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Fourteen Byzantine Rulers by Michael Psellus
Fourteen Byzantine Rulers by Michael Psellus




Fourteen Byzantine Rulers by Michael Psellus

If he gives rein to kindly sentiments, he is accused of ignorance, and when he rouses himself to show interest, they blame him for being meddlesome. If he seeks recreation, at once he incurs the displeasure of the critics. How different it is with an emperor, whose private life is never, even in its most intimate detail, allowed respite from trouble!Ĭonsider how brief are the moments when the sea is calm and peaceful, and how at other times it is swollen, or lashed by waves as Boreas, or Aparktias, or some other storm-wind disturbs its rest–a sight I have seen myself again and again.

Fourteen Byzantine Rulers by Michael Psellus

In the case of the private citizen, his own nature, plus a good start in life, may be sufficient to ensure virtuous behavior, for the simple reasons that he is not overmuch troubled by outside affairs, nor do external events have any effect on his private disposition. Of course, it is possible that you may discover some private citizen who pursued the same undeviating path throughout life, from the very beginning to the very end (although there cannot be many examples of such consistency) but an emperor, one who inherited from God supreme power, especially if he lived longer than most, would never be able to maintain the highest standards all through his reign.

Fourteen Byzantine Rulers by Michael Psellus

Some won greater praise for their conduct in early life, others impressed more in their later years, and while some preferred a life of pleasure, others dabbled in philosophy, only to confound the principles they had elected to follow and end in muddle.įor my own part, I find such inconsistency nothing to marvel at on the contrary, it would be extraordinary if someone were always unalterable. Most men who have set themselves to record the history of the emperors have found it surprising that none of them kept his reputation untarnished in every particular. Here Psellus muses on the tribulations of those who have been blessed–or cursed–to wear the imperial diadem.

Fourteen Byzantine Rulers by Michael Psellus

Although not a well-known work, it is a candid and intimate record of palace events that the author had first-hand knowledge of. His work, known by the name Chronographia, is a series of biographical portraits of fourteen emperors occupying the throne of the Eastern Roman Empire from about 978 to 1050. Michael Psellus (1017-1078?) was a Greek cleric, historian, and advisor to a number of Byzantine emperors.






Fourteen Byzantine Rulers by Michael Psellus