@@huntclanhunt9697Exactly. Going down fighting is a more Roman way for the Roman Empire to end than a child "emperor" nobody really recognizes being deposed without a fight. (Though, tbh, Odoacer was pretty chadly himself if you learn about his history; he did depose an illegitimate emperor and basically reunify the empire under one ruler by making himself a vassal of the emperor in Constantinople; plus, the regular Romans of the time wouldn't have seen it as the end of Rome; that idea didn't come into vogue until Justinian used the apparent lack of "Roman" government in the west to justify his wars that left Italy as a whole and the city of Rome in particular far worse than he found them).
@@James_Wisniewskieh not really, he was a vassal in name only and romans in the east probably wouldn't have seen him as the western Roman emperor. Although on a purely factual basis, he literally disbanded the western Roman empire and sent the regalia to the east.
Constantine I was renowed for his military and martial prowess,having reconquered Lower Germania and Dacia.He had never lost a battle in his lifetime and always fought on the frontlines.
How you gonna put my boy Constantine XI at 52? Sure the empire fell under him, but that was in no way his fault, he got handed a corrupt and tiny empire with an extremely ambitious and powerful empire on his dorrstep that wished nothing more than to take constantinople. The fact the the siege of constantinople lasted several years is amazing given the lack of a full garrison due to the lack of people.
He backed the winning side during the ottoman interregnum, playing an important role i think, so the Ottoman Sultan was apparently very grateful. Its possible that he actually recognized the emperor as technically his superior but i am not sure. Would have been a technicality AKA like the emperor of Japan and the Shogun even if it did happen, but i can't recall the exact phrasing@@Goratrix66
It's not that he is bad, it's that there is a lot more emperors that accomplished more than he did, he simply did not have the resources or variability to do anything, such is the sad fate of history.
You should do this with the Byzantine Rump states such as the Empire of Trebizond and rank their emperors. Nevertheless, I appreciate the hard work, the dedication, and most of all time you put into this video. Keep it up!
Thank you very much. I took me a very long time putting this video together, admittedly a couple of errors slipped through but as you can imagine, keeping track of nearly 100 people is quite difficult. I would certainly love to do one for Trebizond. Epirus is much harder because it was conquered several times and broke up so a consistent line of Despots is quite difficult.
@Iamnotracistlmao His diplomacy per se wasn't the bad thing, it was his extremely necessary but unpopular economy reforms that doomed him. I don't think not banishing John Tzimiskes would have saved him.
3:20 I still think this dude is the worst emperor of Byzantium. Maybe he succeeded a little in religious matters (although I doubt it, because disputes between the Uniates and the Orthodox continued after), but he managed to lose all of Asia Minor, part of the territories in the Balkans, and actually destroyed the army of the empire, making it extremely ineffective , despite the fact that the emperor’s court was drowning in luxury and his friends were plundering the treasury. If the later Komnenos were forced to live and work in hellish and incredibly cramped conditions, then during the 40 years of the rule of this imbecile so much could have been done - revive the economy, establish a stronger presence in the Balkans, or take advantage of the fragmentation of the Rum Sultanate by capturing weak beyliks. But instead we have mediocrity, after which Byzantium really did not exist but SURVIVED.
I don’t think I’ve ever commented on your videos but they provide so much great research and find them more entertaining then cable history. You are up there with History with Hilbert, Mr.Beat, Fire of Learning and many others. Your vids on the Palaiologos are really great and have been helping me with trying to write some sort of historical drama been trying to make.
Ah, small typo, it can happen when one is doing the write up for 95 people. It would probably be unpopular decisions, such as wanting to make soldiers martyrs, his coinage reform and his actions during the famine at the end of his reign.
I'd put Basil in front of Justinian but I guess his conquest are a big heritage. But I largely disagree on two things. Fitstly, Leo the 3rd only 16th? He was a top 7 easily, he was such a forward thinking ruler saving the empire for 700 more years. Most importantly I cannot understand why Manuel is in front of brilliant Aleksios and John. He was a great ruler but he made so many uneccesary wars instead of finishing off the Seljucks. He spent his power and that's why 25 years later the state was doomed. The rest of your ranking is great though, thank for you great work!
What do you think of my rankings? Let me know in a comment below. I am aware that a couple of errors snuck in to the video and an audio glitch. Marcian is missing his reasonings, Nikephoros II should replaced Scandolous personal life with unpopular policies and decisions, Michael VIII's reign is is wrong in dates; and Irene's reign has a typo. My apologises for these things.
I would have placed some of them higher, some lower. To me Basil II the Bulgar-slayer, John II Komnenos and John III Vatatzes are the best emperors, while I have very mixed feelings towards both Justinian the Great, Heraclius, Constantine Himself and Theodosius, and enormous despise for several very unsuccessful basileii, first and foremost Phocas, but also Michael VIII's son and the Angeloi.
Leo the 3rd way better costant 2nd all though he did some good things but most of his reign was mediocre Leo was in more terrible time then costant 2nd because of Leo byzantine empire lasted 726 year thanks to him the Umayyad started to fragmented because of the lost in 717 and Anatolia defense made the gate of Europe and recent conquest of Spain the caliphate was too large and multicultural to controlled easily the caliph was in sirya the rulers of Spain were too far without Anatolia and Balkans no way he control it from that far sure his iconoclasm was bad but if was put in let say the 641 ad Egypt would even be still in byzantine hands and loses would have been only sirya to me Leo should be on high rank
Also u did great exposing the truth for leo the 5 was real savvy emperor he had some leo third genes at least his brain he kept Sicily/ crete save and Bulgaria in cheak he was great assassino had he killed krum I think I would give him 9/10 also second iconoclast wasn't that long
@@rickyyacine4818 I agree, I think Leo V was a very good emperor. The second Iconoclasm was a result of his own success. The second and, in many ways, the first iconoclasm were closely tied to military victory.
Actually a really good list but Constantine the IX is wayyyyyyyy too high. Flagrantly incompetent emperor, well worth reading Michael Psellos who served under him (he defends him but his poor decisions really bleed through). Otherwise great choices for especially the good and great Emperors! (Alexios I especially is well placed at 11)
I would also add to John VIII credit that he stopped the Theodore and Constantine conflict before a civil war could happen, succescfully won a naval battle against Epirus and Morea was expanding
The fact that a solid three quarters of these are at least competent may speak to how Eastern Rome lasted so long. Edit: Why Constantine XI in last place? He couldn't have done anything else. (Well, except for the Demetrius part)
Anastasius I at rank no. 4 is well deserved! However, since you placed him so high, I think it would be also appropriate to place another "master of economics emperor" Nikephoras I higher. He devised a method to tax the rich merchants by forcing them to take loans from the government and purchase land in western Anatolia (which was subjected to the land tax). His new European themes gave a lasting stability to Greece and some parts of the Balkans. His resettlement of anatolian soldiers and their families to greece re-romanized the slavs and the whole region. His reign in my opinion, like that of Anastasius, set the stage for the 2nd golden age of the roman empire during the reign of the Macedonian Dynasty.
What a great video of ranking all eastern emperors. In my honest opinion Leo I is if not one of the last roman emperors who really cared for the western empire along Justinian But alas Aspar and Basilicus got in his way of retaking Africa
And as the rotting cherry on top of Andronikos I's rancid sundae of misdeeds, the guy who overthrew him was the founder of the Angelos dynasty (the one with some of the worst rulers in Byzantine history).
@Iamnotracistlmao no, the massacre of the latins pretty much was a serious reason for the sacking of 1204, people always like to blame the west and one emperor but not one blames the nobles in constantinople for what happened too when they decided to riot. It was a murder of other christians and you can't go blaming others for what they and that was solely on the rome's part for that part.
@michelleg7 the 4th Crusade's sacking was due to greed. Period. The tensions you mention didn't exist. The citizens thought it was just a cue and didn't flee. The soldiers on the crusades were lied to frequently. It was greed which doomed the crusade movement and left the crusade states to fall
Thank you for putting Anastasius so high. He really set things in motion to allow for the empire to prosper through the crises that would occur in the 6th and 7th century.
I have never understood the tendency of people to rate Constantine and Justinian highly. Constantine lived in calm and well-fed times; his opponents were real imbecils who could not normally govern the state or lead armies. Constantine simply did not have worthy enemies. The barbarians also did not pose much of a threat; the border was in complete peace. Although he was indeed an outstanding emperor, he had no challenges, no difficulties, and at the same time he very unsuccessfully divided the empire, laying the ground for political instability in the following years. Therefore, I would call him great but not the greatest. Justinian was very effective until the 540s, but everything connected with the plague and after is agony. The huge treasury left behind by Anastasia was completely spent, Italy was ruined, Spain generally knows how it was managed and existed on its own. The only real gain was Africa and Carthage. Let’s not forget about the destruction of the borders by the Sassanids, whom neither Justinian nor Belisarius could defeat. In my opinion, the truly successful and effective, GREATEST emperor of Byzantium was Alexei Komnenos. Yes, at the end of his life there was an obvious crisis at court due to the struggle between Anna and John, but Alexei, with minimal resources, was able not only to preserve the old borders but also to restore them as much as possible. Under such emperors as Phocas or Andronikos, Byzantium would have definitely perished in the 1080s, due to the attacks of Guiscard, Chaka, and the crusaders, but Alexei not only survived and won, but also took full advantage of all the circumstances, due to which Byzantium grew stronger and strengthened during the reign of his son and grandson. This is a much greater achievement than anything that Constantine and Justinian did. He not only handed over the state to his descendants in a much better form, he did everything possible to ensure that the state was at its zenith until 1178.
You're overlooking a lot to not consider Justinian and Constantine as Godtier. You're thinking in terms of diplomacy, not geopolitics. They each holistically expanded trade and economic confidence, promoting remarkable stability despite challenging times. Their politics saw excellent administration and highly skilled bureaucracy which took serious work at this time. They each aimed to unify their citizens by centralising the creeds. Constantine restored the currency and Justinian's laws were adopted for centuries after. These guys simply didn't sleep and deserve their legacy, which also include enhancing the new capital which was a hallmark of Byzantine power. I am a huge Alexios fan and agree he's criminally underrated by most. An incredible planner, muti-dimensional and my favourite diplomatically. He's no doubt a top 10, but the more research I do the more clear the top 3 are: Basil II, Justinian I and Constantine I with an order that's subjective
@@rockstar450 In my understanding, the Great, the Greatest Emperor is not the one who was born in calm times and after him it got worse (and after CONSTANTINE AND JUSTINIAN IT BECAME WORSE, including through their fault) but the one who came in times of crisis and showed extraordinary abilities was able to leave behind a world much better than it was before him. Alexei Komnenos laid a lot of controversial foundations for the structure of the empire, but there was nothing that would not have been corrected over time. Yes, Justinian's legal code is awesome. But without his Italian campaigns, Byzantium would have been less likely to have faced the crisis of the 7th century, especially if the eastern and southern borders had been adequately defended. Yes, Constantine built a magnificent capital and established an excellent bureaucracy. But he unsuccessfully divided his empire between relatives, did not complete the work of strengthening Christianity, which led to crises with Julian and Eugenius, and was unable to properly secure the captured areas for himself. All this greatly diminishes the contribution of these two in my eyes. As I said, Constantine did not have a single real challenge or strong enemy. And Justinian, in isolation from his reforms, conducted extremely terrible wars with the Ostrogoths and Persians and laid a solid foundation for the loss of both Italy and Spain. In this regard, Vasily is much more worthy as a candidate for first place, but Vasily was not a great emperor. He turned defeats into victories (like Alexei), but he was completely blind to the issue of inheritance, which caused the whole crisis in the 1040-1070s, and he was also a military emperor and a good bureaucrat, but he understood very little economics and culture and therefore Byzantium was unable to take full advantage of the fruits of its conquests.
I don’t trust anybody that says Justinian I is better than Basil II lmao. Justinian, to me, was great, but if we’re including Constantine, he’s not even in the top 3. His campaigns used up basically all of the gold that Anastasius I procured, and led to a severe decline of Italy. Yes, much of his resources were destroyed because of the plague, which is why I don’t blame him that much, but he’s still below Heraclius, perhaps Anastasius I, and certainly Basil II. Basil especially, as he gained money while still expanding territory. Furthermore, it’s not like Justinian’s succession was much better. Also, saying that Manuel is the best Komnenos is wild. He easily falls below his father and grandfather, though he was still pretty great. John II was, in my opinion, the best Komnenos.
I agree with you especially on what you said about Manuel he could have pushed the Turks out of Anatolia but instead diverted most of his attention to Italy and the balkans which would cost the empire in the long run
Justinian didn't overextend the empire. It was profitable and strong but Justin II started wars on all fronts. Basil II isn't judged for Alexander nor other exposures. Justinian did many things Basil could not
This is an amazing video. Thank you for the effort you have put into this as well as the entirety of your channel as a whole. I wanted to pick your brain regarding the Komnennian Emperors. John II is considered the best of his family but he doesn’t rank the highest while Manuel I, who many consider to have a mixed record, ranks significantly higher than his father and grandfather. Alexios was indeed quite transformative. He may not have excelled in one area but his competency in many areas saved the polity. I’ll admit, I wouldn’t know how I would rank them and any of the three could be number one on any given day
I am enormously grateful for such kind words. Thank you. My reasoning for the great Komnenian emperors is what you seem to be asking. So Alexios I is undoubtedly a great man and managed to achieve a huge amount during his reign. However, for sometime now, I have been keen to be more objective about his reign and not simply follow the obviously eulogising account of Anna Komnene's Alexiad as so many people do. John Zonaras holds a fair more objective assessment of the emperor, which is the course I try to follow these days. Why? I will attempt to be brief because no-one reads essays in RUclips comments. He had a mixed military record (and no I am not just talking about the beginning of his reign); he was a usurper and chose to plunge the empire into civil conflict to seize power; he was a religious persecutor; his concessions to Venice essentially is what founded the Venetian maritime empire that would become a considerable thorn the empire's side; and, though necessary, his emergency measures in the 1080's were somewhat callous, had he died in 1092 when the crises were finally over but before he was able to start reforming the empire, we might remember him very differently. John II was very successful and generally a good ruler in whose reign the reforms of Alexios I really took root. However, possibly because we know so little about this emperor, my hand is stayed from entering too high in the list. Manuel I despite his ups and downs was a great emperor and would be the last great emperor for over a generation. Why? While people generally dwell on his failed expeditions to Egypt, Italy and central Anatolia, they seem to forget that he successfully managed to carry on this invasion of southern Italy, at the same time as fighting a Hungarian-Serbian coalition. His reign saw an immense amount of cultural achievement. It was of course, in his reign that Anna Komnene, John Kinnamos, Constantine Manassas, Michael Glykas and Niketas Choniates wrote their histories, just as an example. Furthermore, Manuel I was truly able to bring his empire's power to bare on the world stage. He sponsored repairs and building in the Crusader states, he carried on relations with Russia, he was pen pals with England, he tried to become Holy Roman emperor, nearly took southern Italy back, destroyed the power of Hungary and Serbia in the Balkans, had the resources to invade Egypt and also successfully fortified the provinces of Asia Minor and established the economy and defences necessary that ultimately ensured the empire's survival in Anatolia. While, I think a mitigation of Manuel I's reign is justified he was still a great emperor, though I might not but him quite so high in my list as I did.
I feel like Leo III is underrated. He literally saved the empire, secured border by defeating Arabs at Akroinon and published new law code. If I was to make my own ranking I would seriously consider putting him in TOP 5.
I would love a version of this video that goes in chronological order rather than by merit (not that i don't appreciate a ranking video but a chronological version of this video would give such an awesome overview of Byzantine history.)
I am in fact doing such a thing in Short form with each emperor going chronological order from Constantine XI to Constantine I. I am up too Theodore Ii so far.
This could easily be a reductive misinformed take, but IMHO, Justinian is the guy who lost the West. The barbarian-held kingdoms in the West were still at least on favorable terms with the East, operating something like franchises that at least cared about what Constantinople had to say. After Justinian tried to reconquer them, that's when they decided to go solo. So I would argue (again, possibly misinformedly) that Justinian made relations with the West far worse, and burned bridges with them.
He also overstretched the Empire to fuck, creating constant headaches against the Persians for all following Emperors. Imho he should've stopped after Africa at the latest. The plague was unfortunate tho.
@@broxim9668 Maurice considered reviving The Western Empire to administer the newly conquered provinces, but ultimately decided to set up the two "exarchates" of Africa and Italy as autonomous provinces. Byzantine Spain was considered part of Africa for administrative purposes.
Revisionist nonsense. The plague is what made it difficult to hold those territories. They lost a massive amount of population. Justinian couldn't stop that
Very interesting list. However, I would give Phocas a spot to the awful ones. My top 10 would be 1. Constantine I 2. Basil II 3. Justinian I 4. Theodosius I 5. Heraclius 6. John II 7. Alexios I 8. John I 9. Anastasius I 10. John III Honorable mentions Leo III, Constantine V, Constantine IV, Theodore I
@@lamastu2156 Not much. He made Christianity official, crushed the barbarian usurpers and kept the Empire Roman, and manipulated the Goths because after Andrianople the East practically had no army. That's all.
@@miramax6165 Every emperor that time crushed barbarians. How manipulated Goths when they destroyed all the western empire and Latin world? The only think who he done is thst he persecuted Pagans as I said before.
And I believe it was also Christmas day. Michael VIII was one of the few emperors who never escaped the stigma of usurpation due to how he treated his predecessor.
I would have made quite a few changes. Theodosius II was a big suprise for me. Well, sooner or later I will make my own list, but only starting with Arcadius and excluding Laskarids.
Man the people on the Byzantine Reddit despiseee John VI and I am always just baffled when I see just how many people really hate that guy. Glad to see someone who doesn't say that he was the absolute worst emperor out there. He will always be my underrated pick. Man did what he could.
Thank you, although the civil war is partially his fault, responsibility also lays with the patriarch, Alexios Apokaukos and Empress Anna. I had a discussion with Dr Brian McLaughlin about John Vi which you can watch here:ruclips.net/video/fgL5FgFD41k/видео.html
@@geordiejones5618 He only lost one battle in his life and that was a night ambush, Tsimiskes lost once to Sayf and I don't think nikephoros ever lost a battle
Justinian reformed laws, administration and his holdings were so well restructured they held until Phocus and the Arabs. The HRE would emulate his law codes and the Hagia Sofia cemented New Rome as the world's capital
I am SO GLAD you gave credit to Constans II! He usually gets such a bad rap because most people look at only his reign as covered in Theophanes. The Armenian history of Sebeos shows how proactive he was in the Caucus and energetic his naval strategy was.
Oh indeed, some of the silence over his reign by the Byzantines might simply have been due to him being an Monothelite heretic thus presenting similar source issues to the Iconoclast emperors. Although, as I said he was no military genius he was responsible for holding the line, he started reforming the empire, created the professional navy and was one of the very few emperors to actually bother with the western provinces of his empire. I wanted to acknowledge these facets to his reign. Also, you are correct, the much more contemporary history of Sebeos is far kinder and perhaps closer to contemporary feelings about Constans II, especially since he calls him a second David.
Q: why did the East survive? A : Constantine. Undefeated in battle, restructured the state administration and redirected the religion to unify the empire. Finally restored the economy and refortified the empire, including New Rome, the gem of the world until 1204.
I’m amazed with how low Maurice and Constantine XI are. Then again, it’s always kinda funny to think about how Phocas, one of the worst emperors, had his reign between two good ones, Maurice and Heraclius.
I think Constantine XI gets blown out of all proportion simply because he was the last emperor, but the facts speak for themselves, he lost Constantinople, he made decisions which actually worsened the empire's position, but was still competent and effective. I do like Maurice, he is a favourite of mine but he undid his own legacy. All the successes of Maurice were undone within 30 years. Although, he is an emperor that deserves significantly more study than he hitherto has received.
@alanpennie8013 He was the WORST of them all 😑😑 The CORE reason why the Arab Caliphate (and thus Islam) ever became a noteworthy thing in the first place.
The true legacy of the Byzantine Empire is the majestic blending of our Ancient Greek identity with our splendid Christian Orthodox tradition. That is in fact, our heritage as modern Greeks. 🇬🇷☦️
Greeks have been the predominant ethnic group in the region of Constantinople and Asia Minor, already for a millennium before the Roman Empire emerged. They never vanished from their native lands. Some monumental works regarding the Greek Byzantine Empire by three experts of Byzantine History, include; Warren Treadgold; “A Concise History of Byzantium”, “A History of the Byzantine State and Society”, “Byzantium and Its Army, 284-1081”, “The Byzantine Revival, 780-842”. Gustav Schlumberger; “Un empereur byzantin au dixieme siecle: Nicephore Phocas”, “Byzance et les croisades”, “Récits de Byzance et des croisades”, “ Le siege la prise et le sac de Constantinople par les Turcs en 1453”. Sir Steven Runciman; “Byzantine Civilization”, “The Fall of Constantinople 1453”, “The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence”, “Byzantine Style and Civilization”, “The Last Byzantine Renaissance”. A historic and academic treasure.
Greeks have been the predominant ethnic group in the region of Constantinople and Asia Minor, already for a millennium before the Roman Empire emerged. They never vanished from their native lands. Hence it was only natural for the Eastern part to retain its pre-existing Hellenic identity and background. Angelos, Doukas, Vatatzes, Laskaris, Komnenos, Palaiologos. Only a few among the Greek Royal Houses that ruled in the Byzantine Empire. Some monumental works regarding the Greek Byzantine Empire by three experts of Byzantine History, include; Warren Treadgold; “A Concise History of Byzantium”, “A History of the Byzantine State and Society”, “Byzantium and Its Army, 284-1081”, “The Byzantine Revival, 780-842”. Gustav Schlumberger; “Un empereur byzantin au dixieme siecle: Nicephore Phocas”, “Byzance et les croisades”, “Récits de Byzance et des croisades”, “ Le siege la prise et le sac de Constantinople par les Turcs en 1453”. Sir Steven Runciman; “Byzantine Civilization”, “The Fall of Constantinople 1453”, “The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence”, “Byzantine Style and Civilization”, “The Last Byzantine Renaissance”. All epic.
@@Theodoros_Kolokotronis The East Roman Empire covered a lot more than those areas, and most of the emperors weren't even Greek until later on. They never called themselves Greeks either
“Greeks were generally the largest and most influential ethnic group in both Anatolia and the Byzantine Empire, especially from the Hellenistic period onward. By the time of the Byzantine Empire, Greeks were the predominant ethnic group in the urban and administrative centers, particularly in Constantinople and other key cities. Greek became the official language in the empire under Emperor Heraclius in the 7th century. This cemented the cultural dominance of Greek-speaking populations, especially in Asia Minor (Anatolia), which was a vital part of the empire. Many influential figures, such as Byzantine emperors and military leaders, came from Greek-speaking regions”. Arnold J. Toynbee, “A Study of History”.
Thank you, I already did a collaboration with Maiorianus. Here is a link to the videos we made: ruclips.net/video/Yl9iCpBkMQw/видео.html ruclips.net/video/l_qYPHwIFTA/видео.html
John VIII Palaiologos THE DECENT?! Why? Because he didn't win a couple of battles and didn't go chill in Constantinople for the rest of his days, like the other emperors? This guy practically sold his soul in Rome, just for a chance to save the empire
alexios did extraordinary job of saving the empire but set the seed for more problems later he sold his soul the day he sing the treaty with Venice and calling the pop for help he should have bought mercenary and worked slowly on carful strategy to restore Anatolia he sacrificed byzantine sovrenity with a quick success he restore lands sure but after that he had to keep an eye on every crusade it coming to his land he was great man real savvy but he focused to much on today gain with worrying on later problems caused by his action his pronoia strategy worked well during his early years from 1081 ad to 1100 ad but rather going back to the thematic system he kept relaying on it so much that his successors used as defaults system the military aristocracy toke power and every the state become mush poorer and provinces become independed and military aristocracy become to powerful to the point that the civil aristocracy is gone again his great and savvy ruler in better times he would be number 3 or 1 but his quick actions give him short victories but long disasters afterward in just 24 years from 1180 ad to 1204 ad the byzantine collapsed so badly it lead to 4 crusade meaning after 1081 ad any retarded emperor or average one will be the end of byzantine
Basil the 2nd did give major trade rights to venice which crippled byzantium as the major trade power of the med and made venice the great trade power of the med, by doing so he did weaken a shit ton the empire in the long run but still i can't argue that he was great, he did what the empire needed at the time.
I believe this better applies to Alexios I who gave Venice extremely generous trade rights and essentially is what allowed them to establish their trade empire, not Basil II.
@EasternRomanHistory but how was the empire under Basil and how was under Alexios?? Alexios had no other choice. These two and Heraclius are the greatest Eastern Roman emperors for me. The one that made Eastern Rome one of the greatest powers ever and the two that saved the empire from sure collapse, gave it a breath of life and made it great again
I think you rank Alexios V Doukas Mourzuphlos a bit too low. Yes, he did lose against the crusaders, but it was more due to the fault of all the Angeli before him, who blundered everything and basically made sure that Alexios V couldn't even field an army, who had been underpaid for years by that point, because the Empire was bankrupt. He did all he could with the populace that didn't care because they thought it was just another change in power and army who wanted more money from where was none, and although he was said to be an effective administrator and a ruthless politician, he couldn't do anything in that situation. I don't think even Basil II could have done anything there.
Constantine X Doukas is a difficult emperor to understand because the sources are so vague on what he was doing. It seems like he neglected the eastern front against the Turks but we don't really know for sure (or why he did it). I find it hard to believe that Isaac I Komnenos (who seemed to be a strong, responsible emperor) would select such a weak successor.
Damn! I did not type up my reasoning for him, he has the reasons from Constantine IX. My apologies for this, there are a lot of emperors and can pose challenges to keeping track of all of them.
He was a legitimate Roman emperor from the Valentinian dynasty, it would be strange in my mind not to include him. I might well have wished to include Magnus Maximus as well.
@@EasternRomanHistory I was confused because neither him nor Gratian were eastern emperors, though I can understand seeing how Gratian did allow for the accession of Theodosius. I’m also wondering, do you have a comprehensive bibliography for your videos? I really like how you always cite your sources.
As Roman emperors I see no reason to split them off from the eastern Roman emperors. Coins of them were minted in both halves of the empire. Laws were issued in the names of all of the legitimate emperors. They were all related to the reigning dynasty and could move troops into each others territories, such as Gratian helping Valens against the Goths. Constantine II restored the Alexandrian patriarch. Constans I often worked together with Constantius II and his death led the latter into a civil war with his killers. Valentinian II fled to the east, his sister married Theodosius I and was restored to power by the eastern emperor. It would be difficult to make a complete picture of the Roman empire in the fourth century without them.
You spotted it! This is a reference to a famous text by Synesius of Cyrene who warned against Arcadius' inaction as a ruler as like being a polip of the sea, a jellyfish. This description has always stuck with me as the perfect way to describe Arcadius.
I know it's become a spicy take but I'm glad Justinian I for all his flaws ended up 2nd. If it had not been for environmental changes in the climate and the plague he would probably have gone down as the greatest emperor.
Overrated. Even without the plague, I'm not sure his conquests in Italy and Spain would have lasted long. Not to mention the hell that was happening on the Sassanian border. And all this for the sake of Italy, which was partially covered by the Lombards after 15-20 years.
Great ranking! However, I believe that you are somewhat generous with Isaac II, and unfair with Theodosius I. I mean, if it weren't for him, I really don't know what would have happened after the defeat in Adrianople. For me, Theodosius I serves as a great paradigm for politicians who aim for the top and the challenges they could encounter as rulers. Definitely in the Top 10 for me. I don't want to miss the opportunity to mention the opinion of a Byzantinophile friend of mine which always astonishes me. He believes that John II was the best Eastern Roman Emperor of all, including Constantine the Great! I also believe that perhaps John I deserves better. Thank you for your time doing this.
Thank you for the comment. For John II, even though I like him very much I do recognise that sometimes things did not go to plan, he lost the siege of Neocaesarea, he could not take Shaizar and carve out a new Crusader state for Raymond and was forced to resume the trade treaty with Venice. The annoying thing is that we just don't know that much about his reign. Theodosius I, I agree with you that he was not a terrible emperor as some channels like Majorianus have said and you are right, he saved the east while it was in a crisis. He may have even become emperor because of his early successes against the Goths. He could also be heavy handed like with the massacre of Thessalonica, which was rather senseless and could make poor decisions such as assigning his general Abogast as MM for Valentinian II the feud between the two directly led to a civil war because of it. One where Theodosius caught his mortal disease. Isaac II is mediocre, his biggest blunder was Bulgaria but spent a concerted effort to undo his mistake, which I can appreciate and on two occasions nearly destroyed the Bulgarian- Vlach revolt. I don't think he was a good emperor but it could have been much worse which for this period from 1180-1204 all of them were.
@@EasternRomanHistory Your channel is the most valid and historically accurate. I have stopped watching Majorianus videos because they are full of contradictions. He favors the barbarians and defies the historical truth. One channel I also like is Romaboo Ramblings.
@giannisgiannopoulos791 Maiorianus is a terrible channel who outright lies at how Germanised the west was by its fall, hates Greeks and Christians. The lies he spins like Ricimir just being evil when he was doing more to save the west than even Majorian who was simply a good general who pandered to the senate. Justinian was a net positive for the empire no matter how you cut it.
To be fair Consantine XI couldnt do anything, he was in a pretty bad sittuation
Constantine XI was a chad
He at least went down like a legend though, ensuring he isn't remembered as the worst.
He did a decent job with what he had.
@@huntclanhunt9697Exactly. Going down fighting is a more Roman way for the Roman Empire to end than a child "emperor" nobody really recognizes being deposed without a fight. (Though, tbh, Odoacer was pretty chadly himself if you learn about his history; he did depose an illegitimate emperor and basically reunify the empire under one ruler by making himself a vassal of the emperor in Constantinople; plus, the regular Romans of the time wouldn't have seen it as the end of Rome; that idea didn't come into vogue until Justinian used the apparent lack of "Roman" government in the west to justify his wars that left Italy as a whole and the city of Rome in particular far worse than he found them).
@@James_Wisniewskieh not really, he was a vassal in name only and romans in the east probably wouldn't have seen him as the western Roman emperor.
Although on a purely factual basis, he literally disbanded the western Roman empire and sent the regalia to the east.
Constantine I was renowed for his military and martial prowess,having reconquered Lower Germania and Dacia.He had never lost a battle in his lifetime and always fought on the frontlines.
Theophilos was so successful the mere mention of his name has distorted audio tracks throughout the ages.
26:32 apparently Andronikos III was a demon
How you gonna put my boy Constantine XI at 52? Sure the empire fell under him, but that was in no way his fault, he got handed a corrupt and tiny empire with an extremely ambitious and powerful empire on his dorrstep that wished nothing more than to take constantinople. The fact the the siege of constantinople lasted several years is amazing given the lack of a full garrison due to the lack of people.
his father made the ottomans his vassals through diplomacy, surely there was more to do
@@TrajGreekFire I thought they became Ottoman vassals, not the other way around
@@TrajGreekFireWhat? Lol
He backed the winning side during the ottoman interregnum, playing an important role i think, so the Ottoman Sultan was apparently very grateful. Its possible that he actually recognized the emperor as technically his superior but i am not sure. Would have been a technicality AKA like the emperor of Japan and the Shogun even if it did happen, but i can't recall the exact phrasing@@Goratrix66
It's not that he is bad, it's that there is a lot more emperors that accomplished more than he did, he simply did not have the resources or variability to do anything, such is the sad fate of history.
You should do this with the Byzantine Rump states such as the Empire of Trebizond and rank their emperors. Nevertheless, I appreciate the hard work, the dedication, and most of all time you put into this video. Keep it up!
Thank you very much. I took me a very long time putting this video together, admittedly a couple of errors slipped through but as you can imagine, keeping track of nearly 100 people is quite difficult.
I would certainly love to do one for Trebizond. Epirus is much harder because it was conquered several times and broke up so a consistent line of Despots is quite difficult.
Nice foreshadowing!
Also, I think both Nikephoros II and John Tzimiskes should be higher, both were highly competent and Basil II-s strength came from their achievements.
@Iamnotracistlmao His diplomacy per se wasn't the bad thing, it was his extremely necessary but unpopular economy reforms that doomed him. I don't think not banishing John Tzimiskes would have saved him.
@IamnotracistlmaoIsn't it because of his strange madness?
@@madcrusader123
Tzimisces has some claim to be the absolute GOAT.
Pity about the horrible way he seized power.
3:20
I still think this dude is the worst emperor of Byzantium. Maybe he succeeded a little in religious matters (although I doubt it, because disputes between the Uniates and the Orthodox continued after), but he managed to lose all of Asia Minor, part of the territories in the Balkans, and actually destroyed the army of the empire, making it extremely ineffective , despite the fact that the emperor’s court was drowning in luxury and his friends were plundering the treasury. If the later Komnenos were forced to live and work in hellish and incredibly cramped conditions, then during the 40 years of the rule of this imbecile so much could have been done - revive the economy, establish a stronger presence in the Balkans, or take advantage of the fragmentation of the Rum Sultanate by capturing weak beyliks. But instead we have mediocrity, after which Byzantium really did not exist but SURVIVED.
13:00 correction Empress Irene’s reign was from 797-802 AD
29:59 this makes me so happy omg
loved this video ❤
Correction @27:27, the dates for Michael VIII Palaeologos are at least 2 centuries off. Correct ones are 1261 - 1282.
I am aware. It was an error I had not noticed until after I published the video.
I don’t think I’ve ever commented on your videos but they provide so much great research and find them more entertaining then cable history. You are up there with History with Hilbert, Mr.Beat, Fire of Learning and many others. Your vids on the Palaiologos are really great and have been helping me with trying to write some sort of historical drama been trying to make.
Thank you very much. I am glad that I have been able to help and that you enjoy what I have to offer.
25:24 in what way was Nikephoros scandalous? He was not a hedonist but ascetic.
Ah, small typo, it can happen when one is doing the write up for 95 people. It would probably be unpopular decisions, such as wanting to make soldiers martyrs, his coinage reform and his actions during the famine at the end of his reign.
asceticism is based
@@ReplyToMeIfUrRetardedi agree
I'd put Basil in front of Justinian but I guess his conquest are a big heritage. But I largely disagree on two things. Fitstly, Leo the 3rd only 16th? He was a top 7 easily, he was such a forward thinking ruler saving the empire for 700 more years.
Most importantly I cannot understand why Manuel is in front of brilliant Aleksios and John. He was a great ruler but he made so many uneccesary wars instead of finishing off the Seljucks. He spent his power and that's why 25 years later the state was doomed.
The rest of your ranking is great though, thank for you great work!
This makes me want to learn even more about the rulers of Byzantium! I want a series of all of them in chronological order!
What do you think of my rankings? Let me know in a comment below.
I am aware that a couple of errors snuck in to the video and an audio glitch. Marcian is missing his reasonings, Nikephoros II should replaced Scandolous personal life with unpopular policies and decisions, Michael VIII's reign is is wrong in dates; and Irene's reign has a typo. My apologises for these things.
I would have placed some of them higher, some lower. To me Basil II the Bulgar-slayer, John II Komnenos and John III Vatatzes are the best emperors, while I have very mixed feelings towards both Justinian the Great, Heraclius, Constantine Himself and Theodosius, and enormous despise for several very unsuccessful basileii, first and foremost Phocas, but also Michael VIII's son and the Angeloi.
Leo the 3rd way better costant 2nd all though he did some good things but most of his reign was mediocre Leo was in more terrible time then costant 2nd because of Leo byzantine empire lasted 726 year thanks to him the Umayyad started to fragmented because of the lost in 717 and Anatolia defense made the gate of Europe and recent conquest of Spain the caliphate was too large and multicultural to controlled easily the caliph was in sirya the rulers of Spain were too far without Anatolia and Balkans no way he control it from that far sure his iconoclasm was bad
but if was put in let say the 641 ad Egypt would even be still in byzantine hands and loses would have been only sirya to me Leo should be on high rank
Also u did great exposing the truth for leo the 5 was real savvy emperor he had some leo third genes at least his brain he kept Sicily/ crete save and Bulgaria in cheak he was great assassino had he killed krum I think I would give him 9/10 also second iconoclast wasn't that long
@@rickyyacine4818 I agree, I think Leo V was a very good emperor. The second Iconoclasm was a result of his own success. The second and, in many ways, the first iconoclasm were closely tied to military victory.
Actually a really good list but Constantine the IX is wayyyyyyyy too high. Flagrantly incompetent emperor, well worth reading Michael Psellos who served under him (he defends him but his poor decisions really bleed through). Otherwise great choices for especially the good and great Emperors! (Alexios I especially is well placed at 11)
I would also add to John VIII credit that he stopped the Theodore and Constantine conflict before a civil war could happen, succescfully won a naval battle against Epirus and Morea was expanding
The fact that a solid three quarters of these are at least competent may speak to how Eastern Rome lasted so long.
Edit: Why Constantine XI in last place? He couldn't have done anything else. (Well, except for the Demetrius part)
He meant the last as in the final emperor.
5:53 I literally choked on my drink 😂😂😂😂
Tip: don't name your child Andronikos.
Literally not a single good emperor with that name some being Fratricidal
Anastasius I at rank no. 4 is well deserved! However, since you placed him so high, I think it would be also appropriate to place another "master of economics emperor" Nikephoras I higher. He devised a method to tax the rich merchants by forcing them to take loans from the government and purchase land in western Anatolia (which was subjected to the land tax). His new European themes gave a lasting stability to Greece and some parts of the Balkans. His resettlement of anatolian soldiers and their families to greece re-romanized the slavs and the whole region. His reign in my opinion, like that of Anastasius, set the stage for the 2nd golden age of the roman empire during the reign of the Macedonian Dynasty.
Yeah, losing at Pliska and getting turned into a mug for Krum might have ruined Nikephoras I reputation.
Also being extremely unpopular contributed to his fall. I think he's an ok emperor, but certainly not as good as Theophilos
What a great video of ranking all eastern emperors.
In my honest opinion
Leo I is if not one of the last roman emperors who really cared for the western empire along Justinian
But alas Aspar and Basilicus got in his way of retaking Africa
35:35 He stubbed his toe but carried on, respect.
And as the rotting cherry on top of Andronikos I's rancid sundae of misdeeds, the guy who overthrew him was the founder of the Angelos dynasty (the one with some of the worst rulers in Byzantine history).
Such a bad Dynasty because only one emperor actually tried to do a good job being Issac II but even then it wasn’t a very good try
Alexios I should be in top 5 as he saved the empire from absolute extinction. His actions saved the empire to live for another four centuries.
@Iamnotracistlmao no, the massacre of the latins pretty much was a serious reason for the sacking of 1204, people always like to blame the west and one emperor but not one blames the nobles in constantinople for what happened too when they decided to riot. It was a murder of other christians and you can't go blaming others for what they and that was solely on the rome's part for that part.
@michelleg7 massacre of latins never happened. The west never mention it. They talk about Manuel's expulsion instead
@michelleg7 the 4th Crusade's sacking was due to greed. Period. The tensions you mention didn't exist. The citizens thought it was just a cue and didn't flee. The soldiers on the crusades were lied to frequently. It was greed which doomed the crusade movement and left the crusade states to fall
Great video I love Roman and Byzantine history a lot
Thank you for putting Anastasius so high. He really set things in motion to allow for the empire to prosper through the crises that would occur in the 6th and 7th century.
I have never understood the tendency of people to rate Constantine and Justinian highly.
Constantine lived in calm and well-fed times; his opponents were real imbecils who could not normally govern the state or lead armies. Constantine simply did not have worthy enemies. The barbarians also did not pose much of a threat; the border was in complete peace. Although he was indeed an outstanding emperor, he had no challenges, no difficulties, and at the same time he very unsuccessfully divided the empire, laying the ground for political instability in the following years. Therefore, I would call him great but not the greatest.
Justinian was very effective until the 540s, but everything connected with the plague and after is agony. The huge treasury left behind by Anastasia was completely spent, Italy was ruined, Spain generally knows how it was managed and existed on its own. The only real gain was Africa and Carthage. Let’s not forget about the destruction of the borders by the Sassanids, whom neither Justinian nor Belisarius could defeat.
In my opinion, the truly successful and effective, GREATEST emperor of Byzantium was Alexei Komnenos. Yes, at the end of his life there was an obvious crisis at court due to the struggle between Anna and John, but Alexei, with minimal resources, was able not only to preserve the old borders but also to restore them as much as possible. Under such emperors as Phocas or Andronikos, Byzantium would have definitely perished in the 1080s, due to the attacks of Guiscard, Chaka, and the crusaders, but Alexei not only survived and won, but also took full advantage of all the circumstances, due to which Byzantium grew stronger and strengthened during the reign of his son and grandson.
This is a much greater achievement than anything that Constantine and Justinian did. He not only handed over the state to his descendants in a much better form, he did everything possible to ensure that the state was at its zenith until 1178.
You're overlooking a lot to not consider Justinian and Constantine as Godtier. You're thinking in terms of diplomacy, not geopolitics. They each holistically expanded trade and economic confidence, promoting remarkable stability despite challenging times. Their politics saw excellent administration and highly skilled bureaucracy which took serious work at this time. They each aimed to unify their citizens by centralising the creeds. Constantine restored the currency and Justinian's laws were adopted for centuries after. These guys simply didn't sleep and deserve their legacy, which also include enhancing the new capital which was a hallmark of Byzantine power. I am a huge Alexios fan and agree he's criminally underrated by most. An incredible planner, muti-dimensional and my favourite diplomatically. He's no doubt a top 10, but the more research I do the more clear the top 3 are: Basil II, Justinian I and Constantine I with an order that's subjective
@@rockstar450 In my understanding, the Great, the Greatest Emperor is not the one who was born in calm times and after him it got worse (and after CONSTANTINE AND JUSTINIAN IT BECAME WORSE, including through their fault) but the one who came in times of crisis and showed extraordinary abilities was able to leave behind a world much better than it was before him. Alexei Komnenos laid a lot of controversial foundations for the structure of the empire, but there was nothing that would not have been corrected over time.
Yes, Justinian's legal code is awesome. But without his Italian campaigns, Byzantium would have been less likely to have faced the crisis of the 7th century, especially if the eastern and southern borders had been adequately defended.
Yes, Constantine built a magnificent capital and established an excellent bureaucracy. But he unsuccessfully divided his empire between relatives, did not complete the work of strengthening Christianity, which led to crises with Julian and Eugenius, and was unable to properly secure the captured areas for himself. All this greatly diminishes the contribution of these two in my eyes.
As I said, Constantine did not have a single real challenge or strong enemy. And Justinian, in isolation from his reforms, conducted extremely terrible wars with the Ostrogoths and Persians and laid a solid foundation for the loss of both Italy and Spain.
In this regard, Vasily is much more worthy as a candidate for first place, but Vasily was not a great emperor. He turned defeats into victories (like Alexei), but he was completely blind to the issue of inheritance, which caused the whole crisis in the 1040-1070s, and he was also a military emperor and a good bureaucrat, but he understood very little economics and culture and therefore Byzantium was unable to take full advantage of the fruits of its conquests.
I love your channer
Thank you very much.
I don’t trust anybody that says Justinian I is better than Basil II lmao.
Justinian, to me, was great, but if we’re including Constantine, he’s not even in the top 3. His campaigns used up basically all of the gold that Anastasius I procured, and led to a severe decline of Italy. Yes, much of his resources were destroyed because of the plague, which is why I don’t blame him that much, but he’s still below Heraclius, perhaps Anastasius I, and certainly Basil II. Basil especially, as he gained money while still expanding territory. Furthermore, it’s not like Justinian’s succession was much better.
Also, saying that Manuel is the best Komnenos is wild. He easily falls below his father and grandfather, though he was still pretty great. John II was, in my opinion, the best Komnenos.
Basil II has to be on top of Justinian.
I agree with you especially on what you said about Manuel he could have pushed the Turks out of Anatolia but instead diverted most of his attention to Italy and the balkans which would cost the empire in the long run
I agree though I think Justinians reign would have been significantly better without the black deaths really took the wind out of the empires sails
I totally agree, Justinian overextended the Empire, the Eastern Romans literally could do nothing when the Lombards invaded Italy
Justinian didn't overextend the empire. It was profitable and strong but Justin II started wars on all fronts. Basil II isn't judged for Alexander nor other exposures. Justinian did many things Basil could not
35:40 John is the greatest Komnenos emperor but Manuel’s rank is higher?
This is an amazing video. Thank you for the effort you have put into this as well as the entirety of your channel as a whole.
I wanted to pick your brain regarding the Komnennian Emperors. John II is considered the best of his family but he doesn’t rank the highest while Manuel I, who many consider to have a mixed record, ranks significantly higher than his father and grandfather. Alexios was indeed quite transformative. He may not have excelled in one area but his competency in many areas saved the polity. I’ll admit, I wouldn’t know how I would rank them and any of the three could be number one on any given day
I am enormously grateful for such kind words. Thank you.
My reasoning for the great Komnenian emperors is what you seem to be asking.
So Alexios I is undoubtedly a great man and managed to achieve a huge amount during his reign. However, for sometime now, I have been keen to be more objective about his reign and not simply follow the obviously eulogising account of Anna Komnene's Alexiad as so many people do. John Zonaras holds a fair more objective assessment of the emperor, which is the course I try to follow these days.
Why? I will attempt to be brief because no-one reads essays in RUclips comments. He had a mixed military record (and no I am not just talking about the beginning of his reign); he was a usurper and chose to plunge the empire into civil conflict to seize power; he was a religious persecutor; his concessions to Venice essentially is what founded the Venetian maritime empire that would become a considerable thorn the empire's side; and, though necessary, his emergency measures in the 1080's were somewhat callous, had he died in 1092 when the crises were finally over but before he was able to start reforming the empire, we might remember him very differently.
John II was very successful and generally a good ruler in whose reign the reforms of Alexios I really took root. However, possibly because we know so little about this emperor, my hand is stayed from entering too high in the list.
Manuel I despite his ups and downs was a great emperor and would be the last great emperor for over a generation. Why? While people generally dwell on his failed expeditions to Egypt, Italy and central Anatolia, they seem to forget that he successfully managed to carry on this invasion of southern Italy, at the same time as fighting a Hungarian-Serbian coalition. His reign saw an immense amount of cultural achievement. It was of course, in his reign that Anna Komnene, John Kinnamos, Constantine Manassas, Michael Glykas and Niketas Choniates wrote their histories, just as an example. Furthermore, Manuel I was truly able to bring his empire's power to bare on the world stage. He sponsored repairs and building in the Crusader states, he carried on relations with Russia, he was pen pals with England, he tried to become Holy Roman emperor, nearly took southern Italy back, destroyed the power of Hungary and Serbia in the Balkans, had the resources to invade Egypt and also successfully fortified the provinces of Asia Minor and established the economy and defences necessary that ultimately ensured the empire's survival in Anatolia. While, I think a mitigation of Manuel I's reign is justified he was still a great emperor, though I might not but him quite so high in my list as I did.
I feel like Leo III is underrated. He literally saved the empire, secured border by defeating Arabs at Akroinon and published new law code. If I was to make my own ranking I would seriously consider putting him in TOP 5.
26:29 bruh I was terrified for a second there
a good video nonetheless.
"So how many civil wars you want" The Byzantine Empire: "YES"
Bro, loving the content but perhaps this should be in a 3 parts. It's epic enough to be. Other than that great vid.
I would love a version of this video that goes in chronological order rather than by merit (not that i don't appreciate a ranking video but a chronological version of this video would give such an awesome overview of Byzantine history.)
I am in fact doing such a thing in Short form with each emperor going chronological order from Constantine XI to Constantine I. I am up too Theodore Ii so far.
Man, I was SHOCKED Phocas wasn't bottom of the barrel, good arguments to keep him from it though. Love the video.
The placings of Katakouzenos nikiphoros phokas tzimiskies and leo III are criminall.
Well one thing is for certain: this will be your most popular video in a few months. (Pre-watch)
The title should be "from Worst to Best". :D
This could easily be a reductive misinformed take, but IMHO, Justinian is the guy who lost the West. The barbarian-held kingdoms in the West were still at least on favorable terms with the East, operating something like franchises that at least cared about what Constantinople had to say. After Justinian tried to reconquer them, that's when they decided to go solo. So I would argue (again, possibly misinformedly) that Justinian made relations with the West far worse, and burned bridges with them.
Not at all.
It's pretty mainstream.
See, James O'Donnell, The Ruin of The Roman Empire.
(Not to be confused with Arthur Dent, The Ruin of Rome).
He also overstretched the Empire to fuck, creating constant headaches against the Persians for all following Emperors. Imho he should've stopped after Africa at the latest.
The plague was unfortunate tho.
@@broxim9668
Maurice considered reviving The Western Empire to administer the newly conquered provinces, but ultimately decided to set up the two "exarchates" of Africa and Italy as autonomous provinces.
Byzantine Spain was considered
part of Africa for administrative purposes.
@@broxim9668no he didnt. Plague caused a population collapse.
Revisionist nonsense. The plague is what made it difficult to hold those territories. They lost a massive amount of population. Justinian couldn't stop that
36:54 That's not John III Doukas Vatatzes,that's an oil paiting of the Bulgarian ruler Boris 1 and his wife
Very interesting list. However, I would give Phocas a spot to the awful ones. My top 10 would be
1. Constantine I
2. Basil II
3. Justinian I
4. Theodosius I
5. Heraclius
6. John II
7. Alexios I
8. John I
9. Anastasius I
10. John III
Honorable mentions
Leo III, Constantine V, Constantine IV, Theodore I
What Theodosius done? Nothing. Just he murdered Pagans. Nothing else
@@lamastu2156 Not much. He made Christianity official, crushed the barbarian usurpers and kept the Empire Roman, and manipulated the Goths because after Andrianople the East practically had no army. That's all.
@@miramax6165 Every emperor that time crushed barbarians. How manipulated Goths when they destroyed all the western empire and Latin world? The only think who he done is thst he persecuted Pagans as I said before.
@@miramax6165theodosius wasn’t the one who legalized christianity
@@lamastu2156 It wasn't Theodosius' fault that the Goths ransacked the West. It was their need that turned to greed.
If anyone's obsessed with this I thoroughly recommend Schwerpunkt's Byzantine history playlist
26:30 scared the life out of me
Alexios Angelos could also be in a category of the worse than bad.
i understand that John 4th was blinded on his birthday-i think that one gift no one would want
And I believe it was also Christmas day. Michael VIII was one of the few emperors who never escaped the stigma of usurpation due to how he treated his predecessor.
and decades later you have Andronikos II meeting you to give you apologizes when you've been a blind monk for most of your life
Leontios was like if balicaruis toke the throne from Justinian the great and fail except he wasn't a bad governor either
Maurice Is so underrated
I would have made quite a few changes. Theodosius II was a big suprise for me. Well, sooner or later I will make my own list, but only starting with Arcadius and excluding Laskarids.
The Laskarids have legitimacy
@@TrajGreekFire in a way, Yes. Just not enough for me. I did a poll about this issue, remember?
@@epikurejczyk no
Man the people on the Byzantine Reddit despiseee John VI and I am always just baffled when I see just how many people really hate that guy. Glad to see someone who doesn't say that he was the absolute worst emperor out there. He will always be my underrated pick. Man did what he could.
Thank you, although the civil war is partially his fault, responsibility also lays with the patriarch, Alexios Apokaukos and Empress Anna. I had a discussion with Dr Brian McLaughlin about John Vi which you can watch here:ruclips.net/video/fgL5FgFD41k/видео.html
Justinian should be No.3, behind Basil II, IMO.
Justinian is the greatest politician but basil II is the greatest general
@@TheIronChancellorNikephoros and Tzimiskes were more naturally talented generals, but Basil was better at staying alive which always matters more
@@geordiejones5618 He only lost one battle in his life and that was a night ambush, Tsimiskes lost once to Sayf and I don't think nikephoros ever lost a battle
Justinian vs Basil discourse will always be a topic of which one is better
Justinian reformed laws, administration and his holdings were so well restructured they held until Phocus and the Arabs. The HRE would emulate his law codes and the Hagia Sofia cemented New Rome as the world's capital
the Byzantine Empire: " can we be an empire for like 5 minutes without a civil war breaking out"
That is certainly true for the fourteenth century.
I am SO GLAD you gave credit to Constans II! He usually gets such a bad rap because most people look at only his reign as covered in Theophanes. The Armenian history of Sebeos shows how proactive he was in the Caucus and energetic his naval strategy was.
Oh indeed, some of the silence over his reign by the Byzantines might simply have been due to him being an Monothelite heretic thus presenting similar source issues to the Iconoclast emperors.
Although, as I said he was no military genius he was responsible for holding the line, he started reforming the empire, created the professional navy and was one of the very few emperors to actually bother with the western provinces of his empire. I wanted to acknowledge these facets to his reign. Also, you are correct, the much more contemporary history of Sebeos is far kinder and perhaps closer to contemporary feelings about Constans II, especially since he calls him a second David.
Q: why did the East survive?
A : Constantine. Undefeated in battle, restructured the state administration and redirected the religion to unify the empire. Finally restored the economy and refortified the empire, including New Rome, the gem of the world until 1204.
26:31 wtf happened to the sound
audio glitch, while rending I am afraid.
Why do you refer to Ioanes II as the greatest komnenoi but rank him below his son?
Because John was the best out of the Komnenoi but Manuel I was greater out of all of the emperors.
@@EasternRomanHistory isn’t that contradictory?
28:17 *conquered southern Greece.
Macedonia and Thrace are also part of Greece.
makedonia einai ellinas
Constantine the great pretty much created the Europe we all know today, he could be called the founding father of Europe.
I’m amazed with how low Maurice and Constantine XI are. Then again, it’s always kinda funny to think about how Phocas, one of the worst emperors, had his reign between two good ones, Maurice and Heraclius.
I think Constantine XI gets blown out of all proportion simply because he was the last emperor, but the facts speak for themselves, he lost Constantinople, he made decisions which actually worsened the empire's position, but was still competent and effective.
I do like Maurice, he is a favourite of mine but he undid his own legacy. All the successes of Maurice were undone within 30 years. Although, he is an emperor that deserves significantly more study than he hitherto has received.
If Constantine XI had the same resources his predecessors had then he would’ve been more of the goat than he already was
Your everywhere
14:39 based, I already hear butts cracking
What do you mean?
How did Phocus make it up to 88th place!!! Surely he was just as bad as Alexios III?
He was awful but he wasn't as bad as Alexios III. And there were many awful Emperors on the level on both men
@@iDeathMaximuMII
Phokas is difficult to judge.
You could argue he was more unlucky than bad.
@alanpennie8013 He was the WORST of them all 😑😑 The CORE reason why the Arab Caliphate (and thus Islam) ever became a noteworthy thing in the first place.
In what world is Constantine II an eastern emperor?
Phokas may have been more unlucky than bad.
Do you have videos about iconoclasm?
The true legacy of the Byzantine Empire is the majestic blending of our Ancient Greek identity with our splendid Christian Orthodox tradition. That is in fact, our heritage as modern Greeks. 🇬🇷☦️
They were romans, not Greeks. No Greek emperors even until the 11th century
Greeks have been the predominant ethnic group in the region of Constantinople and Asia Minor, already for a millennium before the Roman Empire emerged. They never vanished from their native lands.
Some monumental works regarding the Greek Byzantine Empire by three experts of Byzantine History, include;
Warren Treadgold;
“A Concise History of Byzantium”,
“A History of the Byzantine State and Society”,
“Byzantium and Its Army, 284-1081”,
“The Byzantine Revival, 780-842”.
Gustav Schlumberger;
“Un empereur byzantin au dixieme siecle: Nicephore Phocas”,
“Byzance et les croisades”,
“Récits de Byzance et des croisades”,
“ Le siege la prise et le sac de Constantinople par les Turcs en 1453”.
Sir Steven Runciman;
“Byzantine Civilization”,
“The Fall of Constantinople 1453”,
“The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence”,
“Byzantine Style and Civilization”,
“The Last Byzantine Renaissance”.
A historic and academic treasure.
Greeks have been the predominant ethnic group in the region of Constantinople and Asia Minor, already for a millennium before the Roman Empire emerged. They never vanished from their native lands. Hence it was only natural for the Eastern part to retain its pre-existing Hellenic identity and background.
Angelos, Doukas, Vatatzes, Laskaris, Komnenos, Palaiologos. Only a few among the Greek Royal Houses that ruled in the Byzantine Empire.
Some monumental works regarding the Greek Byzantine Empire by three experts of Byzantine History, include;
Warren Treadgold;
“A Concise History of Byzantium”,
“A History of the Byzantine State and Society”,
“Byzantium and Its Army, 284-1081”,
“The Byzantine Revival, 780-842”.
Gustav Schlumberger;
“Un empereur byzantin au dixieme siecle: Nicephore Phocas”,
“Byzance et les croisades”,
“Récits de Byzance et des croisades”,
“ Le siege la prise et le sac de Constantinople par les Turcs en 1453”.
Sir Steven Runciman;
“Byzantine Civilization”,
“The Fall of Constantinople 1453”,
“The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence”,
“Byzantine Style and Civilization”,
“The Last Byzantine Renaissance”.
All epic.
@@Theodoros_Kolokotronis The East Roman Empire covered a lot more than those areas, and most of the emperors weren't even Greek until later on. They never called themselves Greeks either
“Greeks were generally the largest and most influential ethnic group in both Anatolia and the Byzantine Empire, especially from the Hellenistic period onward.
By the time of the Byzantine Empire, Greeks were the predominant ethnic group in the urban and administrative centers, particularly in Constantinople and other key cities. Greek became the official language in the empire under Emperor Heraclius in the 7th century. This cemented the cultural dominance of Greek-speaking populations, especially in Asia Minor (Anatolia), which was a vital part of the empire. Many influential figures, such as Byzantine emperors and military leaders, came from Greek-speaking regions”.
Arnold J. Toynbee, “A Study of History”.
Forcibly blinded into retirement: the Byzantine Emperor pension plan. Worst 401k ever.
Thanks for the video! Hope you can collaborate with Maiorianus and other Byzantine youtubers for content too!
Thank you, I already did a collaboration with Maiorianus. Here is a link to the videos we made:
ruclips.net/video/Yl9iCpBkMQw/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/l_qYPHwIFTA/видео.html
I would put Tzimiskes, Nikephoros Phokas and Maurice higher than Michael the 8th
amazing.
Justinian is way over rated. He can't be above Basil II.
I know what I'll be watching in bed tonight!
Thank you.
John VIII Palaiologos THE DECENT?! Why? Because he didn't win a couple of battles and didn't go chill in Constantinople for the rest of his days, like the other emperors? This guy practically sold his soul in Rome, just for a chance to save the empire
You did Alexios Komnenos dirty.
alexios did extraordinary job of saving the empire but set the seed for more problems later he sold his soul the day he sing the treaty with Venice and calling the pop for help he should have bought mercenary and worked slowly on carful strategy to restore Anatolia he sacrificed byzantine sovrenity with a quick success he restore lands sure but after that he had to keep an eye on every crusade it coming to his land he was great man real savvy but he focused to much on today gain with worrying on later problems caused by his action his pronoia strategy worked well during his early years from 1081 ad to 1100 ad but rather going back to the thematic system he kept relaying on it so much that his successors used as defaults system the military aristocracy toke power and every the state become mush poorer and provinces become independed and military aristocracy become to powerful to the point that the civil aristocracy is gone again his great and savvy ruler in better times he would be number 3 or 1 but his quick actions give him short victories but long disasters afterward in just 24 years from 1180 ad to 1204 ad the byzantine collapsed so badly it lead to 4 crusade meaning after 1081 ad any retarded emperor or average one will be the end of byzantine
29:44 *Moesia not Thrace
tHANK YOU
Basil the 2nd did give major trade rights to venice which crippled byzantium as the major trade power of the med and made venice the great trade power of the med, by doing so he did weaken a shit ton the empire in the long run but still i can't argue that he was great, he did what the empire needed at the time.
I believe this better applies to Alexios I who gave Venice extremely generous trade rights and essentially is what allowed them to establish their trade empire, not Basil II.
@EasternRomanHistory but how was the empire under Basil and how was under Alexios?? Alexios had no other choice. These two and Heraclius are the greatest Eastern Roman emperors for me. The one that made Eastern Rome one of the greatest powers ever and the two that saved the empire from sure collapse, gave it a breath of life and made it great again
I think you rank Alexios V Doukas Mourzuphlos a bit too low. Yes, he did lose against the crusaders, but it was more due to the fault of all the Angeli before him, who blundered everything and basically made sure that Alexios V couldn't even field an army, who had been underpaid for years by that point, because the Empire was bankrupt. He did all he could with the populace that didn't care because they thought it was just another change in power and army who wanted more money from where was none, and although he was said to be an effective administrator and a ruthless politician, he couldn't do anything in that situation. I don't think even Basil II could have done anything there.
No phocas in worst or 2nd worst?
Constantine X Doukas is a difficult emperor to understand because the sources are so vague on what he was doing. It seems like he neglected the eastern front against the Turks but we don't really know for sure (or why he did it). I find it hard to believe that Isaac I Komnenos (who seemed to be a strong, responsible emperor) would select such a weak successor.
Was Marcian’s private life scandalous? 25:12
Damn! I did not type up my reasoning for him, he has the reasons from Constantine IX. My apologies for this, there are a lot of emperors and can pose challenges to keeping track of all of them.
Didn't realize how many Emperors were asassinated for their scandalous personal lives (being "too gay")
Poor Maurice, lost the empire and his life because he was too cheap to pay for soldier’s shirts.
Maurice done dirty
why did you include Valentian II?
He was a legitimate Roman emperor from the Valentinian dynasty, it would be strange in my mind not to include him. I might well have wished to include Magnus Maximus as well.
@@EasternRomanHistory I was confused because neither him nor Gratian were eastern emperors, though I can understand seeing how Gratian did allow for the accession of Theodosius. I’m also wondering, do you have a comprehensive bibliography for your videos? I really like how you always cite your sources.
Basil below Justinian? Come on now, Justinian is overrated as fuck
Constantine XI will always be one of my favorites
totally blew it with the komnenians, no way you ranked manuel higher than john ii and alexios lol
John VI Kantakouzenos is indeed a very controversial person! He EVEN let the Turks IN into Europe!!!
To help the Romans against the barbarian Bulgarians and Serbs
Why do You count valentinian ii, constans and Constantine ii as byzantine emperors?
As Roman emperors I see no reason to split them off from the eastern Roman emperors. Coins of them were minted in both halves of the empire. Laws were issued in the names of all of the legitimate emperors. They were all related to the reigning dynasty and could move troops into each others territories, such as Gratian helping Valens against the Goths. Constantine II restored the Alexandrian patriarch. Constans I often worked together with Constantius II and his death led the latter into a civil war with his killers. Valentinian II fled to the east, his sister married Theodosius I and was restored to power by the eastern emperor. It would be difficult to make a complete picture of the Roman empire in the fourth century without them.
We only needed 5 more usurpers to get to 100
Magnus Maximus, Thomas the Slav, Stephen and Constantine Lekapenos, Constantine Lekapenos and Andronikos V Palaiologos.
@@EasternRomanHistory so Constantine Lekapenos was such an usurper he cloned himself just so he can be named twice!!! 😱😱😱
Am I the only one who thinks that Arcadius being called a jellyfish is hilarious in a pitiful way?
You spotted it! This is a reference to a famous text by Synesius of Cyrene who warned against Arcadius' inaction as a ruler as like being a polip of the sea, a jellyfish. This description has always stuck with me as the perfect way to describe Arcadius.
Huzzah!
What about Marcus Aurelius ?
I would rate him just above Charles V
Marcus Aurelius is not an Eastern Roman Emperor, though in my opinion no one before Arcadius should be counted either so yeah.
@@Dustz92 good response 👍
I know it's become a spicy take but I'm glad Justinian I for all his flaws ended up 2nd. If it had not been for environmental changes in the climate and the plague he would probably have gone down as the greatest emperor.
Overrated. Even without the plague, I'm not sure his conquests in Italy and Spain would have lasted long. Not to mention the hell that was happening on the Sassanian border. And all this for the sake of Italy, which was partially covered by the Lombards after 15-20 years.
@@Крэйден_хso what. He made the Justinian code and got more than than any other emperor
Great ranking! However, I believe that you are somewhat generous with Isaac II, and unfair with Theodosius I. I mean, if it weren't for him, I really don't know what would have happened after the defeat in Adrianople. For me, Theodosius I serves as a great paradigm for politicians who aim for the top and the challenges they could encounter as rulers. Definitely in the Top 10 for me.
I don't want to miss the opportunity to mention the opinion of a Byzantinophile friend of mine which always astonishes me. He believes that John II was the best Eastern Roman Emperor of all, including Constantine the Great! I also believe that perhaps John I deserves better. Thank you for your time doing this.
Thank you for the comment. For John II, even though I like him very much I do recognise that sometimes things did not go to plan, he lost the siege of Neocaesarea, he could not take Shaizar and carve out a new Crusader state for Raymond and was forced to resume the trade treaty with Venice. The annoying thing is that we just don't know that much about his reign.
Theodosius I, I agree with you that he was not a terrible emperor as some channels like Majorianus have said and you are right, he saved the east while it was in a crisis. He may have even become emperor because of his early successes against the Goths. He could also be heavy handed like with the massacre of Thessalonica, which was rather senseless and could make poor decisions such as assigning his general Abogast as MM for Valentinian II the feud between the two directly led to a civil war because of it. One where Theodosius caught his mortal disease.
Isaac II is mediocre, his biggest blunder was Bulgaria but spent a concerted effort to undo his mistake, which I can appreciate and on two occasions nearly destroyed the Bulgarian- Vlach revolt. I don't think he was a good emperor but it could have been much worse which for this period from 1180-1204 all of them were.
@@EasternRomanHistory Your channel is the most valid and historically accurate. I have stopped watching Majorianus videos because they are full of contradictions. He favors the barbarians and defies the historical truth. One channel I also like is Romaboo Ramblings.
@giannisgiannopoulos791 Maiorianus is a terrible channel who outright lies at how Germanised the west was by its fall, hates Greeks and Christians. The lies he spins like Ricimir just being evil when he was doing more to save the west than even Majorian who was simply a good general who pandered to the senate. Justinian was a net positive for the empire no matter how you cut it.
Constantine is by no stretch of imagination a Byzantine emperor. He was a sole emperor of an undivided empire.