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Byzantine bureaucracy and aristocracy

Throughout the fifth century, Hellenistic political systems, philosophies, and theocratic Christian-Eastern concepts had gained power in the eastern Greek-speaking Mediterranean due to the intervention of important religious figures there such as Eusebius of Caesarea (c. 260 – c. 339) and Origen of Alexandria (c. 185 – c. 253) who had been key to developing the constant Christianized worldview of late antiquity.[1][need quotation to verify][2]

Painting of Emperor Basil II in triumphal garb, exemplifying the imperial crown and royal power handed down by Christ and the angels.

By the 6th century, such ideas had already influenced the definitive power of the monarch as the representative of God on earth and of his kingdom as an imitation of God's holy realm.[3] The Byzantine Empire was a multi-ethnic monarchic theocracy adopting, following, and applying the Orthodox-Hellenistic political systems and philosophies.[4][5] The monarch was the incarnation of the law—nomos empsychos—and his power was immeasurable and divine in origin insofar as he channeled God's divine grace, maintaining what is good. He was the ultimate benefactor, caretaker, and saviour of the people: Evergétis, Philanthrōpía, and Sōtēr, anointed with all power, uphoalding the divine laws since he ought to emulate Christ first (christomimetes) in all of his divine, pious, loving orthodox attributes to all by being his earthly presence.[6][7]

The people in turn were the monarch's paroikoi (subjects). He was the sole administrator and lawgiver of the holy Basileia and Oikoumene (commonwealth), with sole power over the state, the land, and his subjects, which he had achieved through God's appointment of him as king. This opened a new stage of deification in which Hellenistic and Eastern court ceremonies such as proskynesis highlighted the divinity of the ruler and became standardized and very often mandatory.[8] In practice, imperial power was exercised as administration—simplified and centralized through viceroys such as the Exarchos, Douk, Katepánō, Kephalai and the Strategoi who enjoyed the same omnipotence and the emperor's God given divinity in their respective governorships.[9]

Such concentrations of power proved to be both a great internal weakness and the cause of various coups and rebellions in which viceroys with provincial armies and, sometimes, entire themes, would often challenge imperial power with claims of their own. In this way emperors such as Nikephoros II Phokas (r. 963–969) and Heraclius (r. 610–641) achieved royal power for themselves.

There were no codified laws on the imperial succession, and the Roman Republic was never formally abolished. Theoretically, each emperor was formally elected, by both the senate (Synkletos) and the army. In practice, however, the Senate had lost all of its former powers and was mostly reduced to a ceremonial role, filled with relatives or close aristocrats to the Emperor; while the Army practically had a monopoly regarding elections. Emperors usually managed to secure succession for their children through indirect means, such as appointing them as co-emperors, and thus introduced various dynasties. The absence of codified succession laws and procedures, as well as the militarized state of the Empire, led to numerous coups and revolts, leading to several disastrous results, such as the 1071 defeat at Manzikert.

Applying Orthodox-Hellenistic political schemes, the monarch's household was the sacred kingdom Oikonomia, and he was its Christ-loving owner and manager Oikonomos, which meant that no individual or institution through the history of the empire truly owned any land in the face of state supreme ownership.[10] Beneath the emperor, a multitude of officials and court functionaries—all directly chosen by the emperor or by one of his representatives—operated the empire's administrative bureaucracy. State officials acted not as magistrates or elected public legates, but as representatives, deputies, and viceroys of the monarch in his different domains throughout the empire. In addition to those officials, a large number of honorific titles existed, which the emperor awarded to prominent subjects or to friendly foreign rulers.

Over the more than a thousand years of the empire's existence, the Imperial administrative system evolved in its adoption of historic titles. At first, the various titles of the empire were the same as those of the late Roman Empire. However, by the era of Heraclius (r. 610–641), many of the titles had become obsolete. By the time of Alexios I (r. 1082–1118), many of the positions were either new or drastically changed. However, from that time on, they remained essentially the same until the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453.

Background history edit

In the early Byzantine period (4th to late 6th century), the administrative structure of the empire was a conglomeration of the late Roman Empire's diocese system, set up by Diocletian and Constantine, and of Justinian's innovations; in the years 535 and 536 Justinian's administrative reforms were formalized. This eliminated the administrative diocese system hierarchy established in previous centuries and with it the strict military and civic divisions within the empire, replacing it with various provincial circumscriptions directly governed by deputies of the emperor, variously called Stratalates, Strategoi and Harmost.[11] These deputies held extraordinary military and administrative powers accompanied by prestigious new titleholders in an attempt to lessen corruption and simplify the emperor's direct handling over its domains, foreshadowing similar future administrative reforms initiated and endorsed by contemporary divine Orthodox monarchical philosophy in the Greek-speaking eastern Mediterranean.[12]

Following the transformation of the Byzantine state during the 7th century due to massive territorial loss to the Muslim conquests, this system had vanished and was replaced by the thematic military system whose functions had been simplified and specialized in the rapid creation of provincial armies. Influenced by Hellenistic political kingship and Orthodox theocratic philosophies, power was relegated to military leaders, with the various Strategoi, Katepan, Douk, Kephalai or Exarch each acting as viceroys in their respective "thémata" or governorships, all being appointed by the sovereign directly.[13] These governors, being the direct representatives of the monarch himself all through the provinces, enjoyed an omnipotence of their own, accompanied by the divine attributes for being deputies of the emperor himself in their respective districts. Their primary tasks were jointly working with the various provincial subordinates of the capital bureaus for the effective collection of taxes from the different communities ("Chora", "Komai"), from the different land owners estates ("proasteion"), and from monasteries ("episkepsis"). Additionally, and more commonly, as the right hand of the emperor in the management of internal and external affairs, they had to provide an efficient management of fast and flexible provincial armies, dispatching them to appease different threats within the borders, or for the management of new successful territorial acquisitions after long-term campaigns, thereby taking key roles as protagonists of any armed offensive headed by the emperor.[14]

A Strategos, or any military governor, was assisted by several deputies, chief among them the tourmarchēs or merarchēs (to a lesser degree also referred as topotērētēs). The main provincial governors and their deputies held equal military and administrative duties within the main sub-division inside a thema, a tourma. These deputies, or any deputy or representative of the Strategos, or of any other military governor, were generally called Ek prosopou, second to them the Krites or Praitor were responsible for the judicial matters inside a Theme. Although the range of tasks of the Krites or Praitor were neither fixed nor dogmatic, as they are shown assisting in various military campaigns or, on occasions, replacing the Strategos in his military duties.[15]

Due to the lack of action or large-scale battles in the thematas of mainland Greece, by the 12th century most of these came to be governed directly by the Megas doux, under him the Krites or Archons of the various coastal cities. The themes, now made up of several Archontates, was accommodated and repurposed solely for the income and maintenance of the Byzantine navy, fulfilling a tax supporting role largely in contrast from the more active and military themas of Strategos and Katepanos focussed in Asia Minor. The duties of said governors were largely limited to the collection of the various maritime taxes of their governorships; the management of the various large urban centers such as Athens, Corinth or Thebes; and a basic level of protection for its provinces against pirates and any other parties.[16]

During the "classic" or middle period of the Byzantine state (8th-late 11th centuries), a new, court-centered system emerged. In this, dignities of a certain level were awarded with new titles derived from older, now obsolete, public offices. A senatorial class remained in place, which incorporated a large part of the upper officialdom; every official from the rank of protospatharios (literally "first sword-bearer"; originally the head of the Emperor's bodyguards) was considered a member of it.[17] During this period, many families remained important for several centuries, and several Emperors rose from the aristocracy. Two groups can be distinguished: a metropolitan civil nobility and a provincial military one, the latter remaining regionally based and having large land-holdings, but apparently no military forces of their own, in contrast to contemporary Western Europe.

The backbone of Byzantine administration and economy (until the fall of Constantinople) was the joint tax liability system of the different communities inside a théma, duties which were carried out by provincial officials such as the epoptes, exisotes, and praktores of the different bureaus. A Theme was made up of several individuals and institutions, such as the various lands that the many monasteries owned (episkepsis), the soldiers' farming lands (stratiotai), the estates (proasteion) of the land owners (dynatoi) and the peasants (geōrgikē), with most of a village or town (chora or komai) being made up of the later. These were the main source of a constant and rapid revenue that ultimately derived from the earlier Hellenistic fiscal and administrative principle of "epibole".[18] Epibole had served as an accessible tool for the Hellenistic kingdoms for the simple income and rapid collection of taxes by deputies towards various rural communities in the war-time Hellenistic period, after having been adopted and adapted from the late Roman and early Byzantine province of Egypt, which had kept its own former fixed fiscal system as an indirect consequence of the multiple wars and invasions that Byzantium had to deal throughout its history.[19]

After the reforms of Alexios I, the system underwent various changes in which, due to the desperate state of the empire and the urgent need for income to finance its military campaigns and strengthen its borders, several simplifications and concessions were made. The theme system established under the Komnenoi would remain the administrative basis of the Byzantine state until its final fall in 1453, differing in few key aspects from its administrative predecessors; it highlighted a greater centralization of power. The various Themes had been divided into smaller districts called "Katepanakia" which in turn were made up of the various towns and villages (chora), the monastic estates (episkpesis), the estates of the dynatoi (proasteion), and the various pronoia grants. The Themes were ruled by a "Doux", who was positioned by the emperor directly, commonly a relative of his or a close aristocrat to the Basileus. The Katepanakia inside the Theme were ruled by a deputy of the Doux called a "Praktor" or "Energon", they were appointed either by the monarch or the Doux himself, with the primary task of the collection of taxes and a second role in the maintenance of basic order, administration and justice in his district.[20]

Alexios fiscal reforms allowed an institution or individual to catalog and group their land domains and, through it, their fiscal obligations, in a document referred as praktikon. The new reform essentially broke from the integrity of the "chora" or village tax, as its new purpose was the collection of the various taxes regardless of whether collection was by an institution, individual or the village itself, essentially offering it to the highest bidder. Although a simplification, it was not an improvement, as it pushed a great variety of villages and towns to eventually be added to the different episkpesis of either the adjoining monasteries or of the various well-resourced dynatoi landowners, who would become responsible for both their fiscal obligations as monastic institutions, or as individuals, and for the fiscal obligations of the various towns and villages in their domain. This trend culminated in the eventual disappearance of the fiscal individuality that each commune or town had enjoyed, something which emperors like Basil II had fought and delayed with special taxes such as the allelengyon. Becoming one of several towns within the estates of the different institutions and individuals of the time was an unbearable phenomenon for many communes due to the various fiscal tolerances that the basileus offered the different monastic institutions and their estates, further accelerating the disappearance of the fiscal individuality of the villages and towns.[21]

The 10th and 11th centuries saw a rise in importance of the aristocracy, and an increased number of new families entering it. The catastrophic losses in the latter 11th century again prompted a reorganization of the imperial administrative system, at the hands of the new Komnenos dynasty: the older offices and titles fell gradually into disuse, while an array of new honorifics emerged, which signified primarily the closeness of their recipient's familial relationship to the Emperor.[17] The Komnenian-led Empire, and later their Palaiologan successors, were based primarily on the landed aristocracy, keeping the governance of the state tightly controlled by a limited number of intermarrying aristocratic families; for instance in the 11th and 12th century, only 80 civil and 64 military noble families have been identified, a very small number for so large a state.[22] Finally, in the Palaiologan system as reported by pseudo-Kodinos, one can discern the accumulated nomenclature of centuries, with formerly high ranks having been devalued and others taking their place, and the old distinction between office and dignity having vanished.[17]

Imperial titles edit

These were the highest titles, usually limited to members of the imperial family or to a few very select foreign rulers whose friendship the Emperor desired.

Titles used by the emperors edit

 
The back of this coin by Manuel I Comnenus bears his title, porphyrogennetos.
  • Basileus (βασιλεύς), the Greek word for "sovereign" — Originally referred to any king in the Hellenistic period or in any Greek-speaking area of the Roman Empire. It also referred to the Shahs of Persia. Heraclius adopted it in 629, and it became the Greek word for "emperor." Heraclius also used the titles autokrator (αὐτοκράτωρ – "autocrat," "self-ruler") and kyrios (κύριος – "Lord"). The Byzantines reserved the term "basileus" among Christian rulers exclusively for the emperor in Constantinople, and referred to Western European kings as rēgas, a Hellenized form of the Latin word rex ("king"). The feminine form basilissa referred to an empress. Empresses were addressed as eusebestatē avgousta ("Most Pious Augusta"), and were also called kyria ("Lady") or despoina (the female form of "despotes", see below). Primogeniture, or even heredity, were not legally established in Byzantine imperial succession, because in principle the Roman Emperor was selected by common acclamation of the Senate, the People and the Army. This was rooted firmly in the Roman "republican" tradition, whereby hereditary kingship was rejected and the Emperor was nominally the convergence of several offices of the Republic onto one person.[citation needed] Many emperors, anxious to safeguard their firstborn son's right to the throne, had them crowned as co-emperors when they were still children, thus assuring that upon their own death the throne would not be even momentarily vacant. In such a case the need for an imperial selection never arose. In several cases, the new Emperor ascended the throne after marrying the previous Emperor's widow, or indeed after forcing the previous Emperor to abdicate and become a monk. Several emperors were also deposed because of perceived inadequacy, for example after a military defeat, and some were murdered.
  • Porphyrogennētos (πορφυρογέννητος), "born in the purple" — Derived from Hellenistic bureaucracy, emperors wanting to emphasize the legitimacy of their ascent to the throne appended this title to their names, meaning they were born to a reigning emperor in the delivery room of the imperial palace (called the Porphyra because it was paneled with slabs of the reddish-purple stone porphyry), and were therefore legitimate beyond any claim to the contrary.
  • Autokratōr (αὐτοκράτωρ), "self-ruler" — Originally equivalent to imperator, and was used by the emperors.
  • Basileus Autokratōr (βασιλεύς αὐτοκράτωρ) – A combination of titles reserved for the senior of several ruling co-emperors (συμβασιλεῖς, symbasileis), and denoted the person who held substantive political power.

Titles used by the imperial family edit

 
Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos with his family: empress Helena Dragaš (right), and three of their sons, John, Andronikos and Theodore. John, as his father's heir and co-emperor, wears an exact replica of his imperial costume.
  • Despotēs (δεσπότης), "Lord" — Used by the emperors themselves since the time of Justinian I, and was an honorific address for the sons of reigning emperors. Hellenistic rulers had used it extensively, and during Byzantine times often featured in coins, in lieu of Basileus. In the 12th century, Manuel I Komnenos made it a separate title, the highest "awarded" title after the emperor. The first such despotēs was actually a foreigner, Bela III of Hungary, signifying that Hungary was considered a Byzantine tributary state. In later times, a despot could be the holder of a despotate; for example, the Despotate of Morea, centred at Mistra, was held by the heir to the Byzantine throne after 1261. The feminine form, despoina, referred to a female despot or the wife of a despot, but it was also used to address the Empress.
  • Sebastokratōr (σεβαστοκράτωρ), "Venerable Ruler" — Created by Alexios I Komnenos as a combination of autokratōr and sebastos (see below). The first sebastokratōr was Alexios' brother Isaakios. It was essentially a meaningless title, which signified only a close relationship with the Emperor, but ranked immediately after the despotēs. The feminine form was sebastokratorissa. The first foreigner to be called sebastokratōr was Stefan Nemanjić of Serbia, who was given the title in 1191. A Bulgarian aristocrat by the name Kaloyan also used the title.
  • Kaisar (καῖσαρ), "Caesar" — Originally, as in the late Roman Empire, it was used for a subordinate co-emperor or the heir apparent, and was first among the "awarded" dignities. The office enjoyed extensive privileges, great prestige and power. When Alexios I created sebastokratōr, kaisar became third in importance, and fourth after Manuel I created despotēs. The feminine form was kaisarissa. However, it remained an office of great importance, and was awarded to a few high-ranking and distinguished officials, and was only rarely awarded to foreigners. Justinian II named Tervel, khan of the Bulgars, kaisar in 705; the title then developed into the Slavic term tsar or czar (from Latin through Bulgarian and then into Russian, Serbian etc.). Title was also awarded to George II of Georgia. Andronikos II Palaiologos also named Roger de Flor, leader of the Catalan Grand Company, kaisar in 1304.
  • Nobelissimos (νωβελίσσιμος), from the Latin Nobilissimus ("most noble") — Originally a title given to close relatives of the Emperor, subordinate only to the kaisar. During the Komnenian period, the title was awarded to officials and foreign dignitaries, diluting its status. The title Prōtonobelissimos was created in its stead, until it too started to decline, only to be replaced by a further augmented form: Prōtonobelissimohypertatos. By the late Palaiologan era, the former had vanished, while the latter was a provincial official.
  • Kouropalatēs (κουροπαλάτης), from the Latin cura palatii, "charge of the palace" — First attested in the time of Justinian I, it was the official in charge of running the imperial palace. However, the great authority and wealth deriving from this position, as well as the close proximity to the Emperor, meant that it accumulated great prestige. It was awarded to important members of the imperial family, but from the 11th century onwards, it declined, and was usually awarded to the vassal rulers of Armenia and Georgia.
  • Sebastos (σεβαστός), "August One" — This title is the literal Greek translation of the Latin term Augustus or Augoustos, which was sometimes used by the emperors. As a separate title, it appeared in the latter half of the 11th century, and was extensively awarded by Alexios I Komnenos to his brothers and relations. The female version of the title was sebastē. The special title Protosebastos ("First Venerable One") was created for Hadrianos, Alexios' second brother, and awarded also to the Doge of Venice and the Sultan of Iconium. During the 12th century, it remained in use for the Emperor's and the sebastokratōr's children, and senior foreign dignitaries. However, the parallel processes of proliferation and devaluation of titles during the 12th century resulted in the creation of a bewildering array of often ridiculously large variations, by using the prefixes pan ("all"), hyper ("above"), prōto ("first"): examples include Pansebastos and Panhypersebastos. Few of them actually survived past the 12th century, and all of them rapidly declined in importance.

Court titles from the 8th to 11th centuries edit

 
Emperor Nikephoros III with an aura flanked by personifications of Truth and Justice, and by his senior court dignitaries, from an illuminated manuscript dating to the 1070s. From left: the proedros and epi tou kanikleiou, the prōtoproedros and prōtovestiarios (a eunuch, since he is beardless), the emperor, the proedros and dekanos, and the proedros and megas primikērios.[23]

In the 8th–11th centuries, according to information provided by the Taktikon Uspensky, the Klētorologion of Philotheos (899) and the writings of Constantine Porphyrogennetos, below the imperial titles, the Byzantines distinguished two distinct categories of dignities (ἀξίαι): the "dignities by award" (διὰ βραβείων ἀξίαι), which were purely honorific court titles and were conferred by the award of a symbol of rank, and the "dignities by proclamation" (διὰ λόγου ἀξίαι), which were offices of the state and were conferred by imperial pronouncement. The former were further divided into three subcategories, depending on who was eligible for them: different sets of titles existed for the "Bearded Ones" (βαρβάτοι from Latin barbati, i.e. not eunuchs), the eunuchs (ἐκτομίαι) and women. State officials usually combined titles from both main categories, so that a high official would be both magistros (an "awarded" title) and logothetēs tou dromou (a "proclaimed" office).

Titles for the "bearded ones" edit

The "by award" titles for the "Bearded Ones" (non-eunuchs[24]) were, in descending order of precedence:

  • Proedros (πρόεδρος), "president" — Originally reserved for eunuchs (see below), it was opened up in the mid-11th century to "Bearded Ones" as well, especially military officials.[25]
  • Magistros (μάγιστρος) – In the early Byzantine state, the magister officiorum was one of the most senior officials, but as his duties were gradually relegated to other officials, by the 8th century, only the title was left. It remained a high honour, and only rarely awarded until the 10th century.[26] By the early 10th century, there were 12, the first in precedence among them bearing the title of prōtomagistros. Thereafter the number of its holders was inflated, and the office vanished sometime in the 12th century.[27]
  • Vestarches (βεστάρχης), "head of the vestai" — Adopted in the latter half of the 10th century for high-ranking eunuchs, it began being awarded to "bearded" senior military officers and judicial officials of Constantinople around 1050, before disappearing in the early 12th century.[28]
  • Vestes (βέστης) – A senior honorific title, first attested under John I Tzimiskes. Awarded to both eunuchs and non-eunuchs, it survived until the early 12th century.[28] The term is etymologically connected to the vestiarion, the imperial wardrobe, but despite earlier attempts to connect the vestai and the related title of vestarchēs, the head of the class of the vestai (see above), with the officials of the vestiarion (see below), no such relation appears to have existed.
  • Anthypatos (ἀνθύπατος), "proconsul" — Originally the highest rank for provincial governors, it survived the creation of the Theme system, until, in the 9th century, it too became a purely honorific title. The variant prōtanthypatos was created in the 11th century to counter its decline in importance, but both disappeared by the end of the 12th century.
  • Patrikios (πατρίκιος), "patrician" — Established as the highest title of nobility by Constantine the Great, it remained one of the highest dignities until its disappearance in the Komnenian period, awarded to high-ranking officials, including eunuchs, and foreign rulers. The spouses of patricians bore the title patrikia (not to be confused with zōstē patrikia, see below).[29]
  • Prōtospatharios (πρωτοσπαθάριος), "first spatharios" — As its name signifies, it originally was the title borne by the leader of the spatharioi ("swordbearers," the Emperor's bodyguards). For instance, in the 6th century Narses bore this title.[30] It later became one of the most common high court titles, awarded to senior officials such as the logothetai, the commanders of the imperial tagmata, or the strategoi in charge of a theme. The title of prōtospatharios also signified admittance to the Senate. The office survived until the Palaiologan period, but had declined to the 35th place of the hierarchy.
  • Dishypatos (δισύπατος), "twice consul" — A very rare dignity, which originated possibly in the 8th century.[30]
  • Spatharokandidatos (σπαθαροκανδιδᾶτος) – a blend word of the titles spatharios and kandidatos, both of which were types of palace guards in the 4th–6th centuries. The earliest references to the title occur in early 8th century and the title is clearly attested only from the early 9th century on. Its distinctive badge (brabeion) was a golden chain (maniakion) worn around the chest.[1][3] [full citation needed]
  • Spatharios (σπαθάριος), "spatha-bearer" — As their name signifies, the spatharioi were initially a special corps of imperial guards (a spatha is a kind of sword). They performed specific duties inside the imperial palace. The title survived until the early 12th century.
  • Hypatos (ὕπατος), "consul" or "The supreme one" — As in the Roman Republic and Empire, the title was initially given each year to two distinguished citizens (the "ordinary consuls"), until Justinian I halted the practice due to the extraordinary expenditure it involved. It too became a purely honorific title. The title continued to be occasionally assumed by emperors on accession until the end of the 7th century. Honorary consuls however continued to be named, as attested by seals bearing the titles hypatos or apo hypatōn ("former consul").[31] The title was often conferred to the rulers of south Italian city-states.
  • Stratōr (στράτωρ), "Groom (horses)".
  • Kandidatos (κανδιδᾶτος) – From the Latin candidatus, so named because of their white tunics. They were originally a select group of guards, drawn from the Scholae Palatinae. The title disappeared in the Komnenian period.
  • Basilikos mandatōr (βασιλικὸς μανδάτωρ), "imperial or royal messenger".
  • Vestētōr (βεστήτωρ) — Officers of the imperial wardrobe (Latin vestiarium).[32]
  • Silentiarios (σιλεντιάριος) — Originally a group of courtiers responsible for the maintenance of order (including respectful silence) in the palace.
  • Stratēlatēs (στρατηλάτης), Greek equivalent of the Latin magister militum, and apoeparchōn (ἀποεπάρχων or ἀπὸ ἐπάρχων), equivalent of the Latin ex praefectis — These two titles are listed as equal by Philotheos. Both were still high dignities in the 6th century, but were devalued afterward.[33]

Titles for eunuchs edit

By descending order of precedence, the "by award" titles for the eunuchs were:

  • Proedros (πρόεδρος), "president" — This was an entirely new rank introduced in the 960s by Nikephoros II Phokas and first awarded to Basil Lekapenos, the eunuch parakoimōmenos. The holder of this dignity was also the president of the Senate, and the term proedros was often used to denote precedence, e.g. proedros of the notarioi for the prōtonotarios. The title was widely awarded in the 11th century, when it was opened up to non-eunuchs, prompting the creation of the prōtoproedros to distinguish the most senior amongst its holders. It disappeared in the latter 12th century.[25]
  • Vestarches (βεστάρχης) – Adopted in the latter half of the 10th century for high-ranking eunuchs, it was awarded to "bearded" senior military officers and judicial officials of Constantinople from ca. 1050 on. It disappeared in the early 12th century.[28]
  • Patrikios – Same as for the "Bearded Ones".
  • Vestes (βέστης) – Same as for the "Bearded Ones".[28]
  • Praipositos (πραιπόσιτος) – From the Latin praepositus, "placed before".
  • Prōtospatharios – Same as for the "Bearded Ones".
  • Primikērios (πριμικήριος) – From the Latin primicerius, "first in the list".
  • Ostiarios (ὀστιάριος) – From the Latin ostiarius, "doorkeeper, usher".
  • Spatharokoubikoularios (σπαθαροκουβικουλάριος), "sword-chamberlain" — A ceremonial sword-carrier assigned to the personal guard of the emperor.[34] It later became a simple court rank.[35]
  • Koubikoularios (κουβικουλάριος) – From the Latin cubicularius, "chamberlain".
  • Nipsistiarios (νιψιστιάριος), from Greek νίπτειν, "to wash hands") — The nipsistiarios was tasked with holding a gold, gem-encrusted water basin and assisting the emperor in performing the ritual ablutions before he exited the imperial palace or performed ceremonies.

Titles for women edit

  • Zōstē patrikia (ζωστὴ πατρικία), "Girded patrikia" — This title, reserved for women, was given to the empress' ladies of honour, and, according to Philotheos, ranked very high in hierarchy, above even the magistros and proedros and just below the kouropalates. The title is known from the early 9th century, and disappeared in the 11th century.[36] Otherwise women bore the female forms of their husbands' titles.

Titles for foreigners edit

  • Exousiastes (εξουσιαστής), "one who executes authority" — It was a style applied in the empire to some sovereign foreign rulers.

14th–15th century edit

Book of Offices ranks the order of command below the emperor:[37]

  1. Despot
  2. Sebastokrator
  3. Caesar
  4. Megas domestikos
  5. Megas doux
  6. Protostrator, deputy of megas domestikos
  7. Megas stratopedarches
  8. Megas primmikerios
  9. Megas konostablos
  10. Megas droungarios
  11. Megas hetairearches
  12. Epi tou stratou
  13. Domestic of the Scholae
  14. Megas droungarios, deputy of megas doux
  15. Protospatharios
  16. Megas arkhon, deputy of megas primmikerios
  17. Megas tzaousios
  18. Skouterios
  19. Amyriales, deputy of megas droungarios
  20. Megas akolouthos
  21. Arkhon tou Allagion, deputy of megas arkhon
  22. Protallagator
  23. Domestic of the Walls
  24. Vestiarios, deputy of amyriales
  25. Hetaireiarches, deputy of megas hetairearches
  26. Stratopedarches of the Mourtatoi
  27. Stratopedarches of the Tzakones
  28. Stratopedarches of one-horse cavalry men
  29. Stratopedarches of the crossbowmen
  30. Protokomes

Palace offices edit

  • Parakoimomenos (literally, "one who sleeps nearby") — The High Chamberlain who slept in the Emperor's bedchamber. Usually a eunuch, during the 9th–10th centuries the holders of this office often functioned as de facto chief ministers of the Empire.
  • Protovestiarios – Usually a minor relative of the emperor who took care of the emperor's personal wardrobe, especially on military campaigns. He was also sometimes responsible for other members of the imperial household, and the emperor's personal finances. The older term, from before the time of Justinian I, was curopalata (or kouropalates in Greek). This was derived from kourator (curator), an earlier official responsible for financial matters. The vestiarios was a subordinate official. The protovestiaria and vestiaria performed the same functions for the empress.
  • Papias – Concierge of the imperial palaces, responsible for opening and closing the palace gates each day.
  • Pinkernes – Originally the emperor's cupbearer, later a senior honorific title.
  • Kanikleios – The keeper of the imperial inkstand, one of the senior officials of the imperial chancery. In the Komnenian and Palaiologan period, some of its holders were de facto chief ministers of the Empire.
  • Epi tes trapezes (ὁ ἐπὶ τῆς τραπέζης), "the one in charge of the table" — Official responsible for attending to the imperial table during banquets.

Military offices edit

Army edit

  • Exarchos – The exarchs were governors of remote parts of the empire such as Italy or Africa. They enjoyed a greater degree of independence than other provincial governors, combining both civil and military authority, practically acting as viceroys.
  • Domestikos – The domestikoi were originally imperial guards, who later functioned as senior staff officers in the Late Roman army. In the Byzantine period, they were among the highest military offices, and included:
    • Megas domestikos, Grand Domestic – The overall commander of the army.
    • Domestikos tōn scholōn, Domestic of the Schools – The commander of the Scholai, originally a number of guards units, later a Tagma. This was a very prestigious title, and by the late 9th century, its holder functioned as commander in chief of the army. In ca. 959, the post was divided, with one domestic for the East and one for the West.
    • Domestikos tōn thematōn, Domestic of the Themes – The commander and organizer of the military themes; there was one for the European themes and one for Asian themes.
  • Katepanō – The governor of a greater area combining two or more themes, such as the Catepan of Italy, a title developed in the 9th century.
  • Stratēgos – A military and later also civil commander of a theme, who often also had the title of doux. The term is basically equivalent to "general" or "admiral", as it was used in both branches of service.
  • Tourmarchēs – The commander of a tourma, a military unit of battalion size.
  • Prōtostratōr – Initially the Emperor's stable master, under the Komnenian and Palaiologan emperors the term was used for the second-ranking commander of the army.
  • Stratopedarchēs, Master of the Camp – In charge of making sure the army was stocked with food and arms.
  • Hoplitarchēs or archēgētēs – Commander of all infantry in a large army. The title first appeared in the mid-10th century, when the infantry was reorganized and gained in importance.
  • Prōtokentarchos and kentarchos – Commanders of a smaller division of the army in the field. The name was derived from the Latin centurion.
  • Merarchēs – Commander of a division (meros) of the army. Usually, each army was divided into two to three such commands.
  • Taxiarchēs or chiliarchēs – Commander of an infantry regiment (taxiarchia or chiliarchia) in the army.
  • Kavallarios – A title borrowed from the Latin caballarius, it originally meant a cavalry soldier. During the Palaiologan period, it became a minor court title.[38]

Navy edit

  • Megas doux, Megaduke or Grand Duke — The basic equivalent of the modern Lord High Admiral. The office was created by Alexios I Komnenos, when he combined the remnants of the imperial and thematic fleets into a single imperial fleet. By the end of the Palaiologos dynasty the megaduke was head of the government and bureaucracy, not just the navy.
  • Amirales — Greek version of "Admiral", introduced via Sicilian practice; an office founded in the late Palaiologan era for Western mercenary leaders and rarely held, the amirales was the deputy of the megas doux.
  • Megas droungarios — Initially the commander-in-chief of the Byzantine navy; after the creation of the megas doux his lieutenant, in charge of the naval officers.
  • Droungarios – The title existed both in the army and the navy. In the navy of the 8th–11th centuries, a droungarios headed a fleet, either the central imperial fleet or one of the thematic fleets; in the army he headed a Droungos, a roughly battalion-sized grouping.
  • Komēs or droungarokomēs – The commander of a squadron of dromons.
  • Kentarchos or nauarchos – The captain of a ship.

Other military titles edit

  • Ethnarchēs — The ethnarch, commander of foreign troops.
  • Konostaulos — Greek form of Latin Comes stabuli "count of the stable" and various European feudal titles such as English "constable"; the chief of the Frankish mercenaries.
  • Hetaireiarchēs — The chief of the barbarian mercenaries, the Hetaireia, successor to the Foederati. Initially subdivided into Greater (Megalē), Middle (Mesē) and Little (Mikra) Hetaireia.
  • Akolouthos, "Acolyte" — The chief of the Varangian Guard from the Komnenian era onwards.
  • Manglavitai — A category of palace guards, armed with sword and cudgel (manglavion). Under the command of a Prōtomanglavitēs.
  • Topotērētēs, "place-holder" or "lieutenant" — Found at various levels of the hierarchy, as deputies to commanders of the imperial tagmata, deputy to a drungarios.

Administrative offices edit

 
Emperor Theophilos flanked by courtiers. From the Skylitzes Chronicle.

Byzantine administrative nature was characterized by its versatility and unfixed duties in constant role change depending on a specific situation. The vast Byzantine bureaucracy had many titles, more varied than aristocratic and military titles. In Constantinople there were normally hundreds, if not thousands, of bureaucrats at any time. Like members of the Church and the military, they wore elaborately differentiated dress, often including huge hats. These are some of the more common ones, including non-nobles who also directly served the emperor.

  • Praetorian prefect — The Praetorian prefecture was set up by Augustus as the command of the imperial Guard in Rome. It was developed by Diocletian into a civil office, whereby a handful of Prefects each acted for the Emperor with responsibility for a cluster of dioceses and provinces. Each received regular reports on administration from the provincial governors, had treasuries of his own, and paid and supplied the army with food. He was also a supreme judge of appeal; in cases which were brought before his court from a lower tribunal there was no further appeal to the Emperor. He could issue, on his own authority, praetorian edicts, but they concerned only matters of detail. The office was abolished in the 7th century as part of wide-ranging civil and military reforms, and evolved into that of the domestikos.
  • Basileopatōr (βασιλεοπάτωρ), "Father of the Emperor" — An exceptional title, granted only twice in Byzantine history. Although a basileopatōr was not the emperor's actual father, and the title did not necessarily denote any familial relationship at all, both awardees were the father-in-law of the emperor: Stylianos Zaoutzes under Leo VI the Wise and Romanos I Lekapenos briefly as regent for Constantine VII, before he raised himself to co-emperor. It ranked first among the "decreed" offices, and entailed wide-ranging administrative duties.
  • Protasekretis, "First Secretary" — an earlier title for the head of the chancery, responsible for keeping official government records and head of the class of senior secretaries known as asekretis. Other subordinates included the chartoularios, in charge of imperial documents; the kastrensios, a chamberlain in the palace; the mystikos, a private secretary; and the eidikos, a treasury official.
  • Protonotarios — Mainly used during the middle Byzantium (8th to 10th c.), also "First Secretary" but chiefly employed as chief financial and executive officer of either each thema/province, directly under its governor-general, or as imperial secretary in various government ministries in the capital. Charged with the provisioning of the thematic troops ahead of a campaign, the Protonotarios at times resembled a Commissar of the USSR, answering only to the emperor. During the late Byzantine era, the title was only encountered at the Palaiologan court, as the emperor's private secretary. In post-imperial times the title was linked to a higher administrative position with the Orthodox Church authorities.
  • Chartoularios tou vestiariou, literally "keeper of documents for the Public Wardrobe" (see Vestiarion) — Responsible for minting gold and silver coins and equipping the fleet.
  • Logothetēs, "one who accounts, calculates or ratiocinates" (literally "one who sets the word") — A secretary in the extensive bureaucracy, who did various jobs depending on the exact position. In the middle and late Byzantine Empire, it rose to become a senior administrative title, equivalent to a modern minister or secretary of state. Different offices of Logothetes included:

Logothetes originally had some influence on the emperor, but the posts eventually became honorary. In the later empire the Grand Logothete was replaced by the mesazōn ("mediator").

Other administrators included:

  • Eparch of Constantinople — The urban prefect of Constantinople.
  • Quaestor — Originally an accountant or auditor, the office eventually became a judicial one for Constantinople.
  • Tribounos, translation of Latin tribune — Responsible for maintenance of roads, monuments, and buildings in Constantinople (which were the responsibility of the Aedile, not the Tribunes in earlier Latin speaking times.)
  • Magister (magister officiorum, magister militum, "maistor" in Greek) — An old Roman term, master of offices and master of the army; by the time of Leo III, these had become honorary titles and were eventually discarded.[39]
  • Sakellarios, "treasurer; purse-bearer" — Under Heraclius, an honorary supervisor of the other palace administrators, logothetes, etc. Later, the chief financial comptroller of the Empire.
  • Praetor, Latin for "Man who goes before; first man." — One of the oldest of Roman titles, predating the Roman Republic, the title's use morphed considerably through the years. By the time of Theodosius I (379-395) it meant the leading municipal magistrate (like a modern Mayor) but from late 10th century until 1204, a civil governor of a theme.
  • Kephale, "head" — The governor of a small province, usually a town and its surrounding territory, in the Palaiologan period
  • Horeiarios — In charge of distributing food from the state granaries.
  • Archon

The protasekretis, logothetes, prefect, praetor, quaestor, magister, and sakellarios, among others, were members of the senate.

Court life edit

At the peaceful height of Middle Byzantium, court life "passed in a sort of ballet",[40] with precise ceremonies prescribed for every occasion, to show that "Imperial power could be exercised in harmony and order", and "the Empire could thus reflect the motion of the Universe as it was made by the Creator", according to the Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus, who wrote a Book of Ceremonies describing in enormous detail the annual round of the Court. Special forms of dress for many classes of people on particular occasions are set down; at the name-day dinner for the Emperor or Empress various groups of high officials performed ceremonial "dances", one group wearing "a blue and white garment, with short sleeves, and gold bands, and rings on their ankles. In their hands they hold what are called phengia". The second group do just the same, but wearing "a garment of green and red, split, with gold bands". These colours were the marks of the old chariot-racing factions, the four now merged to just the Blues and the Greens, and incorporated into the official hierarchy. As in the Versailles of Louis XIV, elaborate dress and court ritual probably were at least partly an attempt to smother and distract from political tensions.[citation needed]

Eunuchs also participated in court life, typically serving as attendants to noble women or assisting the emperor when he took part in religious ceremonies or removed his crown. Eunuchs in the early Byzantine Empire were usually foreigners, and they were often seen as having a low status. This changed in the 10th century, when the social status of eunuchs increased and members of the educated Byzantine upper class began to become eunuchs.[41]

However, even by the time of Anna Comnena, with the Emperor away on military campaigns for much of the time, this way of life had changed considerably, and after the Crusader occupation it virtually vanished. A French visitor[who?] was shocked to see the Empress going to church far less well attended than the Queen of France would have been.[citation needed] The Imperial family largely abandoned the Great Palace for the relatively compact Palace of Blachernae.[when?]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Barnes, T. D. (1989-11-24), "Panegyric, history and hagiography in Eusebius' Life of Constantine", The Making of Orthodoxy, Cambridge University Press, pp. 94–123, doi:10.1017/cbo9780511555350.007, ISBN 9780521351881, retrieved 2022-03-02
  2. ^ Lewis, V. Bradley (2017-04-04). "Eusebius of Caesarea's Un-Platonic Platonic Political Theology". Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek Political Thought. 34 (1): 94–114. doi:10.1163/20512996-12340119. ISSN 0142-257X. For Eusebius the Laws mainly shows the agreement of Christian and pagan morality, while his political theory centers on the establishment and maintenance of a Christian empire under a Christian emperor who is a philosopher-king. His view represents one of the fundamental political options in ancient Christianity, one that influenced later Byzantine political theology, but was largely rejected in the west.
  3. ^ Mango 2007, pp. 259–260.
  4. ^ Walter, Christopher (1968). "Dvornik (Francis), Early Christian and Byzantine Political Philosophy". Revue des études byzantines. 26 (1): 373–376. from the original on 2019-05-25. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  5. ^ Constantelos, Demetrios (April 1970). "Byzantine Philanthropy and Social Welfare". The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 21 (2): 173–174. doi:10.1017/S0022046900048703. S2CID 162224826.
  6. ^ Iii, Patrick Henry (1967-12-30). "A Mirror for Justinian: the Ekthesis of Agapetus Diaconus". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 8 (4): 281–308. ISSN 2159-3159. from the original on 2023-01-24. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  7. ^ Roy, Christian (January 2003). "The basileus as Christomimetes".
  8. ^ Alexander, Suzanne Spain (April 1977). "Heraclius, Byzantine Imperial Ideology, and the David Plates". Speculum. 52 (2): 217–237. doi:10.2307/2850511. ISSN 0038-7134. JSTOR 2850511. S2CID 161886591.
  9. ^ 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.
  10. ^ Heather, Peter; Moncur, David (January 2001). Politics, Philosophy, and Empire in the Fourth Century. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. doi:10.3828/978-0-85323-106-6 (inactive 2024-04-10). ISBN 978-0-85323-106-6. from the original on 2022-08-31. Retrieved 2022-04-25.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of April 2024 (link)
  11. ^ Bury, J.B. (2018). HISTORY OF THE LATER ROMAN EMPIRE from the death of theodosius i to the death of justinian. Charles River Editors. ISBN 978-1-61430-462-3. OCLC 1193333944.
  12. ^ Heather, Peter; Moncur, David (January 2001). Politics, Philosophy, and Empire in the Fourth Century. Liverpool University Press. doi:10.3828/978-0-85323-106-6 (inactive 2024-04-10). ISBN 978-0-85323-106-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of April 2024 (link)
  13. ^ Barnes, T. D. (1989-11-24), "Panegyric, history and hagiography in Eusebius' Life of Constantine", The Making of Orthodoxy, Cambridge University Press, pp. 94–123, doi:10.1017/cbo9780511555350.007, ISBN 9780521351881, retrieved 2023-02-24
  14. ^ Bury, J. B. History of the later Roman Empire : from the death of Theodosius I. to the death of Justinian. Dover. ISBN 0-486-20398-0. OCLC 59201731.
  15. ^ Haldon, John F. (2004). Warfare, state, and society in the Byzantine world, 565-1204. Routledge. OCLC 1039560193.
  16. ^ Haldon, John F. (2004). Warfare, state, and society in the Byzantine world, 565-1204. Routledge. OCLC 1039560193.
  17. ^ a b c Kazhdan (1991), p. 623
  18. ^ Harvey, Alan (1993). The land and taxation in the reign of Alexios I Komnenos: the evidence of Theophylakt of Ochrid. PERSEE. OCLC 754219713.
  19. ^ Ziche, Hartmut (2017-01-01), "Historians and the Economy: Zosimos and Prokopios on Fifth- and Sixth- Century Economie Development", Byzantine Narrative, BRILL, pp. 462–474, doi:10.1163/9789004344877_036, ISBN 9789004344877, retrieved 2022-03-13
  20. ^ Frankopan, P. (2007-02-01). "Kinship and the Distribution of Power in Komnenian Byzantium". The English Historical Review. CXXII (495): 1–34. doi:10.1093/ehr/cel378. ISSN 0013-8266.
  21. ^ Kazhdan, Alexander (1993). "State, Feudal, and Private Economy in Byzantium". Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 47: 83–100. doi:10.2307/1291672. ISSN 0070-7546. JSTOR 1291672.
  22. ^ Robin Cormack, "Writing in Gold, Byzantine Society and its Icons", 1985, George Philip, London, p180, using Kazhdan A.P. , 1974 (in Russian) ISBN 0-540-01085-5
  23. ^ Spatharakis, Iohannis (1976). The portrait in Byzantine illuminated manuscripts. Brill Archive. p. 110. ISBN 978-90-04-04783-9.
  24. ^ The Eunuch in Byzantine History and Society; Shaun Tougher; page 22
  25. ^ a b Kazhdan (1991), p. 1727
  26. ^ Bury (1911), p. 21
  27. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 1267
  28. ^ a b c d Kazhdan (1991), p. 2162
  29. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 1600
  30. ^ a b Bury (1911), p. 27
  31. ^ Bury (1911), p. 26
  32. ^ Bury (1911), p. 25
  33. ^ Bury (1911), pp. 21, 23–24
  34. ^ Ringrose 2003, p. 234 (Note #86)
  35. ^ Bury 1911, p. 121.
  36. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 2231
  37. ^ Heath, Ian (13 November 1995). Byzantine Armies, 1118–1461. Osprey. pp. 18–9. ISBN 978-1-85532-347-6.
  38. ^ Mark C. Bartusis, "The Kavallarioi of Byzantium" in Speculum, Vol. 63, No. 2 (Apr., 1988), pp. 343–350
  39. ^ Bury (1911), p. 32
  40. ^ Steven Runciman, Byzantine Style and Civilization (London: Penguin, 1975)
  41. ^ Rosenwein, Barbara (2009). A Short History of the Middle Ages (3rd ed.). University of Toronto Press.

Sources edit

  • Bartusis, Mark C. (1997). The Late Byzantine Army: Arms and Society 1204–1453. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-1620-2.
  • Bréhier, Louis (2000) [1949]. Les institutions de l'empire byzantin (in French). Paris: Albin Michel. ISBN 978-2-226-04722-9.
  • Bury, J. B. (1911). The Imperial Administrative System of the Ninth Century – With a Revised Text of the Kletorologion of Philotheos. London: Oxford University Press. OCLC 1046639111.
  • Angold, Michael (1984). The Byzantine Aristocracy: IX to XIII Centuries. BAR International Series. ISBN 0-86054-283-1.
  • Guilland, Rodolphe (1967). Recherches sur les institutions byzantines (2 vols.) [Studies on the Byzantine Institutions]. Berliner byzantinische Arbeiten 35 (in French). Berlin and Amsterdam: Akademie-Verlag & Adolf M. Hakkert. OCLC 878894516.
  • (in French) Guilland, Rodolphe (1971). "Les Logothètes: Etudes sur l'histoire administrative de l'Empire byzantin". Revue des études byzantines. 29: 5–115. doi:10.3406/rebyz.1971.1441. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  • Haldon, John F. (1997). Byzantium in the Seventh Century: The Transformation of a Culture. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31917-1.
  • Haldon, John (1999). Warfare, State and Society in the Byzantine World, 565–1204. London: UCL Press. ISBN 1-85728-495-X.
  • Kaldellis, Anthony (2015). The Byzantine Republic: People and Power in New Rome. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674365407.
  • Kazhdan, Alexander, ed. (1991). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  • Kelly, Christopher (2004). Ruling the later Roman Empire. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01564-7.
  • Krsmanović, Bojana (2008). The Byzantine Province in Change: On the Threshold Between the 10th and the 11th Century. Belgrade: Institute for Byzantine Studies. ISBN 9789603710608.
  • Mango, Cyril A. (2007). Η Αυτοκρατορία της Νέας Ρώμης [Byzantium: The Empire of the New Rome] (in Greek). Translated by Dimitris Tsoungarakis. Athens: Educational Institution of the National Bank of Greece.
  • Oikonomides, Nicolas (1972). Les listes de préséance byzantines des IXe et Xe siècles (in French). Paris: Éditions CNRS.
  • Oikonomides, Nicolas (1985). "La chancellerie impériale de Byzance du 13e au 15e siècle". Revue des études byzantines (in French). 43: 167–195. doi:10.3406/rebyz.1985.2171. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  • Ringrose, Kathryn M. (2003). The Perfect Servant: Eunuchs and the Social Construction of Gender in Byzantium. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-72015-9.
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External links edit

  • of Byzantium-related technical terms including official titles; Prosopography of the Byzantine World Project, King's College London

byzantine, bureaucracy, aristocracy, this, article, includes, inline, citations, they, properly, formatted, please, improve, this, article, correcting, them, july, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, message, throughout, fifth, century, hellenistic, political, sy. This article includes inline citations but they are not properly formatted Please improve this article by correcting them July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Throughout the fifth century Hellenistic political systems philosophies and theocratic Christian Eastern concepts had gained power in the eastern Greek speaking Mediterranean due to the intervention of important religious figures there such as Eusebius of Caesarea c 260 c 339 and Origen of Alexandria c 185 c 253 who had been key to developing the constant Christianized worldview of late antiquity 1 need quotation to verify 2 Painting of Emperor Basil II in triumphal garb exemplifying the imperial crown and royal power handed down by Christ and the angels By the 6th century such ideas had already influenced the definitive power of the monarch as the representative of God on earth and of his kingdom as an imitation of God s holy realm 3 The Byzantine Empire was a multi ethnic monarchic theocracy adopting following and applying the Orthodox Hellenistic political systems and philosophies 4 5 The monarch was the incarnation of the law nomos empsychos and his power was immeasurable and divine in origin insofar as he channeled God s divine grace maintaining what is good He was the ultimate benefactor caretaker and saviour of the people Evergetis Philanthrōpia and Sōter anointed with all power uphoalding the divine laws since he ought to emulate Christ first christomimetes in all of his divine pious loving orthodox attributes to all by being his earthly presence 6 7 The people in turn were the monarch s paroikoi subjects He was the sole administrator and lawgiver of the holy Basileia and Oikoumene commonwealth with sole power over the state the land and his subjects which he had achieved through God s appointment of him as king This opened a new stage of deification in which Hellenistic and Eastern court ceremonies such as proskynesis highlighted the divinity of the ruler and became standardized and very often mandatory 8 In practice imperial power was exercised as administration simplified and centralized through viceroys such as the Exarchos Douk Katepanō Kephalai and the Strategoi who enjoyed the same omnipotence and the emperor s God given divinity in their respective governorships 9 Such concentrations of power proved to be both a great internal weakness and the cause of various coups and rebellions in which viceroys with provincial armies and sometimes entire themes would often challenge imperial power with claims of their own In this way emperors such as Nikephoros II Phokas r 963 969 and Heraclius r 610 641 achieved royal power for themselves There were no codified laws on the imperial succession and the Roman Republic was never formally abolished Theoretically each emperor was formally elected by both the senate Synkletos and the army In practice however the Senate had lost all of its former powers and was mostly reduced to a ceremonial role filled with relatives or close aristocrats to the Emperor while the Army practically had a monopoly regarding elections Emperors usually managed to secure succession for their children through indirect means such as appointing them as co emperors and thus introduced various dynasties The absence of codified succession laws and procedures as well as the militarized state of the Empire led to numerous coups and revolts leading to several disastrous results such as the 1071 defeat at Manzikert Applying Orthodox Hellenistic political schemes the monarch s household was the sacred kingdom Oikonomia and he was its Christ loving owner and manager Oikonomos which meant that no individual or institution through the history of the empire truly owned any land in the face of state supreme ownership 10 Beneath the emperor a multitude of officials and court functionaries all directly chosen by the emperor or by one of his representatives operated the empire s administrative bureaucracy State officials acted not as magistrates or elected public legates but as representatives deputies and viceroys of the monarch in his different domains throughout the empire In addition to those officials a large number of honorific titles existed which the emperor awarded to prominent subjects or to friendly foreign rulers Over the more than a thousand years of the empire s existence the Imperial administrative system evolved in its adoption of historic titles At first the various titles of the empire were the same as those of the late Roman Empire However by the era of Heraclius r 610 641 many of the titles had become obsolete By the time of Alexios I r 1082 1118 many of the positions were either new or drastically changed However from that time on they remained essentially the same until the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453 Contents 1 Background history 2 Imperial titles 2 1 Titles used by the emperors 2 2 Titles used by the imperial family 3 Court titles from the 8th to 11th centuries 3 1 Titles for the bearded ones 3 2 Titles for eunuchs 3 3 Titles for women 3 4 Titles for foreigners 4 14th 15th century 5 Palace offices 6 Military offices 6 1 Army 6 2 Navy 6 3 Other military titles 7 Administrative offices 7 1 Court life 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksBackground history editIn the early Byzantine period 4th to late 6th century the administrative structure of the empire was a conglomeration of the late Roman Empire s diocese system set up by Diocletian and Constantine and of Justinian s innovations in the years 535 and 536 Justinian s administrative reforms were formalized This eliminated the administrative diocese system hierarchy established in previous centuries and with it the strict military and civic divisions within the empire replacing it with various provincial circumscriptions directly governed by deputies of the emperor variously called Stratalates Strategoi and Harmost 11 These deputies held extraordinary military and administrative powers accompanied by prestigious new titleholders in an attempt to lessen corruption and simplify the emperor s direct handling over its domains foreshadowing similar future administrative reforms initiated and endorsed by contemporary divine Orthodox monarchical philosophy in the Greek speaking eastern Mediterranean 12 Following the transformation of the Byzantine state during the 7th century due to massive territorial loss to the Muslim conquests this system had vanished and was replaced by the thematic military system whose functions had been simplified and specialized in the rapid creation of provincial armies Influenced by Hellenistic political kingship and Orthodox theocratic philosophies power was relegated to military leaders with the various Strategoi Katepan Douk Kephalai or Exarch each acting as viceroys in their respective themata or governorships all being appointed by the sovereign directly 13 These governors being the direct representatives of the monarch himself all through the provinces enjoyed an omnipotence of their own accompanied by the divine attributes for being deputies of the emperor himself in their respective districts Their primary tasks were jointly working with the various provincial subordinates of the capital bureaus for the effective collection of taxes from the different communities Chora Komai from the different land owners estates proasteion and from monasteries episkepsis Additionally and more commonly as the right hand of the emperor in the management of internal and external affairs they had to provide an efficient management of fast and flexible provincial armies dispatching them to appease different threats within the borders or for the management of new successful territorial acquisitions after long term campaigns thereby taking key roles as protagonists of any armed offensive headed by the emperor 14 A Strategos or any military governor was assisted by several deputies chief among them the tourmarches or merarches to a lesser degree also referred as topoteretes The main provincial governors and their deputies held equal military and administrative duties within the main sub division inside a thema a tourma These deputies or any deputy or representative of the Strategos or of any other military governor were generally called Ek prosopou second to them the Krites or Praitor were responsible for the judicial matters inside a Theme Although the range of tasks of the Krites or Praitor were neither fixed nor dogmatic as they are shown assisting in various military campaigns or on occasions replacing the Strategos in his military duties 15 Due to the lack of action or large scale battles in the thematas of mainland Greece by the 12th century most of these came to be governed directly by the Megas doux under him the Krites or Archons of the various coastal cities The themes now made up of several Archontates was accommodated and repurposed solely for the income and maintenance of the Byzantine navy fulfilling a tax supporting role largely in contrast from the more active and military themas of Strategos and Katepanos focussed in Asia Minor The duties of said governors were largely limited to the collection of the various maritime taxes of their governorships the management of the various large urban centers such as Athens Corinth or Thebes and a basic level of protection for its provinces against pirates and any other parties 16 During the classic or middle period of the Byzantine state 8th late 11th centuries a new court centered system emerged In this dignities of a certain level were awarded with new titles derived from older now obsolete public offices A senatorial class remained in place which incorporated a large part of the upper officialdom every official from the rank of protospatharios literally first sword bearer originally the head of the Emperor s bodyguards was considered a member of it 17 During this period many families remained important for several centuries and several Emperors rose from the aristocracy Two groups can be distinguished a metropolitan civil nobility and a provincial military one the latter remaining regionally based and having large land holdings but apparently no military forces of their own in contrast to contemporary Western Europe The backbone of Byzantine administration and economy until the fall of Constantinople was the joint tax liability system of the different communities inside a thema duties which were carried out by provincial officials such as the epoptes exisotes and praktores of the different bureaus A Theme was made up of several individuals and institutions such as the various lands that the many monasteries owned episkepsis the soldiers farming lands stratiotai the estates proasteion of the land owners dynatoi and the peasants geōrgike with most of a village or town chora or komai being made up of the later These were the main source of a constant and rapid revenue that ultimately derived from the earlier Hellenistic fiscal and administrative principle of epibole 18 Epibole had served as an accessible tool for the Hellenistic kingdoms for the simple income and rapid collection of taxes by deputies towards various rural communities in the war time Hellenistic period after having been adopted and adapted from the late Roman and early Byzantine province of Egypt which had kept its own former fixed fiscal system as an indirect consequence of the multiple wars and invasions that Byzantium had to deal throughout its history 19 After the reforms of Alexios I the system underwent various changes in which due to the desperate state of the empire and the urgent need for income to finance its military campaigns and strengthen its borders several simplifications and concessions were made The theme system established under the Komnenoi would remain the administrative basis of the Byzantine state until its final fall in 1453 differing in few key aspects from its administrative predecessors it highlighted a greater centralization of power The various Themes had been divided into smaller districts called Katepanakia which in turn were made up of the various towns and villages chora the monastic estates episkpesis the estates of the dynatoi proasteion and the various pronoia grants The Themes were ruled by a Doux who was positioned by the emperor directly commonly a relative of his or a close aristocrat to the Basileus The Katepanakia inside the Theme were ruled by a deputy of the Doux called a Praktor or Energon they were appointed either by the monarch or the Doux himself with the primary task of the collection of taxes and a second role in the maintenance of basic order administration and justice in his district 20 Alexios fiscal reforms allowed an institution or individual to catalog and group their land domains and through it their fiscal obligations in a document referred as praktikon The new reform essentially broke from the integrity of the chora or village tax as its new purpose was the collection of the various taxes regardless of whether collection was by an institution individual or the village itself essentially offering it to the highest bidder Although a simplification it was not an improvement as it pushed a great variety of villages and towns to eventually be added to the different episkpesis of either the adjoining monasteries or of the various well resourced dynatoi landowners who would become responsible for both their fiscal obligations as monastic institutions or as individuals and for the fiscal obligations of the various towns and villages in their domain This trend culminated in the eventual disappearance of the fiscal individuality that each commune or town had enjoyed something which emperors like Basil II had fought and delayed with special taxes such as the allelengyon Becoming one of several towns within the estates of the different institutions and individuals of the time was an unbearable phenomenon for many communes due to the various fiscal tolerances that the basileus offered the different monastic institutions and their estates further accelerating the disappearance of the fiscal individuality of the villages and towns 21 The 10th and 11th centuries saw a rise in importance of the aristocracy and an increased number of new families entering it The catastrophic losses in the latter 11th century again prompted a reorganization of the imperial administrative system at the hands of the new Komnenos dynasty the older offices and titles fell gradually into disuse while an array of new honorifics emerged which signified primarily the closeness of their recipient s familial relationship to the Emperor 17 The Komnenian led Empire and later their Palaiologan successors were based primarily on the landed aristocracy keeping the governance of the state tightly controlled by a limited number of intermarrying aristocratic families for instance in the 11th and 12th century only 80 civil and 64 military noble families have been identified a very small number for so large a state 22 Finally in the Palaiologan system as reported by pseudo Kodinos one can discern the accumulated nomenclature of centuries with formerly high ranks having been devalued and others taking their place and the old distinction between office and dignity having vanished 17 Imperial titles editSee also Byzantine emperors These were the highest titles usually limited to members of the imperial family or to a few very select foreign rulers whose friendship the Emperor desired Titles used by the emperors edit nbsp The back of this coin by Manuel I Comnenus bears his title porphyrogennetos Basileus basileys the Greek word for sovereign Originally referred to any king in the Hellenistic period or in any Greek speaking area of the Roman Empire It also referred to the Shahs of Persia Heraclius adopted it in 629 and it became the Greek word for emperor Heraclius also used the titles autokrator aὐtokratwr autocrat self ruler and kyrios kyrios Lord The Byzantines reserved the term basileus among Christian rulers exclusively for the emperor in Constantinople and referred to Western European kings as regas a Hellenized form of the Latin word rex king The feminine form basilissa referred to an empress Empresses were addressed as eusebestate avgousta Most Pious Augusta and were also called kyria Lady or despoina the female form of despotes see below Primogeniture or even heredity were not legally established in Byzantine imperial succession because in principle the Roman Emperor was selected by common acclamation of the Senate the People and the Army This was rooted firmly in the Roman republican tradition whereby hereditary kingship was rejected and the Emperor was nominally the convergence of several offices of the Republic onto one person citation needed Many emperors anxious to safeguard their firstborn son s right to the throne had them crowned as co emperors when they were still children thus assuring that upon their own death the throne would not be even momentarily vacant In such a case the need for an imperial selection never arose In several cases the new Emperor ascended the throne after marrying the previous Emperor s widow or indeed after forcing the previous Emperor to abdicate and become a monk Several emperors were also deposed because of perceived inadequacy for example after a military defeat and some were murdered Porphyrogennetos porfyrogennhtos born in the purple Derived from Hellenistic bureaucracy emperors wanting to emphasize the legitimacy of their ascent to the throne appended this title to their names meaning they were born to a reigning emperor in the delivery room of the imperial palace called the Porphyra because it was paneled with slabs of the reddish purple stone porphyry and were therefore legitimate beyond any claim to the contrary Autokratōr aὐtokratwr self ruler Originally equivalent to imperator and was used by the emperors Basileus Autokratōr basileys aὐtokratwr A combination of titles reserved for the senior of several ruling co emperors symbasileῖs symbasileis and denoted the person who held substantive political power Titles used by the imperial family edit nbsp Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos with his family empress Helena Dragas right and three of their sons John Andronikos and Theodore John as his father s heir and co emperor wears an exact replica of his imperial costume Despotes despoths Lord Used by the emperors themselves since the time of Justinian I and was an honorific address for the sons of reigning emperors Hellenistic rulers had used it extensively and during Byzantine times often featured in coins in lieu of Basileus In the 12th century Manuel I Komnenos made it a separate title the highest awarded title after the emperor The first such despotes was actually a foreigner Bela III of Hungary signifying that Hungary was considered a Byzantine tributary state In later times a despot could be the holder of a despotate for example the Despotate of Morea centred at Mistra was held by the heir to the Byzantine throne after 1261 The feminine form despoina referred to a female despot or the wife of a despot but it was also used to address the Empress Sebastokratōr sebastokratwr Venerable Ruler Created by Alexios I Komnenos as a combination of autokratōr and sebastos see below The first sebastokratōr was Alexios brother Isaakios It was essentially a meaningless title which signified only a close relationship with the Emperor but ranked immediately after the despotes The feminine form was sebastokratorissa The first foreigner to be called sebastokratōr was Stefan Nemanjic of Serbia who was given the title in 1191 A Bulgarian aristocrat by the name Kaloyan also used the title Kaisar kaῖsar Caesar Originally as in the late Roman Empire it was used for a subordinate co emperor or the heir apparent and was first among the awarded dignities The office enjoyed extensive privileges great prestige and power When Alexios I created sebastokratōr kaisar became third in importance and fourth after Manuel I created despotes The feminine form was kaisarissa However it remained an office of great importance and was awarded to a few high ranking and distinguished officials and was only rarely awarded to foreigners Justinian II named Tervel khan of the Bulgars kaisar in 705 the title then developed into the Slavic term tsar or czar from Latin through Bulgarian and then into Russian Serbian etc Title was also awarded to George II of Georgia Andronikos II Palaiologos also named Roger de Flor leader of the Catalan Grand Company kaisar in 1304 Nobelissimos nwbelissimos from the Latin Nobilissimus most noble Originally a title given to close relatives of the Emperor subordinate only to the kaisar During the Komnenian period the title was awarded to officials and foreign dignitaries diluting its status The title Prōtonobelissimos was created in its stead until it too started to decline only to be replaced by a further augmented form Prōtonobelissimohypertatos By the late Palaiologan era the former had vanished while the latter was a provincial official Kouropalates koyropalaths from the Latin cura palatii charge of the palace First attested in the time of Justinian I it was the official in charge of running the imperial palace However the great authority and wealth deriving from this position as well as the close proximity to the Emperor meant that it accumulated great prestige It was awarded to important members of the imperial family but from the 11th century onwards it declined and was usually awarded to the vassal rulers of Armenia and Georgia Sebastos sebastos August One This title is the literal Greek translation of the Latin term Augustus or Augoustos which was sometimes used by the emperors As a separate title it appeared in the latter half of the 11th century and was extensively awarded by Alexios I Komnenos to his brothers and relations The female version of the title was sebaste The special title Protosebastos First Venerable One was created for Hadrianos Alexios second brother and awarded also to the Doge of Venice and the Sultan of Iconium During the 12th century it remained in use for the Emperor s and the sebastokratōr s children and senior foreign dignitaries However the parallel processes of proliferation and devaluation of titles during the 12th century resulted in the creation of a bewildering array of often ridiculously large variations by using the prefixes pan all hyper above prōto first examples include Pansebastos and Panhypersebastos Few of them actually survived past the 12th century and all of them rapidly declined in importance Court titles from the 8th to 11th centuries edit nbsp Emperor Nikephoros III with an aura flanked by personifications of Truth and Justice and by his senior court dignitaries from an illuminated manuscript dating to the 1070s From left the proedros and epi tou kanikleiou the prōtoproedros and prōtovestiarios a eunuch since he is beardless the emperor the proedros and dekanos and the proedros and megas primikerios 23 In the 8th 11th centuries according to information provided by the Taktikon Uspensky the Kletorologion of Philotheos 899 and the writings of Constantine Porphyrogennetos below the imperial titles the Byzantines distinguished two distinct categories of dignities ἀ3iai the dignities by award diὰ brabeiwn ἀ3iai which were purely honorific court titles and were conferred by the award of a symbol of rank and the dignities by proclamation diὰ logoy ἀ3iai which were offices of the state and were conferred by imperial pronouncement The former were further divided into three subcategories depending on who was eligible for them different sets of titles existed for the Bearded Ones barbatoi from Latin barbati i e not eunuchs the eunuchs ἐktomiai and women State officials usually combined titles from both main categories so that a high official would be both magistros an awarded title and logothetes tou dromou a proclaimed office Titles for the bearded ones edit The by award titles for the Bearded Ones non eunuchs 24 were in descending order of precedence Proedros proedros president Originally reserved for eunuchs see below it was opened up in the mid 11th century to Bearded Ones as well especially military officials 25 Magistros magistros In the early Byzantine state the magister officiorum was one of the most senior officials but as his duties were gradually relegated to other officials by the 8th century only the title was left It remained a high honour and only rarely awarded until the 10th century 26 By the early 10th century there were 12 the first in precedence among them bearing the title of prōtomagistros Thereafter the number of its holders was inflated and the office vanished sometime in the 12th century 27 Vestarches bestarxhs head of the vestai Adopted in the latter half of the 10th century for high ranking eunuchs it began being awarded to bearded senior military officers and judicial officials of Constantinople around 1050 before disappearing in the early 12th century 28 Vestes besths A senior honorific title first attested under John I Tzimiskes Awarded to both eunuchs and non eunuchs it survived until the early 12th century 28 The term is etymologically connected to the vestiarion the imperial wardrobe but despite earlier attempts to connect the vestai and the related title of vestarches the head of the class of the vestai see above with the officials of the vestiarion see below no such relation appears to have existed Anthypatos ἀn8ypatos proconsul Originally the highest rank for provincial governors it survived the creation of the Theme system until in the 9th century it too became a purely honorific title The variant prōtanthypatos was created in the 11th century to counter its decline in importance but both disappeared by the end of the 12th century Patrikios patrikios patrician Established as the highest title of nobility by Constantine the Great it remained one of the highest dignities until its disappearance in the Komnenian period awarded to high ranking officials including eunuchs and foreign rulers The spouses of patricians bore the title patrikia not to be confused with zōste patrikia see below 29 Prōtospatharios prwtospa8arios first spatharios As its name signifies it originally was the title borne by the leader of the spatharioi swordbearers the Emperor s bodyguards For instance in the 6th century Narses bore this title 30 It later became one of the most common high court titles awarded to senior officials such as the logothetai the commanders of the imperial tagmata or the strategoi in charge of a theme The title of prōtospatharios also signified admittance to the Senate The office survived until the Palaiologan period but had declined to the 35th place of the hierarchy Dishypatos disypatos twice consul A very rare dignity which originated possibly in the 8th century 30 Spatharokandidatos spa8arokandidᾶtos a blend word of the titles spatharios and kandidatos both of which were types of palace guards in the 4th 6th centuries The earliest references to the title occur in early 8th century and the title is clearly attested only from the early 9th century on Its distinctive badge brabeion was a golden chain maniakion worn around the chest 1 3 full citation needed Spatharios spa8arios spatha bearer As their name signifies the spatharioi were initially a special corps of imperial guards a spatha is a kind of sword They performed specific duties inside the imperial palace The title survived until the early 12th century Hypatos ὕpatos consul or The supreme one As in the Roman Republic and Empire the title was initially given each year to two distinguished citizens the ordinary consuls until Justinian I halted the practice due to the extraordinary expenditure it involved It too became a purely honorific title The title continued to be occasionally assumed by emperors on accession until the end of the 7th century Honorary consuls however continued to be named as attested by seals bearing the titles hypatos or apo hypatōn former consul 31 The title was often conferred to the rulers of south Italian city states Stratōr stratwr Groom horses Kandidatos kandidᾶtos From the Latin candidatus so named because of their white tunics They were originally a select group of guards drawn from the Scholae Palatinae The title disappeared in the Komnenian period Basilikos mandatōr basilikὸs mandatwr imperial or royal messenger Vestetōr besthtwr Officers of the imperial wardrobe Latin vestiarium 32 Silentiarios silentiarios Originally a group of courtiers responsible for the maintenance of order including respectful silence in the palace Stratelates strathlaths Greek equivalent of the Latin magister militum and apoeparchōn ἀpoeparxwn or ἀpὸ ἐparxwn equivalent of the Latin ex praefectis These two titles are listed as equal by Philotheos Both were still high dignities in the 6th century but were devalued afterward 33 Titles for eunuchs edit By descending order of precedence the by award titles for the eunuchs were Proedros proedros president This was an entirely new rank introduced in the 960s by Nikephoros II Phokas and first awarded to Basil Lekapenos the eunuch parakoimōmenos The holder of this dignity was also the president of the Senate and the term proedros was often used to denote precedence e g proedros of the notarioi for the prōtonotarios The title was widely awarded in the 11th century when it was opened up to non eunuchs prompting the creation of the prōtoproedros to distinguish the most senior amongst its holders It disappeared in the latter 12th century 25 Vestarches bestarxhs Adopted in the latter half of the 10th century for high ranking eunuchs it was awarded to bearded senior military officers and judicial officials of Constantinople from ca 1050 on It disappeared in the early 12th century 28 Patrikios Same as for the Bearded Ones Vestes besths Same as for the Bearded Ones 28 Praipositos praipositos From the Latin praepositus placed before Prōtospatharios Same as for the Bearded Ones Primikerios primikhrios From the Latin primicerius first in the list Ostiarios ὀstiarios From the Latin ostiarius doorkeeper usher Spatharokoubikoularios spa8arokoybikoylarios sword chamberlain A ceremonial sword carrier assigned to the personal guard of the emperor 34 It later became a simple court rank 35 Koubikoularios koybikoylarios From the Latin cubicularius chamberlain Nipsistiarios nipsistiarios from Greek niptein to wash hands The nipsistiarios was tasked with holding a gold gem encrusted water basin and assisting the emperor in performing the ritual ablutions before he exited the imperial palace or performed ceremonies Titles for women edit Zōste patrikia zwstὴ patrikia Girded patrikia This title reserved for women was given to the empress ladies of honour and according to Philotheos ranked very high in hierarchy above even the magistros and proedros and just below the kouropalates The title is known from the early 9th century and disappeared in the 11th century 36 Otherwise women bore the female forms of their husbands titles Titles for foreigners edit Exousiastes e3oysiasths one who executes authority It was a style applied in the empire to some sovereign foreign rulers 14th 15th century editBook of Offices ranks the order of command below the emperor 37 Despot Sebastokrator Caesar Megas domestikos Megas doux Protostrator deputy of megas domestikos Megas stratopedarches Megas primmikerios Megas konostablos Megas droungarios Megas hetairearches Epi tou stratou Domestic of the Scholae Megas droungarios deputy of megas doux Protospatharios Megas arkhon deputy of megas primmikerios Megas tzaousios Skouterios Amyriales deputy of megas droungarios Megas akolouthos Arkhon tou Allagion deputy of megas arkhon Protallagator Domestic of the Walls Vestiarios deputy of amyriales Hetaireiarches deputy of megas hetairearches Stratopedarches of the Mourtatoi Stratopedarches of the Tzakones Stratopedarches of one horse cavalry men Stratopedarches of the crossbowmen ProtokomesPalace offices editParakoimomenos literally one who sleeps nearby The High Chamberlain who slept in the Emperor s bedchamber Usually a eunuch during the 9th 10th centuries the holders of this office often functioned as de facto chief ministers of the Empire Protovestiarios Usually a minor relative of the emperor who took care of the emperor s personal wardrobe especially on military campaigns He was also sometimes responsible for other members of the imperial household and the emperor s personal finances The older term from before the time of Justinian I was curopalata or kouropalates in Greek This was derived from kourator curator an earlier official responsible for financial matters The vestiarios was a subordinate official The protovestiaria and vestiaria performed the same functions for the empress Papias Concierge of the imperial palaces responsible for opening and closing the palace gates each day Pinkernes Originally the emperor s cupbearer later a senior honorific title Kanikleios The keeper of the imperial inkstand one of the senior officials of the imperial chancery In the Komnenian and Palaiologan period some of its holders were de facto chief ministers of the Empire Epi tes trapezes ὁ ἐpὶ tῆs trapezhs the one in charge of the table Official responsible for attending to the imperial table during banquets Military offices editArmy edit Exarchos The exarchs were governors of remote parts of the empire such as Italy or Africa They enjoyed a greater degree of independence than other provincial governors combining both civil and military authority practically acting as viceroys Domestikos The domestikoi were originally imperial guards who later functioned as senior staff officers in the Late Roman army In the Byzantine period they were among the highest military offices and included Megas domestikos Grand Domestic The overall commander of the army Domestikos tōn scholōn Domestic of the Schools The commander of the Scholai originally a number of guards units later a Tagma This was a very prestigious title and by the late 9th century its holder functioned as commander in chief of the army In ca 959 the post was divided with one domestic for the East and one for the West Domestikos tōn thematōn Domestic of the Themes The commander and organizer of the military themes there was one for the European themes and one for Asian themes Katepanō The governor of a greater area combining two or more themes such as the Catepan of Italy a title developed in the 9th century Strategos A military and later also civil commander of a theme who often also had the title of doux The term is basically equivalent to general or admiral as it was used in both branches of service Tourmarches The commander of a tourma a military unit of battalion size Prōtostratōr Initially the Emperor s stable master under the Komnenian and Palaiologan emperors the term was used for the second ranking commander of the army Stratopedarches Master of the Camp In charge of making sure the army was stocked with food and arms Hoplitarches or archegetes Commander of all infantry in a large army The title first appeared in the mid 10th century when the infantry was reorganized and gained in importance Prōtokentarchos and kentarchos Commanders of a smaller division of the army in the field The name was derived from the Latin centurion Merarches Commander of a division meros of the army Usually each army was divided into two to three such commands Taxiarches or chiliarches Commander of an infantry regiment taxiarchia or chiliarchia in the army Kavallarios A title borrowed from the Latin caballarius it originally meant a cavalry soldier During the Palaiologan period it became a minor court title 38 Navy edit Further information Byzantine navy Organization Megas doux Megaduke or Grand Duke The basic equivalent of the modern Lord High Admiral The office was created by Alexios I Komnenos when he combined the remnants of the imperial and thematic fleets into a single imperial fleet By the end of the Palaiologos dynasty the megaduke was head of the government and bureaucracy not just the navy Amirales Greek version of Admiral introduced via Sicilian practice an office founded in the late Palaiologan era for Western mercenary leaders and rarely held the amirales was the deputy of the megas doux Megas droungarios Initially the commander in chief of the Byzantine navy after the creation of the megas doux his lieutenant in charge of the naval officers Droungarios The title existed both in the army and the navy In the navy of the 8th 11th centuries a droungarios headed a fleet either the central imperial fleet or one of the thematic fleets in the army he headed a Droungos a roughly battalion sized grouping Komes or droungarokomes The commander of a squadron of dromons Kentarchos or nauarchos The captain of a ship Other military titles edit Ethnarches The ethnarch commander of foreign troops Konostaulos Greek form of Latin Comes stabuli count of the stable and various European feudal titles such as English constable the chief of the Frankish mercenaries Hetaireiarches The chief of the barbarian mercenaries the Hetaireia successor to the Foederati Initially subdivided into Greater Megale Middle Mese and Little Mikra Hetaireia Akolouthos Acolyte The chief of the Varangian Guard from the Komnenian era onwards Manglavitai A category of palace guards armed with sword and cudgel manglavion Under the command of a Prōtomanglavites Topoteretes place holder or lieutenant Found at various levels of the hierarchy as deputies to commanders of the imperial tagmata deputy to a drungarios Administrative offices edit nbsp Emperor Theophilos flanked by courtiers From the Skylitzes Chronicle Byzantine administrative nature was characterized by its versatility and unfixed duties in constant role change depending on a specific situation The vast Byzantine bureaucracy had many titles more varied than aristocratic and military titles In Constantinople there were normally hundreds if not thousands of bureaucrats at any time Like members of the Church and the military they wore elaborately differentiated dress often including huge hats These are some of the more common ones including non nobles who also directly served the emperor Praetorian prefect The Praetorian prefecture was set up by Augustus as the command of the imperial Guard in Rome It was developed by Diocletian into a civil office whereby a handful of Prefects each acted for the Emperor with responsibility for a cluster of dioceses and provinces Each received regular reports on administration from the provincial governors had treasuries of his own and paid and supplied the army with food He was also a supreme judge of appeal in cases which were brought before his court from a lower tribunal there was no further appeal to the Emperor He could issue on his own authority praetorian edicts but they concerned only matters of detail The office was abolished in the 7th century as part of wide ranging civil and military reforms and evolved into that of the domestikos Basileopatōr basileopatwr Father of the Emperor An exceptional title granted only twice in Byzantine history Although a basileopatōr was not the emperor s actual father and the title did not necessarily denote any familial relationship at all both awardees were the father in law of the emperor Stylianos Zaoutzes under Leo VI the Wise and Romanos I Lekapenos briefly as regent for Constantine VII before he raised himself to co emperor It ranked first among the decreed offices and entailed wide ranging administrative duties Protasekretis First Secretary an earlier title for the head of the chancery responsible for keeping official government records and head of the class of senior secretaries known as asekretis Other subordinates included the chartoularios in charge of imperial documents the kastrensios a chamberlain in the palace the mystikos a private secretary and the eidikos a treasury official Protonotarios Mainly used during the middle Byzantium 8th to 10th c also First Secretary but chiefly employed as chief financial and executive officer of either each thema province directly under its governor general or as imperial secretary in various government ministries in the capital Charged with the provisioning of the thematic troops ahead of a campaign the Protonotarios at times resembled a Commissar of the USSR answering only to the emperor During the late Byzantine era the title was only encountered at the Palaiologan court as the emperor s private secretary In post imperial times the title was linked to a higher administrative position with the Orthodox Church authorities Chartoularios tou vestiariou literally keeper of documents for the Public Wardrobe see Vestiarion Responsible for minting gold and silver coins and equipping the fleet Logothetes one who accounts calculates or ratiocinates literally one who sets the word A secretary in the extensive bureaucracy who did various jobs depending on the exact position In the middle and late Byzantine Empire it rose to become a senior administrative title equivalent to a modern minister or secretary of state Different offices of Logothetes included Megas logothetes Grand Logothete the head of the logothetes personally responsible for the legal system and treasury somewhat like a chancellor in western Europe Logothetes tou dromou Drome Logothete the head of diplomacy and the postal service Logothetes tōn oikeiakōn Logothete of the oikeiakoi the exact functions of this office are unclear Logothetes tou genikou General Logothete responsible for taxation Also acted as a secretary in later cases Logothetes tou stratiotikou Military Logothete a civilian in charge of distributing pay to the army Logothetes originally had some influence on the emperor but the posts eventually became honorary In the later empire the Grand Logothete was replaced by the mesazōn mediator Other administrators included Eparch of Constantinople The urban prefect of Constantinople Quaestor Originally an accountant or auditor the office eventually became a judicial one for Constantinople Tribounos translation of Latin tribune Responsible for maintenance of roads monuments and buildings in Constantinople which were the responsibility of the Aedile not the Tribunes in earlier Latin speaking times Magister magister officiorum magister militum maistor in Greek An old Roman term master of offices and master of the army by the time of Leo III these had become honorary titles and were eventually discarded 39 Sakellarios treasurer purse bearer Under Heraclius an honorary supervisor of the other palace administrators logothetes etc Later the chief financial comptroller of the Empire Praetor Latin for Man who goes before first man One of the oldest of Roman titles predating the Roman Republic the title s use morphed considerably through the years By the time of Theodosius I 379 395 it meant the leading municipal magistrate like a modern Mayor but from late 10th century until 1204 a civil governor of a theme Kephale head The governor of a small province usually a town and its surrounding territory in the Palaiologan period Horeiarios In charge of distributing food from the state granaries Archon The protasekretis logothetes prefect praetor quaestor magister and sakellarios among others were members of the senate Court life edit At the peaceful height of Middle Byzantium court life passed in a sort of ballet 40 with precise ceremonies prescribed for every occasion to show that Imperial power could be exercised in harmony and order and the Empire could thus reflect the motion of the Universe as it was made by the Creator according to the Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus who wrote a Book of Ceremonies describing in enormous detail the annual round of the Court Special forms of dress for many classes of people on particular occasions are set down at the name day dinner for the Emperor or Empress various groups of high officials performed ceremonial dances one group wearing a blue and white garment with short sleeves and gold bands and rings on their ankles In their hands they hold what are called phengia The second group do just the same but wearing a garment of green and red split with gold bands These colours were the marks of the old chariot racing factions the four now merged to just the Blues and the Greens and incorporated into the official hierarchy As in the Versailles of Louis XIV elaborate dress and court ritual probably were at least partly an attempt to smother and distract from political tensions citation needed Eunuchs also participated in court life typically serving as attendants to noble women or assisting the emperor when he took part in religious ceremonies or removed his crown Eunuchs in the early Byzantine Empire were usually foreigners and they were often seen as having a low status This changed in the 10th century when the social status of eunuchs increased and members of the educated Byzantine upper class began to become eunuchs 41 However even by the time of Anna Comnena with the Emperor away on military campaigns for much of the time this way of life had changed considerably and after the Crusader occupation it virtually vanished A French visitor who was shocked to see the Empress going to church far less well attended than the Queen of France would have been citation needed The Imperial family largely abandoned the Great Palace for the relatively compact Palace of Blachernae when See also editByzantine Navy Byzantine battle tactics Byzantine army ByzantinismReferences edit Barnes T D 1989 11 24 Panegyric history and hagiography in Eusebius Life of Constantine The Making of Orthodoxy Cambridge University Press pp 94 123 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511555350 007 ISBN 9780521351881 retrieved 2022 03 02 Lewis V Bradley 2017 04 04 Eusebius of Caesarea s Un Platonic Platonic Political Theology Polis The Journal for Ancient Greek Political Thought 34 1 94 114 doi 10 1163 20512996 12340119 ISSN 0142 257X For Eusebius the Laws mainly shows the agreement of Christian and pagan morality while his political theory centers on the establishment and maintenance of a Christian empire under a Christian emperor who is a philosopher king His view represents one of the fundamental political options in ancient Christianity one that influenced later Byzantine political theology but was largely rejected in the west Mango 2007 pp 259 260 Walter Christopher 1968 Dvornik Francis Early Christian and Byzantine Political Philosophy Revue des etudes byzantines 26 1 373 376 Archived from the original on 2019 05 25 Retrieved 2022 02 28 Constantelos Demetrios April 1970 Byzantine Philanthropy and Social Welfare The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 21 2 173 174 doi 10 1017 S0022046900048703 S2CID 162224826 Iii Patrick Henry 1967 12 30 A Mirror for Justinian the Ekthesis of Agapetus Diaconus Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 8 4 281 308 ISSN 2159 3159 Archived from the original on 2023 01 24 Retrieved 2023 01 24 Roy Christian January 2003 The basileus as Christomimetes Alexander Suzanne Spain April 1977 Heraclius Byzantine Imperial Ideology and the David Plates Speculum 52 2 217 237 doi 10 2307 2850511 ISSN 0038 7134 JSTOR 2850511 S2CID 161886591 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 Heather Peter Moncur David January 2001 Politics Philosophy and Empire in the Fourth Century Liverpool Liverpool University Press doi 10 3828 978 0 85323 106 6 inactive 2024 04 10 ISBN 978 0 85323 106 6 Archived from the original on 2022 08 31 Retrieved 2022 04 25 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of April 2024 link Bury J B 2018 HISTORY OF THE LATER ROMAN EMPIRE from the death of theodosius i to the death of justinian Charles River Editors ISBN 978 1 61430 462 3 OCLC 1193333944 Heather Peter Moncur David January 2001 Politics Philosophy and Empire in the Fourth Century Liverpool University Press doi 10 3828 978 0 85323 106 6 inactive 2024 04 10 ISBN 978 0 85323 106 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of April 2024 link Barnes T D 1989 11 24 Panegyric history and hagiography in Eusebius Life of Constantine The Making of Orthodoxy Cambridge University Press pp 94 123 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511555350 007 ISBN 9780521351881 retrieved 2023 02 24 Bury J B History of the later Roman Empire from the death of Theodosius I to the death of Justinian Dover ISBN 0 486 20398 0 OCLC 59201731 Haldon John F 2004 Warfare state and society in the Byzantine world 565 1204 Routledge OCLC 1039560193 Haldon John F 2004 Warfare state and society in the Byzantine world 565 1204 Routledge OCLC 1039560193 a b c Kazhdan 1991 p 623 Harvey Alan 1993 The land and taxation in the reign of Alexios I Komnenos the evidence of Theophylakt of Ochrid PERSEE OCLC 754219713 Ziche Hartmut 2017 01 01 Historians and the Economy Zosimos and Prokopios on Fifth and Sixth Century Economie Development Byzantine Narrative BRILL pp 462 474 doi 10 1163 9789004344877 036 ISBN 9789004344877 retrieved 2022 03 13 Frankopan P 2007 02 01 Kinship and the Distribution of Power in Komnenian Byzantium The English Historical Review CXXII 495 1 34 doi 10 1093 ehr cel378 ISSN 0013 8266 Kazhdan Alexander 1993 State Feudal and Private Economy in Byzantium Dumbarton Oaks Papers 47 83 100 doi 10 2307 1291672 ISSN 0070 7546 JSTOR 1291672 Robin Cormack Writing in Gold Byzantine Society and its Icons 1985 George Philip London p180 using Kazhdan A P 1974 in Russian ISBN 0 540 01085 5 Spatharakis Iohannis 1976 The portrait in Byzantine illuminated manuscripts Brill Archive p 110 ISBN 978 90 04 04783 9 The Eunuch in Byzantine History and Society Shaun Tougher page 22 a b Kazhdan 1991 p 1727 Bury 1911 p 21 Kazhdan 1991 p 1267 a b c d Kazhdan 1991 p 2162 Kazhdan 1991 p 1600 a b Bury 1911 p 27 Bury 1911 p 26 Bury 1911 p 25 Bury 1911 pp 21 23 24 Ringrose 2003 p 234 Note 86 Bury 1911 p 121 Kazhdan 1991 p 2231 Heath Ian 13 November 1995 Byzantine Armies 1118 1461 Osprey pp 18 9 ISBN 978 1 85532 347 6 Mark C Bartusis The Kavallarioi of Byzantium in Speculum Vol 63 No 2 Apr 1988 pp 343 350 Bury 1911 p 32 Steven Runciman Byzantine Style and Civilization London Penguin 1975 Rosenwein Barbara 2009 A Short History of the Middle Ages 3rd ed University of Toronto Press Sources editBartusis Mark C 1997 The Late Byzantine Army Arms and Society 1204 1453 University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1620 2 Brehier Louis 2000 1949 Les institutions de l empire byzantin in French Paris Albin Michel ISBN 978 2 226 04722 9 Bury J B 1911 The Imperial Administrative System of the Ninth Century With a Revised Text of the Kletorologion of Philotheos London Oxford University Press OCLC 1046639111 Angold Michael 1984 The Byzantine Aristocracy IX to XIII Centuries BAR International Series ISBN 0 86054 283 1 Guilland Rodolphe 1967 Recherches sur les institutions byzantines 2 vols Studies on the Byzantine Institutions Berliner byzantinische Arbeiten 35 in French Berlin and Amsterdam Akademie Verlag amp Adolf M Hakkert OCLC 878894516 in French Guilland Rodolphe 1971 Les Logothetes Etudes sur l histoire administrative de l Empire byzantin Revue des etudes byzantines 29 5 115 doi 10 3406 rebyz 1971 1441 Retrieved 28 May 2011 Haldon John F 1997 Byzantium in the Seventh Century The Transformation of a Culture Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31917 1 Haldon John 1999 Warfare State and Society in the Byzantine World 565 1204 London UCL Press ISBN 1 85728 495 X Kaldellis Anthony 2015 The Byzantine Republic People and Power in New Rome Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674365407 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Kelly Christopher 2004 Ruling the later Roman Empire Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01564 7 Krsmanovic Bojana 2008 The Byzantine Province in Change On the Threshold Between the 10th and the 11th Century Belgrade Institute for Byzantine Studies ISBN 9789603710608 Mango Cyril A 2007 H Aytokratoria ths Neas Rwmhs Byzantium The Empire of the New Rome in Greek Translated by Dimitris Tsoungarakis Athens Educational Institution of the National Bank of Greece Oikonomides Nicolas 1972 Les listes de preseance byzantines des IXe et Xe siecles in French Paris Editions CNRS Oikonomides Nicolas 1985 La chancellerie imperiale de Byzance du 13e au 15e siecle Revue des etudes byzantines in French 43 167 195 doi 10 3406 rebyz 1985 2171 Retrieved 28 May 2011 Ringrose Kathryn M 2003 The Perfect Servant Eunuchs and the Social Construction of Gender in Byzantium Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 72015 9 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 External links editGlossary of Byzantium related technical terms including official titles Prosopography of the Byzantine World Project King s College London Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Byzantine bureaucracy and aristocracy amp oldid 1221175666, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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