The new emperor, Constantine X Doukas, had…
1061 CE
The new emperor, Constantine X Doukas, had quickly associated two of his young sons in power, Michael VII Doukas and Konstantios Doukas, appointed his brother John Doukas as kaisar (Caesar), and embarked on a policy favorable to the interests of the court bureaucracy and the church.
Severely undercutting the training and financial support for the armed forces, Constantine X fatally weakens imperial defenses by disbanding the Armenian local militia of fifty thousand men at a crucial point of time, coinciding with the westward advance of the Seljuqs and their Turkmen allies.
Undoing many of the necessary reforms of Isaac I, he has bloated the military bureaucracy with highly paid court officials and crowded the Senate with his supporters.
His decisions to replace standing soldiers with mercenaries and leaving the frontier fortifications unrepaired have led Constantine to become naturally unpopular with the supporters of Isaac within the military aristocracy, who attempt to assassinate him in 1061.
He also becomes unpopular with the general population after he raises taxes to try to pay the army.