Byzantine Rank Hierarchy in the 9th–11th Centuries Cover Image

Byzantine Rank Hierarchy in the 9th–11th Centuries
Byzantine Rank Hierarchy in the 9th–11th Centuries

Author(s): Nikolay Kanev
Subject(s): Political history, 6th to 12th Centuries
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: Byzantine rank hierarchy; Middle-Byzantine administration; Byzantine aristocracy; Byzantine court; Middle-Byzantine state organization

Summary/Abstract: The aim of the article is to present the Byzantine secular rank hierarchy of the 9th–11th centuries. During the above-mentioned period of time Byzantium knew not one but several distinct, relatively independent official hierarchical systems. All of them, however, were mutually interconnected to varying degrees and thus formed a single, pan-imperial hierarchical construct, expressed through the so-called system of palace precedence of ranks in the empire. It is this global and more general paradigm that reflects the Byzantine hierarchical model of the 9th–11th centuries; consequently, it seems fitting to refer to it as the rank hierarchy of the classical Middle Byzantine period, in the era preceding the reforms of Alexios I Komnenos (1081–1118).

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