Leo Diogenes

Leo Diogenes (Greek: Λέων Διογένης, Leōn Diogenes) was the son of Byzantine Emperor Romanos IV Diogenes and Eudokia Makrembolitissa. Crowned co-emperor during his father's reign, he later served in the armies of Emperor Alexios I Komnenos.

Leo Diogenes
Co-emperor of the Byzantine Empire
Reign1069–1071
Born1069
Died1087
FatherRomanus IV
MotherEudokia Makrembolitissa

Life

Leo’s father, Romanos IV Diogenes, died while Leo was still an infant. Although elevated to the rank of co-emperor on his birth, he was banished to a monastery along with his mother after the fall of Romanos. Here he remained until the accession of Alexios I Komnenos in 1081, who took in Leo and his brother Nikephoros and raised them like his own sons.

According to Anna Komnene’s account, Leo was a committed supporter of Alexios, who urged him not only to confront the Norman invaders early in his reign,[1] but also the Pechenegs who had invaded the empire from beyond the Danube in 1087.[2] During one of the pitched battles against the Pechenegs, Leo allowed himself to be drawn away from the emperor’s side, and as he approached the wagons of the enemy, he was struck down and died on the field of battle.[3]

gollark: Sure, if you expect everyone to be trustworthy security is much easier.
gollark: Why not just directly do payments from that somehow?
gollark: So you also have to manually muck around with a tablet or something to declare how much money it should let you take?
gollark: ?
gollark: What if it makes, say, 100 transactions for 1 currency unit to get around that?

References

  1. Comnena, Book 4, Chapter 5
  2. Comnena, Book 7, Chapter 2
  3. Comnena, Book 7, Chapter 3

Sources

  • Dawes, Elizabeth A., ed. (1928), The Alexiad, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul
  • Skoulatos, Basile (1980). Les personnages byzantins de l'Alexiade: Analyse prosopographique et synthèse [The Byzantine Personalities of the Alexiad: Prosopographical Analysis and Synthesis] (in French). Louvain-la-Neuve and Louvain: Bureau du Recueil Collège Érasme and Éditions Nauwelaerts. OCLC 8468871.
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