List of Roman emperors
Template:Short description Template:Featured list
The Roman emperors were the rulers of the Roman Empire from the granting of the name and title Augustus to Octavian by the Roman Senate in 27 BC onward.<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb</ref> Augustus maintained a facade of Republican rule, rejecting monarchical titles but calling himself princeps senatus (first man of the Senate) and princeps civitatis (first citizen of the state). The title of Augustus was conferred on his successors to the imperial position, and emperors gradually grew more monarchical and authoritarian.Template:Sfn
The style of government instituted by Augustus is called the Principate and continued until the late third or early fourth century.Template:Sfn The modern word "emperor" derives from the title imperator, that was granted by an army to a successful general; during the initial phase of the empire, the title was generally used only by the princeps.Template:Sfn For example, Augustus's official name was Imperator Caesar Divi Filius Augustus.Template:Sfn The territory under command of the emperor had developed under the period of the Roman Republic as it invaded and occupied much of Europe and portions of North Africa and the Middle East. Under the republic, the Senate and People of Rome authorized provincial governors, who answered only to them, to rule regions of the empire.Template:Sfn The chief magistrates of the republic were two consuls elected each year; consuls continued to be elected in the imperial period, but their authority was subservient to that of the emperor, who also controlled and determined their election.Template:Sfn Often, the emperors themselves, or close family, were selected as consul.Template:Sfn
After the Crisis of the Third Century, Diocletian increased the authority of the emperor and adopted the title dominus noster (our lord). The rise of powerful barbarian tribes along the borders of the empire, the challenge they posed to the defense of far-flung borders as well as an unstable imperial succession led Diocletian to divide the administration of the Empire geographically with a co-augustus in 286. In 330, Constantine the Great, the emperor who accepted Christianity, established a second capital in Byzantium, which was renamed Constantinople. Historians consider the Dominate period of the empire to have begun with either Diocletian or Constantine, depending on the author.Template:Sfn For most of the period from 286 to 480, there was more than one recognized senior emperor, with the division usually based on geographic regions. This division became permanent after the death of Theodosius I in 395, which historians have traditionally dated as the division between the Western Roman Empire and the Eastern Roman Empire. However, formally the Empire remained a single polity, with separate co-emperors in the separate courts.Template:Sfn
The fall of the Western Roman Empire is dated either from the de facto date of 476, when Romulus Augustulus was deposed by the Germanic Herulians led by Odoacer, or the de jure date of 480, on the death of Julius Nepos, when Eastern emperor Zeno ended recognition of a separate Western court.<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb.</ref> Historians typically refer to the empire in the centuries that followed as the "Byzantine Empire", governed by the Byzantine emperors.Template:Efn Given that "Byzantine" is a later historiographical designation and the inhabitants and emperors of the empire continually maintained Roman identity, this designation is not used universally and continues to be a subject of specialist debate.Template:Efn Under Justinian I, in the sixth century, a large portion of the western empire was retaken, including Italy, Africa, and part of Spain.Template:Sfn Over the course of the centuries thereafter, most of the imperial territories were lost, which eventually restricted the empire to Anatolia and the Balkans.Template:Efn The line of emperors continued until the death of Constantine XI Palaiologos at the fall of Constantinople in 1453, when the remaining territories were conquered by the Ottoman Turks led by Sultan Mehmed II.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn In the aftermath of the conquest, Mehmed II proclaimed himself kayser-i Rûm ("Caesar of the Romans"),Template:Efn thus claiming to be the new emperor,Template:Sfn a claim maintained by succeeding sultans.Template:Sfn Competing claims of succession to the Roman Empire have also been forwarded by various other states and empires, and by numerous later pretenders.Template:Sfn
Legitimacy
[edit]While the imperial government of the Roman Empire was rarely called into question during its five centuries in the west and fifteen centuries in the east, individual emperors often faced unending challenges in the form of usurpation and perpetual civil wars.Template:Sfn From the rise of Augustus, the first Roman emperor, in 27 BC to the sack of Rome in AD 455, there were over a hundred usurpations or attempted usurpations (an average of one usurpation or attempt about every four years). From the murder of Commodus in 192 until the fifth century, there was scarcely a single decade without succession conflicts and civil war. Very few emperors died of natural causes, with regicide in practical terms having become the expected end of a Roman emperor by late antiquity.Template:Sfn The distinction between a usurper and a legitimate emperor is a blurry one, given that a large number of emperors that were commonly considered legitimate began their rule as usurpers, revolting against the previous legitimate emperor.Template:Sfn
True legitimizing structures and theories were weak, or wholly absent in the Roman Empire,Template:Sfn and there were no true objective legal criteria for being acclaimed emperor beyond acceptance by the Roman army.Template:Sfn Dynastic succession was not legally formalized, but also not uncommon, with powerful rulers sometimes succeeding in passing power on to their children or other relatives. While dynastic ties could bring someone to the throne, they were not a guarantee that their rule would not be challenged.Template:Sfn With the exception of Titus (Template:Reign79–81; son of Vespasian), no son of an emperor who ruled after the death of his father died a natural death until Constantine I in 337. Control of Rome itself and approval of the Roman Senate held some importance as legitimising factors, but were mostly symbolic. Emperors who began their careers as usurpers had often been deemed public enemies by the senate before they managed to take the city. Emperors did not need to be acclaimed or crowned in Rome itself, as demonstrated in the Year of the Four Emperors (69), when claimants were crowned by armies in the Roman provinces, and the senate's role in legitimising emperors had almost faded into insignificance by the Crisis of the Third Century (235–285). By the end of the third century, Rome's importance was mainly ideological, with several emperors and usurpers even beginning to place their court in other cities in the empire, closer to the imperial frontier.Template:Sfn
Common methods used by emperors to assert claims of legitimacy, such as proclamation by the army, blood connections (sometimes fictitious) to past emperors, wearing imperial regalia, distributing one's own coins or statues and claims to pre-eminent virtue through propaganda, were pursued just as well by many usurpers as they were by legitimate emperors.Template:Sfn There were no constitutional or legal distinctions that differentiated legitimate emperors and usurpers. In ancient Roman texts, the differences between emperors and "tyrants" (the term typically used for usurpers) is often a moral one (with the tyrants ascribed wicked behaviour) rather than a legal one. Typically, the actual distinction was whether the claimant had been victorious or not. In the Historia Augusta, an ancient Roman collection of imperial biographies, the usurper Pescennius Niger (193–194) is expressly noted to only be a tyrant because he was defeated by Septimius Severus (Template:Reign193–211).Template:Sfn This is also followed in modern historiography, where, in the absence of constitutional criteria separating them, the main factor that distinguishes usurpers from legitimate Roman emperors is their degree of success. What makes a figure who began as a usurper into a legitimate emperor is typically either that they managed to gain the recognition from a more senior, legitimate emperor, or that they managed to defeat a more senior, legitimate emperor and seize power from them by force.Template:Sfn
List inclusion criteria
[edit]Given that a concept of constitutional legitimacy was irrelevant in the Roman Empire, and emperors were only 'legitimate' in so far as they were able to be accepted in the wider empire,Template:Sfn this list of emperors operates on a collection of inclusion criteria:
- Imperial claimants whose power across the empire became, or from the beginning was, absolute and who ruled undisputed are treated as legitimate emperors.Template:Sfn From 286 onward, when imperial power was usually divided among two colleagues in the east and west,Template:Sfn control over the respective half is sufficient even if a claimant was not recognized in the other half, such as was the case for several of the last few emperors in the west.Template:Sfn
- Imperial claimants who were proclaimed emperors by another, legitimate, senior emperor, or who were recognized by a legitimate senior emperor, are treated as legitimate emperors.<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb.</ref> Many emperors ruled alongside one or various joint-emperors. However, and specially from the 4th century onwards, most of these were children who never ruled in their own right. Scholars of the later Empire always omit these rulers,<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb.</ref> but the same is not always applied during the early Empire.Template:Sfnm For the purposes of consistency, later senior emperors' tenures as junior co-emperors are not counted as part of their reign. The list also gives all co-emperors their own entry only up to the 4th century.
- Imperial claimants who achieved the recognition of the Roman Senate, especially in times of uncertainty and civil war, are, due to the senate's nominal role as an elective body, treated as legitimate emperors.<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb</ref> In later times, especially when emperors ruled from other cities, this criterion defaults to the possession and control of Rome itself. In the later eastern empire, possession of the capital of Constantinople was an essential element of imperial legitimacy.Template:Sfn
In the case of non-dynastic emperors after or in the middle of the rule of a dynasty, it is customary among historians to group them together with the rulers of said dynasty,Template:Sfn an approach that is followed in this list. Dynastic breaks with non-dynastic rulers are indicated with thickened horizontal lines.
Principate (27 BC – AD 284)
[edit]Julio-Claudian dynasty (27 BC – AD 68)
[edit]Portrait | NameTemplate:Efn | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Augustus Template:Small |
16 January 27 BC – 19 August AD 14 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Grandnephew and adopted son of Julius Caesar. Gradually acquired further power through grants from, and constitutional settlements with, the Roman Senate. Continuously head of state since 19 August 43 BC, unopposed after the Battle of Actium in 31 BC. | 23 September 63 BC – 19 August 14 Template:Small Born as Gaius Octavius. Died probably of natural causes, allegedly poisoned with figs by Livia.Template:SfnmTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn |
bust | Tiberius Template:Small |
17 September 14 – 16 March 37 Template:Small |
Stepson, former son-in-law and adopted son of Augustus | 16 November 42 BC – 16 March 37 Template:Small Died probably of natural causes, allegedly murdered at the instigation of CaligulaTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Caligula Template:Small |
18 March 37 – 24 January 41 Template:Small |
Grandnephew and adopted heir of Tiberius, great-grandson of Augustus | 31 August 12 – 24 January 41 Template:Small Murdered in a conspiracy involving the Praetorian Guard and senatorsTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Claudius Template:Small |
24 January 41 – 13 October 54 Template:Small |
Uncle of Caligula, nephew of Tiberius, grandnephew of Augustus, proclaimed emperor by the Praetorian Guard and accepted by the Senate | 1 August 10 BC – 13 October 54 Template:Small Began the Roman conquest of Britain. Probably poisoned by his wife Agrippina, in favor of her son NeroTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Nero Template:Small |
13 October 54 – 9 June 68 Template:Small |
Grandnephew, stepson, son-in-law and adopted son of Claudius, great-great-grandson of Augustus | 15 December 37 – 9 June 68 Template:Small Committed suicide after being deserted by the Praetorian Guard and sentenced to death by the SenateTemplate:Sfnm |
Year of the Four Emperors (68–69)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
coin | Galba Template:Small |
8 June 68 – 15 January 69 Template:Small |
Governor of Hispania Tarraconensis, revolted against Nero and seized power after his suicide, with support of the Senate and Praetorian Guard | 24 December 3 BC – 15 January 69 Template:Small Murdered by soldiers of the Praetorian Guard in a coup led by OthoTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Otho Template:Small |
15 January – 16 April 69 Template:Small |
Seized power through a coup against Galba | 28 April 32 – 16 April 69 Template:Small Committed suicide after losing the Battle of Bedriacum to VitelliusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Vitellius Template:Small |
19 April – 20 December 69 Template:Small |
Governor of Germania Inferior, proclaimed emperor by the Rhine legions on 2 January in opposition to Galba and Otho, later recognized by the Senate | 24 September 15 – 20 December 69 Template:Small Murdered by Vespasian's troopsTemplate:Sfnm |
Flavian dynasty (69–96)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Vespasian Template:Small |
1 July 69 – 23 June 79 Template:Small |
Proclaimed by the eastern legions in opposition to Vitellius, later recognized by the Senate | 17 November 9 – 23 June 79 Template:Small Began construction of the Colosseum. Died of dysenteryTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Titus Template:Small |
24 June 79 – 13 September 81 Template:Small |
Son of Vespasian | 30 December 39 – 13 September 81 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
statue | Domitian Template:Small |
14 September 81 – 18 September 96 Template:Small |
Brother of Titus and son of Vespasian | 24 October 51 – 18 September 96 Template:Small Assassinated in a conspiracy of court officials, possibly involving NervaTemplate:Sfnm |
Nerva–Antonine dynasty (96–192)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Nerva Template:Small |
18 September 96 – 27 January 98 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor by the Senate after the murder of Domitian | 8 November 30 – 27/28 January 98 Template:Small First of the "Five Good Emperors". Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Trajan Template:Small |
28 January 98 – 9 August (?) 117 Template:Small |
Adopted son of Nerva | 18 September 53 – 9 August (?) 117 Template:Small First non-Italian emperor. His reign marked the geographical peak of the empire. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
statue | Hadrian Template:Small |
11 August 117 – 10 July 138 Template:Small |
Cousin of Trajan, allegedly adopted on his deathbed | 24 January 76 – 10 July 138 Template:Small Ended Roman expansionism. Destroyed Judea after a massive revolt. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Antoninus Pius Template:Small |
10 July 138 – 7 March 161 Template:Small |
Adopted son of Hadrian | 19 September 86 – 7 March 161 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Marcus Aurelius Template:Small |
7 March 161 – 17 March 180 Template:Small |
Son-in-law and adopted son of Antoninus Pius. Until 169 reigned jointly with his adoptive brother, Lucius Verus, the first time multiple emperors shared power. Since 177 reigned jointly with his son Commodus | 26 April 121 – 17 March 180 Template:Small Last of the "Five Good Emperors"; also one of the most representative Stoic philosophers. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Lucius Verus Template:Small |
7 March 161 – January/February 169 Template:Small |
Adopted son of Antoninus Pius, named joint emperor by his adoptive brother Marcus Aurelius | 15 December 130 – early 169 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Commodus Template:Small |
17 March 180 – 31 December 192 Template:Small |
Son of Marcus Aurelius. Proclaimed co-emperor in 177, at age 16, becoming the first emperor to be elevated during predecessor's lifetime | 31 August 161 – 31 December 192 Template:Small Strangled to death in a conspiracy involving his praetorian prefect, Laetus, and mistress, MarciaTemplate:Sfnm |
Year of the Five Emperors (193)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Pertinax Template:Small |
1 January – 28 March 193 Template:Small |
City prefect of Rome at Commodus's death, set up as emperor by the praetorian prefect, Laetus, with consent of the Senate | 1 August 126 – 28 March 193 Template:Small Murdered by mutinous soldiers of the Praetorian GuardTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Didius Julianus Template:Small |
28 March – 1 June 193 Template:Small |
Won auction held by the Praetorian Guard for the position of emperor | 30 January 133 – 1/2 June 193 Template:Small Killed on order of the Senate, at the behest of Septimius SeverusTemplate:Sfnm |
Severan dynasty (193–235)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Septimius Severus Template:Small |
9 April 193 – 4 February 211 Template:Small |
Governor of Upper Pannonia, acclaimed emperor by the Pannonian legions following the murder of Pertinax | 11 April 145 – 4 February 211 Template:Small First non-European emperor. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Caracalla Template:Small |
4 February 211 – 8 April 217 Template:Small |
Son of Septimius Severus, proclaimed co-emperor on 28 January 198, at age 10. Succeeded jointly with his brother, Geta, in 211 | 4 April 188 – 8 April 217 Template:Small First child emperor. Granted Roman citizenship to all free inhabitants of the empire. Murdered by a soldier at the instigation of MacrinusTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Geta Template:Small |
4 February 211 – 26 December 211 Template:Small |
Son of Septimius Severus, proclaimed co-emperor in October 209, succeeded jointly with his older brother, Caracalla | 7 March 189 – 26 December 211 Template:Small Murdered on order of his brother, CaracallaTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Macrinus Template:Small |
11 April 217 – 8 June 218 Template:Small |
Praetorian prefect of Caracalla, accepted as emperor by the army and Senate after having arranged his predecessor's death in fear of his own life | c. 165 – June 218 Template:Small First non-senator to become emperor, and first emperor not to visit Rome after acceding. Executed during a revolt of the troops in favor of Elagabalus.Template:Sfnm |
coin | Diadumenian (§) Template:Small |
Late May – June 218 Template:Small |
Son of Macrinus, named co-emperor by his father after the eruption of a rebellion in favor of Elagabalus | 14 September 208 – June 218 Template:Small Caught in flight and executed in favor of ElagabalusTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Elagabalus Template:Small |
16 May 218 – 13 March 222 Template:Small |
Cousin and alleged illegitimate son of Caracalla, acclaimed as emperor by rebellious legions in opposition to Macrinus at the instigation of his grandmother, Julia Maesa | 203/204 – 13 March 222 Template:Small Murdered by the Praetorian Guard alongside his mother, probably at the instigation of Julia MaesaTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Severus Alexander Template:Small |
14 March 222 – March 235 Template:Small |
Cousin and adopted heir of Elagabalus | 1 October 208 – early March 235 Template:Small Lynched by mutinous troops, alongside his motherTemplate:Sfnm |
Crisis of the Third Century (235–285)
[edit]Template:Main Template:Legend Template:Legend
Portrait | Name | ReignTemplate:Efn | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Maximinus I "Thrax" Template:Small |
Template:Circa March 235 – c. June 238 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor by Germanic legions after the murder of Severus Alexander, recognized at Rome on 23 March 235 | c. 172–180 – c. June 238 Template:Small First commoner to become emperor. Murdered by his men during the siege of AquileiaTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Gordian I Template:Small |
c. April – Template:Circa May 238 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor alongside his son, Gordian II, while serving as governor of Africa, in a revolt against Maximinus, and recognized by the Senate | c. 158 (?) – c. May 238 Template:Small Oldest emperor at the time of his elevation. Committed suicide upon hearing of the death of his sonTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Gordian II Template:Small |
c. April – c. May 238 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor alongside his father Gordian I, during revolt in Africa against Maximinus | c. 192 – c. May 238 Template:Small The shortest-reigning emperor. Killed outside Carthage in battle against an army loyal to Maximinus ITemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Pupienus Template:Small |
c. May – c. August 238 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor jointly with Balbinus by the Senate after death of Gordian I and II, in opposition to Maximinus | c. 164 – c. August 238 Template:Small Tortured and murdered by the Praetorian GuardTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Balbinus Template:Small |
c. May – c. August 238 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor jointly with Pupienus by the Senate after death of Gordian I and II, in opposition to Maximinus | c. 178 – c. August 238 Template:Small Tortured and murdered by the Praetorian GuardTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Gordian III Template:Small |
c. August 238 – c. February 244 Template:Small |
Grandson of Gordian I, appointed as heir by Pupienus and Balbinus, upon whose deaths he succeeded as emperor | 20 January 225 – c. February 244 Template:Small Died during campaign against Persia, possibly in a murder plot instigated by Philip ITemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Philip I "the Arab" Template:Small |
c. February 244 – September/October 249 Template:Small |
Praetorian prefect under Gordian III, seized power after his death | c. 204 – September/October 249 Template:Small Killed at the Battle of Verona, against DeciusTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Philip II "the Younger" (§) Template:Small |
July/August 247 – September/October 249 Template:Small |
Son of Philip I, appointed co-emperor | c. 237 – September/October 249 Template:Small Murdered by the Praetorian GuardTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Decius Template:Small |
September/October 249 – June 251 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor by the troops in Moesia, then defeated and killed Philip I in battle | c. 190/200 – June 251 Template:Small Killed at the Battle of Abrittus, against the GothsTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Herennius Etruscus (§) Template:Small |
May/June – June 251 Template:Small |
Son of Decius, appointed co-emperor | Unknown – June 251 Killed at the Battle of Abrittus alongside his fatherTemplate:Sfnm |
statue | Trebonianus Gallus Template:Small |
June 251 – Template:Circa August 253 Template:Small |
Senator and general, proclaimed emperor after the deaths of Decius and Herennius Etruscus | c. 206 – c. August 253 Template:Small Murdered by his own troops in favor of AemilianTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Hostilian (§) Template:Small |
c. June – c. July 251 Template:Small |
Younger son of Decius, named caesar by his father and proclaimed co-emperor by Trebonianus Gallus | Unknown – c. July 251 Died of plague or murdered by Trebonianus GallusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Volusianus (§) Template:Small |
c. August 251 – c. August 253 Template:Small |
Son of Gallus, appointed co-emperor | c. 230 – c. August 253 Template:Small Murdered by the soldiers, alongside his fatherTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Aemilianus Template:Small |
c. July – c. September 253 Template:Small |
Commander in Moesia, proclaimed emperor by his soldiers after defeating barbarians, in opposition to Gallus | c. 207 – c. September 253 Template:Small Murdered by his own troops in favor of ValerianTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | SilbannacusTemplate:Efn (Template:Hash-tag) Template:Small |
c. September/October 253 (?) Template:Small |
Obscure figure known only from coinage, may have briefly ruled in Rome between Aemilianus and Valerian | Nothing knownTemplate:Sfn |
bust | Valerian Template:Small |
c. September 253 – c. June 260 Template:Small |
Army commander in Raetia and Noricum, proclaimed emperor by the legions in opposition to Aemilian | c. 200 – after 262 (?) Captured at Edessa by the Persian king Shapur I, died in captivity possibly forced to swallow molten goldTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Gallienus Template:Small |
c. September 253 – c. September 268 Template:Small |
Son of Valerian, appointed joint emperor. Sole emperor after Valerian's capture in 260 | 218 – c. September 268 Template:Small Faced multiple revolts & barbarian invasions. Murdered in a conspiracy of army officers, involving Claudius II and AurelianTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | SaloninusTemplate:Efn (§) Template:Small |
Autumn 260 Template:Small |
Son of Gallienus, proclaimed caesar by his father and proclaimed emperor by the praetorian prefect Silvanus while besieged by Postumus | Unknown – Late 260 Murdered by troops loyal to PostumusTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Claudius II "Gothicus" Template:Small |
c. September 268 – c. August 270 Template:Small |
Army commander in Illyria, proclaimed emperor after Gallienus's death | 10 May 214 – August/September (?) 270 Template:Small Died of plagueTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Quintillus Template:Small |
c. August – c. September 270 Template:Small |
Brother of Claudius II, proclaimed emperor after his death | Unknown – 270 Committed suicide or killed at the behest of AurelianTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Aurelian Template:Small |
c. August 270 – c. November 275 Template:Small |
Commander of the Roman cavalry, proclaimed emperor by Danube legions after Claudius II's death, in opposition to Quintillus | 9 September 214 – Sept./Dec. 275 Template:Small Reunified the Roman Empire. Murdered by the Praetorian GuardTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Tacitus Template:Small |
c. December 275 – c. June 276 Template:Small |
Alleged princeps senatus, proclaimed emperor by the Senate or, more likely, by his soldiers in Campania after Aurelian's death | c. 200 (?) – c. June 276 Template:Small Died of illness or possibly murderedTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Florianus Template:Small |
c. June – September 276 Template:Small |
Maternal half-brother of Tacitus, proclaimed himself emperor after the death of Tacitus | Unknown – September/October 276 Murdered by his own troops in favor of ProbusTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Probus Template:Small |
c. June 276 – c. September 282 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed emperor by the eastern legions, in opposition to Florianus | 19 August 232 – c. September 282 Template:Small Murdered by his own troops in favor of CarusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Carus Template:Small |
c. September 282 – c. July/August 283 Template:Small |
Praetorian prefect under Probus, seized power before or after Probus's murder | c. 224 (?) – c. July/August 283 Template:Small Died in Persia, either of illness, assassination, or by being hit by lightningTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Carinus Template:Small |
Spring 283 – August/September 285 Template:Small |
Son of Carus, appointed joint emperor shortly before his death. Succeeded jointly with Numerian | c. 250 – August/September 285 Template:Small Probably died in battle against Diocletian, likely betrayed by his own soldiersTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Numerian Template:Small |
c. July/August 283 – November 284 Template:Small |
Son of Carus, succeeded jointly with Carinus | c. 253 – November 284 Template:Small Died while marching to Europe, probably of disease, possibly assassinatedTemplate:Sfnm |
Dominate (284–476)
[edit]Tetrarchy (284–324)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Diocletian "Jovius" Template:Small |
20 November 284 – 1 May 305 Template:Small |
Commander of the imperial bodyguard, acclaimed by the army after death of Numerian, and proceeded to defeat Numerian's brother, Carinus, in battle | 22 December Template:Circa 243 – 3 December Template:Circa 311 Template:Small Began the last great persecution of Christianity. First emperor to voluntarily abdicate. Died in unclear circumstances, possibly suicideTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Maximian "Herculius" Template:Small |
1 April 286Template:Efn – 1 May 305 Template:Small November 306 – 11 November 308 Template:Small |
Elevated by Diocletian, ruled the western provinces | c. 250 – c. July 310 Template:Small Abdicated with Diocletian, later trying to regain power with, and then from, Maxentius, before being probably killed on orders of Constantine ITemplate:Sfnm |
File:Portrait of Galerius, Thessaloniki (head).jpg | Galerius Template:Small |
1 May 305 – May 311 Template:Small |
Elevated to caesar in 293 by Diocletian, succeeded as eastern augustus upon Diocletian's abdication | c. 258 – May 311 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Constantius I "Chlorus" Template:Small |
1 May 305 – 25 July 306 Template:Small |
Maximian's relation by marriage, elevated to caesar in 293 by Diocletian, succeeded as western augustus upon Maximian's abdication | 31 March Template:Circa 250 – 25 July 306 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Severus IITemplate:Small | August 306 – March/April 307 Template:Small |
Elevated to caesar in 305 by Maximian, promoted to western augustus by Galerius upon Constantius I's death | Unknown – September 307 Surrendered to Maximian and Maxentius, later murdered or forced to commit suicideTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Maxentius Template:Small |
28 October 306 – 28 October 312 Template:Small |
Son of Maximian and son-in-law of Galerius, seized power in Italy with support of the Praetorian Guard and his father after being passed over in the succession. Not recognized by the other emperors | c. 283 – 28 October 312 Template:Small Died at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, against Constantine ITemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Licinius Template:Small |
11 November 308 – 19 September 324 Template:Small |
Elevated by Galerius to replace Severus, in opposition to Maxentius. Defeated Maximinus Daza in a civil war to become sole emperor of the East in 313 | c. 265 – early 325 Template:Small Defeated, deposed and put to death by Constantine ITemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Maximinus II "Daza" Template:Small |
310 – c. July 313 Template:Small |
Nephew of Galerius, elevated to caesar by Galerius in 305, and acclaimed as augustus by his troops in 310 | 20 November c. 270 – c. July 313 Template:Small Defeated in civil war against Licinius, died shortly afterwardsTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Valerius ValensTemplate:Efn Template:Small |
October 316 – c. January 317 Template:Small |
Frontier commander in Dacia, elevated by Licinius in opposition to Constantine I | Unknown – 317 Executed in the lead-up to a peace settlement between Licinius and ConstantineTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | MartinianTemplate:Efn Template:Small |
July – 19 September 324 Template:Small |
A senior bureaucrat, elevated by Licinius in opposition to Constantine I | Unknown – Spring 325 Deposed by Constantine and banished to Cappadocia, later executedTemplate:Sfnm |
Constantinian dynasty (306–363)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Constantine I "the Great" Template:Small |
25 July 306 – 22 May 337 Template:Small |
Son of Constantius I, acclaimed by his father's troops as augustus. Accepted as caesar by Galerius, promoted to augustus in 307 by Maximian, refused demotion to caesar in 309 | 27 February 272/273 – 22 May 337 Template:Small First Christian emperor and founder of Constantinople. Sole ruler of the Empire after defeating Maxentius in 312 and Licinius in 324. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
statue | Constantine II Template:Small |
9 September 337 – April 340 Template:Small |
Son of Constantine I | Template:Circa February 316 – April 340 Template:Small Ruled the praetorian prefecture of Gaul. Killed in an ambush during a war against his brother, Constans ITemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Constans I Template:Small |
9 September 337 – January 350 Template:Small |
Son of Constantine I | 322/323 – January/February 350 Template:Small Ruled Italy, Illyricum and Africa initially, then the western empire after Constantine II's death. Overthrown and killed by MagnentiusTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Constantius II Template:Small |
9 September 337 – 3 November 361 Template:Small |
Son of Constantine I | 7 August 317 – 3 November 361 Template:Small Ruled the east initially, then the whole empire after the death of Magnentius. Died of a fever shortly after planning to fight a war against JulianTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Magnentius (Template:Hash-tag) Template:Small |
18 January 350 – 10 August 353 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor by the troops, in opposition to Constans I | c. 303 – 10 August 353 Template:Small Committed suicide after losing the Battle of Mons SeleucusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Vetranio | 1 March – 25 December 350 Template:Small |
General of Constans in Illyricum, acclaimed by the Illyrian legions at the expense of Magnentius, briefly recognized by Constantius IITemplate:Efn | Unknown – c. 356 Abdicated in Constantius II's favor, retired, and died 6 years laterTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Nepotianus (Template:Hash-tag) Template:Small |
3 June – 30 June 350 Template:Small |
Son of Eutropia, a daughter of Constantius I. Proclaimed emperor in Rome in opposition to Magnentius | Unknown – 30 June 350 Captured and executed by supporters of MagnentiusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Julian "the Apostate" Template:Small |
3 November 361 – 26 June 363 Template:Small |
Cousin and heir of Constantius II, acclaimed by the Gallic army around February 360; entered Constantinople on 11 December 361 | 331 – 26 June 363 Template:Small Last non-Christian emperor. Mortally wounded during a campaign against PersiaTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Jovian Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
27 June 363 – 17 February 364 Template:Small |
Commander of imperial household guard; acclaimed by the army after Julian's death | 330/331 – 17 February 364 Template:Small Died before reaching the capital, possibly due to inhaling toxic fumes or indigestion. Last emperor to rule the whole Empire during their entire reignTemplate:Sfnm |
Valentinianic dynasty (364–392)
[edit]Portrait | NameTemplate:Efn | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
coin | Valentinian I "the Great" Template:Small |
25/26 February 364 – 17 November 375 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed emperor by the army after Jovian's death | 321 – 17 November 375 Template:Small Last emperor to cross the Rhine into Germania. Died of a stroke while yelling at envoysTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Valens | 28 March 364 – 9 August 378 Template:Small |
Brother of Valentinian I, made eastern emperor by his brother (Valentinian retaining the west) | Template:Circa 328 – 9 August 378 Template:Small Killed at the Battle of AdrianopleTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Procopius (Template:Hash-tag) | 28 September 365 – 27 May 366 Template:Small |
Maternal cousin of Julian; revolted against Valens and captured Constantinople, where the people proclaimed him emperor | 326 – 27/28 May 366 Template:Small Deposed, captured and executed by ValensTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Gratian Template:Small |
17 November 375 – 25 August 383 Template:Small |
Son of Valentinian I; proclaimed western co-emperor on 24 August 367, at age 8. Emperor in his own right after Valentinian's death | 18 April 359 – 25 August 383 Template:Small Killed by Andragathius, an officer of Magnus MaximusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Magnus Maximus | 25 August 383 – 28 August 388 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
General, related to Theodosius I; proclaimed emperor by the troops in Britain. Briefly recognized by Theodosius I and Valentinian II | Unknown – 28 August 388 Defeated by Theodosius I at the Battle of Save, executed after surrenderingTemplate:Sfnm |
statue | Valentinian II Template:Small |
28 August 388 – 15 May 392 Template:Small |
Son of Valentinian I, proclaimed co-emperor on 22 November 375, at age 4. Sole western ruler after the defeat of Magnus Maximus in 388 | 371 – 15 May 392 Template:Small Dominated by regents and co-emperors his entire reign. Probably suicide, possibly killed by ArbogastTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Eugenius (Template:Hash-tag) | 22 August 392 – 6 September 394 Template:Small |
Teacher of Latin grammar and rhetoric, secretary of Valentinian II. Proclaimed emperor by Arbogast | Unknown – 6 September 394 Defeated by Theodosius I at the Battle of the Frigidus and executedTemplate:Sfnm |
Theodosian dynasty (379–457)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Theodosius I "the Great" |
19 January 379 – 17 January 395 Template:Small |
Retired general; proclaimed eastern emperor by Gratian after the death of Valens | 11 January 346/347 – 17 January 395 Template:Small Last emperor to briefly rule over the two halves of the Empire after the Battle of the Frigidus. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Arcadius | 17 January 395 – 1 May 408 Template:Small |
Son of Theodosius I; co-emperor since 16 January 383. Emperor in the east | 377 – 1 May 408 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
carved portrait | Honorius | 17 January 395 – 15 August 423 Template:Small |
Son of Theodosius I; co-emperor since 23 January 393. Emperor in the west | 9 September 384 – 15 August 423 Template:Small Reigned under several successive regencies, most notably Stilicho. His reign saw the first sack of Rome in eight centuries. Died of edemaTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Constantine III Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
407 – 411 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Common soldier, proclaimed emperor by the troops in Britain. Recognized by Honorius in 409. Emperor in the west | Unknown – 411 (before 18 September) Surrendered to Constantius, a general of Honorius, and abdicated. Sent to Italy but murdered on the wayTemplate:Sfnm |
bust | Theodosius II "the Calligrapher" |
1 May 408 – 28 July 450 Template:Small |
Son of Arcadius; co-emperor since 10 January 402. Emperor in the east | 10 April 401 – 28 July 450 Template:Small His reign saw the promulgation of the Theodosian Code and the construction of the Theodosian Walls. Died of a fall from his horseTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Priscus Attalus (Template:Hash-tag) | Late 409 – summer 410 Template:Small |
A leading member of the Senate, proclaimed emperor by Alaric after the Sack of Rome. Emperor in the west | Unknown lifespan Deposed by Alaric after reconciling with Honorius. Tried to claim the throne again 414–415 but was defeated and forced into exile; fate unknownTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Constantius III | 8 February – 2 September 421 Template:Small; Template:Small |
Prominent general under Honorius and husband of Galla Placidia, a daughter of Theodosius I. Made co-emperor by Honorius. Emperor in the west | Unknown – 2 September 421 De facto ruler since 411; helped Honorius defeat numerous usurpers & foreign enemies. Died of illnessTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Joannes (Template:Hash-tag) | 20 November 423 – Template:Circa May 425 Template:Small |
Senior civil servant, seized power in Rome and the west after Theodosius II delayed in nominating a successor of Honorius | Unknown – Template:Circa May 425 Captured by the forces of Theodosius II, brought to Constantinople and executedTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Valentinian III Template:Small |
23 October 425 – 16 March 455 Template:Small |
Son of Constantius III, grandson of Theodosius I and great-grandson of Valentinian I, installed as emperor of the west by Theodosius II | 2 July 419 – 16 March 455 Template:Small Faced the invasion of the Huns. Murdered by Optelas and Thraustelas, retainers of AetiusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Marcian Template:Small |
25 August 450 – 27 January 457 Template:Small |
Soldier and official, proclaimed emperor after marrying Pulcheria, a daughter of Arcadius. Emperor in the east | 391/392 – 27 January 457 Template:Small Died after a prolonged period of illnessTemplate:Sfnm |
Last western emperors (455–476)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
coin | Petronius Maximus | 17 March – 31 May 455 Template:Small |
General and civil official, murdered Valentinian III and married his widow, Licinia Eudoxia | c. 397 – 31 May 455 Killed by a mob while fleeing during the Vandalic sack of RomeTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Avitus Template:Small |
9 July 455 – 17 October 456 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed emperor by the Visigoths and Gallo-Romans after the death of Petronius Maximus | Late 4th century – 456/457 Defeated and deposed by the magister militum Ricimer, became a bishop. Died shortly after of either natural causes, strangulation, or being starved to deathTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Majorian Template:Small |
28 December 457 – 2 August 461 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed by the army, backed by Ricimer | Unknown – 7 August 461 Reconquered Gaul, Hispania and Dalmatia. Deposed and executed by RicimerTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Libius Severus Template:Small |
19 November 461 – 14 November 465 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor by Ricimer | Unknown – 14 November 465 Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Anthemius Template:Small |
12 April 467 – 11 July 472 Template:Small |
General; great-grandson of Procopius, a cousin of Julian, and husband of Marcia Euphemia, a daughter of Marcian. Proclaimed western emperor by Leo I | Unknown – 11 July 472 The last effective emperor of the West. Murdered by Gundobad after a civil war with RicimerTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Olybrius Template:Small |
Template:Circa April – 2 November 472 Template:Small |
Husband of Placidia, a daughter of Valentinian III. Proclaimed emperor by Ricimer | Unknown – 2 November 472 Died of dropsyTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Glycerius | 3/5 March 473 – 24 June 474 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed emperor by Gundobad | Unknown lifespan Deposed by Julius Nepos and made a bishop, subsequent fate unknownTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Julius Nepos | 24 June 474 – 28 August 475 Template:Small August 475 – 9 May 480 Template:Small |
General; married to a relative of Verina, the wife of the eastern emperor Leo I. Installed as western emperor by Leo | Unknown – 9 May 480 Fled to Dalmatia in the face of an attack by his magister militum Orestes. Continued to claim to be emperor in exile. Murdered by his retainersTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Romulus "Augustulus" Template:Small |
31 October 475 – 4 September 476 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor by his father, the magister militum Orestes | Roughly 465 – after 507/511? The last western emperor. Deposed by the Germanic general Odoacer and retired. Possibly alive as late as 507 or 511; fate unknownTemplate:Sfnm |
Later Eastern emperors (457–1453)
[edit]Leonid dynasty (457–518)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bust | Leo I "the Thracian" | 7 February 457 – 18 January 474 Template:Small |
Low-ranking army officer; chosen by the magister militum Aspar to succeed Marcian | 400/401 – 18 January 474 Template:Small First emperor to be crowned by the Patriarch of Constantinople. Died of dysenteryTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Leo II "the Younger" | 18 January – November 474 Template:Small |
Grandson of Leo I and son of Zeno; co-emperor since 17 November 473 | 467 – November 474 Template:Small Youngest emperor at the time of his death. Died of illnessTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Zeno | 29 January 474 – 9 January 475 Template:Small |
Husband of Ariadne, a daughter of Leo I, and father of Leo II. Crowned senior co-emperor with the approval of the Senate | 425 – 9 April 491 Template:Small Fled to Isauria in the face of a Revolt led by his mother-in-law Verina & Basiliscus.Template:Sfnm |
coin | Basiliscus | 9 January 475 – August 476 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Brother of Verina, the wife of Leo I. Proclaimed emperor by his sister in opposition to Zeno and seized Constantinople | Unknown – 476/477 Deposed by Zeno upon his return to Constantinople; imprisoned in a dried-up reservoir and starved to deathTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Zeno Template:Small |
August 476 – 9 April 491 Template:Small |
Retook the throne with the help of general Illus | 425 – 9 April 491 Template:Small Saw the end of the Western Roman Empire. Died of dysentery or epilepsyTemplate:Sfnm |
carved portrait | Anastasius I "Dicorus" | 11 April 491 – 9 July 518 Template:Small |
Government official; chosen by Ariadne, whom he married, to succeed Zeno | 430/431 – 9 July 518 Template:Small Oldest emperor at the time of his death. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
Justinian dynasty (518–602)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
coin | Justin I "the Thracian" Template:Small |
9/10 July 518 – 1 August 527 Template:Small |
Soldier; proclaimed emperor by the troops after the death of Anastasius I | 450 – 1 August 527 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
mosaic | Justinian I "the Great" Template:Small |
1 April 527 – 14 November 565 Template:Small |
Nephew and adoptive son of Justin I | 482 – 14 November 565 Template:Small Temporarily reconquered half of the Western Roman Empire, including Rome. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Justin II Template:Small |
14 November 565 – 5 October 578 Template:Small |
Son of Vigilantia, sister of Justinian I | Unknown – 5 October 578 Lost most of Italy to the Lombards by 570. Suffered an attack of dementia in 574, whereafter the government was run by regents. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Tiberius II Constantine Template:Small |
26 September 578 – 14 August 582 Template:Small |
Adoptive son of Justin II | Mid-6th century – 14 August 582 Died after a sudden illness, supposedly after accidentally eating bad foodTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Maurice Template:Small |
13 August 582 – 27 November 602 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Husband of Constantina, a daughter of Tiberius II | 539 – 27 November 602 Template:Small Captured and executed by troops loyal to PhocasTemplate:Sfnm |
statue portrait | Phocas Template:Small |
23 November 602 – 5 October 610 Template:Small |
Centurion in the army; proclaimed emperor by the troops against Maurice | 547 – 5 October 610 Template:Small Deposed and then beheaded on the orders of HeracliusTemplate:Sfnm |
Heraclian dynasty (610–695)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait | HeracliusTemplate:SmallTemplate:Efn | 5 October 610 – 11 February 641 Template:Small |
Son of Heraclius the Elder, the exarch of Carthage. Led a revolt against Phocas | 574/575 – 11 February 641 Template:Small Ended the Persian Wars, but suffered the loss of the Levant to the Muslims. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Heraclius Constantine Template:Small |
11 February – 25 May 641 Template:Small |
Son of Heraclius; co-emperor since 22 January 613 | 3 May 612 – 25 May 641 Template:Small Died of tuberculosisTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Heraclonas Template:Small |
25 May – 5 November (?) 641 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Heraclius; co-emperor since 4 July 638. Co-ruler with Constantine and then sole emperor under the regency of his mother Martina | 626 – unknown Deposed, mutilated and exiled, subsequent fate unknownTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Constans II "the Bearded" Template:Small |
September 641 – 15 July 668 Template:Small |
Son of Heraclius Constantine; proclaimed co-emperor by Heraclonas at age 11 | 7 November 630 – 15 July 668 Template:Small Lost Egypt in 641. Murdered in Sicily while bathing by supporters of MezeziusTemplate:Sfnm |
mosaic | Constantine IV "the Younger" Template:Small |
September 668 – 10 July (?) 685 Template:SmallTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn |
Son of Constans II; co-emperor since 13 April 654 | Roughly 650 – 10 July (?) 685 Template:Small Defeated the First Arab Siege of Constantinople. Died of dysenteryTemplate:Sfnm |
mosaic | Justinian II "Rhinotmetus" Template:Small |
July 685 – 695 Template:Small |
Son of Constantine IV, chosen as successor over Constans' sons | 668/669 – 4 November 711 Template:Small Deposed and mutilated (hence his nickname, "Slit-nosed") by Leontius in 695; returned to the throne in 705Template:Sfnm |
Twenty Years' Anarchy (695–717)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
coin | Leontius Template:Small |
695 – 698 Template:Small |
General; deposed Justinian II | Unknown – 15 February (?) 706 Lost Africa & Carthage to the Muslims. Deposed by Tiberius III in 698 and later executed by Justinian II in 706Template:Sfnm |
coin | Tiberius IIITemplate:Small | 698 – 21 August (?) 705 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed emperor by the troops against Leontius | Unknown – 15 February (?) 706 Deposed and later executed by Justinian II alongside LeontiusTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Justinian II "Rhinotmetus" Template:Small |
21 August (?) 705 – 4 November 711 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Retook the throne with the aid of the Khazars | 668/669 – 4 November 711 Template:Small Killed by supporters of Philippicus after fleeing ConstantinopleTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Philippicus Template:Small |
4 November 711 – 3 June 713 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed emperor by the troops against Justinian II | Unknown – 20 January 714/715 Deposed and blinded in favor of Anastasius II, later died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Anastasius II Template:Small |
4 June 713 – fall 715 Template:Small |
Senior court official, proclaimed emperor after the deposition of Philippicus | Unknown – 1 June 719 Abdicated to Theodosius III after a six-month civil war, becoming a monk. Beheaded by Leo III after an attempt to retake the throneTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Theodosius IIITemplate:Small | Fall 715 – 25 March 717 Template:Small |
Tax-collector, possibly son of Tiberius III; proclaimed emperor by the troops against Anastasius II | Unknown lifespan Deposed by Leo III, whereafter he became a monk. His subsequent fate is unknown.Template:Sfnm |
Isaurian (Syrian) dynasty (717–802)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
coin | Leo III "the Isaurian" Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
25 March 717 – 18 June 741 Template:Small |
General; deposed Theodosius III | Template:Circa 685 – 18 June 741 Template:Small Ended Muslim expansion in Anatolia. Died of dropsyTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Constantine V "Copronymus" Template:Small |
18 June 741 – 14 September 775 Template:Small |
Son of Leo III; co-emperor since 31 March 720 | 718 – 14 September 775 Template:Small Last emperor to rule over Rome. Vilified by later historians for his religious policies, hence his nickname "Dung-Named". Died of a feverTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Artabasdos (Template:Hash-tag) Template:Small |
June 741 – 2 November 743 Template:Small |
Husband of Anna, a daughter of Leo III. Revolted against Constantine V and briefly ruled at Constantinople | Unknown lifespan Deposed and blinded by Constantine V, relegated to a monastery where he died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Leo IV "the Khazar" Template:Small |
14 September 775 – 8 September 780 Template:Small |
Son of Constantine V; co-emperor since 6 June 751 | 25 January 750 – 8 September 780 Template:Small Died of a feverTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Constantine VI "the Blind" Template:Small |
8 September 780 – 19 August 797 Template:Small |
Son of Leo IV; co-emperor since 14 April 776 | 14 January 771 – before 805 Template:Small Last emperor to be recognized in the West. Deposed, blinded and exiled by IreneTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Irene Template:Small |
19 August 797 – 31 October 802 Template:Small |
Widow of Leo IV and former regent of Constantine VI. Became co-ruler in 792. Dethroned and blinded her son Constantine in 797, becoming the first female ruler of the empire | c. 752 – 9 August 803 Template:Small Deposed by Nikephoros I and exiled to Lesbos, where she died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
Nikephorian dynasty (802–813)
[edit]PortraitTemplate:Efn | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Nikephoros I "the Logothete" Template:Small |
31 October 802 – 26 July 811 Template:Small |
Court official; proclaimed emperor in opposition to Irene | Template:Circa 760 – 26 July 811 Template:Small Killed at the Battle of PliskaTemplate:Sfnm |
coin | Staurakios Template:Small |
28 July – 2 October 811 Template:Small |
Son of Nikephoros I; co-emperor since 25 December 803. Proclaimed emperor after the death of his father | 790s – 11 January 812 Template:Small Wounded at Pliska; abdicated in favor of Michael I and became a monkTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Michael I Rangabe Template:Small |
2 October 811 – 11 July 813 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Husband of Prokopia, a daughter of Nikephoros I | c. 770 – 11 January 844 Template:Small Abdicated in 813 in favor of Leo V after suffering a defeat at the Battle of Versinikia and retired as a monkTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Leo V "the Armenian" Template:Small |
11 July 813 – 25 December 820 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
General; proclaimed emperor after the Battle of Versinikia | c. 775 – 25 December 820 Template:Small Murdered while in church by supporters of Michael IITemplate:Sfnm |
Amorian dynasty (820–867)
[edit]PortraitTemplate:Efn | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Michael II "the Amorian" Template:Small |
25 December 820 – 2 October 829 Template:Small |
General sentenced to execution by Leo V; proclaimed emperor by Leo V's assassins and crowned by Patriarch Theodotus I on the same day | Template:Circa 770 – 2 October 829 Template:Small Saw the beginning of the Muslim conquest of Sicily. Died of kidney failureTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Theophilos Template:Small |
2 October 829 – 20 January 842 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Michael II; co-emperor since 12 May 821 | 812/813 – 20 January 842 Template:Small Died of dysenteryTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Michael III "the Drunkard" Template:Small |
20 January 842 – 24 September 867 Template:SmallTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn |
Son of Theophilos; co-emperor since 16 May 840. Ruled under his mother's regency until 15 March 856 | 19 January 840 – 24 September 867 Template:Small The youngest emperor. Murdered by Basil I and his supportersTemplate:Sfnm |
Macedonian dynasty (867–1056)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait | Basil I "the Macedonian" Template:Small |
24 September 867 – 29 August 886 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
General; proclaimed co-emperor by Michael III on 26 May 866 and became senior emperor after Michael's murder | 811, 830 or 836 – 29 August 886 Template:Small Captured Bari in 876 & Taranto in 880. Died after a hunting accidentTemplate:Sfnm |
mosaic | Leo VI "the Wise" Template:Small |
29 August 886 – 11 May 912 Template:Small |
Son of Basil I or illegitimate son of Michael III; crowned co-emperor on 6 January 870 | 19 September 866 – 11 May 912 Template:Small Conquered Southern Italy but lost the remnants of Sicily in 902. Died of an intestinal diseaseTemplate:Sfnm |
mosaic | Alexander Template:Small |
11 May 912 – 6 June 913 Template:Small |
Son of Basil I; co-emperor since September or October 879 | 23 November 870 – 6 June 913 Template:Small Died of illness, possibly testicular cancerTemplate:Sfnm |
carved portrait | Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus Template:Small |
6 June 913 – 9 November 959 Template:Small |
Son of Leo VI; co-emperor since 15 May 908. Successively dominated by regents and co-emperors until 27 January 945, when he deposed Romanos I's sons | 17/18 May 905 – 9 November 959 Template:Small Saw the beginning of renewed expansion in the East against the Arabs. Remembered for his numerous writings. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
seal | Romanos I Lekapenos Template:Small |
17 December 920 – 20 December 944 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Overthrew Constantine VII's regency, married him to his daughter Helena and was made senior co-emperor. Made several sons co-emperors to curb Constantine VII's authority | Template:Circa 870 – 15 June 948 Template:Small Deposed by his sons Stephen and Constantine. Died of natural causes in exile as a monkTemplate:Sfnm |
carved portrait | Romanos II Template:Small |
9 November 959 – 15 March 963 Template:Small |
Son of Constantine VII and grandson of Romanos I; co-emperor since 6 April 945 | 938 – 15 March 963 Template:Small Reconquered Crete in 961. Died of exhaustion on a hunting tripTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Nikephoros II Phokas Template:Small |
16 August 963 – 11 December 969 Template:Small |
General; proclaimed emperor on 2 July 963 against the unpopular Joseph Bringas (regent for the young sons of Romanos II), entered Constantinople on 16 August 963. Married Theophano, the widow of Romanos II | c. 912 – 11 December 969 Template:Small Reconquered Cilicia & Antioch. Murdered in a conspiracy involving his former supporters (including John I Tzimiskes) and TheophanoTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
John I Tzimiskes Template:Small |
11 December 969 – 10 January 976 Template:Small |
Nephew of Nikephoros II, took his place as senior co-emperor | c. 925 – 10 January 976 Template:Small Reconquered Eastern Thrace from the First Bulgarian Empire. Possibly poisoned by Basil LekapenosTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Basil II "the Bulgar-Slayer" Template:Small |
10 January 976 – 15 December 1025 Template:Small |
Son of Romanos II; co-emperor since 22 April 960, briefly reigned as senior emperor in March–August 963. Succeeded as senior emperor upon the death of John I | 958 – 15 December 1025 Template:Small The longest-reigning emperor; best known for his reconquest of Bulgaria. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Constantine VIII Template:Small |
15 December 1025 – 12 November 1028 Template:Small |
Son of Romanos II and brother of Basil II; co-emperor since 30 March 962 | 960 – 12 November 1028 Template:Small De jure longest-reigning emperor. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Romanos III Argyros Template:Small |
12 November 1028 – 11 April 1034 Template:Small |
Husband of Zoë, a daughter of Constantine VIII | c. 968 – 11 April 1034 Template:Small Temporarily reconquered Edessa in 1031. Possibly drowned on Zoë's ordersTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Michael IV "the Paphlagonian" Template:Small |
12 April 1034 – 10 December 1041 Template:Small |
Lover of Zoë, made emperor after their marriage following Romanos III's death | c. 1010 – 10 December 1041 Template:Small Died of epilepsyTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Michael V "Kalaphates" Template:Small |
13 December 1041 – 21 April 1042 Template:Small |
Nephew and designated heir of Michael IV, proclaimed emperor by Zoë three days after Michael IV's death | c. 1015 – unknown Deposed in a popular uprising after attempting to sideline Zoë, blinded and forced to become a monkTemplate:Sfnm |
mosaic | Zoë Porphyrogenita Template:Small |
21 April – 11 June 1042 Template:Small |
Daughter of Constantine VIII and widow of Romanos III and Michael IV. Ruled in her own right from Michael V's deposition until her marriage to Constantine IX. | c. 978 – 1050 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
Portrait from the Monomachos crown | Theodora Porphyrogenita Template:Small |
21 April – 11 June 1042 Template:Small |
Daughter of Constantine VIII and sister of Zoë, proclaimed co-empress during the revolt that deposed Michael V | c. 980 – 31 August 1056 Template:Small Sidelined after Zoë's marriage to Constantine IX, returned to the throne in 1055Template:Sfnm |
mosaic | Constantine IX Monomachos Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
11 June 1042 – 11 January 1055 Template:Small |
Husband of Zoë, crowned the day after their marriage | c. 1006 – 11 January 1055 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
Portrait from the Monomachos crown | Theodora Porphyrogenita Template:Small |
11 January 1055 – 31 August 1056 Template:Small |
Claimed the throne again after Constantine IX's death as the last living member of the Macedonian dynasty | c. 980 – 31 August 1056 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Michael VI Bringas "Stratiotikos" Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
22 August 1056 – 30 August 1057 Template:Small |
Proclaimed emperor by Theodora on her deathbed | 980s/990s – c. 1057 Template:Small Deposed in a revolt, retired to a monastery and died soon afterwardsTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Isaac I Komnenos Template:Small |
1 September 1057 – 22 November 1059 Template:Small |
General, proclaimed emperor on 8 June 1057 in opposition to Michael VI | c. 1007 – 31 May/1 June 1060 Template:Small Abdicated to Constantine X due to illness and hostile courtiers, became a monkTemplate:Sfnm |
Doukas dynasty (1059–1078)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait | Constantine X Doukas Template:Small |
23 November 1059 – 23 May 1067 Template:Small |
Designated as emperor by Isaac I Komnenos during his abdication | Template:Circa 1006 – 23 May 1067 Template:Small Lost nearly all Italian territories to the Normans. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Eudokia Makrembolitissa Template:Small (§) |
23 May – 31 December 1067 Template:Small |
Widow of Constantine X; either regent on behalf of their sons or co-ruler alongside them until her marriage to Romanos IV. Briefly resumed her regency in September 1071 | c. 1030 – after 1078 Became a nun in November 1071 and later died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Romanos IV Diogenes Template:Small |
1 January 1068 – 26 August 1071 Template:SmallTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn |
Husband of Eudokia. Regent and senior co-emperor together with Constantine X's and Eudokia's children | c. 1032 – 4 August 1072 Template:Small Captured at Manzikert by the Seljuk Turks. After his release blinded on 29 June 1072 by John Doukas, later dying of his woundsTemplate:Sfnm |
portrait from the Holy Crown of Hungary | Michael VII Doukas "Parapinakes" Template:Small |
1 October 1071 – 24/31 March 1078 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Constantine X; made co-emperor in 1060 with Eudokia and Romanos IV. Proclaimed sole emperor after Romanos' defeat at the Battle of Manzikert | c. 1050 – c. 1090 Template:Small Lost nearly all of Anatolia to the Turks. Forced to become a monk after a popular uprising. Died of natural causes several years laterTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Nikephoros III Botaneiates Template:Small |
3 April 1078 – 1 April 1081 Template:Small |
General; revolted against Michael VII on 2 July or 2 October 1077 and entered Constantinople on 27 March or 3 April. Married Maria of Alania, the former wife of Michael VII | 1001/1002 – c. 1081 Template:Small Abdicated after Alexios I captured Constantinople, became a monk and died of natural causes, probably later in the same yearTemplate:Sfnm |
Komnenos dynasty (1081–1185)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait | Alexios I Komnenos Template:Small |
1 April 1081 – 15 August 1118 Template:SmallTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn |
Nephew of Isaac I, also husband of Irene Doukaina, a grand-niece of Constantine X. General; revolted against Nikephoros III on 14 February 1081. Seized Constantinople on 1 April; crowned on 4 April | Template:Circa 1057 – 15 August 1118 Template:Small Started the Crusades & the reconquest of Anatolia. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
mosaic | John II Komnenos "the Good" Template:Small |
15 August 1118 – 8 April 1143 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Alexios I, co-emperor since about September 1092 | 13 September 1087 – 8 April 1143 Template:Small Reconquered most of Anatolia by the time of his death. Died of injuries sustained in a hunting accident, possibly assassinated (perhaps involving Raymond of Poitiers or supporters of Manuel I)Template:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Manuel I Komnenos "the Great" Template:Small |
8 April 1143 – 24 September 1180 Template:Small |
Youngest son and allegedly designated heir of John II on his deathbed, crowned in November 1143 after a few months of having to establish his rights | 28 November 1118 – 24 September 1180 Template:Small Last emperor to attempt reconquests in the west. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Alexios II Komnenos Template:Small |
24 September 1180 – c. September 1183 Template:Small |
Son of Manuel I; co-emperor since 1171 | 14 September 1169 – c. September 1183 Template:Small Strangled on the orders of Andronikos I, body thrown in the seaTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Andronikos I Komnenos Template:Small |
c. September 1183 – 12 September 1185 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Isaac Komnenos, a son of Alexios I. Overthrew the regency of Alexios II in April 1182, crowned co-emperor in 1183 and shortly thereafter had Alexios II murdered | c. 1118/1120 – 12 September 1185 Template:Small Overthrown by Isaac II, tortured and mutilated in the imperial palace, then slowly dismembered alive by a mob in the HippodromeTemplate:Sfnm |
Angelos dynasty (1185–1204)
[edit]PortraitTemplate:Efn | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Isaac II Angelos Template:Small |
12 September 1185 – 8 April 1195 Template:Small |
Great-grandson of Alexios I. Resisted an order of arrest issued by Andronikos I, after which he was proclaimed emperor by the people of Constantinople. Captured and killed Andronikos I | Template:Circa 1156 – January 1204 Template:Small Suffered the loss of Bulgaria. Overthrown and blinded by Alexios III in 1195, reinstalled in 1203Template:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Alexios III Angelos Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
8 April 1195 – 17/18 July 1203 Template:Small |
Elder brother of Isaac II, overthrew and blinded his brother | c. 1153 – 1211/1212 Template:Small Fled after brief resistance against the Fourth Crusade. Died a natural death after being captured and forced to become a monk by Theodore ITemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Alexios IV Angelos Template:Small |
19 July 1203 – 27 January 1204 Template:Small |
Son of Isaac II, overthrew Alexios III with the help of the crusaders as part of the Fourth Crusade, then named co-emperor alongside his blinded father | c. 1182/1183 – c. 8 February 1204 Template:Small Deposed and imprisoned by Alexios V, then strangled in prisonTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Isaac II Angelos Template:Small |
19 July 1203 – 27 January (?) 1204 Template:Small |
Freed from imprisonment during the Fourth Crusade by courtiers and reinstated as ruler after Alexios III abandoned the defense of Constantinople | c. 1156 – January 1204 Template:Small Became senile or demented and died of natural causes around the time of Alexios V's coupTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Alexios V Doukas "Mourtzouphlos" Template:Small |
27/28 January – 12 April 1204 Template:Small |
Seized power through a palace coup, son-in-law of Alexios III. | c. 1139 – c. late November 1204 Template:Small Fled during the sack of Constantinople. Blinded by Alexios III, later captured by crusader Thierry de Loos and thrown from the Column of TheodosiusTemplate:Sfnm |
Laskaris dynasty (1205–1261)
[edit]PortraitTemplate:Efn | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Theodore I Laskaris Template:Small |
Template:Circa May 1205 – November 1221 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Husband of Anna Komnene Angelina, a daughter of Alexios III. Organized resistance against the Latin Empire in Nicaea and proclaimed emperor in 1205 after the Battle of Adrianople; crowned by Patriarch Michael IV on 6 April 1208. | c. 1174 – November 1221 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
John III Vatatzes Template:Small |
c. December 1221 – 3 November 1254 Template:Small |
Husband of Irene Laskarina, a daughter of Theodore I | c. 1192 – 3 November 1254 Template:Small Started Nicaean expansionism. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Theodore II Laskaris Template:Small |
3 November 1254 – 16 August 1258 Template:Small |
Son of John III and grandson of Theodore I, co-emperor since about 1235 | November 1221 – 16 August 1258 Template:Small Died of epilepsyTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
John IV Laskaris Template:Small |
16 August 1258 – 25 December 1261 Template:Small |
Son and co-emperor of Theodore II | 25 December 1250 – c. 1305 Template:Small Blinded, deposed and imprisoned by Michael VIII Palaiologos in 1261, died in captivity several decades laterTemplate:Sfnm |
Palaiologos dynasty (1259–1453)
[edit]Portrait | Name | Reign | Succession | Life details |
---|---|---|---|---|
miniature portrait | Michael VIII Palaiologos Template:Small |
1 January 1259 – 11 December 1282 Template:Small |
Great-grandson of Alexios III; became regent for John IV in 1258 and crowned co-emperor in 1259. Regained Constantinople on 25 July 1261, entered the city on 15 August. Became sole ruler after deposing John IV on 25 December | 1224/1225 – 11 December 1282 Template:Small Died of dysenteryTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Andronikos II Palaiologos Template:Small |
11 December 1282 – 24 May 1328 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Michael VIII; named co-emperor shortly after 1261, crowned on 8 November 1272 | 25 March 1259 – 13 February 1332 Template:Small Deposed by his grandson Andronikos III in 1328 and became a monk, dying of natural causes four years laterTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Michael IX Palaiologos (§) Template:Small |
21 May 1294 – 12 October 1320 Template:Small |
Son and co-ruler of Andronikos II, named co-emperor in 1281, crowned on 21 May 1294 | 17 April 1277/1278 – 12 October 1320 Template:Small Allegedly died of grief due to the accidental murder of his second son, probably died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait | Andronikos III Palaiologos Template:Small |
24 May 1328 – 15 June 1341 Template:Small |
Son of Michael IX, named co-emperor between 1308 and 1313. Fought with his grandfather Andronikos II for power from April 1321 onwards. Crowned emperor on 2 February 1325, became sole emperor after deposing Andronikos II | 25 March 1297 – 15 June 1341 Template:Small Last Emperor to effectively control Greece. Died of sudden illness, possibly malariaTemplate:Sfnm |
John V Palaiologos Template:Small |
15 June 1341 – 16 February 1391 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Andronikos III, not formally crowned until 19 November 1341. Dominated by regents until 1354, faced numerous usurpations and civil wars throughout his long reign | 18 June 1332 – 16 February 1391 Template:Small Reigned almost 50 years, but only held effective power for 33. Lost almost all territories outside Constantinople. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm | |
miniature portrait | John VI Kantakouzenos Template:Small |
8 February 1347 – 10 December 1354 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Related to the Palaiologoi through his mother. Proclaimed by the army on 26 October 1341, became regent and senior co-emperor after a lengthy civil war with John V's mother, Anna of Savoy. Entered Constantinople on 8 February, crowned on 21 May 1347 | Template:Circa 1295 – 15 June 1383 Template:Small Deposed by John V in another civil war and retired, becoming a monk. Died of natural causes several decades laterTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
Andronikos IV Palaiologos Template:Small |
12 August 1376 – 1 July 1379 Template:Small May 1381 – June 1385 Template:Small |
Son of John V and grandson of John VI; named co-emperor and heir in 1352, but imprisoned and partially blinded after a failed rebellion in May 1373. Rebelled again and successfully deposed his father in 1376; not formally crowned until 18 October 1377 | 11 April 1348 – 25/28 June 1385 Template:Small Deposed by John V in 1379; fled to Galata in exile but was restored as co-emperor and heir in May 1381, ruling over Selymbria and the coast of Marmara. Rebelled again in June 1385 but died shortly thereafterTemplate:Sfnm |
miniature portrait Template:Small |
John VII Palaiologos Template:Small |
June 1385 – April 1390 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn 14 April – 17 September 1390 Template:Small late 1403 – 22 September 1408 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn |
Son of Andronikos IV, co-emperor since 1377; usurped the throne from John V in 1390. Deposed shortly thereafter but granted Thessalonica by Manuel II in 1403, from where he once more ruled as emperor until his death | 1370 – 22 September 1408 Template:Small Ruled Constantinople as regent in 1399–1403 during Manuel II's absence. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm |
Manuel II Palaiologos Template:Small |
Autumn 1382 – April 1387 Template:SmallTemplate:Efn 16 February 1391 – 21 July 1425 Template:Small |
Son of John V and grandson of John VI; co-emperor since 25 September 1373 | 27 June 1350 – 21 July 1425 Template:Small Suffered a stroke in 1422, whereafter the government was run by his son, John VIII. Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm | |
John VIII Palaiologos Template:Small |
21 July 1425 – 31 October 1448 Template:Small |
Son of Manuel II; co-emperor by 1407 and full emperor since 19 January 1421 | 18 December 1392 – 31 October 1448 Template:Small Died of natural causesTemplate:Sfnm | |
fresco portrait | Constantine XI Palaiologos Template:Small |
6 January 1449 – 29 May 1453 Template:Small |
Son of Manuel II and favored successor of his brother John VIII. Crowned emperor in Mystras on 6 January 1449, entered Constantinople on 12 March. | 8 February 1405 – 29 May 1453 Template:Small The last Roman emperor. Died in battle at the fall of Constantinople.Template:Sfnm |
Other claims to the Roman imperial title
[edit]Subject | Description |
---|---|
Roman usurpers (list) | Roman usurpers were individuals or groups of individuals who obtained or tried to obtain power by force and without legitimate legal authority. Usurpation was endemic during the Roman imperial era, especially from the crisis of the third century onwards, when political instability became the rule.
A number of individuals proclaimed themselves emperor (or were proclaimed or appointed as emperor), but are not considered as legitimate emperors because they did not oust the ruling emperor, or did not establish control of the whole empire, or were not accepted by the senate or other imperial colleagues. |
Byzantine usurpers (list) | |
Holy Roman Emperors (list) | The Holy Roman Emperor was the ruler and head of state of the Holy Roman Empire.
Charlemagne was crowned imperator romanorum ("Emperor of the Romans") by Pope Leo III in AD 800. In so doing, the Pope rejected the legitimacy of Empress Irene.Template:Sfn The Byzantines never recognized the Holy Roman emperors as "Roman emperors" and called them the 'emperor (or king) of the Franks', to them only the Byzantine Senate (successor to the Roman Senate) and/or the Byzantine military (successor to the Roman military) had the right to appoint a new Roman Emperor. Likewise, Western Europeans didn't recognize the legitimacy of the Byzantine emperors and called them the 'emperor of the Greeks' or the 'emperor of Constantinople'. See also: Problem of two emperors |
Latin Emperors (list) | The Latin Emperor was the ruler of the Latin Empire, the historiographical convention for the Crusader realm, established in Constantinople after the Fourth Crusade (1204) and lasting until the city was recovered by the Byzantine Greeks in 1261. Its name derives from its Catholic and Western European ("Latin") nature. The empire, whose official name was Imperium Romaniae (Latin: "Empire of Romania"), claimed the direct heritage of the Eastern Roman Empire, which had most of its lands taken and partitioned by the crusaders. This claim however was disputed by the Byzantine Greek successor states, the Empire of Nicaea, the Empire of Trebizond and the Despotate of Epirus. Out of these three, the Nicaeans succeeded in displacing the Latin emperors in 1261 and restored the Byzantine Empire. |
Trapezuntine emperors (list) | The Trapezuntine emperors were the rulers of the Empire of Trebizond, one of the successor states of the Byzantine Empire founded after the Fourth Crusade in 1204, until its fall to the Ottoman Empire in 1461. The rulers of Trebizond called themselves Megas Komnenos and – like their counterparts in the other two Byzantine successor states, the Empire of Nicaea and the Despotate of Epirus – initially claimed supremacy as "Emperor and Autocrat of the Romans". However, after Michael VIII Palaiologos of Nicaea recaptured Constantinople in 1261, the Komnenian use of the style "Emperor" became a sore point. In September 1282, at Constantinople, John II of Trebizond relinquished his claim and accepted the title despot. His successors used a variant of the imperial title, "Emperor and Autocrat of all the East, the Iberians, and the Transmarine Provinces" until the Empire's end in 1461.<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb.</ref> |
Emperors of Thessalonica (list) | The emperors of Thessalonica were the rulers of the Empire of Thessalonica, a historiographic term to refer to the short-lived state centred on the city of Thessalonica between 1224 and 1246 (sensu stricto until 1242) and ruled by the Komnenodoukas of Epirus. |
Despots of Epirus (list) | The despot of Epirus was the ruler of the Despotate of Epirus, one of the successor states of the Byzantine Empire in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade. The name "Despotate of Epirus" is a modern historiographical name and was not used at the time.
Some rulers used the version "despot of Romania" (Romania essentially referring to the territories of the Roman Empire, i.e. Byzantium) or "despot of the Romans" (claiming rulership over the Romans, i.e. the Byzantines/Greeks). |
Ottoman sultans (list) | Based on the concept of right of conquest, the sultans of the Ottoman Empire claimed to be the legitimate Roman Emperors, in succession to the Byzantine emperors who had previously ruled from Constantinople. This claim was recognized by the Islamic world, but was never recognized by the Western Europeans. See Ottoman claim to Roman succession |
See also
[edit]- List of Roman empresses – for a list of the consorts of the Roman emperors
- Burial places of Roman emperors – for a list of the burial places of the Roman emperors
- List of Roman consuls – for a list of the consuls who held power during the Roman Republic and who continued to be appointed in imperial times
- List of Roman dictators – for a list of dictators during the Roman Republic
- List of Roman dynasties – for a list of the many dynasties that ruled the Roman Empire
- Family tree of Roman emperors – for a concise family tree of emperors and their immediate family (27 BC–518 AD)
- Family tree of Byzantine emperors – for a concise family tree of emperors and their immediate family (337–1453)
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]Citations
[edit]Works cited
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Cited links
[edit]Further reading
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