A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

The Great Palace of Constantinople, a sprawling building complex begun under


Constantine, was expanded and beautified under his successors. (See Map 4.1.) Far


more than the symbolic emplacement of imperial power, it was the central command


post of the empire. Servants, slaves, and grooms; top courtiers and learned


clergymen; cousins, siblings, and hangers-on of the emperor and empress lived within


its walls. Other courtiers—civil servants, officials, scholars, military men, advisers,


and other dependents—lived as near to the palace as they could manage. They were


“on call” at every hour. The emperor had only to give short notice and all assembled


for impromptu but nevertheless highly choreographed ceremonies. These were in


themselves instruments of power; the emperors manipulated courtly formalities to


indicate new favorites or to signal displeasure.


The court was mainly a male preserve, but there were powerful women at the


Great Palace as well. Consider Zoe (d.1050), the daughter of Constantine VIII.


Contemporaries acknowledged her right to rule through her imperial blood. But they


were happier when she was married, her blood-right legitimizing the rule of her


husband. In most cases, though, the emperors themselves boasted the hereditary


bloodline, and their wives were the ones to marry into the imperial family. In that


case the empress normally could exercise power only as a widow acting on behalf of


her children.


There was also a “third gender” at the Great Palace: eunuchs—men who had


been castrated, normally as children, and raised to be teachers, doctors, or guardians


of the women at court. Their status began to rise in the tenth century. Originally


foreigners, they were increasingly recruited from the educated upper classes in the


Byzantine Empire itself. In addition to their duties in the women’s quarter of the


palace, some of them accompanied the emperor during his most sacred and


vulnerable moments—when he removed his crown; when he participated in religious


ceremonies; even when he dreamed, at night. They hovered by his throne, like the


angels flanking Mary in the diptych panel in Plate 2.1 on p. 46. No one, it was


thought, was as faithful, trustworthy, or spiritually pure as a eunuch.


One tenth-century courtier complained that the imperial palace was rife with


“suspicion, jealousy, fear, flattery, servility, ignorance, deceit, softness, languor,


insolence, senselessness, peevishness, slander, and other impurities and filth.”^1


Perhaps so; but it also assiduously cultivated the opposite image—of perfect, stable,


eternal order. The emperor wore the finest silks, decorated with gold. In artistic


representations, he was the largest figure. Sometimes he was shown seated on a high


throne with admiring officials beneath him. At other times he stood, as in Plate 4.1,

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