NICEPHORUS III BOTANEIATES


Meaning of NICEPHORUS III BOTANEIATES in English

flourished 11th century Byzantine emperor (107881) whose use of Turkish support in acquiring and holding the throne tightened the grip of the Seljuq Turks on Anatolia. Nicephorus, who belonged to the military aristocracy of Asia Minor and who was related to the powerful Phocas family, became commander of the Anatolian theme (administrative district). When discontent against the government of Michael VII Ducas led to rioting in Constantinople, Nicephorus was proclaimed emperor (Jan. 7, 1078) by his supporters there. With some support from Suleiman, the Seljuq ruler in Anatolia, Nicephorus was acclaimed emperor by his troops at Nicaea (in northwestern Anatolia) and entered Constantinople three months later. His imperial claim was ratified by the aristocracy and clergy, who had already deposed Michael VII. Nicephorus III defeated a rival claimant to the throne, Nicephorus Bryennius, the empire's commander in Albania; he also defeated a later pretender, Nicephorus Basilacius, who succeeded Bryennius in Albania. After the death of Nicephorus' wife, he married Mary, the wife of the deposed but still living Michael VII, naming Michael's son Constantine as his successor but then later deciding on one of his own nephews instead. He relegated Constantine's fiance, a daughter of the Norman leader Robert Guiscard, to a convent. Nicephorus' action provided an excuse for Guiscard's later successful attacks against the empire. In 1080 another usurper, Nicephorus Melissenus, appeared in Asia Minor and also sought Turkish assistance. As a result of such constant internal strife, with one faction or another requesting aid from the Turks, most of Asia Minor was lost to Byzantium and became incorporated in the Seljuq Sultanate of Rum, centred on Iconium (modern Konya, Tur.). Unable either to save the empire from disintegration or to maintain his own position as ruler, Nicephorus abdicated on April 4, 1081, and entered the Peribleptos monastery in Constantinople.

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