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De administrando imperio vs. the prince
De administrando imperio vs. the prince











According to other researchers the text of De Administrando Imperio was compiled at some point after 952 and before November 959 when Constantine VII died. From this, it is clear that some parts of DAI were written in the period 948-952 CE. In the 45th chapter author says: “now (today) is the X indiction, the year from the creation of the world 6460 in the reign of Constantine and Romanus ”, and Byzantine year 6460 from the creation of the world corresponds with 951/952 CE. In the 29th Chapter author says: “now (today) is the VII indiction, the year 6457 from the creation of the world”, and Byzantine year 6457 from the creation of the world corresponds with 948/949 CE. Such opinion originate from written in the 27th, 29th and 45th Chapters DAI. With the editions of De Administrando Imperio (DAI) it is said that this work was written between 948 and 952. Obviously, the whole De Administrando Imperio Constantine VII was written when he was alive. In this text his son Romanus II is never designated as a self-sustained ruler. Constantine VII’s direct appeals to his son Romanus II and Constantine’s first-person commentaries are located both at the beginning of the treatise in the Proem and in chapter 13, as well as at the end of the text, in chapter 51. The text known as De Administrando Imperio was written by emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, but he had at least one educated “Anonymous Collaborator”. A circle of educated people formed around Constantine VII written three unfinished books (De Administrando Imperio, De Ceremoniis and On the Themes) and finished a biography of his grandfather, Basil I. He gathered a group of educated people and dedicated himself to writing books about the administration, ceremonies, and history of the Eastern Roman Empire. Constantine VII was a scholar-emperor, who sought to foster learning and education in the Eastern Roman Empire. Ĭonstantine’s father, Leo was known for his learning and writings, and, correctly or not, Constantine VII also believed that his mother, Zoe Karbonopsina, was a relative of the chronicler Theophanes the Confessor, one of the Middle Byzantine Historians. Constantine VII, with the help of his supporters, cloistered his brothers-in-law, and personally ruled by the Eastern Roman Empire from January 945 to his death in November 959. From 920, Constantine VII become increasingly distant from the imperial authorities until December 944, when the sons of Emperor Romanos I suddenly rebelled and cloistered their father. In December 920, Romanos I Lekapenos (920-944) was crowned a co-emperor, but he really took over the imperial reign in Constantinople. Later in May 919 Constantine VII married Helena Lekapene, daughter of Romanos Lekapenos. Ĭonstantine VII was too young to rule on his own, and the governorship was created. Leo VI died in May 912, and his brother and co-emperor Alexander became the ruler of Constantinople, but Alexander died in 913. Leo VI gave the crown to young Constantine VII in 908 and he became the co-emperor. The emperor Constantine VII “Porphyrogenitus” (905-959) was only surviving son of the emperor Leo VI the Wise (886-912).













De administrando imperio vs. the prince