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Leo VI the Wise

Leo VI, called the Wise (Greek: Λέων ὁ Σοφός, romanizedLéōn ho Sophós, 19 September 866 – 11 May 912), was Byzantine Emperor from 886 to 912. The second ruler of the Macedonian dynasty (although his parentage is unclear), he was very well read, leading to his epithet. During his reign, the renaissance of letters, begun by his predecessor Basil I, continued; but the Empire also saw several military defeats in the Balkans against Bulgaria and against the Arabs in Sicily and the Aegean. His reign also witnessed the formal discontinuation of several ancient Roman institutions, such as the separate office of Roman consul.

Leo VI
Emperor of the Romans
A mosaic in Hagia Sophia showing Leo VI paying homage to Christ
Byzantine emperor
Reign29 August 886 – 11 May 912
Coronation6 January 870[1]
PredecessorBasil I
SuccessorAlexander
Born19 September 866
Constantinople
Died11 May 912(912-05-11) (aged 45)
Constantinople
Burial
Wives
IssueEudokia, Anna, Anna, Basil, Constantine
DynastyMacedonian
Father
MotherEudokia Ingerina

Early life

 
Leo VI (right) and Basil I, from the 11th-century manuscript by John Skylitzes

Born on 19 September 866 to the empress Eudokia Ingerina,[2] Leo was either the illegitimate son of Emperor Michael III[3][4][5] or the second son of Michael's successor, Basil I the Macedonian.[6][7][8] Eudokia was both Michael III's mistress and Basil's wife. In 867, Michael was assassinated by Basil, who succeeded him as emperor.[9] As the second-eldest son of the Emperor, Leo was associated on the throne in 870[10] and became the direct heir on the death of his older half-brother Constantine in 879.[11] However, Leo and Basil did not like each other; a relationship that only deteriorated after Eudokia's death, when Leo, unhappy with his marriage to Theophano, took up a mistress in the person of Zoe Zaoutzaina. Basil married Zoe off to an insignificant official, and later almost had Leo blinded when he was accused of conspiring against him.[12][13] On 29 August 886, Basil died in a hunting accident, though he claimed on his deathbed that there was an assassination attempt in which Leo was possibly involved.[14]

Domestic policy

 
Gold solidus of Leo VI.

One of the first actions of Leo VI after his succession was the reburial, with great ceremony, of the remains of Michael III in the imperial mausoleum within the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople.[15] This contributed to the suspicion that Leo was (or at least believed himself to be) in truth Michael's son.[11] Seeking political reconciliation, the new emperor secured the support of the officials in the capital, and surrounded himself with bureaucrats like Stylianos Zaoutzes (the father of his mistress, Zoe Zaoutzaina)[14] and the eunuch Samonas, an Arab defector whom Leo raised to the rank of patrikios and who stood in as godfather to Leo's son, Constantine VII.[16] His attempts to control the great aristocratic families (e.g., the Phokadai and the Doukai) occasionally led to serious conflicts,[17] the most significant being the revolt of Andronikos Doukas in 906.[18]

 
Leo VI warns Constantine Doukas not to usurp the throne after the latter's escape from Baghdad.

Leo also attempted to involve himself in the church through his arbitrary interference with the patriarchate.[19] Using his former tutor Patriarch Photios's excommunication by Pope John VIII as an excuse, Leo dismissed him[20] and replaced him with his own 19-year-old brother Stephen in December 886.[11] On Stephen's death in 893, Leo replaced him with Zaoutzes' nominee, Antony II Kauleas, who died in 901.[17] Leo then promoted his own Imperial secretary (mystikos) Nicholas, but suspicions that he was involved in the failed assassination attempt against Leo in 903[21] as well as his opposition to Leo's fourth marriage saw Nicholas replaced with Leo's spiritual father Euthymios in 907.[18]

The magnificent Church of Ayios Lazaros in Larnaca was constructed during the rule of Leo VI in the late 9th century,[22] and it was built after the relics of St. Lazaros were transported from Crete to Constantinople.[23] The church is one of the best examples of Byzantine architecture. Leo also completed work on the Basilika, the Greek translation and update of the law code issued by Justinian I, which had been started during the reign of Basil.[24]

Bishop Liutprand of Cremona gives an account similar to those about Caliph Harun al-Rashid, to the effect that Leo would sometimes disguise himself and go about Constantinople looking for injustice or corruption. According to one story, he was even captured by the city guards during one of his investigations. Late in the evening, he was walking alone and disguised. Though he bribed two patrols with 12 nomismata and moved on, a third city patrol arrested him. When a terrified guardian recognized the jailed ruler in the morning, the arresting officer was rewarded for doing his duty, while the other patrols were dismissed and punished severely.[citation needed]

Foreign policy

 
The Byzantines flee at Boulgarophygon, miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes

Leo VI's fortune in war was more mixed than Basil's had been.[25] In indulging his chief counselor Stylianos Zaoutzes, Leo provoked a war with Simeon I of Bulgaria in 894, but he was defeated.[26] Bribing the Magyars to attack the Bulgarians from the north, Leo scored an indirect success in 895.[27] However, deprived of his new allies, he lost the major Battle of Boulgarophygon in 896 and had to make the required commercial concessions and to pay annual tribute.[28]

 
Leo VI receives Bulgarian envoys at his court.

Although he won a victory in 900 against the Emirate of Tarsus, in which the Arab army was destroyed and the Emir himself captured,[29] in the west the Emirate of Sicily took Taormina, the last Byzantine outpost on the island of Sicily, in 902.[30] Nevertheless, Leo continued to apply pressure on his eastern frontier through the creation of the new thema of Mesopotamia, a Byzantine invasion of Armenia in 902, and the sacking of Theodosiopolis, as well as successful raids in the Arab Thughur.[29]

 
An Arab fleet under Leo of Tripoli sacks the city of Thessalonica.

Then, in 904 the renegade Leo of Tripolis sacked Thessalonica with his pirates—an event described in The Capture of Thessalonica by John Kaminiates—while a large-scale expedition to recover Crete under Himerios in 911–912 failed disastrously. Nevertheless, the same period also saw the establishment of the important frontier provinces (kleisourai) of Lykandos and Leontokome on territory recently taken from the Arabs.[31] In 907 Constantinople was attacked by the Kievan Rus' under Oleg of Novgorod, who was seeking favorable trading rights with the empire.[30] Leo paid them off, but they attacked again in 911, and a trade treaty was finally signed.[32]

 
Prince Oleg of Novgorod having his shield nailed to the Walls of Constantinople.

Marriages

Leo VI caused a major scandal with his numerous marriages which failed to produce a legitimate heir to the throne.[33] His first wife Theophano, whom Basil had forced him to marry on account of her family connections to the Martinakioi, and whom Leo hated,[34] died in 897, and Leo married Zoe Zaoutzaina, the daughter of his adviser Stylianos Zaoutzes, though she died as well in 899.[35] Upon this marriage Leo created the title of basileopatōr ("father of the emperor") for his father-in-law.[36]

After Zoe's death a third marriage was technically illegal,[37] but he married again, only to have his third wife Eudokia Baïana die in 901.[29] Instead of marrying a fourth time, which would have been an even greater sin than a third marriage (according to the Patriarch Nicholas Mystikos)[38] Leo took as mistress Zoe Karbonopsina.[39] He married her only after she had given birth to a son in 905,[37] but incurred the opposition of the patriarch. Replacing Nicholas Mystikos with Euthymios,[17] Leo got his marriage recognized by the church (albeit with a long penance attached, and with an assurance that Leo would outlaw all future fourth marriages).[18]

Succession

 
Gold solidus of Leo VI and Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos, 908–912

The future Constantine VII was the illegitimate son born before Leo's uncanonical fourth marriage to Zoe Karbonopsina.[37] To strengthen his son's position as heir, Leo had Constantine crowned as co-emperor on 15 May 908, when he was only two years old.[40] Leo VI died on 11 May 912.[17] He was succeeded by his younger brother Alexander, who had reigned as emperor alongside his father and brother since 879.[41]

 
Coronation of Constantine VII by Patriarch Euthymius I.

Works

Leo VI was a prolific writer, and he produced works on many different topics and in many styles, including political orations, liturgical poems, and theological treatises.[30] On many occasions he would personally deliver highly wrought and convoluted sermons in the churches of Constantinople.[30]

In the subject matter of legal works and treatises, he established a legal commission that carried out his father's original intent of codifying all of existing Byzantine law. The end result was a six-volume work consisting of 60 books, entitled the Basilika. Written in Greek, the Basilika translated and systematically arranged practically all of the laws preserved in the Corpus Juris Civilis, thereby providing a foundation upon which all later Byzantine laws could be built.[37] Leo then began integrating new laws issued during his reign into the Basilika. Called "Novels", or "New Laws", these were codes that dealt with current problems and issues, such as the prohibition on fourth marriages. Both the Basilika and the Novels were concerned with ecclesiastical law (canon law) as well as secular law.[37] Most importantly, from a historical perspective, they finally did away with much of the remaining legal and constitutional architecture that the Byzantine Empire had inherited from the Roman Empire, and even from the days of the Roman Republic.[16] Obsolete institutions such as the Curiae, the Roman Senate, even the Consulate, were finally removed from a legal perspective, even though these still continued in a lesser, decorative form.[37]

 
Tactica

The supposed Book of the Eparch and the Kletorologion of Philotheos were also issued under Leo's name and testify to his government's interest in organization and the maintenance of public order.[37] The Book of the Eparch described the rules and regulations for trade and trade organizations in Constantinople, while the Kletorologion was an attempt to standardize officials and ranks at the Byzantine court.[37] Leo is also the author, or at least sponsor, of the Tactica, a notable treatise on military operations.[17]

Succeeding generations saw Leo as a prophet and a magician, and soon a collection of oracular poems and some short divinatory texts, the so-called Oracles of Leo the Wise, at least in part based on earlier Greek sources, were attached to the Emperor's name in later centuries and were believed to foretell the future of the world.[30]

Finally, Leo is credited with translating the relics of St. Lazarus to Constantinople in the year 890. There are several stichera (hymns) attributed to him that are chanted on Lazarus Saturday in the Eastern Orthodox Church. He also composed hymns that are sung on the Great Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross.

Family

 

By his first wife, Theophano Martinakia, Leo VI had one daughter:

  • Eudokia, who died in 892.[42]

By his second wife, Zoe Zaoutzaina, Leo had one daughter:

By his third wife, Eudokia Baïana, Leo had one son:

  • Basil, who survived for only a few days.[33]

By his fourth wife, Zoe Karbonopsina, Leo had two children:[39]

See also

References

  1. ^ PBW, "Leon VI".
  2. ^ Tougher, p. 42
  3. ^ Treadgold, p. 462
  4. ^ Norwich, p. 102
  5. ^ Finlay, p. 306
  6. ^ Adontz, Nicholas, L'Age et l'origine de l'empereur Basil I. Byzantion, 8, 1933, pp. 475–550
  7. ^ Charanis, Peter, The Armenians in the Byzantine Empire, 1963, p. 35
  8. ^ Ostrogorsky, George, History of the Byzantine State, 1969, p. 233, note 1
  9. ^ Treadgold, p. 455
  10. ^ Kazhdan, p. 1210
  11. ^ a b c Gregory, p. 225
  12. ^ Norwich, p. 99
  13. ^ Treadgold, p. 460
  14. ^ a b Treadgold, p. 461
  15. ^ Finlay, p. 307
  16. ^ a b Finlay, p. 308
  17. ^ a b c d e Kazhdan, p. 1211
  18. ^ a b c Treadgold, p. 468
  19. ^ Finlay, p. 310
  20. ^ Norwich, p. 104
  21. ^ Treadgold, p. 467
  22. ^ Michaelides, M.G., Saint Lazarus, The Friend Of Christ And First Bishop Of Kition, (1984) . Archived from the original on 22 September 2009. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  23. ^ Shepard, The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire (2008), p. 493–496
  24. ^ Norwich, p. 105
  25. ^ Finlay, p. 314
  26. ^ Treadgold, p. 463
  27. ^ Norwich, p. 108
  28. ^ Treadgold, p. 464
  29. ^ a b c Treadgold, p. 466
  30. ^ a b c d e Gregory, p. 226
  31. ^ Treadgold, p. 466–470
  32. ^ Treadgold, p. 469
  33. ^ a b Norwich, p. 114
  34. ^ According to the Patriarch Euthymios' biographer, Leo once told Euthymios that "the whole Senate knows that it was against my will and in great sorrow that I married [Theophano]. Apud Gilbert Dagron, Emperor and Priest:the Imperial Office in Byzantium. Cambridge University Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-521-03697-9, pp. 203
  35. ^ Treadgold, p. 465
  36. ^ a b Norwich, p. 113
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h Gregory, p. 227
  38. ^ Finlay, p. 312
  39. ^ a b Norwich, p. 115
  40. ^ Kazhdan, p. 502
  41. ^ Gregory, p. 228
  42. ^ Norwich, p. 112
  43. ^ Reuter, Timothy, The New Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. III: c. 900-c. 1024, Cambridge University Press, (2000), p. 334.
  44. ^ Tougher, p. 148.

Sources

External links

  • French translations of a Turkish-language compendium of divinatory works, including some ascribed to Leo the Sage available at .
  • Greek text with Migne's Latin translation of Leo's works at
  • Digitalized manuscripts of Leo VI the Wise at the Princeton University Library
Leo VI the Wise
Born: 19 September 866 Died: 11 May 912
Regnal titles
Preceded by Byzantine emperor
29 August 886 – 11 May 912
with Basil I, 886–887
Succeeded by

wise, called, wise, greek, Λέων, Σοφός, romanized, léōn, sophós, september, byzantine, emperor, from, second, ruler, macedonian, dynasty, although, parentage, unclear, very, well, read, leading, epithet, during, reign, renaissance, letters, begun, predecessor,. Leo VI called the Wise Greek Lewn ὁ Sofos romanized Leōn ho Sophos 19 September 866 11 May 912 was Byzantine Emperor from 886 to 912 The second ruler of the Macedonian dynasty although his parentage is unclear he was very well read leading to his epithet During his reign the renaissance of letters begun by his predecessor Basil I continued but the Empire also saw several military defeats in the Balkans against Bulgaria and against the Arabs in Sicily and the Aegean His reign also witnessed the formal discontinuation of several ancient Roman institutions such as the separate office of Roman consul Leo VIEmperor of the RomansA mosaic in Hagia Sophia showing Leo VI paying homage to ChristByzantine emperorReign29 August 886 11 May 912Coronation6 January 870 1 PredecessorBasil ISuccessorAlexanderBorn19 September 866ConstantinopleDied11 May 912 912 05 11 aged 45 ConstantinopleBurialChurch of the Holy Apostles ConstantinopleWivesTheophano MartinakiaZoe ZaoutzainaEudokia BaianaZoe KarbonopsinaIssueEudokia Anna Anna Basil ConstantineDynastyMacedonianFatherBasil I officially Michael III reputed MotherEudokia Ingerina Contents 1 Early life 2 Domestic policy 3 Foreign policy 4 Marriages 5 Succession 6 Works 7 Family 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksEarly life Edit Leo VI right and Basil I from the 11th century manuscript by John Skylitzes Born on 19 September 866 to the empress Eudokia Ingerina 2 Leo was either the illegitimate son of Emperor Michael III 3 4 5 or the second son of Michael s successor Basil I the Macedonian 6 7 8 Eudokia was both Michael III s mistress and Basil s wife In 867 Michael was assassinated by Basil who succeeded him as emperor 9 As the second eldest son of the Emperor Leo was associated on the throne in 870 10 and became the direct heir on the death of his older half brother Constantine in 879 11 However Leo and Basil did not like each other a relationship that only deteriorated after Eudokia s death when Leo unhappy with his marriage to Theophano took up a mistress in the person of Zoe Zaoutzaina Basil married Zoe off to an insignificant official and later almost had Leo blinded when he was accused of conspiring against him 12 13 On 29 August 886 Basil died in a hunting accident though he claimed on his deathbed that there was an assassination attempt in which Leo was possibly involved 14 Domestic policy Edit Gold solidus of Leo VI One of the first actions of Leo VI after his succession was the reburial with great ceremony of the remains of Michael III in the imperial mausoleum within the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople 15 This contributed to the suspicion that Leo was or at least believed himself to be in truth Michael s son 11 Seeking political reconciliation the new emperor secured the support of the officials in the capital and surrounded himself with bureaucrats like Stylianos Zaoutzes the father of his mistress Zoe Zaoutzaina 14 and the eunuch Samonas an Arab defector whom Leo raised to the rank of patrikios and who stood in as godfather to Leo s son Constantine VII 16 His attempts to control the great aristocratic families e g the Phokadai and the Doukai occasionally led to serious conflicts 17 the most significant being the revolt of Andronikos Doukas in 906 18 Leo VI warns Constantine Doukas not to usurp the throne after the latter s escape from Baghdad Leo also attempted to involve himself in the church through his arbitrary interference with the patriarchate 19 Using his former tutor Patriarch Photios s excommunication by Pope John VIII as an excuse Leo dismissed him 20 and replaced him with his own 19 year old brother Stephen in December 886 11 On Stephen s death in 893 Leo replaced him with Zaoutzes nominee Antony II Kauleas who died in 901 17 Leo then promoted his own Imperial secretary mystikos Nicholas but suspicions that he was involved in the failed assassination attempt against Leo in 903 21 as well as his opposition to Leo s fourth marriage saw Nicholas replaced with Leo s spiritual father Euthymios in 907 18 The magnificent Church of Ayios Lazaros in Larnaca was constructed during the rule of Leo VI in the late 9th century 22 and it was built after the relics of St Lazaros were transported from Crete to Constantinople 23 The church is one of the best examples of Byzantine architecture Leo also completed work on the Basilika the Greek translation and update of the law code issued by Justinian I which had been started during the reign of Basil 24 Bishop Liutprand of Cremona gives an account similar to those about Caliph Harun al Rashid to the effect that Leo would sometimes disguise himself and go about Constantinople looking for injustice or corruption According to one story he was even captured by the city guards during one of his investigations Late in the evening he was walking alone and disguised Though he bribed two patrols with 12 nomismata and moved on a third city patrol arrested him When a terrified guardian recognized the jailed ruler in the morning the arresting officer was rewarded for doing his duty while the other patrols were dismissed and punished severely citation needed Foreign policy Edit The Byzantines flee at Boulgarophygon miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes Leo VI s fortune in war was more mixed than Basil s had been 25 In indulging his chief counselor Stylianos Zaoutzes Leo provoked a war with Simeon I of Bulgaria in 894 but he was defeated 26 Bribing the Magyars to attack the Bulgarians from the north Leo scored an indirect success in 895 27 However deprived of his new allies he lost the major Battle of Boulgarophygon in 896 and had to make the required commercial concessions and to pay annual tribute 28 Leo VI receives Bulgarian envoys at his court Although he won a victory in 900 against the Emirate of Tarsus in which the Arab army was destroyed and the Emir himself captured 29 in the west the Emirate of Sicily took Taormina the last Byzantine outpost on the island of Sicily in 902 30 Nevertheless Leo continued to apply pressure on his eastern frontier through the creation of the new thema of Mesopotamia a Byzantine invasion of Armenia in 902 and the sacking of Theodosiopolis as well as successful raids in the Arab Thughur 29 An Arab fleet under Leo of Tripoli sacks the city of Thessalonica Then in 904 the renegade Leo of Tripolis sacked Thessalonica with his pirates an event described in The Capture of Thessalonica by John Kaminiates while a large scale expedition to recover Crete under Himerios in 911 912 failed disastrously Nevertheless the same period also saw the establishment of the important frontier provinces kleisourai of Lykandos and Leontokome on territory recently taken from the Arabs 31 In 907 Constantinople was attacked by the Kievan Rus under Oleg of Novgorod who was seeking favorable trading rights with the empire 30 Leo paid them off but they attacked again in 911 and a trade treaty was finally signed 32 Prince Oleg of Novgorod having his shield nailed to the Walls of Constantinople Marriages EditLeo VI caused a major scandal with his numerous marriages which failed to produce a legitimate heir to the throne 33 His first wife Theophano whom Basil had forced him to marry on account of her family connections to the Martinakioi and whom Leo hated 34 died in 897 and Leo married Zoe Zaoutzaina the daughter of his adviser Stylianos Zaoutzes though she died as well in 899 35 Upon this marriage Leo created the title of basileopatōr father of the emperor for his father in law 36 After Zoe s death a third marriage was technically illegal 37 but he married again only to have his third wife Eudokia Baiana die in 901 29 Instead of marrying a fourth time which would have been an even greater sin than a third marriage according to the Patriarch Nicholas Mystikos 38 Leo took as mistress Zoe Karbonopsina 39 He married her only after she had given birth to a son in 905 37 but incurred the opposition of the patriarch Replacing Nicholas Mystikos with Euthymios 17 Leo got his marriage recognized by the church albeit with a long penance attached and with an assurance that Leo would outlaw all future fourth marriages 18 Succession Edit Gold solidus of Leo VI and Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos 908 912 The future Constantine VII was the illegitimate son born before Leo s uncanonical fourth marriage to Zoe Karbonopsina 37 To strengthen his son s position as heir Leo had Constantine crowned as co emperor on 15 May 908 when he was only two years old 40 Leo VI died on 11 May 912 17 He was succeeded by his younger brother Alexander who had reigned as emperor alongside his father and brother since 879 41 Coronation of Constantine VII by Patriarch Euthymius I Works EditLeo VI was a prolific writer and he produced works on many different topics and in many styles including political orations liturgical poems and theological treatises 30 On many occasions he would personally deliver highly wrought and convoluted sermons in the churches of Constantinople 30 In the subject matter of legal works and treatises he established a legal commission that carried out his father s original intent of codifying all of existing Byzantine law The end result was a six volume work consisting of 60 books entitled the Basilika Written in Greek the Basilika translated and systematically arranged practically all of the laws preserved in the Corpus Juris Civilis thereby providing a foundation upon which all later Byzantine laws could be built 37 Leo then began integrating new laws issued during his reign into the Basilika Called Novels or New Laws these were codes that dealt with current problems and issues such as the prohibition on fourth marriages Both the Basilika and the Novels were concerned with ecclesiastical law canon law as well as secular law 37 Most importantly from a historical perspective they finally did away with much of the remaining legal and constitutional architecture that the Byzantine Empire had inherited from the Roman Empire and even from the days of the Roman Republic 16 Obsolete institutions such as the Curiae the Roman Senate even the Consulate were finally removed from a legal perspective even though these still continued in a lesser decorative form 37 Tactica The supposed Book of the Eparch and the Kletorologion of Philotheos were also issued under Leo s name and testify to his government s interest in organization and the maintenance of public order 37 The Book of the Eparch described the rules and regulations for trade and trade organizations in Constantinople while the Kletorologion was an attempt to standardize officials and ranks at the Byzantine court 37 Leo is also the author or at least sponsor of the Tactica a notable treatise on military operations 17 Succeeding generations saw Leo as a prophet and a magician and soon a collection of oracular poems and some short divinatory texts the so called Oracles of Leo the Wise at least in part based on earlier Greek sources were attached to the Emperor s name in later centuries and were believed to foretell the future of the world 30 Finally Leo is credited with translating the relics of St Lazarus to Constantinople in the year 890 There are several stichera hymns attributed to him that are chanted on Lazarus Saturday in the Eastern Orthodox Church He also composed hymns that are sung on the Great Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross Family Edit The Leo Scepter By his first wife Theophano Martinakia Leo VI had one daughter Eudokia who died in 892 42 By his second wife Zoe Zaoutzaina Leo had one daughter Anna 36 betrothed and married to the Holy Roman Emperor Louis the Blind 43 though Dr Shaun Tougher Reader in Ancient History at Cardiff University doubts they were married 44 By his third wife Eudokia Baiana Leo had one son Basil who survived for only a few days 33 By his fourth wife Zoe Karbonopsina Leo had two children 39 Anna Constantine VII See also Edit Byzantine Empire portalList of Byzantine emperorsReferences Edit PBW Leon VI Tougher p 42 Treadgold p 462 Norwich p 102 Finlay p 306 Adontz Nicholas L Age et l origine de l empereur Basil I Byzantion 8 1933 pp 475 550 Charanis Peter The Armenians in the Byzantine Empire 1963 p 35 Ostrogorsky George History of the Byzantine State 1969 p 233 note 1 Treadgold p 455 Kazhdan p 1210 a b c Gregory p 225 Norwich p 99 Treadgold p 460 a b Treadgold p 461 Finlay p 307 a b Finlay p 308 a b c d e Kazhdan p 1211 a b c Treadgold p 468 Finlay p 310 Norwich p 104 Treadgold p 467 Michaelides M G Saint Lazarus The Friend Of Christ And First Bishop Of Kition 1984 Father Demetrios Serfes Life of Saint Lazarus Archived from the original on 22 September 2009 Retrieved 21 September 2009 Shepard The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire 2008 p 493 496 Norwich p 105 Finlay p 314 Treadgold p 463 Norwich p 108 Treadgold p 464 a b c Treadgold p 466 a b c d e Gregory p 226 Treadgold p 466 470 Treadgold p 469 a b Norwich p 114 According to the Patriarch Euthymios biographer Leo once told Euthymios that the whole Senate knows that it was against my will and in great sorrow that I married Theophano Apud Gilbert Dagron Emperor and Priest the Imperial Office in Byzantium Cambridge University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 521 03697 9 pp 203 Treadgold p 465 a b Norwich p 113 a b c d e f g h Gregory p 227 Finlay p 312 a b Norwich p 115 Kazhdan p 502 Gregory p 228 Norwich p 112 Reuter Timothy The New Cambridge Medieval History Vol III c 900 c 1024 Cambridge University Press 2000 p 334 Tougher p 148 Sources EditCharanis Peter 1963 The Armenians in the Byzantine Empire Lisbon Fundacao Calouste Gulbenkian Armenian Library OCLC 17186882 Finlay George History of the Byzantine Empire from 716 1057 Edinburgh William Blackwood amp Sons 1853 Gregory Timothy E A History of Byzantium Blackwell Publishing 2005 ISBN 0 631 23512 4 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Norwich John Julius 1993 Byzantium The Apogee London Penguin ISBN 0 14 011448 3 Tougher Shaun 1997 The Reign of Leo VI 886 912 Politics and People Leiden New York Koln Brill ISBN 9004108114 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leon VI French translations of a Turkish language compendium of divinatory works including some ascribed to Leo the Sage available at 1 Greek text with Migne s Latin translation of Leo s works at 2 The Mosaic of Leo VI in the Narthex of Hagia Sophia Digitalized manuscripts of Leo VI the Wise at the Princeton University LibraryLeo VI the WiseMacedonian dynastyBorn 19 September 866 Died 11 May 912Regnal titlesPreceded byBasil I Byzantine emperor29 August 886 11 May 912with Basil I 886 887 Succeeded byAlexander Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leo VI the Wise amp oldid 1143484180, wikipedia, 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