Catherine of Bulgaria
Byzantine empress from 1057 to 1059 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Catherine of Bulgaria (Church Slavonic: Єкатерїна, Greek: Αἰκατερίνη, romanized: Aikaterini, Bulgarian: Екатерина, romanized: Ekaterina; died after 1059) was empress consort to Byzantine emperor Isaac I Komnenos and co-regent of Constantine X for a period after the abdication of her spouse in 1059. She was a daughter of Ivan Vladislav of Bulgaria and his wife Maria, and thus a sister of Presian and Alusian. Catherine was also a paternal aunt of Maria of Bulgaria.
Catherine | |
---|---|
Augusta | |
Byzantine Empress consort | |
Tenure | 1057–1059 |
Spouse | Isaac I Komnenos |
Father | Ivan Vladislav of Bulgaria |
Mother | Maria |
Life
Catherine was a daughter of Ivan Vladislav (reigned 1015–18), the last Tsar of Bulgaria.[1] She married the general Isaac Komnenos.[2] After he became emperor in 1057, Isaac raised her to Augusta.[3]
Isaac abdicated the throne on November 22, 1059. He retired to the Stoudios Monastery and spent the remainder of his life, until his death in late 1060 or 1061, as a monk.[2][4] Following her husband's abdication, she appears to have co-reigned for a while with Constantine X, but eventually she too retired to the Myrelaion monastery under the monastic name of Xene.[5]
Family
Catherine had at least two children with Isaac:[6]
- Manuel Komnenos (ca. 1030 – 1042/57), probably the "son of Komnenos" recorded as having been engaged to the daughter of the protospatharios Helios. He died sometime between 1042 and 1057.[7]
- Maria Komnene (born ca. 1034), her beauty is remarked upon by Psellos, but she remained unmarried, and retired with her mother to the Myrelaion.[8]
References
Bibliography
External links
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