Eudokia Makrembolitissa

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox royalty

Eudokia MakrembolitissaTemplate:Sfn (Template:Langx) was a Byzantine empress by her successive marriages to Constantine X Doukas and Romanos IV Diogenes. She acted as ruler with her two sons in 1067, and resigned her rule by marriage to Romanos IV Diogenes. When he was deposed in 1071 she resumed the rule with her son Michael VII, but was soon forced to resign again.

Because she essentially ruled in her own right during her rules 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

Eudokia Makrembolitissa was the daughter of John Makrembolites and a maternal niece of Michael I Cerularius, the patriarch of Constantinople, whose sister Keroularie had married Makrembolites.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn The birth date of Eudokia is unknown, but scholars often place it Template:Circa 1030.Template:Sfn Some authors give her a lifespan of 1021–1096,Template:Sfn but this is not corroborated by other sources.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Eudokia married Constantine X Doukas sometime before his accession in 1059, probably Template:Circa 1049,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn when Constantine was 43 years old.Template:Sfn She was Constantine's second wife, as his first one, a daughter of Duke Constantine Dalassenos, died soon after their marriage.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

Empress

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

Some historians regard Eudokia as an empress regnant who actually ruled in her own right for seven months,Template:Sfn<ref name="symmeikta"/> while others consider her as a regent who was the de facto emperor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some books include her in lists of emperors,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> others do not.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn Michael VII was "already long past his boyhood" by this time, but nevertheless "left the whole administration to his mother".Template:Sfn Some authors argue that he had some type of mental disability.Template:Sfn

It was very unusual that, on Constantine X's silver and copper coins, he appeared with only his wife Eudokia, without his sons Michael and Constantios, even though they were co-emperors.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn One inscription on a silver reliquary, showing Constantine X and Eudokia, calls her "Great Empress of the Romans" (megalē basilis tōn Romaiōn), suggesting that she was a co-ruler or successor to Constantine.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some inscriptions ascribe the masculine title emperor to her. On Constantine X's silver coinage, the miliaresion, she and Constantine are together called 'faithful emperors of the Romaioi'.Template:Sfn 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'.Template:Sfn A seal, dated to early 1068, link Romanos and Eudokia as co-rulers with the title 'Romanos and Eudokia emperors of the Romaioi'.Template:Sfn On coins, the title of basilis(sa) is used by only the empresses who assumed the throne: Irene, Zoe, Theodora, and Eudokia Makrembolitissa.Template:Sfn On Constantine X's miliaresion, Eudokia has taken the place to the spectator's right, which is traditionally given to the co-emperor and successor to the throne.Template:Sfn Calling her the ruler of the world (κοσμοκράτορ), the dedication poem provides evidence for Eudokia's perception of herself as sharing the empire with her husband Constantine.Template:Sfn On the dating clauses of South Italian charters, Eudokia's name always takes precedence over those of her sons, and she is often the only one to receive the imperial title.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Constantine left as co-regents Michael, Konstantios and Eudokia. Eudokia holds the first place in the Hierarchical order, and she alone bears the imperial status.<ref name="symmeikta">Template:Cite journal</ref> Historian Michael Attaleiates, in order to declare the status of Eudokia after May 1067 and of Zoe and Theodora in April 1042, uses the title of autokrator, precisely because the above were brought to the Byzantine throne with the same legal status as male emperors.<ref name="symmeikta"/> Byzantine sources, referring to imperial statutes, usually mention the name of the ruler who issued this decree, and the name of the first-class emperor is never omitted. Eudokia issued a decree determining the distance between buildings being erected, and the inscription of only the name of Eudokia as its publisher presupposes her imperial capacity at the time of the issuance of the legislation.<ref name="symmeikta"/> Alexios II, for whom Maria was regent, was simply basileus, but upon his father Manuel I's death he was immediately proclaimed autokrator. On the other hand, Michael VII continued to be referred as simply basileus after his father Constantine X's death and was proclaimed autokrator in 1071.<ref name="symmeikta"/> On the coin of 1067, Eudokia is depicted in the midst of her two sons. The arrangement of the figures corresponds to a certain legal relationship between the co-emperors, the senior emperor in the middle and on either side of him the junior co-emperors.<ref name="symmeikta"/> The inscription from Mesembria testify to the repair of the city wall under Constantine and Eudokia. In the inscriptions concerning the renovation of the walls, the rulers who held the throne in the capacity of emperor at the time of the construction work and following the writing of the inscription are always mentioned.<ref name="symmeikta"/>

Eudokia had sworn on Constantine's deathbed not to remarry, and she even made the oath in the presence of patriarch John VIII Xiphilinos.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn This decision was quite controversial, as Romanos had been accused of conspiring with the Hungarians shortly before Constantine X's death.Template:Sfn Eudokia hoped that his skills and leadership would stop the advance of the Seljuk Turks in the East.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 25 December, Eudokia rewarded Romanos with the titles magistros and stratelates in preparation for his coronation.Template:Sfn 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.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The marriage and imperial coronation took place on 1 January 1068, to the surprise of the patriarch and other officials.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

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.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn 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.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Michael Psellos, she explicitly referred to him as "a subject, not a ruler."Template:Sfn Romanos IV, however, soon started to act independently of her, even starting to resent her.Template:Sfn Discontent was also shared by a faction of the Senate and army, with John Doukas at the head.Template:Sfn

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

Later life

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

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.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Her date of death is unknown, but it was sometime after the accession of Alexios I Komnenos in 1081.Template:Sfn Her last known action is the adoption of one of the cousins of Patriarch Michael I Cerularius.Template:Sfn

Attributed to Eudokia is a dictionary of history and mythology, called Template:Lang (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".Template:Sfn However, the book is now thought to be a modern (16th-century) compilation, falsely attributed to Eudokia, and compiled by the counterfeiter Constantine Paleocappa Template:Circa 1540.Template:Sfn The sources from which the work was compiled include Diogenes Laërtius and the Suda.Template:Sfn

Issue

By her first husband, Eudokia had seven children, four sons and three daughters:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

By her second husband, she had two sons, most likely twins:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

Primary sources

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