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Imperial family, women of the

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Author(s)
Garland L
Contributor(s)
University of New England
Keywords
Classical Greek and Roman History

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/2107703
Online Access
http://e-publications.une.edu.au/1959.11/12947
Abstract
Imperial women played an important part at court and in the political and religious life of the Byzantine Empire between 324 and 641. The empress's constitutional importance was never precisely defined, but Byzantine imperial women played a role in government unprecedented in the classical world, with a number of widowed empresses choosing husbands who would then ascend the throne or acting as regents for their sons. Certain empress-consorts were seen almost as co-rulers with their husbands, like Theodora with Justinian I (Evans 2002), and Sophia with Justin II (Garland 1999). While imperial women resided primarily within the women's quarters of the palace, which were staffed by eunuchs, empresses could associate with ministers without reference to their husbands and correspond with popes and world leaders.
Date
2013
Type
book chapter
Identifier
oai:e-publications.une.edu.au:une:13155
vtls086666064
une-20111201-115953
http://e-publications.une.edu.au/1959.11/12947
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