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Nikephoros III Botaneiates
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===Revolt=== Nikephoros, seeing how dire the situation of the Byzantine Empire was, sent a letter to Emperor Michael in 1077 pleading with him to address the rapidly worsening situation in Byzantine Anatolia. Michael was insulted by the directness of one of his subordinates, and turned against Nikephoros, forcing him to rebel against Michael to protect himself from imprisonment. Nikephoros declared himself emperor shortly after, on 2 July/October 1077, mobilizing an army of native troops and Turkish mercenaries.{{efn|group=lower-alpa|[[Michael Attaleiates]] states that Nikephoros was proclaimed emperor on 2 July 1078,{{sfn|Attaleiates|Kaldellis (tr.)|Krallis (tr.)|2012|loc=27.4}} but the year is most probably wrong.{{sfn|Maynard|2018}} The [[Skylitzes Continuatus]] states he was proclaimed emperor in October, with an omen happening on the 3rd.{{sfn|McGeer|2019|p=165}} A 16th-century chronicle records that he reigned for 3 years ½, suggesting that the month was October.{{sfn|Schreiner|1975|p=145}}}} Michael sent Nikephoros a letter in which he reminded Nikephoros that he owed much to the emperor who had brought him out of exile.{{sfn|Maynard|2018}}{{sfn|Sewter|1953|loc=Michael VII 7.18-20}} A month later, in November 1077, the general [[Nikephoros Bryennios the Elder]] raised his own revolt against Michael.{{sfn|Maynard|2018}} The military acumen and family renown of Nikephoros (III) helped him to solidify his support base, and the tyranny of Michael ensured that even some of the elites of Constantinople sided with Nikephoros—something Attaleiates notes as being very rare, since generally people defect from the usurper's side to the emperor's side. The defection of some of the capital elites was even more astonishing because the march from the Anatolic Theme to Constantinople was not safe due to Turkish raids, which had reached deep into Anatolia by 1078,{{sfn|Maynard|2018}}{{sfn|Attaleiates|Kaldellis (tr.)|Krallis (tr.)|2012|loc=30.3-4}} meaning that Nikephoros{{'}}s rebellion might be destroyed before it even reached Constantinople. On 7 January 1078, the [[Byzantine Senate]] proclaimed Nikephoros III as emperor, although he was still far from the city.{{sfn|Attaleiates|Kaldellis (tr.)|Krallis (tr.)|2012|loc=32.2}} Michael's wife, Maria of Alania, seeing that Michael would soon be overthrown, defected to the side of Nikephoros.{{sfn|Maynard|2018}}{{sfn|Bedrosian|2017|loc=2.75}} Michael VII abdicated after a popular uprising and was forced to become a monk on 31 March. Three days later, on 3 April,{{efn|group=lower-alpa|This is the chronology given by the [[Skylitzes Continuatus]]{{sfn|McGeer|2019|p=175}} and is the one commonly used by modern historians.{{sfn|Kazhdan|1991|p=1366, 1479}} Attaleiates, however, dates Michael's abdication and Nikephoros' arrival on 24 and 27 March respectively.{{sfn|Attaleiates|Kaldellis (tr.)|Krallis (tr.)|2012|loc=32.15-17}}}} Nikephoros entered Constantinople and seized the throne.{{sfn|Maynard|2018}}{{sfn|Norwich|1993|p=361}} Upon taking power, Nikephoros married Maria of Alania, exiled Michael to a monastery, a common Byzantine practice for removing threats to the throne since the 7th century, and [[castrated]] Michael's sons. The castration of the sons was viewed poorly by the Byzantine nobility, possibly due to the brutality of the act, although Michael the Syrian does not provide an in-depth explanation of exactly why the Byzantine elite opposed it.{{sfn|Maynard|2018}}{{sfn|Bedrosian|2013|p=166}}{{sfn|Garland|2006|p=2}}
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