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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="C"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="constantinus-x-monomachus-bio-1" n="constantinus_x_monomachus_1"><head><label><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Constanti'nus</surname><genName full="yes">X.</genName><addName full="yes">Monoma'chus</addName></persName></label></head><p>(<label xml:lang="grc">ὁ Μονομάχος</label>), emperor of the East, <date when-custom="1042">A.
       D. 1042</date>-<date when-custom="1054">1054</date>. His surname was given him on account of his
      personal courage in war. In 1042 the government of the empire was in the hands of two imperial
      sisters, Zoe, the widow of the emperor Romanus Argyrus, and afterwards of Michael IV. the
      Paphlagonian, and Theodora, a spinster, who were placed on the throne by the inhabitants of
      Constantinople, after they had deposed the emperor Michael V. Calaphates, the adopted son of
      Zoe. The two sisters being afraid of their position, Zoe proposed to Constantine Monomachus
      that he should marry her; and as she was rather advanced in age, being then upwards of sixty,
      she allowed the gallant warrior to bring his beautiful mistress, Sclerena, with him to the
      imperial palace, where the two ladies lived together on the best terms. Constantine was
      saluted as emperor, and conferred the dignity of Augusta upon Sclerena. Soon after the
      accession of Constantine, Georgius Maniaces, a brother of Sclerena, who was renowned for his
      victories over the Arabs, and who then held the command in Italy, raised a rebellion. At the
      head of a chosen body of troops he crossed the Adriatic, landed in Epeirus, joined an
      auxiliary army of Bulgarians, and marched upon Constantinople. An assassin delivered the
      emperor from his fears : Maniaces was murdered by an unknown hand in the midst of his
      camp.</p><p>A still greater danger arose in 1043 from an invasion of the Russians, who appeared with a
      powerful fleet in the Bosporus, while a land force penetrated as far as Varna : but the fleet
      was dispersed or taken in a bloody engagement, and the Russian army was routed by
      Catacalo.</p><p>In 1047, while absent on an expedition against the Arabs, Constantine received news of
      another rebellion having broken out, headed by Tornicius, a relative of the emperor, who
      assumed the imperial title, and laid siege to Constantinople. The emperor hastened to the
      defence of his capital, broke the forces of the rebel in a decisive battle, and Tornicius,
      having fallen into the hands of his pursuers, was blinded and confined to a monastery.
      Constantine was not less fortunate in a war with Cacicus, the vassal king of Armenia and
      Iberia, who tried to make himself independent; but, unable to take the field against the
      imperial armies, he was at last compelled to throw himself at the feet of the emperor and
      implore his clemency. His crown was taken from him, but he was allowed to enjoy both life and
      liberty, and spent the rest of his days in Cappadocia, where his generous victor had given him
      extensive estates. Iberia and Armenia were reunited under the immediate authority of the
      Greeks.</p><p>While the frontiers of the empire were thus extended in the East, Thrace and Macedonia
      suffered dreadfully from an invasion of the Petchenegues, who were so superior to the Greeks
      in martial qualities, that they would have conquered all those provinces which they had
      hitherto only plundered, but for the timely interference of the emperor's body-guards,
      composed of Waregians or Normans, who drove the enemy back beyond the Danube, and compelled
      them to beg for peace. (<date when-custom="1053">A. D. 1053</date>.) At the same time the Normans
      made great progress <pb n="843"/> in Italy, where they finally succeeded in conquering all the
      dominions of the Greek emperors. In the following year, 1054, the great schism began, which
      resulted in the complete separation of the Greek and Roman churches, and put an end to the
      authority of the popes in the East. Constantine did not live to see the completion of the
      schism, for he died in the course of the same year, 1054. Constantine was a man of generous
      character, who, when emperor, would not revenge many insults he had received while he was but
      an officer in the army. He managed, however, the financial department in an unprincipled
      manner, spending large sums upon the embellishment of Constantinople and other luxuries, and
      shewing himself a miser where he ought to have spared no money. Thus, for economy's sake, he
      paid off his Iberian troops, 50,000 in number, who were the bulwark of Greece, and who were no
      sooner disbanded than the frontier provinces of the empire were inundated by Arabs and
      Petchenegues, so that, although he augmented the extent of his dominions by the addition of
      Iberia and Armenia, he contributed much to the rapid decline of Greek power under his
      successor. The successor of Constantine X. was the empress Theodora mentioned above. (Cedren.
      p. 754, &amp;c., ed. Paris; Psellus in Zonar. vol. ii. p. 247, &amp;c. ed. Paris; Glycas, p.
      319, &amp;c., ed. Paris; Joel, p. 183, &amp;c., ed. Paris.) </p><byline>[<ref target="author.W.P">W.P</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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