιππικός (Βαρδάνης)
4 November 711 –
3 June 713
A general of Armenian origin, he deposed Justinian II and was in turn overthrown by a revolt of the Opsician troops.
Anastasius II Artemius
Ἀναστάσιος (ʹἈρτέμιος)
4 June 713 –
late 715
Originally named Artemios. A bureaucrat and secretary under Philippicus, he was raised to the purple by the soldiers who overthrew Philippicus. Deposed by another military revolt, he led an abortive attempt to regain the throne in 718 and was killed.
Theodosius III
Θεοδόσιος
late 715 –
25 March 717
A fiscal official, he was proclaimed emperor by the rebellious Opsician troops. Entered Constantinople in November 715. Abdicated following the revolt of Leo the Isaurian and became a monk.

Isaurian dynasty (717–802)

Leo III "the Isaurian"
Λέων ὁ Ἴσαυρος
25 March 717 –
18 June 741
Born c. 685 in Germanikeia, Commagene, he became a general. Rose in rebellion and secured the throne in spring 717. Repelled the Second Arab Siege of Constantinople and initiated the Byzantine Iconoclasm.
Constantine V
"the Dung-named"
Κωνσταντῖνος Κοπρώνυμος
18 June 741 –
14 September 775
Born in July 718, the only son of Leo III. Co-emperor since 720, he succeeded upon his father's death. After overcoming the usurpation of Artabasdos, he continued his father's iconoclastic policies and won several victories against the Arabs and the Bulgars. He is given the surname "the Dung-named" by hostile later chroniclers.
Artabasdos
Ἀρτάβασδος
June 741 –
2 November 743
General and son-in-law of Leo III, Count of the Opsician Theme. Led a revolt that secured Constantinople, but was defeated and deposed by Constantine V, who blinded and tonsured him.
Leo IV "the Khazar"
Λέων ὁ Χάζαρος
14 September 775 –
8 September 780
Born on 25 January 750 as the eldest son of Constantine V. Co-emperor since 751, he succeeded upon his father's death.
Constantine VI
Κωνσταντῖνος
8 September 780 –
19 August 797
Born in 771, the only child of Leo IV. Co-emperor since 14 April 776, sole emperor upon Leo's death in 780, until 790 under the regency of his mother, Irene of Athens. He was overthrown on Irene's orders, blinded and imprisoned, probably dying of his wounds shortly after.
Irene
Εἰρήνη
19 August 797 –
31 October 802
Born c. 752 in Athens, she married Leo IV on 3 November 768 and was crowned empress on 17 December. Regent for her son Constantine VI in 780–790, she overthrew him in 797 and became empress-regnant. In 787 she called the Second Council of Nicaea which condemned the practice of iconoclasm and restored the veneration of icons to Christian practice. Deposed in a palace coup in 802, she was exiled and died on 9 August 803.

Nikephorian dynasty (802–813)

Nikephoros I "Genikos" or "the Logothete"
Νικηφόρος ὁ Γενικός/ὁ Λογοθέτης
31 October 802 –
26 July 811
Logothetes tou genikou (general finance minister) under Irene, led initially successful campaigns against the Bulgars but was killed at the Battle of Pliska.
Staurakios
Σταυράκιος
26 July 811 –
2 October 811
Only son of Nikephoros I, crowned co-emperor in December 803. Succeeded on his father's death; however, he had been heavily wounded at Pliska and left paralyzed. He was forced to abdicate, and retired to a monastery where he died soon after.
Michael I Rangabe
Μιχαὴλ Ῥαγγαβέ
2 October 811 –
11 July 813
Son-in-law of Nikephoros I, he succeeded Staurakios on his abdication. Resigned after the revolt under Leo the Armenian and retired to a monastery, where he died on 11 January 844. Reigned with eldest son Theophylact as co-emperor.

Non-dynastic (813–820)

Leo V "the Armenian"
Λέων ὁ Ἀρμένιος
11 July 813 –
25 December 820
General of Armenian origin, born c. 755. He rebelled against Michael I and became emperor. Appointed his son Symbatios co-emperor under the name of Constantine in 813. Revived Byzantine Iconoclasm. Murdered by a conspiracy led by Michael the Amorian.

Amorian dynasty (820–867)

Michael II "the Amorian"
Μιχαὴλ ὁ ἐξ Ἀμορίου
25 December 820 –
2 October 829
Born in 770 at Amorium, he became an army officer. A friend of Leo V, he was raised to high office but led the conspiracy that murdered him. Survived the rebellion of Thomas the Slav, lost Crete to the Arabs and faced the beginning of the Muslim conquest of Sicily, reinforced iconoclasm.
Theophilos
Θεόφιλος
2 October 829 –
20 January 842
Born in 813, as the only son of Michael II. Crowned co-emperor on 12 May 821, he succeeded on his father's death.
Michael III "the Drunkard"
Μιχαὴλ ὁ Μέθυσος
20 January 842 –
24 September 867
His precise date of birth is uncertain, but the balance of available evidence supports a birthdate in January 840. The son of Theophilos, he succeeded on Theophilos' death. Under the regency of his mother Theodora until 856, and under the effective control of his uncle Bardas in 862–866. Ended iconoclasm. Murdered by Basil the Macedonian. A pleasure-loving ruler, he was nicknamed "the Drunkard" by later, pro-Basil chroniclers.

Macedonian dynasty (867–1056)

Basil I "the Macedonian"
Βασίλειος ὁ Μακεδών
24 September 867 –
29 August 886
Born in the Theme of Macedonia c. 811, he rose in prominence through palace service, becoming a favourite of Michael III, who crowned him co-emperor on 26 May 866. He overthrew Michael and established the Macedonian dynasty. He led successful wars in the East against the Arabs and the Paulicians, and recovered southern Italy for the Empire.
Leo VI "the Wise"
Λέων ὁ Σοφός
29 August 886 –
11 May 912
Born on 19 September 866, either the legitimate son of Basil I or the illegitimate son of Michael III. Co-emperor since 6 January 870. Leo was known for his erudition. His reign saw a height in Saracen (Muslim) naval raids, culminating in the Sack of Thessalonica, and was marked by unsuccessful wars against the Bulgarians under Simeon I.
Alexander
Ἀλέξανδρος
11 May 912 –
6 June 913
Son of Basil I, Alexander was born in 870 and raised to co-emperor in 879. Sidelined by Leo VI, Alexander dismissed his brother's principal aides on his accession. He died of exhaustion after a polo game.
Romanos I Lekapenos
Ῥωμανὸς Λεκαπηνός
17 December 920 –
20 December 944
An admiral of lowly origin, Romanos rose to power as a protector of the young Constantine VII against the general Leo Phokas the Elder. After becoming the emperor's father-in-law, he successively assumed higher offices until he crowned himself senior emperor. His reign was marked by the end of warfare with Bulgaria and the great conquests of John Kourkouas in the East. Romanos promoted his sons Stephen and Constantine (alongside Christopher, who died soon after) as co-emperors over Constantine VII, but was himself overthrown by them and confined to an island as a monk. He died there on 15 June 948.
Constantine VII
"the Purple-born"
Κωνσταντῖνος ὁ Πορφυρογέννητος
6 June 913 –
9 November 959
Son of Leo VI, he was born on 17/18 May 905 and raised to co-emperor on 15 May 908. His early reign was dominated by successive regencies, first by his mother, Zoe Karbonopsina, and Patriarch Nicholas Mystikos, and from 919 by the admiral Romanos Lekapenos, who wedded his daughter to Constantine and was crowned senior emperor in 920. Constantine re-asserted his control by deposing Romanos's sons on 27 January 945. His reign was marked by struggles with Sayf al-Dawla in the East and an unsuccessful campaign against Crete, and pro-aristocratic policies that saw a partial reversal of Lekapenos' legislation against the dynatoi. He is notable for his promotion of the "Macedonian Renaissance", sponsoring encyclopaedic works and histories. He was a prolific writer himself, best remembered for the manuals on statecraft (De administrando imperio) and ceremonies (De ceremoniis) he compiled for his son.[13]
Romanos II
"the Purple-born"
Ῥωμανὸς ὁ Πορφυρογέννητος
9 November 959 –
15 March 963
The only surviving son of Constantine VII, he was born on 15 March 938 and succeeded his father on the latter's death. He ruled until his own death, although the government was led mostly by the eunuch Joseph Bringas. His reign was marked by successful warfare in the East against Sayf al-Dawla and the recovery of Crete by general Nikephoros Phokas.
Nikephoros II Phokas
Νικηφόρος Φωκᾶς
16 August 963 –
11 December 969
The most successful general of his generation, Nikephoros II was born c. 912 to the powerful Phokas clan. After the death of Romanos II, he rose to the throne with the support of the army and people as regent for the young emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII, marrying the empress-dowager Theophano. Throughout his reign he led campaigns in the East, conquering much of Syria. He was murdered by his nephew and one-time associate John Tzimiskes.
John I Tzimiskes
Ἰωάννης ὁ Τσιμισκὴς
11 December 969 –
10 January 976
Nephew of Nikephoros Phokas, Tzimiskes was born c. 925. A successful general, he fell out with his uncle and led a conspiracy of disgruntled generals who murdered him. Tzimiskes succeeded Nikephoros as emperor and regent for the young sons of Romanos II. As ruler, Tzimiskes crushed the Rus' in Bulgaria and ended the Bulgarian tsardom before going on to campaign in the East, where he died.
Basil II
"the Bulgar-Slayer"

Βασίλειος ὁ Βουλγαροκτόνος
10 January 976 –
15 December 1025
Eldest son of Romanos II, Basil was born in 958. The first decade of his reign was marked by rivalry with the powerful Basil Lekapenos, an unsuccessful war against Bulgaria, and rebellions by generals in Asia Minor. Basil solidified his position through a marriage alliance with Vladimir I of Kiev, and after suppressing the revolts, he embarked on his conquest of Bulgaria. Bulgaria was finally subdued in 1018 after over 20 years of war, interrupted only by sporadic warfare in Syria against the Fatimid Caliphate. Basil also expanded Byzantine control over most of Armenia. His reign is widely considered as the apogee of medieval Byzantium.
Constantine VIII
"the Purple-born"
Κωνσταντῖνος ὁ Πορφυρογέννητος
15 December 1025– 12 November 1028 The second son of Romanos II, Constantine was born in 960 and raised to co-emperor on 30 March 962. During the rule of Basil II, he spent his time in idle pleasure. During his short reign he was an indifferent ruler, easily influenced by his courtiers and suspicious of plots to depose him, especially among the military aristocracy, many of whom were blinded and exiled.[14]
Romanos III Argyros
Ῥωμανὸς Ἀργυρός
15 November 1028 –
11 April 1034
Born in 968, the elderly aristocrat Romanos was chosen by Constantine VIII on his deathbed as Zoe's husband and succeeded on the throne after Constantine's death a few days later.
Michael IV
"the Paphlagonian"
Μιχαὴλ ὁ Παφλαγών
11 April 1034 –
10 December 1041
Born in 1010, he became a lover of Zoe even while Romanos III was alive, and succeeded him upon his death as her husband and emperor. Aided by his older brother, the eunuch John the Orphanotrophos, his reign was moderately successful against internal rebellions, but his attempt to recover Sicily failed. He died after a long illness.
Michael V "the Caulker"
Μιχαὴλ ὁ Καλαφάτης
10 December 1041 –
20 April 1042
Born in 1015, he was the nephew and adopted son of Michael IV. During his reign he tried to sideline Zoe, but a popular revolt forced him to restore her as empress on 19 April 1042, along with her sister Theodora. He was deposed the next day, castrated and tonsured, dying on 24 August 1042.
Zoe "the Purple-born"
Ζωὴ ἡ Πορφυρογέννητος
21 April 1042 –
1050
The daughter of Constantine VIII, she succeeded on her father's death, as the only surviving member of the Macedonian dynasty, along with her sister Theodora. Her three husbands, Romanos III (1028–1034), Michael IV (1034–1041) and Constantine IX (1042–1050) ruled alongside her.
Theodora
"the Purple-born"
Θεοδώρα ἡ Πορφυρογέννητος
21 April 1042 –
31 August 1056
The younger sister of Zoe, born in 984, she was raised as co-ruler on 19 April 1042. After Zoe married her third husband, Constantine IX, in June 1042, Theodora was again sidelined. After Zoe died in 1050 and Constantine in 1055, Theodora assumed full governance of the Empire and reigned until her death. She nominated Michael VI as her successor.
Constantine IX Monomachos
Κωνσταντῖνος Μονομάχος
12 June 1042 –
11 January 1055
Born c. 1000 of noble origin, he had an undistinguished life but was exiled to Lesbos by Michael IV, returning when he was chosen as Zoe's third husband. Constantine supported the mercantile classes and favoured the company of intellectuals, thereby alienating the military aristocracy. A pleasure-loving ruler, he lived an extravagant life with his favourite mistresses and endowed a number of monasteries, chiefly the Nea Moni of Chios and the Mangana Monastery. His reign was marked by invasions by the Pechenegs in the Balkans and the Seljuk Turks in the East, the revolts of George Maniakes and Leo Tornikios, and the Great Schism between the patriarchates of Rome and Constantinople.[15]

Non-dynastic (1056–1057)

Michael VI Bringas
"Stratiotikos" / "the Old"

Μιχαὴλ Βρίγγας ὁ Στρατιωτικός/ὁ Γέρων
31 August 1056 –
30/31 August 1057
A court bureaucrat and stratiotikos logothetes (hence his first sobriquet). Crowned emperor by Theodora on 22 August 1056. Deposed by military revolt under Isaac Komnenos, he retired to a monastery where he died in 1059.

Komnenid dynasty (1057–1059)

Isaac I Komnenos
Ἰσαάκιος Κομνηνός
1 September 1057 –
22 November 1059
Born c. 1005. A successful general, he rose in revolt leading the eastern armies and was declared emperor on 8 June 1057; he was recognized after the abdication of Michael. He resigned in 1059 and died c. 1061.

Doukid dynasty (1059–1081)

Constantine X Doukas
Κωνσταντῖνος Δούκας
23 November 1059 –
23 May 1067
Born in 1006, he became a general and close ally of Isaac Komnenos, and succeeded him as emperor on his abdication. Named his sons Michael, Andronikos and Konstantios as co-emperors. After his death his widow was regent until the accession of Romanus IV.
Romanos IV Diogenes
Ῥωμανὸς Διογένης
1 January 1068 –
1 October 1071
Born in 1032, a successful general he married empress-dowager Eudokia Makrembolitissa and became senior emperor as guardian of her sons by Constantine X. Deposed by the Doukas partisans after the Battle of Manzikert, blinded in June 1072 and exiled. He died soon after.
Michael VII Doukas "Parapinakes"
Μιχαὴλ Δούκας "Παραπινάκης"
1 October 1071 –
24 March 1078
Born in 1050 as the eldest son of Constantine X. Co-emperor since 1059, he succeeded on his father's death. Due to his minority he was under the regency of his mother, Eudokia Makrembolitissa, in 1067–1068, and relegated to junior emperor under her second husband Romanos IV Diogenes in 1068–71. Senior emperor in 1071–78, he named his son Constantine co-emperor alongside his brothers. He abdicated before the revolt of Nikephoros Botaneiates, retired to a monastery and died c. 1090. His reign saw the devaluation of the Byzantine currency by 25%, hence his nickname "minus-a-quarter".
Nikephoros III Botaneiates
Νικηφόρος Βοτανειάτης
27 March 1078 –
1 April 1081
Born in 1001, he was the strategos of the Anatolic Theme. He was proclaimed emperor on 7 January and crowned on 27 March or 3 April. He weathered several revolts, but was overthrown by the Komnenos clan. He retired to a monastery where he died in the same year.

Komnenid dynasty (1081–1185)

Alexios I Komnenos
Ἀλέξιος Κομνηνός
1 April 1081 –
15 August 1118
Born in 1056, a nephew of Isaac I Komnenos. A distinguished general, he overthrew Nikephoros III. His reign was dominated by wars against the Normans and the Seljuk Turks, as well as the arrival of the First Crusade and the establishment of independent Crusader states. He retained Constantine Doukas as co-emperor until 1087 and named his eldest son John co-emperor in 1092.
John II Komnenos
Ἰωάννης Κομνηνός
15 August 1118 –
8 April 1143
Born on 13 September 1087 as the eldest son of Alexios I. Co-emperor since 1092, he succeeded upon his father's death. His reign was focused on wars with the Turks. A popular, pious and frugal ruler, he was known as "John the Good". Named his eldest son Alexios co-emperor in 1122, but the son predeceased his father.
Manuel I Komnenos
Μανουὴλ Κομνηνός
8 April 1143 –
24 September 1180
Born on 28 November 1118 as the fourth and youngest son of John II, he was chosen as emperor over his elder brother Isaac by his father on his deathbed. An energetic ruler, he launched campaigns against the Turks, humbled Hungary, achieved supremacy over the Crusader states, and tried unsuccessfully to recover Italy and Egypt. His extravagance and constant campaigning, however, depleted the Empire's resources.
Alexios II Komnenos
Ἀλέξιος Κομνηνός
24 September 1180 –
c. September 1183
Born on 14 September 1169 as the only son of Manuel I. In 1180–1182 under the regency of his mother, Maria of Antioch. She was overthrown by Andronikos I Komnenos, who became co-emperor and finally had Alexios II deposed and killed.
Andronikos I Komnenos
Ἀνδρόνικος Κομνηνός
c. September 1183 –
12 September 1185
Born c. 1118, a nephew of John II by his brother Isaac. A general, he was imprisoned for conspiring against John II, but escaped and spent 15 years in exile in various courts in eastern Europe and the Middle East. He seized the regency from Maria of Antioch in 1182 and subsequently throne from his nephew Alexios II. An unpopular ruler, he was overthrown and lynched in a popular uprising.

Angelid dynasty (1185–1204)

Isaac II Angelos
Ἰσαάκιος Ἄγγελος
12 September 1185 –
8 April 1195

1 August 1203 –
27 January 1204
Born in September 1156, Isaac came to the throne at the head of a popular revolt against Andronikos I. His reign was marked by revolts and wars in the Balkans, especially against a resurgent Bulgaria. He was deposed, blinded and imprisoned by his elder brother, Alexios III. He was later restored to the throne by the Crusaders and Alexios IV. Due to their failure to deal with the Crusaders' demands, he was deposed by Alexios V Doukas in January 1204 and died in January 1204, perhaps of poison.
Alexios III Angelos
Ἀλέξιος Ἄγγελος
8 April 1195 –
18 July 1203
Born in 1153, Alexios was the elder brother of Isaac II. His reign was marked by misgovernment and the increasing autonomy of provincial magnates. He was deposed by the Fourth Crusade and fled Constantinople, roaming Greece and Asia Minor, searching for support to regain his throne. He died in Nicaean captivity (confined to a monastery) in 1211.
Alexios IV Angelos
Ἀλέξιος Ἄγγελος
1 August 1203 –
27 January 1204
Born in 1182, the son of Isaac II. He enlisted the Fourth Crusade to return his father to the throne, and reigned alongside his restored father from 19 July 1203. Due to their failure to deal with the Crusaders' demands, he was deposed by Alexios V Doukas in January 1204, and was strangled on 8 February.
Alexios V Doukas "Mourtzouphlos"
Ἀλέξιος Δούκας ὁ "Μούρτζουφλος"
5 February 1204 –
12 April 1204
Born in 1140, the son-in-law of Alexios III and a prominent aristocrat, he deposed Isaac II and Alexios IV in a palace coup. He tried to repel the Crusaders, but they captured Constantinople forcing Mourtzouphlos to flee. He joined the exiled Alexios III, but was later blinded by the latter. Captured by the Crusaders, he was executed in December 1205.

Laskarid dynasty (Empire of Nicaea, 1204–1261)

Theodore I Laskaris
Θεόδωρος Λάσκαρις
6 April 1208 –
November 1221
Born c. 1174, he rose to prominence as a son-in-law of Alexios III. His brother Constantine Laskaris (or Theodore himself, it is uncertain) was elected emperor by the citizens of Constantinople on the day before the city fell to the Crusaders; Constantine only remained for a few hours before the sack of the city and later fled to Nicaea, where Theodore organized the Greek resistance to the Latins. Proclaimed emperor after Constantine's death in 1205, Theodore was crowned only in Easter 1208. He managed to stop the Latin advance in Asia and to repel Seljuk attacks, establishing the Empire of Nicaea as the strongest of the Greek successor states.
John III Vatatzes
Ἰωάννης Βατάτζης
December 1221 –
3 November 1254
Born c. 1192, he became the son-in-law and successor of Theodore I in 1212. A capable ruler and soldier, he expanded his state in Bithynia, Thrace and Macedonia at the expense of the Latin Empire, Bulgaria and the rival Greek state of Epirus.
Theodore II Laskaris
Θεόδωρος Λάσκαρις
3 November 1254 –
16 August 1258
Born in 1221/1222 as the only son of John III, he succeeded on his father's death. His reign was marked by his hostility towards the major houses of the aristocracy, and by his victory against Bulgaria and the subsequent expansion into and Albania.
John IV Laskaris
Ἰωάννης Λάσκαρις
16 August 1258 –
25 December 1261
Born on 25 December 1250 as the only son of Theodore II, he succeeded on his father's death. Due to his minority, the regency was exercised at first by George Mouzalon until his assassination, and then by Michael Palaiologos, who within months was crowned senior emperor. After the recovery of Constantinople in August 1261, Palaiologos sidelined John IV completely, had him blinded and imprisoned. John IV died c. 1305.

Palaiologan dynasty (restored to Constantinople, 1261–1453)

Michael VIII Palaiologos
Μιχαὴλ Παλαιολόγος
1 January 1259 –
11 December 1282
Born in 1223, great-grandson of Alexios III, grandnephew of John III by marriage. Senior emperor alongside John IV in 1259. His forces reconquered Constantinople on 25 July 1261, thus restoring the Empire. He entered the city and was crowned on 15 August. Became sole emperor after deposing John IV on 25 December 1261.
Andronikos II Palaiologos
Ἀνδρόνικος Παλαιολόγος
11 December 1282 –
24 May 1328
Son of Michael VIII, born on 25 March 1259. Named co-emperor in 1261, crowned in 1272, he succeeded as sole emperor on Michael's death. Favouring monks and intellectuals, he neglected the army, and his reign saw the collapse of the Byzantine position in Asia Minor. He named his son Michael IX co-emperor. In a protracted civil war, he was first forced to recognize his grandson Andronikos III as co-emperor and was then deposed outright. He died on 13 February 1332.
Michael IX Palaiologos
Μιχαὴλ Παλαιολόγος
21 May 1294 – 12 October 1320
Son and co-ruler of Andronikos II, named co-emperor in 1281 but not crowned until 21 May 1294. Allegedly died of grief due to the accidental murder of his second son.[16]
Andronikos III Palaiologos
Ἀνδρόνικος Παλαιολόγος
24 May 1328 –
15 June 1341
Son of Michael IX, he was born on 25 March 1297 and named co-emperor in 1316. Rival emperor since July 1321, he deposed his grandfather Andronikos II in 1328 and ruled as sole emperor until his death. Supported by John Kantakouzenos, his reign saw defeats against the Ottoman emirate but successes in Europe, where Epirus and Thessaly were recovered.
John V Palaiologos
Ἰωάννης Παλαιολόγος
19 November 1341 –
12 August 1376
Only son of Andronikos III, he had not been crowned or declared heir at his father's death, a fact which led to the outbreak of a destructive civil war between his regents and his father's closest aide, John VI Kantakouzenos, who was crowned co-emperor. The conflict ended in 1347 with Kantakouzenos recognized as senior emperor, but he was deposed by John V in 1354, during another civil war. Matthew Kantakouzenos, raised by John VI to co-emperor, was also deposed in 1357. John V appealed to the West for aid against the Ottomans, but in 1371 he was forced to recognize Ottoman suzerainty.
John VI Kantakouzenos
Ἰωάννης Καντακουζηνός
21 May 1347– 10 December 1354 A maternal relative of the Palaiologoi, he was declared co-emperor on 26 October 1341, and was recognized as senior emperor for ten years after the end of the civil war on 8 February 1347. Deposed by John V in 1354, he became a monk, dying on 15 June 1383.
Andronikos IV Palaiologos
Ἀνδρόνικος Παλαιολόγος
12 August 1376 –
1 July 1379
Son of John V and grandson of John VI, he was born on 2 April 1348 and raised to co-emperor c. 1352. He deposed his father on 12 August 1376 and ruled until overthrown in turn in 1379. He was again recognized as co-emperor in 1381 and given Selymbria as an appanage, dying there on 28 June 1385.
John V Palaiologos
(second reign)
1 July 1379 –
14 April 1390
Restored to senior emperor, he was reconciled with Andronikos IV in 1381, re-appointing him co-emperor. He was overthrown again in 1390 by his grandson, John VII.
John VII Palaiologos
Ἰωάννης Παλαιολόγος
14 April 1390 –
17 September 1390
Son of Andronikos IV, he was born in 1370, and named co-emperor under his father in 1377–79. He usurped the throne from his grandfather John V for five months in 1390, but with Ottoman mediation he was reconciled with John V and his uncle, Manuel II. As regent, he held Constantinople against the Ottomans in 1399–1402, and was then given Thessalonica as an appanage, which he governed until his death on 22 September 1408.
John V Palaiologos
(third reign)
17 September 1390 –
16 February 1391
Restored to senior emperor, he ruled until his death in February 1391.
Manuel II Palaiologos
Μανουὴλ Παλαιολόγος
16 February 1391 –
21 July 1425
Second son of John V, he was born on 27 June 1350. Raised to co-emperor in 1373, he became senior emperor on John V's death and ruled until his death. He journeyed to the West European courts seeking aid against the Turks, and was able to use the Ottoman defeat in the Battle of Ankara to regain some territories and throw off his vassalage to them.
John VIII Palaiologos
Ἰωάννης Παλαιολόγος
21 July 1425 –
31 October 1448
Eldest surviving son of Manuel II, he was born on 18 December 1392. Raised to co-emperor around 1416 and named full autokrator on 19 January 1421, he succeeded his father on his death. Seeking aid against the resurgent Ottomans, he ratified the Union of the Churches in 1439.
Constantine XI
Dragases Palaiologos
Κωνσταντῖνος Δραγάσης Παλαιολόγος
6 January 1449 –
29 May 1453
The fourth son of Manuel II and Serbian princess Helena Dragaš, he was born on 8 February 1405. As Despot of the Morea since 1428, he distinguished himself in campaigns that annexed the Principality of Achaea and brought the Duchy of Athens under temporary Byzantine suzerainty, but was unable to repel Turkish attacks under Turahan Bey. As the eldest surviving brother, he succeeded John VIII after the latter's death. Facing the designs of the new sultan, Mehmed II, on Constantinople, Constantine acknowledged the Union of the Churches and made repeated appeals for help to the West, but in vain. Refusing to surrender the city, he was killed during the final Ottoman attack on 29 May 1453.[17]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Regnal numbers were never used in the Byzantine Empire. Instead, the Byzantines used nicknames and patronymics to distinguish rulers of the same name. The numbering of Byzantine emperors is a purely historiographical invention.
  2. ^ By the 4th century, the name Flavius had become a part of the imperial title: Cameron, Alan (1988). "Flavius : a Nicety of Protocol". Société d'Études Latines de Bruxelles. 47 (1): 26–33. JSTOR 41540754.
  3. ^ The regnal numbering follows Constantine II who was emperor in the West (317–340).

References

  1. ^ a b Nicol, Donald MacGillivray, Last Centuries of Byzantium, 1261–1453, Cambridge University Press, Second Edition, 1993, p. 72: "Hereditary succession to the throne was a custom or a convenience in Byzantium, not an inviolable principle. Emperors, particularly in the later period, would take pains to nominate their sons as co-emperors, for the rule of a dynasty made for stability and continuity. But in theory, the road to the throne was a carriere ouverte aux talents [career open to talents]..."
  2. ^ Hooker, Richard (1 October 2007). . Washington State University. Archived from the original on 24 February 1999. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  3. ^ Charanis, Peter (July 1969). "Early Christian and Byzantine Political Philosophy: Origins and Background. Francis Dvornik". Speculum. 44 (3): 459–460. doi:10.2307/2855514. ISSN 0038-7134. JSTOR 2855514.
  4. ^ Morrisson, Cécile (2013) "Displaying the Emperor's Authority and Kharaktèr on the Marketplace" in Armstrong, Pamela. Authority in Byzantium. Routledge. p. 72. ISBN 978-1409436089
  5. ^ p. 183, Karayannopoulous, Yanis, "State Organization, Social Structure, Economy, and Commerce," History of Humanity – Scientific and Cultural Development from the Seventh to the Sixteenth Centuries, Vol. IV, M. A. Al-Bakhit, L. Bazin, S. M. Cissoko and M. S. Asimov, Editors, UNESCO, Paris (2000)
  6. ^ Gregory, Timothy E.; Cutler, Anthony (1991). "Constantine I the Great". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 498–500. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  7. ^ Gregory, Timothy E. (1991). "Constantius II". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 524. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  8. ^ Wickham, Christopher (2009). The inheritance of Rome. Penguin. p. 90. ISBN 9780670020980.
  9. ^ Gregory, Timothy E.; Cutler, Anthony (1991). "Leo I". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1206–1207. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  10. ^ Gregory, Timothy E. (1991). "Zeno". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 2223. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  11. ^ Gregory, Timothy E. (1991). "Anastasios I". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  12. ^ McKay/Hill, A History of World Societies. Bedford/St. Martin's, 9th edition. 2012
  13. ^ Kazhdan, Alexander; Cutler, Anthony (1991). "Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 502–503. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  14. ^ Brand, Charles M.; Cutler, Anthony (1991). "Constantine VIII". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 503–504. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  15. ^ Brand, Charles M.; Cutler, Anthony (1991). "Constantine IX Monomachos". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 504. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  16. ^ Talbot, Alice-Mary; Cutler, Anthony (1991). "Michael IX Palaiologos". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1367–1368. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  17. ^ Talbot, Alice-Mary (1991). "Constantine XI Palaiologos". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 505. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.

list, byzantine, emperors, roman, emperors, before, constantine, list, roman, emperors, this, list, byzantine, emperors, from, foundation, constantinople, which, marks, conventional, start, eastern, roman, empire, fall, ottoman, empire, 1453, only, emperors, w. For Roman emperors before Constantine I see List of Roman emperors This is a list of the Byzantine emperors from the foundation of Constantinople in 330 AD which marks the conventional start of the Eastern Roman Empire to its fall to the Ottoman Empire in 1453 AD Only the emperors who were recognized as legitimate rulers and exercised sovereign authority are included to the exclusion of junior co emperors symbasileis who never attained the status of sole or senior ruler as well as of the various usurpers or rebels who claimed the imperial title Emperor of the RomansImperialLast to reignConstantine XI6 January 1449 29 May 1453DetailsFirst monarchConstantine ILast monarchConstantine XIFormation11 May 330Abolition29 May 1453ResidenceGreat Palace Blachernae PalaceAppointerUnspecified de facto hereditary 1 Pretender s NoneThe following list starts with Constantine the Great the first Christian emperor who rebuilt the city of Byzantium as an imperial capital Constantinople and who was regarded by the later emperors as the model ruler It was under Constantine that the major characteristics of what is considered the Byzantine state emerged a Roman polity centered at Constantinople and culturally dominated by the Greek East with Christianity as the state religion The Byzantine Empire was the direct legal continuation of the eastern half of the Roman Empire following the division of the Roman Empire in 395 Emperors listed below up to Theodosius I in 395 were sole or joint rulers of the entire Roman Empire The Western Roman Empire continued until 476 Byzantine emperors considered themselves to be rightful Roman emperors in direct succession from Augustus 2 the term Byzantine was coined by Western historiography only in the 16th century The use of the title Roman Emperor by those ruling from Constantinople was not contested until after the papal coronation of the Frankish Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor 25 December 800 done partly in response to the Byzantine coronation of Empress Irene whose claim as a woman was not recognized by Pope Leo III In practice according to the Hellenistic political system the Byzantine emperor had been given total power through God to shape the state and its subjects he was the last authority and legislator of the empire and all his work was in imitation of the sacred kingdom of God also according to the Christian principles he was the ultimate benefecator and protector of his people 3 The title of all Emperors preceding Heraclius was officially Augustus although other titles such as Dominus were also used Their names were preceded by Imperator Caesar and followed by Augustus Following Heraclius the title commonly became the Greek Basileus Gr Basileys which had formerly meant sovereign though Augustus continued to be used in a reduced capacity Following the establishment of the rival Holy Roman Empire in Western Europe the title Autokrator Gr Aὐtokratwr was increasingly used In later centuries the Emperor could be referred to by Western Christians as the Emperor of the Greeks Towards the end of the Empire the standard imperial formula of the Byzantine ruler was Emperor s name in Christ Emperor and Autocrat of the Romans cf Ῥwmaῖoi and Rum 4 In the medieval period dynasties were common but the principle of hereditary succession was never formalized in the Empire 5 and hereditary succession was a custom rather than an inviolable principle 1 Contents 1 Constantinian dynasty 306 363 2 Non dynastic 363 364 3 Valentinianic dynasty 364 379 4 Theodosian dynasty 379 457 5 Leonid dynasty 457 518 6 Justinian dynasty 518 602 7 Non dynastic 602 610 8 Heraclian dynasty 610 695 9 Twenty Years Anarchy 695 717 10 Isaurian dynasty 717 802 11 Nikephorian dynasty 802 813 12 Non dynastic 813 820 13 Amorian dynasty 820 867 14 Macedonian dynasty 867 1056 15 Non dynastic 1056 1057 16 Komnenid dynasty 1057 1059 17 Doukid dynasty 1059 1081 18 Komnenid dynasty 1081 1185 19 Angelid dynasty 1185 1204 20 Laskarid dynasty Empire of Nicaea 1204 1261 21 Palaiologan dynasty restored to Constantinople 1261 1453 22 See also 23 Notes 24 References Portrait Name a Reign NotesConstantinian dynasty 306 363 Edit See also Constantinian dynastyConstantine I the Great Kwnstantῖnos ὁ MegasFl Valerius Constantinus 19 September 324 22 May 337 Born at Naissus c 272 as the son of the Augustus Constantius and Helena Proclaimed Augustus of the western empire upon the death of his father on 25 July 306 he became sole ruler of the western empire after the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in 312 In 324 he defeated the eastern Augustus Licinius and re united the empire under his rule reigning as sole emperor until his death Constantine completed the administrative and military reforms begun under Diocletian who had begun ushering in the Dominate period Actively interested in Christianity he played a crucial role in its development and the Christianization of the Roman world through his convocation of the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea He is said to have received baptism on his deathbed He also reformed coinage through the introduction of the gold solidus and initiated a large scale building program crowned by the re foundation the city of Byzantium as New Rome popularly known as Constantinople He was regarded as the model of all subsequent Byzantine emperors 6 Constantius IIKwnstantiosFl Iulius Constantius 22 May 337 3 November 361 Born on 7 August 317 as the second surviving son of Constantine I he inherited the eastern third of Roman Empire upon his father s death sole Roman Emperor from 353 after the overthrow of the western usurper Magnentius Constantius reign saw military activity on all frontiers and dissension between Arianism favoured by the emperor and the Orthodox supporters of the Nicene Creed In his reign Constantinople was accorded equal status to Rome and the original Hagia Sophia was built Constantius appointed Constantius Gallus and Julian as Caesares and died on his way to confront Julian who had risen up against him 7 Julian the Apostate Ἰoylianὸs ὁ ἈpostathsFl Claudius Iulianus 3 November 361 26 June 363 Born in May 332 grandson of Constantius Chlorus and cousin of Constantius II Proclaimed by his army in Gaul became legitimate Emperor upon the death of Constantius Killed on campaign against Sassanid Persia Non dynastic 363 364 EditJovianἸobianosClaudius Iovianus b 28 June 363 17 February 364 Born c 332 Captain of the guards under Julian elected by the army upon Julian s death Died on journey back to Constantinople Valentinianic dynasty 364 379 Edit See also Valentinianic dynastyValentinian IOὐalentinianosValentinianus 26 February 28 March 364 Born in 321 An officer under Julian and Jovian he was elected by the army upon Jovian s death He soon appointed his younger brother Valens as Emperor of the East while he himself ruled in the West Died of cerebral haemorrhage in 375 ValensOὐalhs 28 March 364 9 August 378 Born in 328 A soldier of the Roman army he was appointed Emperor of the East by his elder brother Valentinian I Killed at the Battle of Adrianople GratianGratianos Gratianus 9 August 378 19 January 379 Born on 18 April 23 May 359 the son of Valentinian I Emperor of the West he inherited rule of the East upon the death of Valens and appointed Theodosius I as Emperor of the East Assassinated on 25 August 383 during the rebellion of Magnus Maximus Theodosian dynasty 379 457 Edit See also Theodosian dynastyTheodosius I the Great 8eodosios ὁ Megas 19 January 379 17 January 395 Born on 11 January 347 in Spain Aristocrat and military leader brother in law of Gratian who appointed him as emperor of the East He reunited the whole Empire after defeating Eugenius at the Battle of the Frigidus on 6 September 394 The last emperor to rule both halves of the Empire ArcadiusἈrkadios 17 January 395 1 May 408 Born in 377 378 the eldest son of Theodosius I proclaimed Augustus on 16 January 383 On the death of Theodosius I in 395 the Roman Empire was permanently divided between the Eastern Roman Empire later known as the Byzantine Empire and the Western Roman Empire Theodosius eldest son Arcadius became emperor in the East while his younger son Honorius became emperor in the West Theodosius II8eodosios 1 May 408 28 July 450 Born on 10 April 401 the only son of Arcadius proclaimed Augustus on 10 January 402 Succeeded upon the death of his father As a minor the praetorian prefect Anthemius was regent in 408 414 He died in a riding accident MarcianMarkianos Marcianus 25 August 450 27 January 457 Born in 396 A soldier and politician he became emperor after being wed by the Augusta Pulcheria sister of Theodosius II following the latter s death Died of gangrene Leonid dynasty 457 518 Edit See also Leonid dynastyLeo I the Great and the Butcher Lewn ὁ Megas Makellhs 7 February 457 18 January 474 Born in Dacia c 400 and of Bessian origin Leo became a low ranking officer and served as an attendant of the Gothic magister militum Aspar who chose him as emperor on Marcian s death He was the first emperor to be crowned by the Patriarch of Constantinople and the first one to legislate in Greek 8 His reign was marked by the pacification of the Danube and peace with Persia which allowed him to intervene in the affairs of the West supporting candidates for the throne and dispatching an expedition to recover Carthage from the Vandals in 468 Initially a puppet of Aspar Leo began promoting the Isaurians as a counterweight to Aspar s Goths marrying his daughter Ariadne to the Isaurian leader Tarasicodissa Zeno With their support in 471 Aspar was murdered and Gothic power over the army was broken 9 Leo II the Little Lewn ὁ mikros 18 January November 474 Born 468 he was the grandson of Leo I by Leo s daughter Ariadne and her Isaurian husband Zeno He was raised to Augustus on 17 November 473 Leo ascended the throne after the death of his grandfather on 18 January 474 He crowned his father as co emperor and effective regent on 29 January dying shortly after ZenoZhnwn Tarasikodissas November 474 9 January 475August 476 9 April 491 Born c 425 in Isauria originally named Tarasicodissa As the leader of Leo I s Isaurian soldiers he rose to comes domesticorum married the emperor s daughter Ariadne and took the name Zeno and played a crucial role in the elimination of Aspar and his Goths He was named co emperor by his son on 29 January 474 and became sole ruler upon the latter s death but had to flee to his native country before Basiliscus in 475 regaining control of the capital in 476 Zeno concluded peace with the Vandals saw off challenges against him by Illus and Verina and secured peace in the Balkans by enticing the Ostrogoths under Theodoric the Great to migrate to Italy Zeno s reign also saw the end of the western line of emperors His pro Monophysite stance made him unpopular and his promulgation of the Henotikon resulted in the Acacian Schism with the papacy 10 BasiliscusBasiliskos 9 January 475 August 476 General and brother in law of Leo I seized power from Zeno and crowned himself emperor on 12 January Zeno was restored soon after Died in 476 477Anastasius I Dicorus Ἀnastasios ὁ Dikoros 11 April 491 9 July 518 Born c 430 at Dyrrhachium he was a palace official silentiarius when he was chosen as her husband and Emperor by Empress dowager Ariadne He was nicknamed Dikoros Latin Dicorus because of his heterochromia Anastasius reformed the tax system and the Byzantine coinage and proved a frugal ruler so that by the end of his reign he left a substantial surplus His Monophysite sympathies led to widespread opposition most notably the Revolt of Vitalian and the Acacian Schism His reign was also marked by the first Bulgar raids into the Balkans and by a war with Persia over the foundation of Dara He died childless 11 Justinian dynasty 518 602 Edit See also Byzantine Empire under the Justinian dynastyJustin IἸoystῖnos Iustinus 9 July 518 1 August 527 Born c 450 at Bederiana Justiniana Prima Dardania Officer and commander of the Excubitors bodyguard under Anastasius I he was elected by army and people upon the death of Anastasius I Justinian I the Great Ἰoystinianὸs ὁ MegasPetrus Sabbatius Iustinianus 1 August 527 14 November 565 Born in 482 483 at Tauresium Taor Macedonia Nephew of Justin I raised to co emperor on 1 April 527 Succeeded on Justin I s death Attempted to restore the western territories of the Empire reconquering Italy North Africa and parts of Spain Also responsible for the corpus juris civilis or the body of civil law which is the foundation of law for many modern European nations 12 Justin IIἸoystῖnos Iustinus 14 November 565 5 October 578 Born c 520 Nephew of Justinian I he seized the throne on the death of Justinian I with support of army and Senate Became insane hence in 573 574 under the regency of his wife Sophia and in 574 578 under the regency of Tiberius Constantine Tiberius II ConstantineTiberios KwnstantῖnosTiberius Constantinus 5 October 578 14 August 582 Born c 535 commander of the Excubitors friend and adoptive son of Justin Was named Caesar and regent in 574 Succeeded on Justin II s death MauriceMayrikios TiberiosMauricius Tiberius 14 August 582 27 November 602 Born in 539 at Arabissus Cappadocia Became an official and later a general Married the daughter of Tiberius II and was proclaimed emperor on 13 August 582 Named his son Theodosius as co emperor in 590 Deposed by Phocas and executed on 27 November 602 at Chalcedon Non dynastic 602 610 EditPhocasFwkᾶs Focas 23 November 602 5 October 610 Subaltern in the Balkan army he led a rebellion that deposed Maurice Increasingly unpopular and tyrannical he was deposed and executed by Heraclius Heraclian dynasty 610 695 Edit See also Byzantine Empire under the Heraclian dynastyHeracliusἩrakleios 5 October 610 11 February 641 Born c 575 as the eldest son of the Exarch of Africa Heraclius the Elder Began a revolt against Phocas in 609 and deposed him in October 610 Brought the Byzantine Sassanid War of 602 628 to successful conclusion but was unable to stop the Muslim conquest of Syria Officially replaced Latin with Greek as the language of administration Constantine III c Ἡrakleios KwnstantῖnosHeraclius Constantinus 11 February 25 May 641 Born on 3 May 612 as the eldest son of Heraclius by his first wife Fabia Eudokia Named co emperor on 22 January 613 he succeeded to throne with his younger brother Heraklonas following the death of Heraclius Died of tuberculosis allegedly poisoned by Empress dowager Martina HeraclonasἩraklewnᾶs Heraclius 11 February c 5 November 641 Born in 626 to Heraclius second wife Martina named co emperor on 4 July 638 Succeeded to throne with Constantine III following the death of Heraclius Sole emperor after the death of Constantine III under the regency of Martina but was forced to name Constans II co emperor by the army and was deposed by the Senate in September 641 or early 642 Constans II the Bearded Kwnstas ὁ PwgwnᾶtosHeraclius Constantinus c 5 November 641 15 July 668 Born on 7 November 630 the son of Constantine III Raised to co emperor in summer 641 after his father s death due to army pressure he became sole emperor after the forced abdication of his uncle Heraklonas Baptized Heraclius he reigned as Constantine Constans is his nickname Moved his seat to Syracuse where he was assassinated possibly on the orders of Mizizios Constantine IV the Younger Kwnstantῖnos ὁ neosConstantinus September 668 c 10 July 685 Born in 652 co emperor since 13 April 654 he succeeded following the murder of his father Constans II Erroneously called Constantine the Bearded by historians through confusion with his father He called the Third Council of Constantinople which condemned the heresy of Monothelitism repelled the First Arab Siege of Constantinople and died of dysentery Justinian II the Slit nosed Ἰoystinianὸs ὁ ῬinotmhtosIustinianus first reign c 10 July 685 695 Born in 669 son of Constantine IV he was named co emperor in 681 and became sole emperor upon Constantine IV s death Deposed by military revolt in 695 mutilated hence his surname and exiled to Cherson whence he recovered his throne in 705 Twenty Years Anarchy 695 717 Edit Main article Twenty Years AnarchyLeontiusLeontios 695 698 General from Isauria he deposed Justinian II and was overthrown in another revolt in 698 He was executed in February 706 Tiberius III ApsimarTiberios Ἀpsimaros 698 705 Admiral of Germanic origin originally named Apsimar He rebelled against Leontius after a failed expedition Reigned under the name of Tiberius until deposed by Justinian II in 705 Executed in February 706 Justinian II the Slit nosed second reign c 21 August 705 4 November 711 Returned on the throne with Bulgar support Named son Tiberius as co emperor in 706 Deposed and killed by military revolt Philippicus BardanesFilippikos Bardanhs 4 November 711 3 June 713 A general of Armenian origin he deposed Justinian II and was in turn overthrown by a revolt of the Opsician troops Anastasius II ArtemiusἈnastasios ʹἈrtemios 4 June 713 late 715 Originally named Artemios A bureaucrat and secretary under Philippicus he was raised to the purple by the soldiers who overthrew Philippicus Deposed by another military revolt he led an abortive attempt to regain the throne in 718 and was killed Theodosius III8eodosios late 715 25 March 717 A fiscal official he was proclaimed emperor by the rebellious Opsician troops Entered Constantinople in November 715 Abdicated following the revolt of Leo the Isaurian and became a monk Isaurian dynasty 717 802 Edit See also Byzantine Empire under the Isaurian dynastyLeo III the Isaurian Lewn ὁ Ἴsayros 25 March 717 18 June 741 Born c 685 in Germanikeia Commagene he became a general Rose in rebellion and secured the throne in spring 717 Repelled the Second Arab Siege of Constantinople and initiated the Byzantine Iconoclasm Constantine V the Dung named Kwnstantῖnos Koprwnymos 18 June 741 14 September 775 Born in July 718 the only son of Leo III Co emperor since 720 he succeeded upon his father s death After overcoming the usurpation of Artabasdos he continued his father s iconoclastic policies and won several victories against the Arabs and the Bulgars He is given the surname the Dung named by hostile later chroniclers ArtabasdosἈrtabasdos June 741 2 November 743 General and son in law of Leo III Count of the Opsician Theme Led a revolt that secured Constantinople but was defeated and deposed by Constantine V who blinded and tonsured him Leo IV the Khazar Lewn ὁ Xazaros 14 September 775 8 September 780 Born on 25 January 750 as the eldest son of Constantine V Co emperor since 751 he succeeded upon his father s death Constantine VIKwnstantῖnos 8 September 780 19 August 797 Born in 771 the only child of Leo IV Co emperor since 14 April 776 sole emperor upon Leo s death in 780 until 790 under the regency of his mother Irene of Athens He was overthrown on Irene s orders blinded and imprisoned probably dying of his wounds shortly after IreneEἰrhnh 19 August 797 31 October 802 Born c 752 in Athens she married Leo IV on 3 November 768 and was crowned empress on 17 December Regent for her son Constantine VI in 780 790 she overthrew him in 797 and became empress regnant In 787 she called the Second Council of Nicaea which condemned the practice of iconoclasm and restored the veneration of icons to Christian practice Deposed in a palace coup in 802 she was exiled and died on 9 August 803 Nikephorian dynasty 802 813 Edit Main article Byzantine Empire under the Nikephorian dynastyNikephoros I Genikos or the Logothete Nikhforos ὁ Genikos ὁ Logo8eths 31 October 802 26 July 811 Logothetes tou genikou general finance minister under Irene led initially successful campaigns against the Bulgars but was killed at the Battle of Pliska StaurakiosStayrakios 26 July 811 2 October 811 Only son of Nikephoros I crowned co emperor in December 803 Succeeded on his father s death however he had been heavily wounded at Pliska and left paralyzed He was forced to abdicate and retired to a monastery where he died soon after Michael I RangabeMixaὴl Ῥaggabe 2 October 811 11 July 813 Son in law of Nikephoros I he succeeded Staurakios on his abdication Resigned after the revolt under Leo the Armenian and retired to a monastery where he died on 11 January 844 Reigned with eldest son Theophylact as co emperor Non dynastic 813 820 EditLeo V the Armenian Lewn ὁ Ἀrmenios 11 July 813 25 December 820 General of Armenian origin born c 755 He rebelled against Michael I and became emperor Appointed his son Symbatios co emperor under the name of Constantine in 813 Revived Byzantine Iconoclasm Murdered by a conspiracy led by Michael the Amorian Amorian dynasty 820 867 Edit See also Byzantine Empire under the Amorian dynastyMichael II the Amorian Mixaὴl ὁ ἐ3 Ἀmorioy 25 December 820 2 October 829 Born in 770 at Amorium he became an army officer A friend of Leo V he was raised to high office but led the conspiracy that murdered him Survived the rebellion of Thomas the Slav lost Crete to the Arabs and faced the beginning of the Muslim conquest of Sicily reinforced iconoclasm Theophilos8eofilos 2 October 829 20 January 842 Born in 813 as the only son of Michael II Crowned co emperor on 12 May 821 he succeeded on his father s death Michael III the Drunkard Mixaὴl ὁ Me8ysos 20 January 842 24 September 867 His precise date of birth is uncertain but the balance of available evidence supports a birthdate in January 840 The son of Theophilos he succeeded on Theophilos death Under the regency of his mother Theodora until 856 and under the effective control of his uncle Bardas in 862 866 Ended iconoclasm Murdered by Basil the Macedonian A pleasure loving ruler he was nicknamed the Drunkard by later pro Basil chroniclers Macedonian dynasty 867 1056 Edit See also Macedonian dynasty and Byzantine Empire under the Macedonian dynastyBasil I the Macedonian Basileios ὁ Makedwn 24 September 867 29 August 886 Born in the Theme of Macedonia c 811 he rose in prominence through palace service becoming a favourite of Michael III who crowned him co emperor on 26 May 866 He overthrew Michael and established the Macedonian dynasty He led successful wars in the East against the Arabs and the Paulicians and recovered southern Italy for the Empire Leo VI the Wise Lewn ὁ Sofos 29 August 886 11 May 912 Born on 19 September 866 either the legitimate son of Basil I or the illegitimate son of Michael III Co emperor since 6 January 870 Leo was known for his erudition His reign saw a height in Saracen Muslim naval raids culminating in the Sack of Thessalonica and was marked by unsuccessful wars against the Bulgarians under Simeon I AlexanderἈle3andros 11 May 912 6 June 913 Son of Basil I Alexander was born in 870 and raised to co emperor in 879 Sidelined by Leo VI Alexander dismissed his brother s principal aides on his accession He died of exhaustion after a polo game Romanos I LekapenosῬwmanὸs Lekaphnos 17 December 920 20 December 944 An admiral of lowly origin Romanos rose to power as a protector of the young Constantine VII against the general Leo Phokas the Elder After becoming the emperor s father in law he successively assumed higher offices until he crowned himself senior emperor His reign was marked by the end of warfare with Bulgaria and the great conquests of John Kourkouas in the East Romanos promoted his sons Stephen and Constantine alongside Christopher who died soon after as co emperors over Constantine VII but was himself overthrown by them and confined to an island as a monk He died there on 15 June 948 Constantine VII the Purple born Kwnstantῖnos ὁ Porfyrogennhtos 6 June 913 9 November 959 Son of Leo VI he was born on 17 18 May 905 and raised to co emperor on 15 May 908 His early reign was dominated by successive regencies first by his mother Zoe Karbonopsina and Patriarch Nicholas Mystikos and from 919 by the admiral Romanos Lekapenos who wedded his daughter to Constantine and was crowned senior emperor in 920 Constantine re asserted his control by deposing Romanos s sons on 27 January 945 His reign was marked by struggles with Sayf al Dawla in the East and an unsuccessful campaign against Crete and pro aristocratic policies that saw a partial reversal of Lekapenos legislation against the dynatoi He is notable for his promotion of the Macedonian Renaissance sponsoring encyclopaedic works and histories He was a prolific writer himself best remembered for the manuals on statecraft De administrando imperio and ceremonies De ceremoniis he compiled for his son 13 Romanos II the Purple born Ῥwmanὸs ὁ Porfyrogennhtos 9 November 959 15 March 963 The only surviving son of Constantine VII he was born on 15 March 938 and succeeded his father on the latter s death He ruled until his own death although the government was led mostly by the eunuch Joseph Bringas His reign was marked by successful warfare in the East against Sayf al Dawla and the recovery of Crete by general Nikephoros Phokas Nikephoros II PhokasNikhforos Fwkᾶs 16 August 963 11 December 969 The most successful general of his generation Nikephoros II was born c 912 to the powerful Phokas clan After the death of Romanos II he rose to the throne with the support of the army and people as regent for the young emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII marrying the empress dowager Theophano Throughout his reign he led campaigns in the East conquering much of Syria He was murdered by his nephew and one time associate John Tzimiskes John I TzimiskesἸwannhs ὁ Tsimiskὴs 11 December 969 10 January 976 Nephew of Nikephoros Phokas Tzimiskes was born c 925 A successful general he fell out with his uncle and led a conspiracy of disgruntled generals who murdered him Tzimiskes succeeded Nikephoros as emperor and regent for the young sons of Romanos II As ruler Tzimiskes crushed the Rus in Bulgaria and ended the Bulgarian tsardom before going on to campaign in the East where he died Basil II the Bulgar Slayer Basileios ὁ Boylgaroktonos 10 January 976 15 December 1025 Eldest son of Romanos II Basil was born in 958 The first decade of his reign was marked by rivalry with the powerful Basil Lekapenos an unsuccessful war against Bulgaria and rebellions by generals in Asia Minor Basil solidified his position through a marriage alliance with Vladimir I of Kiev and after suppressing the revolts he embarked on his conquest of Bulgaria Bulgaria was finally subdued in 1018 after over 20 years of war interrupted only by sporadic warfare in Syria against the Fatimid Caliphate Basil also expanded Byzantine control over most of Armenia His reign is widely considered as the apogee of medieval Byzantium Constantine VIII the Purple born Kwnstantῖnos ὁ Porfyrogennhtos 15 December 1025 12 November 1028 The second son of Romanos II Constantine was born in 960 and raised to co emperor on 30 March 962 During the rule of Basil II he spent his time in idle pleasure During his short reign he was an indifferent ruler easily influenced by his courtiers and suspicious of plots to depose him especially among the military aristocracy many of whom were blinded and exiled 14 Romanos III ArgyrosῬwmanὸs Ἀrgyros 15 November 1028 11 April 1034 Born in 968 the elderly aristocrat Romanos was chosen by Constantine VIII on his deathbed as Zoe s husband and succeeded on the throne after Constantine s death a few days later Michael IV the Paphlagonian Mixaὴl ὁ Paflagwn 11 April 1034 10 December 1041 Born in 1010 he became a lover of Zoe even while Romanos III was alive and succeeded him upon his death as her husband and emperor Aided by his older brother the eunuch John the Orphanotrophos his reign was moderately successful against internal rebellions but his attempt to recover Sicily failed He died after a long illness Michael V the Caulker Mixaὴl ὁ Kalafaths 10 December 1041 20 April 1042 Born in 1015 he was the nephew and adopted son of Michael IV During his reign he tried to sideline Zoe but a popular revolt forced him to restore her as empress on 19 April 1042 along with her sister Theodora He was deposed the next day castrated and tonsured dying on 24 August 1042 Zoe the Purple born Zwὴ ἡ Porfyrogennhtos 21 April 1042 1050 The daughter of Constantine VIII she succeeded on her father s death as the only surviving member of the Macedonian dynasty along with her sister Theodora Her three husbands Romanos III 1028 1034 Michael IV 1034 1041 and Constantine IX 1042 1050 ruled alongside her Theodora the Purple born 8eodwra ἡ Porfyrogennhtos 21 April 1042 31 August 1056 The younger sister of Zoe born in 984 she was raised as co ruler on 19 April 1042 After Zoe married her third husband Constantine IX in June 1042 Theodora was again sidelined After Zoe died in 1050 and Constantine in 1055 Theodora assumed full governance of the Empire and reigned until her death She nominated Michael VI as her successor Constantine IX MonomachosKwnstantῖnos Monomaxos 12 June 1042 11 January 1055 Born c 1000 of noble origin he had an undistinguished life but was exiled to Lesbos by Michael IV returning when he was chosen as Zoe s third husband Constantine supported the mercantile classes and favoured the company of intellectuals thereby alienating the military aristocracy A pleasure loving ruler he lived an extravagant life with his favourite mistresses and endowed a number of monasteries chiefly the Nea Moni of Chios and the Mangana Monastery His reign was marked by invasions by the Pechenegs in the Balkans and the Seljuk Turks in the East the revolts of George Maniakes and Leo Tornikios and the Great Schism between the patriarchates of Rome and Constantinople 15 Non dynastic 1056 1057 EditMichael VI Bringas Stratiotikos the Old Mixaὴl Briggas ὁ Stratiwtikos ὁ Gerwn 31 August 1056 30 31 August 1057 A court bureaucrat and stratiotikos logothetes hence his first sobriquet Crowned emperor by Theodora on 22 August 1056 Deposed by military revolt under Isaac Komnenos he retired to a monastery where he died in 1059 Komnenid dynasty 1057 1059 Edit See also Komnenos and Byzantine Empire under the Komnenos dynastyIsaac I KomnenosἸsaakios Komnhnos 1 September 1057 22 November 1059 Born c 1005 A successful general he rose in revolt leading the eastern armies and was declared emperor on 8 June 1057 he was recognized after the abdication of Michael He resigned in 1059 and died c 1061 Doukid dynasty 1059 1081 Edit See also Doukas and Byzantine Empire under the Doukas dynastyConstantine X DoukasKwnstantῖnos Doykas 23 November 1059 23 May 1067 Born in 1006 he became a general and close ally of Isaac Komnenos and succeeded him as emperor on his abdication Named his sons Michael Andronikos and Konstantios as co emperors After his death his widow was regent until the accession of Romanus IV Romanos IV DiogenesῬwmanὸs Diogenhs 1 January 1068 1 October 1071 Born in 1032 a successful general he married empress dowager Eudokia Makrembolitissa and became senior emperor as guardian of her sons by Constantine X Deposed by the Doukas partisans after the Battle of Manzikert blinded in June 1072 and exiled He died soon after Michael VII Doukas Parapinakes Mixaὴl Doykas Parapinakhs 1 October 1071 24 March 1078 Born in 1050 as the eldest son of Constantine X Co emperor since 1059 he succeeded on his father s death Due to his minority he was under the regency of his mother Eudokia Makrembolitissa in 1067 1068 and relegated to junior emperor under her second husband Romanos IV Diogenes in 1068 71 Senior emperor in 1071 78 he named his son Constantine co emperor alongside his brothers He abdicated before the revolt of Nikephoros Botaneiates retired to a monastery and died c 1090 His reign saw the devaluation of the Byzantine currency by 25 hence his nickname minus a quarter Nikephoros III BotaneiatesNikhforos Botaneiaths 27 March 1078 1 April 1081 Born in 1001 he was the strategos of the Anatolic Theme He was proclaimed emperor on 7 January and crowned on 27 March or 3 April He weathered several revolts but was overthrown by the Komnenos clan He retired to a monastery where he died in the same year Komnenid dynasty 1081 1185 Edit See also Komnenos and Byzantine Empire under the Komnenos dynastyAlexios I KomnenosἈle3ios Komnhnos 1 April 1081 15 August 1118 Born in 1056 a nephew of Isaac I Komnenos A distinguished general he overthrew Nikephoros III His reign was dominated by wars against the Normans and the Seljuk Turks as well as the arrival of the First Crusade and the establishment of independent Crusader states He retained Constantine Doukas as co emperor until 1087 and named his eldest son John co emperor in 1092 John II KomnenosἸwannhs Komnhnos 15 August 1118 8 April 1143 Born on 13 September 1087 as the eldest son of Alexios I Co emperor since 1092 he succeeded upon his father s death His reign was focused on wars with the Turks A popular pious and frugal ruler he was known as John the Good Named his eldest son Alexios co emperor in 1122 but the son predeceased his father Manuel I KomnenosManoyὴl Komnhnos 8 April 1143 24 September 1180 Born on 28 November 1118 as the fourth and youngest son of John II he was chosen as emperor over his elder brother Isaac by his father on his deathbed An energetic ruler he launched campaigns against the Turks humbled Hungary achieved supremacy over the Crusader states and tried unsuccessfully to recover Italy and Egypt His extravagance and constant campaigning however depleted the Empire s resources Alexios II KomnenosἈle3ios Komnhnos 24 September 1180 c September 1183 Born on 14 September 1169 as the only son of Manuel I In 1180 1182 under the regency of his mother Maria of Antioch She was overthrown by Andronikos I Komnenos who became co emperor and finally had Alexios II deposed and killed Andronikos I KomnenosἈndronikos Komnhnos c September 1183 12 September 1185 Born c 1118 a nephew of John II by his brother Isaac A general he was imprisoned for conspiring against John II but escaped and spent 15 years in exile in various courts in eastern Europe and the Middle East He seized the regency from Maria of Antioch in 1182 and subsequently throne from his nephew Alexios II An unpopular ruler he was overthrown and lynched in a popular uprising Angelid dynasty 1185 1204 Edit See also Angelos and Byzantine Empire under the Angelos dynastyIsaac II AngelosἸsaakios Ἄggelos 12 September 1185 8 April 11951 August 1203 27 January 1204 Born in September 1156 Isaac came to the throne at the head of a popular revolt against Andronikos I His reign was marked by revolts and wars in the Balkans especially against a resurgent Bulgaria He was deposed blinded and imprisoned by his elder brother Alexios III He was later restored to the throne by the Crusaders and Alexios IV Due to their failure to deal with the Crusaders demands he was deposed by Alexios V Doukas in January 1204 and died in January 1204 perhaps of poison Alexios III AngelosἈle3ios Ἄggelos 8 April 1195 18 July 1203 Born in 1153 Alexios was the elder brother of Isaac II His reign was marked by misgovernment and the increasing autonomy of provincial magnates He was deposed by the Fourth Crusade and fled Constantinople roaming Greece and Asia Minor searching for support to regain his throne He died in Nicaean captivity confined to a monastery in 1211 Alexios IV AngelosἈle3ios Ἄggelos 1 August 1203 27 January 1204 Born in 1182 the son of Isaac II He enlisted the Fourth Crusade to return his father to the throne and reigned alongside his restored father from 19 July 1203 Due to their failure to deal with the Crusaders demands he was deposed by Alexios V Doukas in January 1204 and was strangled on 8 February Alexios V Doukas Mourtzouphlos Ἀle3ios Doykas ὁ Moyrtzoyflos 5 February 1204 12 April 1204 Born in 1140 the son in law of Alexios III and a prominent aristocrat he deposed Isaac II and Alexios IV in a palace coup He tried to repel the Crusaders but they captured Constantinople forcing Mourtzouphlos to flee He joined the exiled Alexios III but was later blinded by the latter Captured by the Crusaders he was executed in December 1205 Laskarid dynasty Empire of Nicaea 1204 1261 Edit See also Laskaris and Empire of NicaeaTheodore I Laskaris8eodwros Laskaris 6 April 1208 November 1221 Born c 1174 he rose to prominence as a son in law of Alexios III His brother Constantine Laskaris or Theodore himself it is uncertain was elected emperor by the citizens of Constantinople on the day before the city fell to the Crusaders Constantine only remained for a few hours before the sack of the city and later fled to Nicaea where Theodore organized the Greek resistance to the Latins Proclaimed emperor after Constantine s death in 1205 Theodore was crowned only in Easter 1208 He managed to stop the Latin advance in Asia and to repel Seljuk attacks establishing the Empire of Nicaea as the strongest of the Greek successor states John III VatatzesἸwannhs Batatzhs December 1221 3 November 1254 Born c 1192 he became the son in law and successor of Theodore I in 1212 A capable ruler and soldier he expanded his state in Bithynia Thrace and Macedonia at the expense of the Latin Empire Bulgaria and the rival Greek state of Epirus Theodore II Laskaris8eodwros Laskaris 3 November 1254 16 August 1258 Born in 1221 1222 as the only son of John III he succeeded on his father s death His reign was marked by his hostility towards the major houses of the aristocracy and by his victory against Bulgaria and the subsequent expansion into and Albania John IV LaskarisἸwannhs Laskaris 16 August 1258 25 December 1261 Born on 25 December 1250 as the only son of Theodore II he succeeded on his father s death Due to his minority the regency was exercised at first by George Mouzalon until his assassination and then by Michael Palaiologos who within months was crowned senior emperor After the recovery of Constantinople in August 1261 Palaiologos sidelined John IV completely had him blinded and imprisoned John IV died c 1305 Palaiologan dynasty restored to Constantinople 1261 1453 Edit See also Palaiologos and Byzantine Empire under the Palaiologos dynastyMichael VIII PalaiologosMixaὴl Palaiologos 1 January 1259 11 December 1282 Born in 1223 great grandson of Alexios III grandnephew of John III by marriage Senior emperor alongside John IV in 1259 His forces reconquered Constantinople on 25 July 1261 thus restoring the Empire He entered the city and was crowned on 15 August Became sole emperor after deposing John IV on 25 December 1261 Andronikos II PalaiologosἈndronikos Palaiologos 11 December 1282 24 May 1328 Son of Michael VIII born on 25 March 1259 Named co emperor in 1261 crowned in 1272 he succeeded as sole emperor on Michael s death Favouring monks and intellectuals he neglected the army and his reign saw the collapse of the Byzantine position in Asia Minor He named his son Michael IX co emperor In a protracted civil war he was first forced to recognize his grandson Andronikos III as co emperor and was then deposed outright He died on 13 February 1332 Michael IX PalaiologosMixaὴl Palaiologos 21 May 1294 12 October 1320 Son and co ruler of Andronikos II named co emperor in 1281 but not crowned until 21 May 1294 Allegedly died of grief due to the accidental murder of his second son 16 Andronikos III PalaiologosἈndronikos Palaiologos 24 May 1328 15 June 1341 Son of Michael IX he was born on 25 March 1297 and named co emperor in 1316 Rival emperor since July 1321 he deposed his grandfather Andronikos II in 1328 and ruled as sole emperor until his death Supported by John Kantakouzenos his reign saw defeats against the Ottoman emirate but successes in Europe where Epirus and Thessaly were recovered John V PalaiologosἸwannhs Palaiologos 19 November 1341 12 August 1376 Only son of Andronikos III he had not been crowned or declared heir at his father s death a fact which led to the outbreak of a destructive civil war between his regents and his father s closest aide John VI Kantakouzenos who was crowned co emperor The conflict ended in 1347 with Kantakouzenos recognized as senior emperor but he was deposed by John V in 1354 during another civil war Matthew Kantakouzenos raised by John VI to co emperor was also deposed in 1357 John V appealed to the West for aid against the Ottomans but in 1371 he was forced to recognize Ottoman suzerainty John VI KantakouzenosἸwannhs Kantakoyzhnos 21 May 1347 10 December 1354 A maternal relative of the Palaiologoi he was declared co emperor on 26 October 1341 and was recognized as senior emperor for ten years after the end of the civil war on 8 February 1347 Deposed by John V in 1354 he became a monk dying on 15 June 1383 Andronikos IV PalaiologosἈndronikos Palaiologos 12 August 1376 1 July 1379 Son of John V and grandson of John VI he was born on 2 April 1348 and raised to co emperor c 1352 He deposed his father on 12 August 1376 and ruled until overthrown in turn in 1379 He was again recognized as co emperor in 1381 and given Selymbria as an appanage dying there on 28 June 1385 John V Palaiologos second reign 1 July 1379 14 April 1390 Restored to senior emperor he was reconciled with Andronikos IV in 1381 re appointing him co emperor He was overthrown again in 1390 by his grandson John VII John VII PalaiologosἸwannhs Palaiologos 14 April 1390 17 September 1390 Son of Andronikos IV he was born in 1370 and named co emperor under his father in 1377 79 He usurped the throne from his grandfather John V for five months in 1390 but with Ottoman mediation he was reconciled with John V and his uncle Manuel II As regent he held Constantinople against the Ottomans in 1399 1402 and was then given Thessalonica as an appanage which he governed until his death on 22 September 1408 John V Palaiologos third reign 17 September 1390 16 February 1391 Restored to senior emperor he ruled until his death in February 1391 Manuel II PalaiologosManoyὴl Palaiologos 16 February 1391 21 July 1425 Second son of John V he was born on 27 June 1350 Raised to co emperor in 1373 he became senior emperor on John V s death and ruled until his death He journeyed to the West European courts seeking aid against the Turks and was able to use the Ottoman defeat in the Battle of Ankara to regain some territories and throw off his vassalage to them John VIII PalaiologosἸwannhs Palaiologos 21 July 1425 31 October 1448 Eldest surviving son of Manuel II he was born on 18 December 1392 Raised to co emperor around 1416 and named full autokrator on 19 January 1421 he succeeded his father on his death Seeking aid against the resurgent Ottomans he ratified the Union of the Churches in 1439 Constantine XIDragases PalaiologosKwnstantῖnos Dragashs Palaiologos 6 January 1449 29 May 1453 The fourth son of Manuel II and Serbian princess Helena Dragas he was born on 8 February 1405 As Despot of the Morea since 1428 he distinguished himself in campaigns that annexed the Principality of Achaea and brought the Duchy of Athens under temporary Byzantine suzerainty but was unable to repel Turkish attacks under Turahan Bey As the eldest surviving brother he succeeded John VIII after the latter s death Facing the designs of the new sultan Mehmed II on Constantinople Constantine acknowledged the Union of the Churches and made repeated appeals for help to the West but in vain Refusing to surrender the city he was killed during the final Ottoman attack on 29 May 1453 17 See also Edit Byzantine Empire portal Lists portalFamily tree of Byzantine emperors List of Roman emperors List of Trapezuntine emperors List of Roman usurpers List of Byzantine usurpers Succession to the Byzantine Empire List of Roman and Byzantine empresses List of Byzantine emperors of Armenian origin Family tree of Roman emperors History of the Byzantine EmpireNotes Edit Regnal numbers were never used in the Byzantine Empire Instead the Byzantines used nicknames and patronymics to distinguish rulers of the same name The numbering of Byzantine emperors is a purely historiographical invention By the 4th century the name Flavius had become a part of the imperial title Cameron Alan 1988 Flavius a Nicety of Protocol Societe d Etudes Latines de Bruxelles 47 1 26 33 JSTOR 41540754 The regnal numbering follows Constantine II who was emperor in the West 317 340 References Edit a b Nicol Donald MacGillivray Last Centuries of Byzantium 1261 1453 Cambridge University Press Second Edition 1993 p 72 Hereditary succession to the throne was a custom or a convenience in Byzantium not an inviolable principle Emperors particularly in the later period would take pains to nominate their sons as co emperors for the rule of a dynasty made for stability and continuity But in theory the road to the throne was a carriere ouverte aux talents career open to talents Hooker Richard 1 October 2007 European Middle Ages The Byzantine Empire Washington State University Archived from the original on 24 February 1999 Retrieved 25 August 2015 Charanis Peter July 1969 Early Christian and Byzantine Political Philosophy Origins and Background Francis Dvornik Speculum 44 3 459 460 doi 10 2307 2855514 ISSN 0038 7134 JSTOR 2855514 Morrisson Cecile 2013 Displaying the Emperor s Authority and Kharakter on the Marketplace in Armstrong Pamela Authority in Byzantium Routledge p 72 ISBN 978 1409436089 p 183 Karayannopoulous Yanis State Organization Social Structure Economy and Commerce History of Humanity Scientific and Cultural Development from the Seventh to the Sixteenth Centuries Vol IV M A Al Bakhit L Bazin S M Cissoko and M S Asimov Editors UNESCO Paris 2000 Gregory Timothy E Cutler Anthony 1991 Constantine I the Great In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 498 500 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Gregory Timothy E 1991 Constantius II In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press p 524 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Wickham Christopher 2009 The inheritance of Rome Penguin p 90 ISBN 9780670020980 Gregory Timothy E Cutler Anthony 1991 Leo I In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 1206 1207 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Gregory Timothy E 1991 Zeno In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press p 2223 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Gregory Timothy E 1991 Anastasios I In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 McKay Hill A History of World Societies Bedford St Martin s 9th edition 2012 Kazhdan Alexander Cutler Anthony 1991 Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 502 503 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Brand Charles M Cutler Anthony 1991 Constantine VIII In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 503 504 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Brand Charles M Cutler Anthony 1991 Constantine IX Monomachos In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press p 504 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Talbot Alice Mary Cutler Anthony 1991 Michael IX Palaiologos In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 1367 1368 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Talbot Alice Mary 1991 Constantine XI Palaiologos In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press p 505 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Byzantine emperors amp oldid 1144096929, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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