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Sebastos

 
Wikipedia: Sebastos

Sebastos (Greek: σεβαστός, "venerable one") was a honorific used by the ancient Greeks to render the Roman imperial title of Augustus. From the late 11th century on, during the Komnenian period, it and variants derived from it formed the basis of a new system of court titles for the Byzantine Empire. The female form of the title was sebastē (σεβαστή). It also formed the basis for the creation of the title of sebastokratōr.

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Sebastos

The term was used in the Hellenistic East as a honorific for the Roman emperors from the 1st century onwards.[1] This association also was carried over to the naming of cities in honor of the emperor, such as Sebaste, Sebasteia and Sebastopolis. Following the adoption of the term basileus as the main imperial title in the 7th century, the epithet fell out of use, but it was revived in the mid-11th century by emperor Constantine IX Monomachos for his mistress Maria Skleraina.[1] Thereafter, the title began to be conferred upon members of the nobility favored by the emperor, including Bagrat IV of Georgia, George II of Georgia, and the future emperor Alexios I Komnenos.[2][3] When the latter assumed the purple in 1081, he set about to reorganize the old system of court dignities, with the sebastos as the basis for new titles, which primarily signalled the closeness of their holders' familial relationship to the emperor.[4] This use of the imperial sebastos set the imperial family apart at the top of the imperial hierarchy, making them, in the words of historian Paul Magdalino, "partners in, rather than executives of, imperial authority."[5] In this context, it is useful to note that the scholar L. Stiernon calculated that over 90 percent of the sebastoi belonged to the ruling Komnenos family.[6]

In 12th-century Byzantium, the sebastoi were divided in two groups: the simple sebastoi and the sebastoi gambroi.[7] The latter were members of various aristocratic families tied to the emperor via marriage to his female relatives (gambros means "son in law"). The gambroi thus formed the upper layer of the sebastoi class.[8] The title was also conferred to foreign rulers, and spread to neighboring, Byzantine-influenced states, like Bulgaria, where a sebastos was the head of an administrative district, and Serbia, where the title was employed for various officials.[7] In Byzantium itself, the title lost its preeminence in the late 12th century, and in the following centuries the sebastos was a title reserved for commanders of ethnic units.[7]

Variants

Protosebastos

The title of prōtosebastos (Greek: πρωτοσέβαστος, "first sebastos") was probably created by Alexios I, and first conferred to his brother Hadrian.[3] It was also conferred on Sergius VI of Naples and his son, John VI, at about the same time.[9] Later, during the 12th century, it was given to close relatives of the emperor, such as the sons of a sebastokratōr. The title remained relatively important during the Palaiologan period as well, being listed by pseudo-Kodinos as coming after the megas logothetes and before the pinkernes ("cupbearer").[10]

Panhypersebastos

The title of panhypersebastos (Greek: πανυπερσέβαστος, "venerable above all") was also created by Alexios I, and conferred to members of aristocratic families closely allied to the imperial family.[11] Michael Taronites, Alexios' brother-in-law, was also awarded the title, placing him The title remained very important through to the Palaiologan era, following the megas domestikos, the overall army commander. Perhaps the most notable of its holders was John VI Kantakouzenos, who held the title before his proclamation as emperor.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b Kazhdan (1991), p. 1862
  2. ^ Kazhdan (1991), pp. 1862–1863
  3. ^ a b Magdalino (2002), p. 181
  4. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 623
  5. ^ Magdalino (2002), pp. 180–182
  6. ^ Stiernon (1965), pp. 226–232
  7. ^ a b c Kazhdan (1991), p. 1863
  8. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 821
  9. ^ Vera von Falkenhausen (2007), "The South Italian Sources," Proceedings of the British Academy, 132, 107.
  10. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 1717
  11. ^ Stiernon (1965), p. 223
  12. ^ Kazhdan (1991), p. 1570

Sources


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