6th—10th centuries ,
Ravenna Eunuchs were often found among the top Byzantine army and navy commanders from the time of Justinian I. Historians explain that emperors preferred to trust court eunuchs rather than experienced commanders because the former, if successful, could not claim to have seized power in the empire. More often, however, eunuchs failed to demonstrate military talent. Under Justinian, Narses was awarded the highest ranks available to eunuchs for his successes in the
wars against the Ostgoths, and
Solomon was elevated to patrician for his victories over the
Vandals. Another
Narses, whose career was in the second half of the sixth century, fought successfully with Persia. After Phocas came to power (602-610), Narses began a rebellion on the Persian frontier, which Phocas sent the eunuch Leontius to suppress. Leontius was defeated, and the emperor's nephew
Domentziolus was sent to replace him. Finally, Narses was captured, marched in disgrace through the Hippodrome, and burned alive. By the end of the 8th century, several less successful generals are known to have been eunuchs with varying degrees of probability, but eunuch generals became particularly influential with the beginning of the independent reign of Empress
Irene (797-802). Her reign was marked by a struggle for influence between two powerful eunuchs,
Staurakios, patrician and
logothetes tou dromou who was honored with a triumph for his military victories over the
Slavs, and
Aetios,
strategos of the
Anatoliacs. The struggle was won by Aetios, who tried to secure the throne for his brother Leo, but a conspiracy resulted in
Nikephoros I (802-811) becoming emperor. Under Basil I (867-886), Procopius, the proto-eunuch, is known to have died at the head of the army. In the 9-10th centuries eunuchs often led the fleet, as for example John under
Romanos I Lekapenos (920-944), for victories over the Slavs received the title of
parakimomenos. Thanks to the successes of the generals Nicephorus II Phocas (963-969), Peter Phocas and Michael Vurza, Antioch and the surrounding area were recaptured. According to historian George Kedrin, Peter Phocas was once the personal eunuch of Emperor
Nicephorus, purchased at a young age and then given military training. For his bravery and success in his wars with the Slavs in Thrace, he was given the title of stratopedarch. A few years later, in 970, the patrician Nicholas, a trusted eunuch of
John Tzimiskes (969-976), repulsed an Arab attack on Syrian cities. In the long reign of the warlord emperor
Basil II Porphyrogenitus (976-1025), only two eunuch commanders are known, the strategist of Abydos Romanus and the cubicularius Orestes, who was defeated in
Sicily.
11th-15th centuries After the death of Basil II, his brother Constantine VIII (1025-1028) became sole emperor. Previously, he had been formally considered his brother's co-emperor, but was actually excluded from the government. With Constantine's accession, there was a typical Byzantine reshuffling of the highest officials, and court eunuchs were appointed to the most important posts: Nicholas — parakimomenos and domestick schola, Simeon — droungarios of the Watch and Eustratius the Great Etheriarch. At the same time, many members of the former military aristocracy, accused of conspiracies, were blinded, exiled, or stripped of their property. Having made these appointments, Constantine finally withdrew from affairs, allowing the eunuchs to enrich themselves unchecked at public expense. During this period, the military activity of Byzantium, which had reached the height of its military and economic power in 1025, declined sharply. In
Syria, the failures of the Catharean eunuch
Michael Spondyles significantly worsened Byzantium's position in the region. Relatively successful in 1028 in
Georgia acted against
Bagrat IV domestic school Nicholas. With the death of Constantine VIII, the male line of the
Macedonian dynasty was cut off, and a representative of the old military family
Roman III Argyr (1028-1034), whom Constantine VIII's daughter
Zoe married, was enthroned thanks to the efforts of the court party headed by Drungarius Simeon. Military failures of Roman's board have been connected including with kept command posts in army eunuchs — Michael Spondyla and replaced him Niceta in Syria, continued to act ineffectively in Italy. In his domestic policies, Roman III tried to find support from both the court party and the previously oppressed aristocrats, who were amnestied under him. However, power in the country gradually concentrated in the hands of a small circle of court eunuchs, which provoked protests from Argyr's relatives. As a result, the emperor, who had neither popular nor aristocratic support, was overthrown by a conspiracy led by the court eunuch
John the Orphanotrophus. Three brothers of Emperor
Michael IV of Paphlagon (1034-1041) were eunuchs, and one of them, Constantine, was a successful
military governor of
Antioch. Another eunuch commander prominent in this reign, Basil the Pediadite, was notorious for disastrous defeats in
Sicily and
Serbia. Many eunuchs at the head of the army are known from the reign of
Constantine IX Monomachos (1042-1054). In
Armenia, the great Constantine and the
rhaiktor Nikephoros fought wars. Nicephorus, together with the famous commander
Katakalon Kekaumenos, was then sent against the
Pechenegs. The incompetence of Nicephorus led to an ignominious defeat at Diaken in 1049, after which the Pechenegs plundered Macedonia and Thrace, even reaching the walls of Constantinople. To reflect the danger from the capital, one of Empress Zoe's sleeping eunuchs, John the Philosopher, was sent to lead a detachment of imperial bodyguards and palace servants in an attack on the Pechenegs while they slept, cutting them all down. Also significant in the reign of Constantine IX was the rebellion of the commander
George Maniakes, whose fight was entrusted to the court eunuch Stephen. The quick death of Maniakes greatly facilitated the task of Stephen, who was honored with a triumph for his successes. At the end of 1054 Constantine IX became seriously ill, and the main task of the ruling court group, headed by the
logothetes tou dromou, the eunuch John, the prothonotary of the Droma Constantine and the "keeper of the imperial inkwell" Basil, was the search for Monomakh's successor. Their choice has stopped on the governor of
Bulgaria Nikephoros Protevon. However, the group of supporters of the Empress Zoe's sister,
Theodora, in which the eunuchs Neceta Xilinit, Theodore and Manuel played the leading roles, managed to win over the palace guards to their side, as a result of which Theodora was proclaimed sole Empress. In the spring of 1056, new appointments were made, and from the eunuchs, Theodore, the
domestikos of the
Scholae of the East, was appointed proedrus Theodore. The death of Theodora and the accession of
Michael VI Bringas (1056-1057) did not change the policy towards the army, and the replacement of experienced military commanders by court eunuchs and capital officials continued. In the 12th-13th centuries, eunuchs are mentioned as generals, but already under the Paleolochs eunuch commanders are unknown; perhaps this is due to the strengthening of the idea of the legitimacy of the hereditary transmission of imperial power, which in turn made the successes of non-eunuch generals non-threatening. == Differences between eunuchs ==