(Redirected from Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamaterina)'Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamaterina' or better 'Kamatera' (
Greek: 'Ευφροσύνη Δούκαινα Καματερίνα ή Καματηρά', ''Euphrosynē Doukaina Kamatēra'') (c.
1155 –
1211) was the wife of the
Byzantine Emperor Alexios III Angelos.
Euphrosyne was the daughter of Andronikos Doukas Kamateros, a high-ranking official who held the titles of ''
megas droungarios'' and ''pansebastos'' (died
1176), and (accordingly to genealogist David Hughes) his second wife, as her second husband, married in
1158, Qirwerne(je), sister of the 7th Zagwe Ethiopian Emperor
Gebre Mesqel Lalibela (
1119-
1159)
[1]. She was related to the Emperor
Constantine X and
Irene Doukaina, empress of
Alexios I Komnenos. Both of her brothers had rebelled against
Andronikos I Komnenos; one was imprisoned and the other was blinded.
Euphrosyne married Alexios Angelos, the older brother of the future Emperor
Isaac II Angelos in c.
1169. Although Isaac II bestowed many titles and honors upon his brother, Alexios seized the throne on
April 8,
1195, desposing Isaac and proclaiming himself emperor. In this he was assisted by Euphrosyne, who had organized a party of aristocratic supporters. Euphrosyne took control of the palace and quelled the opposition herself, securing the accession of her husband to the throne by wholesale bribery.
Euphrosyne was a dominating woman with a talent for politics, and she virtually ruled the Empire in the name of Alexios III, who was concerned primarily with pleasure and idle pursuits. She issued commands herself and even altered Alexios' decrees when it suited her. Euphrosyne and Alexios were criticized for their love of finery and the enrichment of their relatives at state expense. Her own brother, Basil Kamateros, and her son-in-law, Andronikos Kontostephanos, accused Euphrosyne of adultery with one of her ministers, a nobleman named Vatatzes. Alexios III believed the allegations and had Vatatzes executed. Euphrosyne was stripped of her imperial robes and banished to a convent at Nematarea in October
1196. However, her relatives convinced Alexios to reinstate her, and she was recalled six months later in spring
1197.
In
1203, faced with the
Fourth Crusade and the return of his nephew,
Alexios IV Angelos, Alexios III fled
Constantinople with a magnificent treasure and some female relatives, including his daughter Eirene. Euphrosyne was left behind and was immediately imprisoned by the new regime. Alexios IV was soon strangled by
Alexios Doukas Mourtzouphlos, the lover of Euphrosyne's daughter Eudokia, who then proclaimed himself emperor as Alexios V. In April
1204 Euphrosyne fled the city along with her daughter and Alexios V, and they made their way to Mosynoupolis, where Euphrosyne's husband Alexios III had taken refuge. Alexios III had Alexios V blinded and abandoned to the
crusaders, who had him executed.
Euphrosyne and Alexios III fled across Greece to
Thessalonica and
Corinth, but were finally captured by
Boniface of Montferrat and imprisoned. In
1209 or
1210 they were ransomed by their cousin
Michael I of Epirus, and Euphrosyne spent the remainder of her life in
Arta. She died in 1210 or
1211.
Family
By her husband, Alexios III Angelos, Euphrosyne had three daughters:
# Eirene Angelina, who married (1) Andronikos Kontostephanos; (2) Alexios Palaiologos, by whom she was the grandmother of Emperor
Michael VIII Palaiologos.
#
Anna Angelina, who married (1) the ''sebastokratōr'' Isaac Komnenos, great-nephew of Emperor
Manuel I Komnenos; (2) Emperor
Theodore I Laskaris of Nicaea.
#
Eudokia Angelina, who married (1) King
Stefan I Prvovenčani of Serbia; (2) Emperor
Alexios V Doukas; (3)
Leo Sgouros, ruler of Corinth.
Empress Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamatera's direct
matrilineal 27th-generation descendant
Grand Duchess Olga Constantinovna of Russia (1851-1926) became in 1867 the
Queen-Consort of the Hellenes by marrying King
George I of Greece. Queen Olga later, in 1920, became also the
Regent of their kingdom,
Greece.
Empress Euphrosyne's matrilineal descent is, exceptionally, a verifiable one. There are still matrilineal descendants alive. Highly exceptional in longevity, her matrilineal descent has lasted now more than 800 years.
Sources
★ ''The
Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium'', Oxford University Press, 1991
★ Garland, Lynda. ''Byzantine Empresses'', 1999
★
Women in Purple:Rulers of Medieval Byzantium, , Judith, Herrin, Phoenix Press, 2001, ISBN 1-84212-529-X