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Eudokia Makrembolitissa

Eudokia Makrembolitissa[4] (Greek: Εὐδοκία Μακρεμβολίτισσα, romanizedEvdokía Makremvolítissa) was a Byzantine empress by her successive marriages to Constantine X Doukas and Romanos IV Diogenes. She acted as regent of her minor son, Michael VII in 1067, and resigned her regency by marriage to Romanos IV Diogenes. When he was deposed in 1071 she resumed the regency for her sons, but was soon forced to resign again.

Eudokia Makrembolitissa
Augusta
Empress and Autocratess of the Romans
Contemporary miniature of empress Eudokia[a]
Byzantine empress regnant or regent
Rule23 May – 31 December 1067[3]
(also regent for her co-emperor Michael VII)
PredecessorConstantine X
SuccessorRomanos IV
Co-emperorsMichael VII and Konstantios Doukas
Byzantine empress consort
Tenure1059–1067 (as wife of Constantine X)
1068–1071 (as wife of Romanos IV)
Bornc. 1030
Diedafter 1081
Spouse
(m. 1049; died 1067)
(m. 1068; died 1072)
Issueby Constantine X
Michael VII Doukas
A son
Anne Doukaina
Andronikos Doukas
Theodora Doukaina
Konstantios Doukas
Zoe Doukaina
by Romanos IV
Nikephoros Diogenes
Leo Diogenes
DynastyDoukid
ReligionOrthodox

Because she essentially ruled in her own right during her sole regencies and retained the title of empress, several modern scholars consider Eudokia to have been empress regnant in 1067 and some also in 1071.

Background and early life edit

Eudokia Makrembolitissa was the daughter of John Makrembolites and a niece of Michael I Cerularius, the patriarch of Constantinople, whose sister had married Makrembolites.[5] John, who belonged to the aristocracy of Constantinople, allied with Cerularius in 1040 to conspire against Emperor Michael IV, but their plan was stopped soon after.[6] The birth date of Eudokia is unknown, but scholars often place it c. 1030.[7] Some authors give her a lifespan of 1021–1096,[8] but this is not corroborated by other sources.[3][5][4] Eudokia married Constantine X Doukas sometime before his accession in 1059, probably c. 1049,[3][4] when Constantine was 43 years old.[9] She was Constantine's second wife, as his first one, a daughter of Duke Constantine Dalassenos, died soon after their marriage.[10] By 1059 they already had at least five children: the future Michael VII, an unnamed son who died young, Andronikos Doukas, Anna Doukaina and Theodora Doukaina.[11]

Empress edit

Constantine X Doukas was crowned emperor on 23 November 1059, the day after Isaac I Komnenos' abdication.[12] Eudokia was crowned augusta soon after, probably on the same year.[4][11] They had a fourth son around this time, Konstantios Doukas, who was crowned before his brother Michael, and an other daughter, Zoe.[12] When Constantine fell ill in October 1066, he appointed caesar John Doukas and patriarch John VIII Xiphilinos as co-regents. Eudokia was meant to only take care of Michael and Konstantios, but Constantine knew that she had larger ambitions.[13] Constantine died the next year, on 23 May 1067.[12]

In 1825, Charles Abraham Elton counted Eudocia among the monarchs of the Byzantine Empire in his History of the Roman Emperors.[14] Some historians regard Eudokia as a empress regnant who actually ruled in her own right, rather than just a regent.[3][15][16] According to the contemporary Michael Psellos, Eudokia "succeeded [Constantine X] as supreme ruler, she did not hand over the government to others... she assumed control of the whole administration in person.[17] Michael VII was "already long past his boyhood" by this time, but nevertheless "left the whole administration to his mother".[18] Some authors argue that he had some type of mental disability.[19]

Her status as a ruler is reflected in her coinage and public iconography.[20] For example, she sometimes appeared on silver and copper coins without her sons, which was very unusual. One inscription on a silver reliquary calls her "Great Empress of the Romans" (megalē basilis tōn Romaiōn), suggesting that she had a higher status than her sons (who were only basileus).[20] Some inscriptions of 1067 ascribe the masculine title Emperor to her. On a tetarteron probably of late 1067, the inscription reads 'Eudokia and Michael, emperors', and on a seal, probably dated between May and December 1067, the inscription reads 'Eudokia, Michael and Constantios, emperors of the Romaioi'.[21]

Eudokia had sworn on Constantine's deathbed not to remarry, and she even made the oath in the presence of patriarch John VIII Xiphilinos.[3] However, she knew that her position of power could be compromised if she continued to wield power alone. She then chose Romanos IV Diogenes, a general who had great popularity with the army.[22] This decision was quite controversial, as Romanos had been accused of conspiring with the Hungarians shortly before Constantine X's death.[23] Eudokia hoped that his skills and leadership would stop the advance of the Seljuk Turks in the East.[8][22][24] On 25 December, Eudokia rewarded Romanos with the titles magistros and stratelates in preparation for his coronation.[23] However, they still needed the approval of the patriarch of Constantinople. According to some sources, Eudokia tricked John VIII into believing that she would marry one of his brothers. John VIII accepted the offer and canceled the oath.[23][25][4] The marriage and imperial coronation took place on 1 January 1068, to the surprise of the patriarch and other officials.[26][25]

 
15th-century portrait of Eudokia, from the Mutinensis gr. 122

With her new husband's assistance, Eudokia was able to dispel the impending danger. She had two sons with Romanos IV, Nikephoros and Leo.[3][4] Another of Eudokia and Constantine's sons, Andronikos Doukas, was also made co-emperor by Romanos IV, although he had been excluded from power by his own father, mother, and brothers. He was probably crowned too in 1068, although he is ignored by contemporary chronicles.[11] Contemporary coinage seems to depict Romanos as inferior to Michael and his brothers, and thus inferior to the empress. He is sometimes not even called "emperor", as some tetarteron only call him despotes and reserve the title basileus for Eudokia.[26][27] According to Michael Psellos, she explicitly referred to him as "a subject, not a ruler."[28] Romanos IV, however, soon started to act independently of her, even starting to resent her.[29] Discontent was also shared by a faction of the Senate and army, with John Doukas at the head.[30]

On 26 August 1071, Romanos IV faced Alp Arslan, sultan of the Seljuk Empire, at the decisive Battle of Manzikert.[31][32] The Byzantine army was destroyed and the emperor himself was captured, partly because of the treachery of general Andronikos, John Doukas's son.[33][27][34] The news reached Constantinople a few days later, causing much shock in the populace.[35] On 1 October the Senate declared Romanos IV deposed and proclaimed Eudokia and Michael VII as joint rulers.[36][33] Some sources state that Eudokia was already planning on deposing her husband, but this is very unlikely.[37] The new regime only lasted one month,[b] when Eudokia's opposition became strong enough to depose her, especially after news of Romanos release arrived at the capital.[31][33] Michael VII was then proclaimed sole autokrator by John Doukas, who forced Eudokia to retire to a monastery as a nun.[31][4][38]

Later life edit

Eudokia continued to be influential even after her exile in 1071.[38] Soon after her deposition, she allied with Anna Dalassene, a sister-in-law of Isaac I Komnenos who had also been exiled,[38] to restore Romanos IV and depose John Doukas.[39] However, Doukas soon fell from grace as a result of the schemes of eunuch Nikephoritzes, who was close to the Komnenos family.[39] Eudokia later performed a memorable funeral and burial for Romanos IV, who died on 4 August 1072.[37][4]

After Michael VII was deposed in 1078 by Nikephoros III Botaneiates, Eudokia was recalled to Constantinople by the new emperor, who offered to marry her. This plan did not come to pass, mainly due to the opposition of John Doukas, who returned to power after Nikephoritzes's exile. However, Nikephoros still sent her many rewards and gifts of gratitude.[40][4][3] Her date of death is unknown, but it was sometime after the accession of Alexios I Komnenos in 1081.[40] Her last known action is the adoption of one of the cousins of Patriarch Michael I Cerularius.[4]

Attributed to Eudokia is a dictionary of history and mythology, called Ἰωνιά (i.e., Collection or Bed of Violets). It is prefaced by an address to her husband, Romanos Diogenes, and the work is described as "a collection of genealogies of gods, heroes, and heroines, of their metamorphoses, and of the fables and stories respecting them found in the ancients; containing also notices of various philosophers".[41] However, the book is now thought to be a modern (16th-century) compilation, falsely attributed to Eudokia, and compiled by the counterfeiter Constantine Paleocappa c. 1540.[42] The sources from which the work was compiled include Diogenes Laërtius and the Suda.[42]

Issue edit

By her first husband, Eudokia had seven children, four sons and three daughters:[44]

By her second husband, she had two sons, most likely twins:[45]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Previously thought to be Irene Doukaina. The red hair seems to be a later addition.[1][2]
  2. ^ One chronicle states that their joint rule began on 1 October and that it lasted "one month". Schreiner dates Eudokia's fall to 1 November.[36]
  3. ^ The inscription reads: "Constantine Doukas in Christ the Lord, pious Basileus and Autokrator of the Romans / Eudokia in Christ the Lord, great Basilissa of the Romans."[43]

References edit

  1. ^ Sághy & Robert 2019, p. 162.
  2. ^ a b Spatharakis 1976, pp. 27–34.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g ODB, p. 739.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j PBW, Eudokia 1.
  5. ^ a b Garland 2002, p. 168.
  6. ^ ODB, p. 1272, 1361.
  7. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 608.
  8. ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
  9. ^ ODB, p. 504.
  10. ^ Garland 2002, pp. 168–169.
  11. ^ a b c Grierson 1973, p. 779.
  12. ^ a b c Grierson 1973, p. 764.
  13. ^ Garland 2002, p. 169.
  14. ^ Elton, Charles Abraham (1825). A History of the Roman Emperors: From the Accession of Augustus to the Fall of the Last Constantine. Baldwin, Cradock and Joy. p. 304.
  15. ^ McLachlan 2004, p. 236.
  16. ^ Haldon 2005, p. 176.
  17. ^ Psellos, Eudocia 1.
  18. ^ Psellos, Eudocia 2.
  19. ^ ODB, p. 1366.
  20. ^ a b Garland 2002, pp. 170−172.
  21. ^ Garland 2002, p. 172.
  22. ^ a b Finlay 1877, p. 24.
  23. ^ a b c Garland 2002, p. 173.
  24. ^ Hill 2014, p. 63.
  25. ^ a b Finlay 1877, p. 25.
  26. ^ a b Garland 2002, pp. 173−174.
  27. ^ a b Hill 2014, p. 64.
  28. ^ Psellos, Eudocia 8.
  29. ^ Psellos, Romanos 10.
  30. ^ Finlay 1877, pp. 24–25.
  31. ^ a b c Grierson 1973, p. 780.
  32. ^ Schreiner 1975, p. 170.
  33. ^ a b c Garland 2002, p. 176.
  34. ^ Finlay 1877, pp. 31–33.
  35. ^ Psellos, Romanos 23.
  36. ^ a b Schreiner 1975, p. 161.
  37. ^ a b Vratimos 2003.
  38. ^ a b c Garland 2002, p. 177.
  39. ^ a b Hill 2014, p. 65.
  40. ^ a b Garland 2002, p. 178.
  41. ^ Smith 1870.
  42. ^ a b Dorandi 2013.
  43. ^ a b Evans & Wixom 1997, pp. 77–78.
  44. ^ Norwich, John Julius (1993). Byzantium. 2: The apogee. London: Penguin Books. p. 301. ISBN 978-0-14-011448-5.
  45. ^ Bartusis, Mark C. (2012). Land and privilege in Byzantium: the institution of pronoia. Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-1-107-00962-2.

Bibliography edit

Primary sources

Secondary sources

Eudokia Makrembolitissa
Regnal titles
Preceded by Byzantine empress regnant
23 May – 31 December 1067
Succeeded by
Royal titles
Preceded by Byzantine empress consort
23 November 1059 – 23 May 1067 and 1 January 1068 – 1 October 1071
Succeeded by

eudokia, makrembolitissa, greek, Εὐδοκία, Μακρεμβολίτισσα, romanized, evdokía, makremvolítissa, byzantine, empress, successive, marriages, constantine, doukas, romanos, diogenes, acted, regent, minor, michael, 1067, resigned, regency, marriage, romanos, diogen. Eudokia Makrembolitissa 4 Greek Eὐdokia Makrembolitissa romanized Evdokia Makremvolitissa was a Byzantine empress by her successive marriages to Constantine X Doukas and Romanos IV Diogenes She acted as regent of her minor son Michael VII in 1067 and resigned her regency by marriage to Romanos IV Diogenes When he was deposed in 1071 she resumed the regency for her sons but was soon forced to resign again Eudokia MakrembolitissaAugustaEmpress and Autocratess of the RomansContemporary miniature of empress Eudokia a Byzantine empress regnant or regentRule23 May 31 December 1067 3 also regent for her co emperor Michael VII PredecessorConstantine XSuccessorRomanos IVCo emperorsMichael VII and Konstantios DoukasByzantine empress consortTenure1059 1067 as wife of Constantine X 1068 1071 as wife of Romanos IV Bornc 1030Diedafter 1081SpouseConstantine X Doukas m 1049 died 1067 wbr Romanos IV Diogenes m 1068 died 1072 wbr Issueby Constantine XMichael VII DoukasA sonAnne DoukainaAndronikos DoukasTheodora DoukainaKonstantios DoukasZoe Doukainaby Romanos IVNikephoros DiogenesLeo DiogenesDynastyDoukidReligionOrthodoxBecause she essentially ruled in her own right during her sole regencies and retained the title of empress several modern scholars consider Eudokia to have been empress regnant in 1067 and some also in 1071 Contents 1 Background and early life 2 Empress 3 Later life 4 Issue 5 Notes 6 References 7 BibliographyBackground and early life editEudokia Makrembolitissa was the daughter of John Makrembolites and a niece of Michael I Cerularius the patriarch of Constantinople whose sister had married Makrembolites 5 John who belonged to the aristocracy of Constantinople allied with Cerularius in 1040 to conspire against Emperor Michael IV but their plan was stopped soon after 6 The birth date of Eudokia is unknown but scholars often place it c 1030 7 Some authors give her a lifespan of 1021 1096 8 but this is not corroborated by other sources 3 5 4 Eudokia married Constantine X Doukas sometime before his accession in 1059 probably c 1049 3 4 when Constantine was 43 years old 9 She was Constantine s second wife as his first one a daughter of Duke Constantine Dalassenos died soon after their marriage 10 By 1059 they already had at least five children the future Michael VII an unnamed son who died young Andronikos Doukas Anna Doukaina and Theodora Doukaina 11 Empress editConstantine X Doukas was crowned emperor on 23 November 1059 the day after Isaac I Komnenos abdication 12 Eudokia was crowned augusta soon after probably on the same year 4 11 They had a fourth son around this time Konstantios Doukas who was crowned before his brother Michael and an other daughter Zoe 12 When Constantine fell ill in October 1066 he appointed caesar John Doukas and patriarch John VIII Xiphilinos as co regents Eudokia was meant to only take care of Michael and Konstantios but Constantine knew that she had larger ambitions 13 Constantine died the next year on 23 May 1067 12 In 1825 Charles Abraham Elton counted Eudocia among the monarchs of the Byzantine Empire in his History of the Roman Emperors 14 Some historians regard Eudokia as a empress regnant who actually ruled in her own right rather than just a regent 3 15 16 According to the contemporary Michael Psellos Eudokia succeeded Constantine X as supreme ruler she did not hand over the government to others she assumed control of the whole administration in person 17 Michael VII was already long past his boyhood by this time but nevertheless left the whole administration to his mother 18 Some authors argue that he had some type of mental disability 19 Her status as a ruler is reflected in her coinage and public iconography 20 For example she sometimes appeared on silver and copper coins without her sons which was very unusual One inscription on a silver reliquary calls her Great Empress of the Romans megale basilis tōn Romaiōn suggesting that she had a higher status than her sons who were only basileus 20 Some inscriptions of 1067 ascribe the masculine title Emperor to her On a tetarteron probably of late 1067 the inscription reads Eudokia and Michael emperors and on a seal probably dated between May and December 1067 the inscription reads Eudokia Michael and Constantios emperors of the Romaioi 21 Eudokia had sworn on Constantine s deathbed not to remarry and she even made the oath in the presence of patriarch John VIII Xiphilinos 3 However she knew that her position of power could be compromised if she continued to wield power alone She then chose Romanos IV Diogenes a general who had great popularity with the army 22 This decision was quite controversial as Romanos had been accused of conspiring with the Hungarians shortly before Constantine X s death 23 Eudokia hoped that his skills and leadership would stop the advance of the Seljuk Turks in the East 8 22 24 On 25 December Eudokia rewarded Romanos with the titles magistros and stratelates in preparation for his coronation 23 However they still needed the approval of the patriarch of Constantinople According to some sources Eudokia tricked John VIII into believing that she would marry one of his brothers John VIII accepted the offer and canceled the oath 23 25 4 The marriage and imperial coronation took place on 1 January 1068 to the surprise of the patriarch and other officials 26 25 nbsp 15th century portrait of Eudokia from the Mutinensis gr 122With her new husband s assistance Eudokia was able to dispel the impending danger She had two sons with Romanos IV Nikephoros and Leo 3 4 Another of Eudokia and Constantine s sons Andronikos Doukas was also made co emperor by Romanos IV although he had been excluded from power by his own father mother and brothers He was probably crowned too in 1068 although he is ignored by contemporary chronicles 11 Contemporary coinage seems to depict Romanos as inferior to Michael and his brothers and thus inferior to the empress He is sometimes not even called emperor as some tetarteron only call him despotes and reserve the title basileus for Eudokia 26 27 According to Michael Psellos she explicitly referred to him as a subject not a ruler 28 Romanos IV however soon started to act independently of her even starting to resent her 29 Discontent was also shared by a faction of the Senate and army with John Doukas at the head 30 On 26 August 1071 Romanos IV faced Alp Arslan sultan of the Seljuk Empire at the decisive Battle of Manzikert 31 32 The Byzantine army was destroyed and the emperor himself was captured partly because of the treachery of general Andronikos John Doukas s son 33 27 34 The news reached Constantinople a few days later causing much shock in the populace 35 On 1 October the Senate declared Romanos IV deposed and proclaimed Eudokia and Michael VII as joint rulers 36 33 Some sources state that Eudokia was already planning on deposing her husband but this is very unlikely 37 The new regime only lasted one month b when Eudokia s opposition became strong enough to depose her especially after news of Romanos release arrived at the capital 31 33 Michael VII was then proclaimed sole autokrator by John Doukas who forced Eudokia to retire to a monastery as a nun 31 4 38 Later life editEudokia continued to be influential even after her exile in 1071 38 Soon after her deposition she allied with Anna Dalassene a sister in law of Isaac I Komnenos who had also been exiled 38 to restore Romanos IV and depose John Doukas 39 However Doukas soon fell from grace as a result of the schemes of eunuch Nikephoritzes who was close to the Komnenos family 39 Eudokia later performed a memorable funeral and burial for Romanos IV who died on 4 August 1072 37 4 After Michael VII was deposed in 1078 by Nikephoros III Botaneiates Eudokia was recalled to Constantinople by the new emperor who offered to marry her This plan did not come to pass mainly due to the opposition of John Doukas who returned to power after Nikephoritzes s exile However Nikephoros still sent her many rewards and gifts of gratitude 40 4 3 Her date of death is unknown but it was sometime after the accession of Alexios I Komnenos in 1081 40 Her last known action is the adoption of one of the cousins of Patriarch Michael I Cerularius 4 Attributed to Eudokia is a dictionary of history and mythology called Ἰwnia i e Collection or Bed of Violets It is prefaced by an address to her husband Romanos Diogenes and the work is described as a collection of genealogies of gods heroes and heroines of their metamorphoses and of the fables and stories respecting them found in the ancients containing also notices of various philosophers 41 However the book is now thought to be a modern 16th century compilation falsely attributed to Eudokia and compiled by the counterfeiter Constantine Paleocappa c 1540 42 The sources from which the work was compiled include Diogenes Laertius and the Suda 42 nbsp Constantine X and Eudokia in a reliquary of Demetrius of Thessaloniki by John Autoreianos 43 c nbsp Miniature of Constantine X and Eudokia alongside their son and co emperor Michael VII Doukas 2 nbsp Gold tetarteron of Romanos IV Diogenes and Eudokia Issue editBy her first husband Eudokia had seven children four sons and three daughters 44 Michael VII Doukas co emperor from 1060 and senior emperor after 1071 A son who died in infancy Anne Doukaina nun Andronikos Doukas co emperor from 1068 to 1078 Theodora Doukaina who married Domenico Selvo Doge of Venice Konstantios Doukas co emperor from 1060 to 1078 died in battle with the Normans in 1081 Zoe Doukaina who married Adrianos Komnenos a brother of Emperor Alexios I Komnenos They had a son Alexios and two daughters maybe named Anne and Alexia By her second husband she had two sons most likely twins 45 Nikephoros Diogenes blinded by order of Alexios I Comnenus on charges of treason Leo Diogenes died in battle Notes edit Previously thought to be Irene Doukaina The red hair seems to be a later addition 1 2 One chronicle states that their joint rule began on 1 October and that it lasted one month Schreiner dates Eudokia s fall to 1 November 36 The inscription reads Constantine Doukas in Christ the Lord pious Basileus and Autokrator of the Romans Eudokia in Christ the Lord great Basilissa of the Romans 43 References edit Saghy amp Robert 2019 p 162 a b Spatharakis 1976 pp 27 34 a b c d e f g ODB p 739 a b c d e f g h i j PBW Eudokia 1 a b Garland 2002 p 168 ODB p 1272 1361 Treadgold 1997 p 608 a b Chisholm 1911 ODB p 504 Garland 2002 pp 168 169 a b c Grierson 1973 p 779 a b c Grierson 1973 p 764 Garland 2002 p 169 Elton Charles Abraham 1825 A History of the Roman Emperors From the Accession of Augustus to the Fall of the Last Constantine Baldwin Cradock and Joy p 304 McLachlan 2004 p 236 Haldon 2005 p 176 Psellos Eudocia 1 Psellos Eudocia 2 ODB p 1366 a b Garland 2002 pp 170 172 Garland 2002 p 172 a b Finlay 1877 p 24 a b c Garland 2002 p 173 Hill 2014 p 63 a b Finlay 1877 p 25 a b Garland 2002 pp 173 174 a b Hill 2014 p 64 Psellos Eudocia 8 Psellos Romanos 10 Finlay 1877 pp 24 25 a b c Grierson 1973 p 780 Schreiner 1975 p 170 a b c Garland 2002 p 176 Finlay 1877 pp 31 33 Psellos Romanos 23 a b Schreiner 1975 p 161 a b Vratimos 2003 a b c Garland 2002 p 177 a b Hill 2014 p 65 a b Garland 2002 p 178 Smith 1870 a b Dorandi 2013 a b Evans amp Wixom 1997 pp 77 78 Norwich John Julius 1993 Byzantium 2 The apogee London Penguin Books p 301 ISBN 978 0 14 011448 5 Bartusis Mark C 2012 Land and privilege in Byzantium the institution of pronoia Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press p 147 ISBN 978 1 107 00962 2 Bibliography editPrimary sources Psellos Michael Cronographia Vol 7 Secondary sources Evans Helen C Wixom William D 1997 The glory of Byzantium art and culture of the Middle Byzantine era New York Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 9780810965072 Finlay George 1877 1854 Regency of Eudocia 1067 History of the Byzantine and Greek Empires from 1057 1453 William Blackwood amp Sonspages pp 24 36 Garland Lynda 2002 Eudokia Makrembolitissa Byzantine Empresses Woman and Power in Byzantium Routledge pp 168 179 ISBN 9781134756384 Grierson Philip 1973 Eudocia Macrembolitissa Catalogue of the Byzantine Coins Vol 3 Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Papers pp 779 784 ISBN 0 88402 012 6 Jeffreys Michael ed 2016 Eudokia Makrembolitissa Prosopography of the Byzantine World King s College London ISBN 978 1 908951 20 5 Hill Barbara 2014 Imperial Women in Byzantium 1025 1204 Power Patronage and Ideology Hoboken Taylor and Francis ISBN 978 1 317 88466 8 OCLC 881417376 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 Eudokia Makrembolitissa The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Haldon John 2005 The Palgrave Atlas of Byzantine History New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0230243644 Saghy Marianne Robert Ousterhout 2019 Piroska and the Pantokrator Central European University Press ISBN 9789633862971 Spatharakis Ioannis 1976 The Portrait in Byzantine Illuminated Manuscripts Brill ISBN 9789633862971 Schreiner Peter 1975 Die byzantinischen Kleinchronike Byzantine small chronicles Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae Vienna OAW ISBN 978 3 7001 0206 9 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 Vratimos Antonios 2003 Eudokia Makrembolitissa was she implicated in the removal of her husband Romanos IV Diogenes from power Revue des etudes byzantines 71 277 284 doi 10 3406 rebyz 2013 4998 McLachlan Sean 2004 Byzantium An Illustrated History Hippocrene Books ISBN 0 7818 1033 7 Dorandi Tiziano 2013 Introduction Diogenes Laertius Lives of Eminent Philosophers Cambridge University Press pp 7 9 ISBN 978 0521886819 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Eudocia Macrembolitissa Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press nbsp Smith William ed 1870 Eudocia Augusta Macrembolis Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology vol 2 p 80 Eudokia MakrembolitissaMakrembolitesRegnal titlesPreceded byConstantine X Byzantine empress regnant23 May 31 December 1067 Succeeded byRomanos IVRoyal titlesPreceded byCatherine of Bulgaria Byzantine empress consort23 November 1059 23 May 1067 and 1 January 1068 1 October 1071 Succeeded byMaria of Alania Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eudokia Makrembolitissa amp oldid 1197550337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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