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List of Byzantine emperors of Armenian origin

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A miniature depicting the proclamation of Leo V the Armenian as emperor (from the Madrid Skylitzes). Leo V is the only Byzantine emperor to be nicknamed "Armenian" by Byzantine chroniclers.[1]
This now-destroyed mosaic of Gregory the Illuminator, Armenia's patron saint, in Hagia Sophia, Constantinople may had been created next to the Church Fathers in support of the myth of the Arsacid origin of Basil I, likely fabricated by Patriarch Photios I of Constantinople.[2][3]
This 7th century obelisk in Oshakan, Armenia is attributed by a local tradition to emperor Maurice or his mother.[4][5][6][7]

According to medieval and modern sources, a number of Byzantine emperors were allegedly Armenian or of partially Armenian heritage. The following list includes the Byzantine emperors to whom sources attribute Armenian origin. Speculation of Armenian ancestry in emperors remains a wide topic of debate.

History and criticism

The first work on Byzantine emperors of Armenian origin, Armenian Emperors of Byzantium (Armenian: Հայ կայսերք Բիւզանդիոնի), was authored by Fr. Garabed Der-Sahagian and published in 1905 by the Mekhitarist congregation of San Lazzaro degli Armeni in Venice.[8] Anthony Kaldellis suggested that Der-Sahagian extended "western European modes of racial and nationalist historiography to the history of medieval Armenia." Kaldellis believes that it was Nicholas Adontz who "made the search for Armenians in Byzantium into a more scholarly and less romantic nationalist process." However, he is critical of Adontz as he saw "Armenians everywhere and injected them into as many important events as he could." According to Kaldellis it was later endorsed by Peter Charanis and Alexander Kazhdan and "has spread widely in the field of Byzantine Studies."[9] Kazhdan's book Armenians in the Ruling Class of the Byzantine Empire in the 11th-12th Centuries was published by the Armenian Academy of Sciences in Russian in 1975.[10]

Charanis suggested that "every emperor who sat on the Byzantine throne from the accession of Basil I to the death of Basil II (867—1025) was of Armenian or partially Armenian origin."[11] However, he noted that "in Byzantium the ethnic origins of a person was of not significance, provided he integrated himself into its cultural life."[12] Robert H. Hewsen counted "no fewer than sixteen emperors and eleven empresses" of Byzantium of Armenian origin and suggested that Armenians ruled "for almost a third of [the empire's] history." He conceded, however, that "[m]ost of these Armenians, of course, were thoroughly hellenized, membership in the Greek Church being the sine qua non for advancement in the Byzantine world."[13]

Anthony Kaldellis is highly critical of what he calls the "Armenian fallacy" in Byzantine studies to which he dedicated a separate chapter (Armenian fallacy) and a sub-chapter specifically about emperors ('Armenian' emperors) in his 2019 book Romanland: Ethnicity and Empire in Byzantium, published by Harvard University Press.[14] He wrote:[15]

The consensual mass hallucination that is the Armenian fallacy has populated Byzantine history with a series of alleged “Armenian” emperors.

Even earlier, in 2008, Kaldellis wrote in a publication for Oxford University Press:[16]

Here our scholarship creates confusion by calling these people, in obedience to the needs of modern nationalism, “Armenians,” “Bulgarians,” “Arabs,” and so on. In the vast majority of cases, however, what they should be called are Romans of Armenian descent (or Slavic, or whatever it might be), and in most cases they should not be called that at all without good reason. There is every indication that they or their immediate descendents were fully assimilated to the customs, language, religion, and social consensus that maintained—and, in fact, constituted—the (Byzantine) Roman nation. It makes as much sense to call the emperors Herakleios or Basileios I “Armenians” as it does to call president Bill Clinton an “Englishman” or Barack Obama a “Kenyan”—even less so, in fact, as the former ethnic attributions are mostly conjectural on our part. There is no evidence that these emperors spoke their supposed “ancestral languages” or knew much about the customs of their supposed ancestor. Yet since Roman national claims have never been taken seriously, Byzantinists have filled the gap with modern ones. It is also no coincidence that modern historians will label a Byzantine as an “Armenian” (or the like) overwhelmingly in cases when a modern nation corresponding to that label still exists and presses its ethnic claims to the past. Peoples who have since lost their lobbying power—for example, Goths, Pechenegs, and many others—have curiously lost their right to similarly colonize the Byzantine “assimilated” subject. This discrepancy reveals the modern dynamic behind this ethnicizing discourse.

Kaldellis' criticisms of the "Armenian fallacy" have been subsequently praised and supported by historians such as Johannes Preiser-Kapeller,[17] Alexander Beihammer,[18] and Marek Klatý.[19]

List

Portrait Name Reign Dynasty Comments and notes

Pre-Macedonian

Maurice 582–602
(20 years)
Justinian Medieval Armenian chroniclers such as Stepanos Taronetsi and Kirakos Gandzaketsi claim Maurice to be of Armenian origin.[20] Modern scholarship, however, does not have a consensus. Krzysztof Stopka writes that it is generally regarded as a legend.[21] It has been accepted by Nicholas Adontz,[22] Peter Charanis,[a] Henri Grégoire,[12] Robert H. Hewsen,[13] but rejected by others, such as Paul Goubert.[24] Walter Kaegi described him as "of probable Armenian origin."[25] Anthony Kaldellis argues that his Armenian ancestry is "largely unknown to historians who study his reign" and that "no contemporary source—and there are many— mentions it." He considers the medieval Armenian chronicles to be "Armenian folktales" and notes that "[n]one of the names in his extended family are Armenian".[26] A. E. Redgate is also skeptical; as the "counter-arguments, in his case, seem overwhelming."[27]
Heraclius 610–641
(31 years)
Heraclian The son of Heraclius the Elder, who is generally recognized by scholars as an Armenian.[34][b] According to the 7th century Armenian historian Sebeos, Heraclius was related to the Arsacid dynasty of Armenia.[36] Hewsen talked of the Heraclids being "of royal Arsacid origin."[13] Redgate considers his Armenian origin likely.[27] Walter Kaegi notes that Heraclius was presumably "bilingual (Armenian and Greek) from an early age, but even this is uncertain."[28] Kaldellis argues that "[t]he Armenian ethnic origin of the emperor Herakleios (610–641) takes the prize for fiction masquerading as history" and that statements regarding his ancestry "have been woven out of thin air".[37] He notes that "there is not a single primary source that says that Herakleios was an Armenian" and, moreover, "none of the names in his extended family are Armenian, and this in an age when Armenian generals in Roman service kept their native names and did not always switch to Graeco-Roman ones".[37] He writes that this assertion about Heraclius' ancestry is based on an erroneous reading of Theophylact Simocatta. In a letter, Priscus, a general who had replaced Heraclius the Elder, wrote to him "to leave the army and return to his own city in Armenia". Kaldellis interprets it as the command headquarters of Heraclius the Elder, and not his home town, since "[i]t would make no sense in the context of the narrative for Philippikos to send Herakleios “home.”".[38] According to historian Benjamin Anderson, Kaldellis "effectively debunks the received wisdom" on Heraclius's origins.[39]
Mizizios 668–669
(1 year)

(usurper)
Considered Armenian by mainstream scholarship.[40][41][42] He came from the Gnuni family.[43]
Philippikos
Bardanes
711–713
(2 years)
Considered Armenian by mainstream scholarship.[c][48] Kaldellis disputes this view, pointing to his anti-Armenian policies such as his decision to expel all Armenians from the empire, forcing them to seek refuge among the Arabs, (though this wasn't fully enforced) and his later decree ordering all Armenians to accept the authority of the Patriarch of Constantinople. According to Kaldellis, this "shows that despite his ancestry he was not, and did not consider himself to be, 'an Armenian,' as some modern historians call him" and speculated that he may have been Persian.[49]
Artabasdos 741–743
(2 years)

(usurper)
Considered Armenian by mainstream scholarship.[50][51][13] Nina Garsoïan suggests that he hailed from the Mamikonian house.[52] Kaldellis believes that we "do not know enough about the first [i.e. Artabasdos] to have an interesting discussion of his ethnicity."[53]
Leo V 813–820
(7 years)
non-dynastic
Scholars agree that he was at least partly of Armenian origin.[d][60] According to Jenkins, was certainly of Armenian stock on one side. He is said to have been 'Assyrian', that is, Syrian, on the other: but this is perhaps attached to him owing to his heretical and iconoclastic beliefs, and to the fact that he modelled himself on the great iconoclast conqueror Leo III, to whom Syrian descent was more certainly attributed.[61] He is the only emperor to be nicknamed "Armenian" by Byzantine historians.[1] Armenian chronicles claimed he was an Artsruni.[62] Kaldellis notes that his "ancestry is said to have been Armenian, Assyrian, and Amalekite (a biblical ethnonym), whatever exactly those terms may have meant in a late eighth-century context."[53] He also writes that "we have no evidence for how Leon V acknowledged, tried to hide or counter, or ameliorated his “ethnic” background as emperor".[53]
Constantine 813–820
(7 years)
co-emperor
non-dynastic
The son of Leo V the Armenian.
Michael III 842–867
(25 years)
Amorian His mother, Theodora, the wife of Theophilos, is considered by some scholars to have been, at least partly, of Armenian origin.[65][e] Kaldellis argues that "As the restorer of icons in 843, many texts discuss her, yet none refers to her Armenian ethnicity."[66]
Theodora 842–856
(14 years)
Amorian Empress regnant during the minority of Michael III.[67][68] Considered by some scholars to have been, at least partly, of Armenian origin.[71][f] Kaldellis wrote that no source (Byzantine or Medieval Armenian) refers to her as an Armenian, or as being of Armenian descent.[72]

Macedonian dynasty

The Macedonian dynasty, which ruled the empire between 867 and 1056, has been called the "Armenian dynasty" by some Armenian scholars such as George Bournoutian[73] and Mack Chahin.[74] Zachary Chitwood suggests the term Macedonian dynasty is "something of a misnomer" because of the (alleged) Armenian origin of Basil I, the dynasty's founder.[75]

Portrait Name Reign Dynasty Comments and notes
Basil I 867–886
(19 years)
Macedonian His father is considered by many to be of Armenian origin.[79] The Armenian descent of his mother is debated.[g][81] Her name, which is Greek, points to a Greek origin for her.[82][83] Medieval Armenian historians Samuel Anetsi and Stepanos Taronetsi claimed that he hailed from the region of Taron.[76] He is also "presumed to have descended from the kingly house of the Arsacids."[57] Kaldellis calls the Arsacid connection "propaganda", aimed to confer legitimacy upon Basil's alleged "royal" and "biblical" origins[h] and additionally meant to give "diplomatic leverage in his dealings with the empire’s Armenian neighbors".[85] He wrote: "The Romans generally called Basileios a Macedonian, from his provincial origin, rather than an Armenian, and some Arabic texts call him a Slav[i]. A fierce debate has, predictably, raged among scholars over the issue, as if there could be a single “truth” about his ancestry (the entire debate is premised on the idea of racial purity)."[87]
Romanos I
Lekapenos
920–944
(24 years)
Macedonian/
Lekapenos
According to some scholars.[56][80][58][88] Charanis wrote that Romanos Lekapenos was "definitely known to have been of Armenian origin."[80] According to Mark Whittow Romanos "seem[s] to have been Armenian."[58] According to Kaldellis, Romanos is discussed in many Byzantine sources, "but none of them calls him an Armenian," but because his father came from humble origin he was assumed to have been Armenian. "His alleged ethnicity has been repeated so often in the literature that it has acquired the status of a known fact, even though it is based on the most tenuous of indirect connections," wrote Kaldellis.[89]
Nikephoros II
Phokas
963–969
(9 years)
Macedonian According to some scholars he was of at least partial Armenian descent.[31][j] Kaldellis notes that recent scholarship has correctly removed his family's name from the list of Byzantine families of "Armenian" origin, writing that it had been placed there originally for "flimsy (i.e., nonexistent) reasons".[90]
John I
Tzimiskes
969–976
(8 years)
Macedonian Considered Armenian by mainstream scholarship.[93][k] According to the medieval Armenian chronicler Matthew of Edessa Tzimiskes was from the region of Khozan, from the area which is now called Chmushkatzag."[95] Kaldellis is skeptical, calling the grounds for his Armenian origin "extremely weak", noting that "Tzimiskes" was a nickname given to him by Armenian soldiers serving under him, referring to his short statute, and not a family name.[96] Evaluating the evidence, he concludes that "No ethnicity or even distant ancestry can be proposed based on such evidence".

Post-Macedonian

Andronikos III
Palaiologos
1328–1341
(13 years)
Palaiologos His mother, Rita-Maria, was the daughter of Leo II, King of Armenian Cilicia, and sister of Hethum II.[97][98][99]

Descendants

Descendants of Heraclius

  • Constantine III (11 February–25 May 641) – son of Heraclius.
  • Heraclonas (February or October–November 641) – son of Heraclius.
  • Constans II (641–668) – son of the Constantine III and maternal grandson of Niketas who is a first cousin of Heraclius.
  • Constantine IV (668–685) – son of Constans II and the maternal grandson of Valentinus who was of probably Armenian descent (perhaps descended from Arsacids).
  • Justinian II (685–695; 705–711) – son of Constantine IV.

Descendants of Basil I or Michael III

References

Notes
  1. ^ Charanis changed his views on the ethnic origin of Maurice. In his The Armenians in the Byzantine Empire (1961) he wrote that it is "extremely doubtful" that Maurice may have been of Armenian descent.[23] However, in the 1965 article "A Note on the Ethnic Origin of the Emperor Maurice" he wrote that "Maurice must be accepted, therefore, as the first Byzantine emperor [...] to have been of Armenian origin."[12]
  2. ^ "...Heraclius, himself of Armenian descent..."[35]
  3. ^ "The Armenian Bardanes occupied the throne from 711 to 713."[44]
  4. ^ "Leo V, known as the Armenian, occupied the throne from 813 to 820. He is referred to in one of the sources as digenes, 'twyborn', i. e., born of two races, and these two races are given as Assyrian and Armenian (56). The thorough and careful investigation of all the sources, however, has shown that there is no truth in the tradition (57). Leo was an Armenian..."[54]
  5. ^ "Theodora, the wife of Theophilus, son and successor of Michael II, was a native of Ebissa in Paphlagonia, but she was of Armenian descent at least from her father's side. Thus Michael III who succeeded his father Theophilus was partly Armenian.[54]
  6. ^ "Theodora, the wife of Theophilus, son and successor of Michael II, was a native of Ebissa in Paphlagonia, but she was of Armenian descent at least from her father's side. Thus Michael III who succeeded his father Theophilus was partly Armenian.[54]
  7. ^ "That Basil I, the founder of the most brilliant dynasty of the Byzantine empire, was indeed Armenian and Armenian on both sides, can be regarded as an established fact."[80]
  8. ^ Excluding the Arsacids, Basil claimed links to figures such as Alexander the Great, Constantine the Great, Cyrus the Great, David, Solomon, as well as to prophets of the Old Testament.[84]
  9. ^ Nevertheless, the Arabic term Ṣaqlabī, used to define Basil, and adopted by some modern scholars to describe him as partly Slavic, also described the inhabitants between Constantinople and the First Bulgarian Empire.[86]
  10. ^ "The Phocades then, if not entirely Armenian in origin were at least partially so. That means, of course, that Nicephorus Phocas, one of the three emperors of the tenth century who were not legitimate members of the Macedonian dynasty, but were associated with it, was also at least partially Armenian in origin."[11]
  11. ^ "Thus, Tzimiskes, one of the truly great soldier-emperors of Byzantium, belonged by birth to a distinguished Armenian family which had established itself among the military aristocracy of Byzantium."[94]
Citations
  1. ^ a b Lang, David Marshall (1970). Armenia: Cradle of Civilization. Allen & Unwin. p. 185. However, Leo V (813-20) is the only emperor who has been officially recognized as an Armenian by the Byzantine historians.
  2. ^ Der Nersessian 1966, p. 389.
  3. ^ Mango & Hawkins 1972, p. 38.
  4. ^ Lang, David M. (1983). "Iran, Armenia and Georgia". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 3 (1): The Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanian Periods. Cambridge University Press. p. 522. ISBN 9780521200929. A stone obelisk marking his home is shown to visitors in the Armenian village of Oshakan...
  5. ^ Toramanian, Toros (1948). Հայկական ճարտարապետություն [Armenian Architecture] Volume II (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences Press. p. 54. Թեև գյուղացոց մեջ ընդհանուր համոզում կամ ավանդություն է թե Մորիկ կայսեր մոր գերեզմանն է։
  6. ^ Shahinyan, A. N. (1974). "7-րդ դարի կոթողներ Գեղամա լեռներում [Seventh century Monuments in the Geghama Mountains]". Etchmiadzin (in Armenian). 31 (7–8): 76. ...Օշականում Մորիկ կայսեր կամ նրա մորը վերագրվող 7-րդ դարի հուշասյան...
  7. ^ Ghalpakhchian, Hovhannes [in Armenian] (1962). "Տաթևի երերացող սյունը [Swinging Obelisk of Tatev]". Etchmiadzin (in Armenian). 19 (9): 51–52. Տեղի բնակչությունը համարում է գերեզմանաքարը Մորիկ կայսեր մոր, որն ըստ ավանդության հայ է եղել և ծնունդով օշականցի։
  8. ^ Der-Sahagian, Garabed (1905). Հայ կայսերք Բիւզանդիոնի [Armenian Emperors of Byzantium] (in Armenian). San Lazzaro, Venice: Mekhitarist Congregation.
  9. ^ Kaldellis 2019, p. 157.
  10. ^ Kazhdan, Alexander (1975). Армяне в составе господствующего класса Византийской империи в XI - XII вв. [Armenians in the Ruling Class of the Byzantine Empire in the XI-XII Centuries] (in Russian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences Press.
  11. ^ a b Charanis 1963, p. 39.
  12. ^ a b c Charanis, Peter (1965). "A Note on the Ethnic Origin of the Emperor Maurice". Byzantion. 35 (2). Peeters Publishers: 417. JSTOR 44170146.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Hewsen, Robert H. (2001). Armenia: A Historical Atlas. University of Chicago Press. p. 92. ISBN 0-226-33228-4.
  14. ^ Kaldellis 2019, pp. 155–195.
  15. ^ Kaldellis 2019, p. 180.
  16. ^ Kaldellis, Anthony (2015). "From Rome to New Rome, from Empire to Nation-State: Reopening the Question of Byzantium's Roman Identity". In Grig, Lucy; Kelly, Gavin (eds.). Two Romes: Rome and Constantinople in Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. p. 392. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199739400.003.0017. ISBN 978-0-19-024108-7.
  17. ^ Preiser-Kapeller, Johannes (2020). "Aristocrats, Mercenaries, Clergymen and Refugees: Deliberate and Forced Mobility of Armenians in the Early Medieval Mediterranean (6th to 11th Century a.d.)". Migration Histories of the Medieval Afroeurasian Transition Zone. Brill. pp. 328, n.3. doi:10.1163/9789004425613_013. ISBN 978-90-04-42561-3. S2CID 218992750. Most recently, Kaldellis, Romanland, pp. 155–195, has (legitimately) discussed what he calls the "Armenian fallacy", that is the tendency in scholarship to identify individual member of the Byzantine elite as "Armenian" even several generations after the immigration of their ancestors and their integration into the Eastern Roman polity with regard to language, religion and identity. For a similar case regarding the Abbasid Caliphate see now Preiser-Kapeller, "ʻAlī ibn Yaḥyā al-Armanī".
  18. ^ Beihammer, Alexander (2020). "20.04.28 Kaldellis, Romanland". The Medieval Review. ISSN 1096-746X. Kaldellis debunks the notion that high-ranking dignitaries and even emperors built their careers on the grounds of Armenian family background and loyalties as an "Armenian fallacy" introduced by nationalist trends, and demonstrates how tenuous the evidence of an individual's Armenian descent is in most cases...his analysis of the Armenian fallacy problem is superbly persuasive
  19. ^ Klatý, Marek (2021). "KALDELLIS, Anthony. Romanland: Ethnicity and Empire in Byzantium. Cambridge; Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2019. xv + 373 pp. ISBN 978-0-674-98651-0". Historický časopis. 69 (5): 941–948. doi:10.31577/histcaso.2021.69.5.6. ISSN 2585-9099. S2CID 246451714. The author aptly calls this the 'Armenian fallacy' of the scholarly community. Because such an interpretation of ethnicity is based on biological and false cultural continuity and does not consider the formation of identity based on the principle of cultural integration and assimilation.
  20. ^ Abrahamian, Ashot G.; Petrosian, Garegin B. [in Armenian] (1979). Անանիա Շիրակացի․ Մատենագրություն [Anania Shirakatsi: Writings]. Yerevan: Sovetakan grogh. p. 332. Բյուզանդական կայսր Մորիկը [...] Ըստ հայ մատենագիրների տեղեկությունների՝ նա ծագումով հայ է։ Այս մասին տեղեկություններ կան Շապուհի, Ստեփանոս Տարոնեցու, Կիրակոս Գանձակեցու և այլ պատմիչների մոտ։ Նորագույն ուսումնասիրողներից ոմանք ժխտում են նրա հայկական ծագումը։
  21. ^ Stopka, Krzysztof [in Polish] (2016). Armenia Christiana: Armenian Religious Identity and the Churches of Constantinople and Rome (4th–15th Century). Jagiellonian University Press. p. 78. Some Armenian chronicles [...] write that the Emperor Maurice had Armenian roots. Generally this is regarded as a legend.
  22. ^ Adontz, Nicholas (1934). "Les légendes de Maurice et de Constantin V, empereurs de Byzance". Annuaire de l'Institut de Philologie et d'Histoire Orientales et Slaves (in French). 2. Université libre de Bruxelles: 1–12.
  23. ^ Charanis 1963, p. 14.
  24. ^ P. Goubert, Byzance avant I'Islam, I. Paris, 1951, pp. 34-41.
  25. ^ Kaegi, Walter (1995). Byzantium and the Early Islamic Conquests. Cambridge University Press. p. 64. ISBN 9780521484558. ...another emperor of probable Armenian origin, Maurice.
  26. ^ Kaldellis 2019, pp. 181–182.
  27. ^ a b Redgate, A. E. (2000). The Armenians. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. p. 237. ISBN 9780631220374.
  28. ^ a b Kaegi, Walter E. (2003). Heraclius: Emperor of Byzantium. Cambridge University Press. p. 21. ISBN 9780521814591. The preponderance of evidence points to an Armenian origin for Heraclius the Elder...
  29. ^ Shahîd, Irfan (1972). "The Iranian Factor in Byzantium during the Reign of Heraclius". Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 26: 293–320. doi:10.2307/1291324. JSTOR 1291324. p. 305 "...the Armenian origins of Heraclius..."; p. 308 "...the house of Heraclius, the Armenian provenance of whose founder has been generally accepted."
  30. ^ a b Evans, Helen C. (2018). "Armenians and Their Middle Age". Armenia: Art, Religion, and Trade in the Middle Ages. Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 34. ISBN 9781588396600. The Byzantine Emperor Heraclius (r. 610-640) was the son of an Armenian... [...] In 867 Basil I (r. 867-886), whose father was also Armenian...
  31. ^ a b c Geanakoplos, Deno J. (1984). Byzantium: Church, Society, and Civilization Seen Through Contemporary Eyes. University of Chicago Press. p. 344. ISBN 9780226284606. Some of the greatest Byzantine emperors — Nicephorus Phocas, John Tzimisces and probably Heraclius — were of Armenian descent.
  32. ^ Hovorun, Cyril (2008). Will, Action and Freedom: Christological Controversies in the Seventh Century. BRILL. p. 57. ISBN 9789047442639. Most contemporary historians agree that Heraclius was of Armenian background.
  33. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 287: "Heraclius [...] ...his family were Armenians from Cappadocia..."
  34. ^ [28][29][30][31][32][33]
  35. ^ Charanis 1963, p. 18.
  36. ^ Vasiliev, Alexander A. (1958). History of the Byzantine Empire, 324–1453. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 193. ISBN 9780299809256.
  37. ^ a b Kaldellis 2019, p. 182-183.
  38. ^ Kaldellis 2019, p. 183.
  39. ^ Anderson, Benjamin (1 August 2021). "Anderson on Kaldellis" (PDF). The Classical Journal: 1–3.
  40. ^ Toynbee, Arnold J. (1973). Constantine Porphyrogenitus and His World. Oxford University Press. p. 80. ISBN 9780192152534. This exception is Mjej Gnouni (Graece Mizizios), an Armenian immigrant of the first generation. Mjej succeeded in 668 in assassinating his master Constans II...
  41. ^ Haldon, J. F. (1990). Byzantium in the Seventh Century: The Transformation of a Culture (Rev. ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 61. ...the Armenian general Mzez Gnouni, or Mizizios, as he is called in the Greek sources [...] was acclaimed emperor.
  42. ^ Turtledove, Harry (1982). The Chronicle of Theophanes: Anni Mundi 6095-6305 (A.D. 602-813). University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 51. Once they had buried him, they named Mizizios — an Armenian — Emperor...
  43. ^ Charanis 1963, pp. 21–22.
  44. ^ Charanis 1963, p. 22.
  45. ^ Vasiliev, Alexander A. (1958). History of the Byzantine Empire, 324–1453. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 194. ISBN 9780299809256. ...the Armenian Vardan or Philippicus (711-13)...
  46. ^ Lang, David Marshall (1970). Armenia: Cradle of Civilization. Allen and Unwin. p. 14. Bardanes Philippicus, Armenian Emperor of 711-713
  47. ^ Rice, David Talbot (1965). Constantinople from Byzantium to Istanbul. Stein and Day. p. 79. In 710 an insurrection broke out against Justinian 11 and the Armenian Bardanes (711-13) appeared with a fleet off Constantinople; Justinian was deposed and killed and Bardanes was proclaimed emperor.
  48. ^ [45][46][47][13]
  49. ^ Kaldellis 2019, p. 185-186.
  50. ^ Beckwith, Christopher I. (2009). Empires of the Silk Road: A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present. Princeton University Press. p. 142. ISBN 9780691135892. ...the Armenian general Artavasdos. [...] Because Artavasdos was Armenian...
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  70. ^ Codoñer, Juan Signes (2016). The Emperor Theophilos and the East, 829–842: Court and Frontier in Byzantium during the Last Phase of Iconoclasm. Routledge. p. 111. ISBN 9781317034278. He was also born of and married to Armenian women (Thekla and Theodora)...
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  73. ^ Bournoutian, George (2002). A Concise History of the Armenian People. Mazda Publishers. p. 89. ISBN 9781568591414. ....the later Macedonian dynasty, according to most Byzantinists, was of Armenian origin as well. [...] Ironically, it was this same Armenian dynasty which was chiefly responsible for the breakup of the Bagratuni kingdom.
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  75. ^ Chitwood, Zachary (2017). Byzantine Legal Culture and the Roman Legal Tradition, 867-1056. Cambridge University Press. p. 18. ISBN 9781107182561.
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  97. ^ Nicol, Donald (1993). The Last Centuries of Byzantium, 1261-1453. Cambridge University Press. p. 151. ISBN 9780521439916. ...in 1295 , he married a sister of the King of Armenia called Rita or Maria . She gave him two sons and two daughters . The elder of the sons was named , in the Byzantine custom , after his grandfather and became the Emperor Andronikos III...
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  99. ^ Garland, Lynda (2002). Byzantine Empresses: Women and Power in Byzantium AD 527-1204. Routledge. p. 226. ISBN 9781134756391. ...Rita-Maria, an Armenian princess who had married Michael IX and who was the mother of Andronikos III...
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  101. ^ Norwich, John Julius (1993). Byzantium: The Apogee. London: Penguin. p. 102.
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