The councilors of Emperor Constantine IX Monomachos,…
1055 CE
The councilors of Emperor Constantine IX Monomachos, chiefly the logothetes tou dromou John, persuade the dying emperor to pass the throne to the doux of Bulgaria, Nikephoros Proteuon.
Their plans are preempted, however, by Constantine's aged sister-in-law Theodora, the last descendant of the Macedonian dynasty, who is brought out of her retirement in a convent and proclaimed "emperor" by the imperial guard shortly before Constantine's death on January 11, 1055.
In spite of her seventy years, Theodora reasserts her dormant rights with vigor and frustrates an attempt to supersede her on behalf of the general Nikephoros Bryennios, the empire's commander in Albania.
A purge of senior officials and the leadership of the European military units followed.
Bryennios, whom the western tagmata apparently wanted to proclaim him emperor instead, is also dismissed and exiled.