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Zoe (empress) : ウィキペディア英語版
Zoë Porphyrogenita

Zoë ((ギリシア語:Ζωή), ''Zōē'' meaning "''life''") ( 978 – June 1050) reigned as Byzantine Empress alongside her sister Theodora from April 19 to June 11, 1042. She was also enthroned as the Empress Consort to a series of co-rulers beginning with Romanos III in 1028 until her death in 1050 while married to Constantine IX.
==Early life: 978 – 1028==
Zoë was one of the few Byzantine empresses who was ''Porphyrogenita'',〔Norwich, pg. 259〕 or "born into the purple" (that is, she was born to a reigning emperor). She was the second daughter of Constantine VIII and Helena, daughter of Alypius.〔Kazhdan, pg. 503〕 Her father had become co-emperor in 962 and sole emperor in 1025.〔Canduci, pg. 252〕 His reign as sole emperor lasted less than three years, from December 15, 1025 to November 15, 1028.〔Kazhdan, pg. 503〕
As an eligible imperial princess she was considered as a possible bride for the Holy Roman Emperor, Otto III in 996.〔Norwich, pg. 253〕 A second embassy sent in 1001, headed by Arnulf, Archbishop of Milan,〔Norwich, pg. 258〕 was tasked with selecting Otto’s bride from among Constantine’s three daughters. The eldest, Eudocia, was disfigured by smallpox, while the youngest, Theodora, was a very plain girl. Arnulf therefore selected the attractive 23-year-old Zoë, to which her uncle Basil II agreed.〔Norwich, pg. 259〕 In January 1002 she accompanied Arnulf back to Italy, only to discover when the ship reached Bari that Otto III had died, forcing her to return home.〔Norwich, pg. 259〕 Another opportunity arose in 1028, when an embassy from the Holy Roman Empire arrived in Constantinople with a proposal for an imperial marriage. Constantine VIII and the fifty-year-old Zoë rejected the idea out of hand when it was revealed that the intended groom Henry, the son of Conrad II, was only ten years old.〔Norwich, pg. 269〕
Worried by the prospect of associating another man with the imperial house, Basil II prevented his nieces from marrying any of the Byzantine nobility until the very end of his life.〔Garland, ''Zoe Porphyrogenita''〕 Consequently, Zoë lived a life of virtual obscurity in the imperial ''gynaeceum''〔Norwich, pg. 269〕 until circumstances (her uncle Basil II dying childless and her dying father not siring any sons) forced her into the centre of imperial politics.〔Canduci, pg. 267〕 The first potential match for Zoë was the distinguished noble Constantine Dalassenos, the former ''dux'' of Antioch.〔Finlay, pg. 464〕 He was eventually overlooked for Romanos III Argyros, the urban prefect of Constantinople.〔 Although they were third cousins,〔Norwich, pg. 270〕 they married on November 10, 1028 in the imperial chapel of the palace, and by November 12 they were seated on the imperial throne.〔Norwich, pg. 271〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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