Zoe Zaoutzaina
Zoe Zaoutzaina | |
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Empress of the Byzantine Empire | |
Tenure | 893/897–899 |
Died | May 899 |
Spouse | Theodore Gouniazizes Leo VI the Wise |
Issue | by Leo Anna |
Father | Stylianos Zaoutzes |
Zoe Zaoutzaina (Greek: Ζωὴ Ζαούτζαινα; died May 899) was a Byzantine empress consort as the second wife of the Byzantine emperor Leo VI the Wise.[1] She was the daughter of Stylianos Zaoutzes (Στυλιανὸς Ζαούτζης),[2] a high-ranking bureaucrat during the reign of her husband.
Royal mistress
The work Theophanes Continuatus was a continuation of the chronicle of Theophanes the Confessor by other writers, active during the reign of Constantine VII. According to it Zoe was first married to Theodore Gouniazizes, an otherwise obscure member of the court. She became mistress to the Emperor after the death of her husband. Theophanes records Theodore being poisoned, implicating Leo VI in his early demise. Symeon the Metaphrast records Leo falling in love with her in the third year of his reign, placing their meeting c. 889. At the time Leo was married to Theophano, daughter of Constantine Martiniakos. Their marriage had been arranged by his father Basil I. They had a daughter but the marriage of Leo VI and Theophano seems to have been loveless.
Royal consort
In the seventh year of his reign (c. 893), Theophano retired to a monastery in the Blachernae suburb of Constantinople. Theophano is considered particularly devoted to the church throughout her life. Whether her retirement was voluntary is left vague by both Theophanes and Symeon. Zoe replaced her in the palace and court life. There is a contradiction on her particular status from c. 893 to 897. According to Symeon, the marriage of Leo VI to Theophano was officially declared void, allowing Leo and Zoe to marry within the year. According to Theophanes, the original marriage was still valid and Zoe remained the royal mistress. Both agree, however, that her father Stylianos Zaoutzes rose to the top of palace hierarchy and was even awarded the new title of basileopatōr ("father of the emperor"), which he held until his death in 899. Theophano died in her monastery on 10 November 897. According to Theophanes, Leo and Zoe proceeded to marry at this point. Both Symeon and Theophanes agree that Zoe was only crowned Augusta following the death of her predecessor.
Death
Zoe herself died in 899. According to De Ceremoniis by Constantine VII, she had given birth to at least two daughters. However, Leo VI still had no son and his succession was not secure. Symeon records her being buried in the temple of her namesake Hagia Zoe. However, De Ceremoniis mentions her buried in the Church of the Holy Apostles where Leo VI, Theophano and third wife Eudokia Baïana were also buried. Providing both references were accurate, her remains were moved from the original burial place to that of her husband.
Issue
According to De Ceremoniis by Constantine VII, Leo VI and Zoe had a daughter:
- Anna. She married Louis the Blind and was mother of Charles Constantine of Vienne.
References
Sources
- Theophanes Continuatus, Chronicle.
- Symeon Metaphrastes, Chronicle.
- Constantine VII, De Ceremoniis.
External links
Royal titles | ||
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Preceded by | Byzantine Empress consort 893/897–899 | Succeeded by |
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27 BC – AD 235
- Livia
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235–285
284–610
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Western Empire 395–480 | |
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Eastern Empire 395–610 |
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Byzantine Empire
610–1453
- Fabia Eudokia
- Martina
- Gregoria
- Fausta
- Anastasia
- Eudokia
- Theodora of Khazaria
- Maria
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- Theodosia
- Thekla
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- Theodora
- Eudokia Dekapolitissa
- Eudokia Ingerina
- Theophano Martinakia
- Zoe Zaoutzaina
- Eudokia Baïana
- Zoe Karbonopsina
- Helena Lekapene
- Theodora
- Theophano
- Theodora
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- Theodora
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