| Portrait | Name | Reign | Notes |
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 | Basil I "the Macedonian" Βασίλειος | 24 September 867 – 29 August 886 (18 years, 11 months and 5 days) withConstantine (868–879)[g] | Born in theTheme of Macedoniac. 811, he rose in prominence through palace service, becoming a favourite of Michael III, who crowned him co-emperor on 26 May 866. He overthrew Michael and established the Macedonian dynasty. He led successful wars in the East against the Arabs and thePaulicians, and recovered southern Italy for the Empire. |
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 | Leo VI "the Wise" Λέων | 29 August 886 – 11 May 912 (25 years, 8 months and 12 days) | Born on 19 September 866, either the legitimate son of Basil I or the illegitimate son of Michael III. Co-emperor since 6 January 870. Leo was known for his erudition. His reign saw a height inSaracen (Muslim) naval raids, culminating in theSack of Thessalonica, and was marked by unsuccessful wars against the Bulgarians underSimeon I. |
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 | Alexander Αλέξανδρος | 11 May 912 – 6 June 913 (1 year and 26 days) | Son of Basil I, Alexander was born in 870 and raised to co-emperor in 879. Sidelined by Leo VI, Alexander dismissed his brother's principal aides on his accession. Died of illness, possiblytesticular cancer[69] |
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 | Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus Κωνσταντῖνος | 6 June 913 – 9 November 959 (46 years, 5 months and 3 days) | Son of Leo VI, he was born on 17/18 May 905 and raised to co-emperor on 15 May 908. His early reign was dominated by successive regencies, first by his mother,Zoe Karbonopsina, and PatriarchNicholas Mystikos, and from 919 by the admiral Romanos Lekapenos, who wedded his daughter to Constantine and was crowned senior emperor in 920. Constantine re-asserted his control by deposing Romanos's sons on 27 January 945. His reign was marked by struggles withSayf al-Dawla in the East and an unsuccessful campaign against Crete, and pro-aristocratic policies that saw a partial reversal of Lekapenos' legislation against thedynatoi. He is notable for his promotion of the "Macedonian Renaissance", sponsoring encyclopaedic works and histories. He was a prolific writer himself, best remembered for the manuals on statecraft (De administrando imperio) and ceremonies (De ceremoniis) he compiled for his son.[70] |
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 | Romanos I Lekapenos Ῥωμανὸς | 17 December 920 – 20 December 944 (24 years and 3 days) withChristopher (921–931),Stephen andConstantine Lekapenos (924–945)[g] | An admiral of lowly origin, Romanos rose to power as a protector of the young Constantine VII against the generalLeo Phokas the Elder. He became emperor in 920. His reign was marked by the end of warfare with Bulgaria and the great conquests ofJohn Kourkouas in the East.[71] Romanos promoted his sonsStephen andConstantine (alongsideChristopher, who died soon after) as co-emperors over Constantine VII, but was himself overthrown by them and confined to an island as a monk. He died there on 15 June 948.[72] |
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 | Romanos II Ῥωμανὸς | 9 November 959 – 15 March 963 (3 years, 4 months and 6 days) | The only surviving son of Constantine VII, he was born on 15 March 938 and succeeded his father on the latter's death. He ruled until his own death, although the government was led mostly by the eunuchJoseph Bringas. His reign was marked by successful warfare in the East againstSayf al-Dawla and the recovery of Crete by generalNikephoros Phokas. |
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| Nikephoros II Phokas Νικηφόρος | 16 August 963 – 11 December 969 (6 years, 3 months and 25 days) | The most successful general of his generation, Nikephoros II was bornc. 912 to the powerfulPhokas clan. After the death of Romanos II, he rose to the throne with the support of the army and people as regent for the young emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII, marrying the empress-dowagerTheophano. Throughout his reign he led campaigns in the East, conquering much of Syria. He was murdered by his nephew and one-time associate John Tzimiskes. |
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 | John I Tzimiskes Ἰωάννης | 11 December 969 – 10 January 976 (6 years and 30 days) | Nephew of Nikephoros Phokas, Tzimiskes was bornc. 925. A successful general, he fell out with his uncle and led a conspiracy of disgruntled generals who murdered him. Tzimiskes succeeded Nikephoros as emperor and regent for the young sons of Romanos II. As ruler, Tzimiskescrushed theRus' in Bulgaria and ended the Bulgarian tsardom before going on to campaign in the East, where he died. |
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 | Basil II "the Bulgar-Slayer" Βασίλειος | 10 January 976 – 15 December 1025 (49 years, 11 months and 5 days) | Eldest son of Romanos II, Basil II was born in 958 to Romanus II.[73] The first decade of his reign was marked by rivalry with the powerfulBasil Lekapenos, an unsuccessful war against Bulgaria, and rebellions by generals in Asia Minor. Basil solidified his position through a marriage alliance of his sister Anna toVladimir I of Kiev, which was accompanied by the conversion to Christian Orthodoxy of the grand Kievian Rus' prince and his people.[74] After over 20 years of war, Basil eventually succeeded in hisconquest of Bulgaria, which was finally subdued in 1018, earning him the name "Bulgar-slayer".[75] His conquest of Bulgar was periodically interrupted by warfare in Syria against theFatimid Caliphate. Basil expanded Byzantine control over most of Armenia and his reign is widely considered as the apogee of medieval Byzantium.[76] |
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 | Constantine VIII Κωνσταντῖνος | 15 December 1025 – 12 November 1028 (2 years, 10 months and 28 days) | The second son of Romanos II, Constantine was born in 960 and raised to co-emperor on 30 March 962. During the rule of Basil II, he spent his time in idle pleasure. During his short reign he was an indifferent ruler, easily influenced by his courtiers and suspicious of plots to depose him, especially among the military aristocracy, many of whom wereblinded and exiled.[77] |
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 | Romanos III Argyros Ῥωμανὸς | 12 November 1028 – 11 April 1034 (5 years, 4 months and 30 days) | Born in 968, the elderly aristocrat Romanos—who had served in both the judiciary and civil service—was chosen by Constantine VIII on his deathbed, after being required to marry the emperor's daughter Zoe under the alternative threat of being blinded and sent to a monastery. Romanos III succeeded to the throne upon Constantine's death a few days later.[78] Deluded by grandeur, Romanos fashioned himself at one time as a philosopher king likeMarcus Aurelius and later as a military genius likeTrajan, resulting in military debacles. He initiated expensive church building projects. A subsequent affair between his wife Zoe and his chief eunuch's brother Michael, led to the pair colluding in poisoning Romanos, before ultimately resolving to having the emperor strangled and drowned in his own bath.[79] |
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 | Michael IV "the Paphlagonian" Μιχαὴλ | 12 April 1034 – 10 December 1041 (7 years, 7 months and 28 days) | Born in 1010, he became a lover of Zoe even while Romanos III was alive, and succeeded him upon his death as her husband and emperor. Aided by his older brother, the eunuchJohn the Orphanotrophos, his reign was moderately successful against internal rebellions, but his attempt to recoverSicily failed. He died after a long illness. |
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 | Michael V "Kalaphates" Μιχαὴλ | 13 December 1041 – 21 April 1042 (4 months and 8 days) | Born in 1015, he was the nephew and adopted son of Michael IV. During his reign he tried to sideline Zoe, but a popular revolt forced him to restore her as empress on 19 April 1042, along with her sisterTheodora. He was deposed the next day, castrated and tonsured, dying on 24 August 1042. |
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 | Zoë Porphyrogenita Ζωή | 21 April – 11 June 1042 (1 month and 21 days) | The daughter of Constantine VIII, she succeeded on her father's death, as the only surviving member of the Macedonian dynasty, along with her sister Theodora. Her three husbands, Romanos III (1028–1034), Michael IV (1034–1041) and Constantine IX (1042–1050) ruled alongside her. |
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 | Theodora Porphyrogenita Θεοδώρα | 21 April – 11 June 1042 (1 month and 21 days) | The younger sister of Zoe, born in 984, she was raised as co-ruler on 19 April 1042. After Zoe married her third husband, Constantine IX, in June 1042, Theodora was again sidelined. After Zoe died in 1050 and Constantine in 1055, Theodora assumed full governance of the Empire and reigned until her death. She nominatedMichael VI as her successor. |
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 | Constantine IX Monomachos Κωνσταντῖνος Μονομάχος[k] | 11 June 1042 – 11 January 1055 (12 years and 7 months) | Bornc. 1000 of noble origin, he had an undistinguished life but was exiled toLesbos by Michael IV, returning when he was chosen as Zoe's third husband. Constantine supported the mercantile classes and favoured the company of intellectuals, thereby alienating the military aristocracy. A pleasure-loving ruler, he lived an extravagant life with his favourite mistresses and endowed a number of monasteries, chiefly theNea Moni of Chios and theMangana Monastery. His reign was marked by invasions by thePechenegs in theBalkans and theSeljuk Turks in the East, the revolts ofGeorge Maniakes andLeo Tornikios, and theGreat Schism between the patriarchates of Rome and Constantinople.[81] |
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 | Theodora Porphyrogenita Θεοδώρα (second reign) | 11 January 1055 – 31 August 1056 (1 year, 7 months and 20 days) | Claimed the throne again after Constantine IX's death as the last living member of the Macedonian dynasty. Died of natural causes[82] |
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 | Michael VI Bringas "Stratiotikos" Μιχαήλ[k] | 22 August 1056 – 30 August 1057 (1 year and 8 days) | A court bureaucrat andstratiotikos logothetes (hence his first sobriquet). Proclaimed emperor by Theodora on her deathbed on 22 August 1056. Deposed by military revolt under Isaac Komnenos, he retired to a monastery where he died in 1059. |
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 | Isaac I Komnenos Ἰσαάκιος Κομνηνός | 1 September 1057 – 22 November 1059 (2 years, 2 months and 21 days) | Bornc. 1005. A successful general, he rose in revolt leading the eastern armies and was declared emperor on 8 June 1057; he was recognized after the abdication of Michael. He resigned in 1059 and diedc. 1061. |
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