Two surviving examples of representations of imperial panel portraits from before and after Iconoclasm attest to the continuation of the imperial icon and its veneration. A copper alloy weight dated between the end of the fourth and the late fifth century and an illumination of the Theodore Psalter from 1066 both show images of panel paintings depicting the emperor. On the surface of the weight, a framed imperial portrait includes the busts of two emperors, each wearing chlamys and crown while two Tychai support the portrait and a female figure kneels before it with hands raised.Footnote 1 (Fig. 1) in the Theodore Psalter's illumination, a group of people bow in proskynesis before a painted image of the emperor.Footnote 2 (Fig. 2) the gilded panel has a gemmed frame and hangs from a hook. It depicts the emperor standing in splendour, crowned, wearing a purple chlamys and a gem-studded loros, on a suppedaneum of the same material as his robes. Here, the Biblical, gilded image of Nebuchadnezzar is replaced by an imperial painting.Footnote 3 In Late Antiquity as in the eleventh century, painted panels of emperors – icons, as they are repeatedly called in primary sources – were understood as objects of veneration. As the mid-sixth century monk Dorotheus of Gaza tells us, they were depicted in bright and precious colours and sometimes showed the use of gold leaf.Footnote 4 They were exhibited as representations of empire – legitimizing objects struck by the imperial workshops, like coins and weights – and were the focus of ceremonial acts. That said, the representation of proskynesis before the imperial icon in the Theodore Psalter is used here to signify the worship of Nebuchadnezzar's golden image, probably a rather polemical allusion to the reigning emperor Constantine X Doukas (r. 1059-67). The imperial icon, the εἰκὼν τοῦ βασιλέως, noted already by the Church Fathers, played a very important part in iconophile discourse. However, the fact that none survive from any century of the Byzantine period makes it difficult for scholars to discuss imperial panel icons in general and during the iconoclastic period specifically.Footnote 5 In what follows I will attempt to situate the imperial icons within the context of their veneration and meaning over time, focusing on their value across the period of Iconoclasm.
The aim of this paper is to understand a fundamental problem for Byzantine image theory: if the imperial icon proved the closest comparison in describing the value of holy icons, then what was its role across an age that saw damnatio memoriae and even the excommunication of certain emperors – notably the iconoclast rulers? Indeed, did the vision of the sacred basileus and imperial basileia change as a result of the iconoclastic controversy? In order to understand the value of the imperial image, scholars must rely on iconophile texts where references to and quotations of iconoclastic literature are rarely found and, when they are mentioned, are highly biased. As Brubaker and Haldon have demonstrated,Footnote 6 the years between the 730s and 843 are extremely complex, characterized by frequent changes and continuous crises. All of this had a great impact on the perception of the emperor: Iconoclasm was proclaimed by emperors, was frequently seen as an imperial affair in Byzantine written sources, and may have changed the way people perceived the ruler, his image, and the state in Byzantium.Footnote 7
I will focus on a few texts from different sources: the acts of church councils, hagiography, and treatises by churchmen. However, mine will be a visual inquiry with no philological purpose. Using references to panel portraits as well as imperial images in other media, I will try to sketch a picture of the role of the imperial icon throughout this period, discussing its place in Byzantine visuality and the perception of the emperor. In short, I will trace a path from the imperial icon to the imperial body.
The imperial icon in the defence of icons
One of the most frequent – and, we may infer, most effective – ways to explain the value of an icon in defence of holy images was to compare it to the imperial image, quoting passages on the subject from the Fathers.Footnote 8 The Acts of the Second Council of NicaeaFootnote 9 repeatedly invoke four main patristic texts in their defence of icons. The first (erroneously attributed to John Chrysostom by the Council, and in fact written by his opponent, Severianus of Gabala) reminds us that to insult the imperial robe, image, or statue was to insult the emperor himself, an offence punishable by death. It was believed that the affront was made directly to the emperor through his image.Footnote 10 Again, quoting Chrysostom (but in fact Severianus), the second passage read at the Council states that honours given to ‘imperial countenances and images’ (βασιλικοὶ χαρακτῆρες καὶ εἰκόνες / imperiales vultus et imagines) carried in procession into a city should be addressed as if to the emperor himself.Footnote 11 The third passage referenced by the Council quoted Basil of Caesarea: ‘honour paid to the image passes over to the archetype’ (ἡ τῆς εἰκόνος τιμὴ ἐπὶ τὸ πρωτότυπον διαβαίνει).Footnote 12 And, though the imperial image is called ‘the emperor’ and reproduces the ruler, it does not duplicate him, who is always one and the same. Quoting Athanasius, the fourth passage explains that the imperial image is the ‘form and figure’ (ἡ μορφὴ καὶ τὸ εἶδος) of the emperor, as the image bears his likeness; thus, whoever venerates the image venerates the emperor himself.Footnote 13
In the Acts of Nicaea II, several other extracts appear from earlier literature that are related to the contents of these four main passages; and these recur in various texts of different genres from the iconoclastic era. For instance, the writings of John of Damascus, Theodore of Stoudios, and Patriarch Nicephoros either recall the Fathers or quote these texts without explicit reference to a source.Footnote 14 Throughout the various phases of the iconoclastic controversy, the argument relied on the imperial image for comparison to support and explain the legitimacy of icon veneration and the need to continue practices long established in Byzantine tradition; and the same Late Antique texts were quoted again and again to provide authority to this argument. However, these passages were not merely literary topoi: they provide crucial evidence for the role of imperial icons in Byzantine perception – a role that, as we shall see, did not change over the course of the iconoclastic controversy. In Brubaker's words, topoi ‘encapsulate some deep-seated and more complex structure of thought particular to a given culture’.Footnote 15 In Byzantine literature, the repetition of passages from ancient writers, usually without attribution, demonstrated the author's refinement and knowledge. This holds for iconophile literature at large; and yet, in the Acts of Nicaea II, both in the regia by Pope Hadrian and in the fourth session, each Church Father was named with his respective quotations.Footnote 16 These passages are also found in other florilegia; as, for instance, in John of Damascus’ treatises on images, in Patriarch Nicephorus’ Apologeticus, and in Nicetas of Medicion's writings.Footnote 17 By providing the names of the sources, the passages reinforced iconophile arguments with the venerable support of the Fathers, affirming the value of icon veneration as an established custom and widely accepted practiceFootnote 18 – just as was veneration of the imperial image. The writings of the Fathers also countered the iconoclastic appeal to apostolic tradition by linking the apostolic and patristic traditions to claim that the practice of icon veneration had originated in the time of the Apostles, continued through the time of the Fathers, and should be recognized still by the Council of 787.Footnote 19 As another passage from Nicaea II explains, devout Christians receive, kiss, and embrace the holy icons in accordance with established church practice.Footnote 20
Furthermore, it should be remembered that statues, mosaics, and paintings of emperors pervaded Constantinople during this time: thus, the textual sources did not draw on abstract concepts when they refer to the imperial icon but were based on lived reality. For instance, although scholars envisage the end of three-dimensional statuary around the seventh century,Footnote 21 we know that in the eighth and ninth century the capital of the empire was still adorned with imperial statues, some of which were repositories of magical powers, while others were known as portraits of ancient emperors.Footnote 22 A statue of Justinian II (r. 685-95; 705-11) was displayed on a column at St Anna in the Deuteron area.Footnote 23 Scholars doubt that the emperor represented was actually Justinian II,Footnote 24 but more importantly the people believed that it was his statue. Along with paintings and mosaics of emperors set up in public spaces,Footnote 25 Constantinople was pervaded by imperial imagery well into the eighth and early ninth centuries. If we read the several references to the imperial image found both in patristic and iconophile literature in connection to the urban landscape of the capital, reconstructing the context in which the imperial images appeared in a visual perspective, then it is clear that the imperial portrait was not just a literary metaphor drawn from ancient texts and used to legitimize the veneration of religious icons but an object known in everyday life, the power of which was widely and vividly felt.
The frequent appeal to the imperial icon in literature of the iconoclastic period also attests that imperial portraits were common objects of veneration and still manufactured even during this period – otherwise no one would have understood the repeated mentions found in iconophile writings. Although we do not have actual evidence for this typology of portrait from the eighth and ninth centuries,Footnote 26 the constant reference to it in the discourse on icon veneration bears testimony to its persistence in unbroken continuity with the past. As will be demonstrated, even portraits of iconoclastic emperors were still made and, though subtly exorcized from the larger context of imperial icons and their veneration, their use continued undisputed during their rule.
Veneration of the imperial image: practice and meaning
Byzantine law codes of the fifth, sixth, and ninth century clarify how imperial portraits had to be treated and in doing so attest to their diffusion and unique value in Byzantine society. The law required citizens to honour the imperial image and demanded punishment for insulting behaviour toward the representation of the emperor. The Codes of Theodosius and of Justinian further dictate how to treat the imperial image: in cases where public spaces needed repair, imperial images were to be removed with due reverence (cum reverentia) and later restored to their places.Footnote 27 Likewise, pictures of actors or charioteers were not allowed to be set up in porticoes or in public spaces that were ‘consecrated to imperial images’;Footnote 28 people could seek asylum at imperial statues;Footnote 29 no absolution was given to ‘the skilled worker who, by copying the sacred imperial features and thus assailing the divine countenance, has sacrilegiously coined their venerable images’.Footnote 30 Although the latter passage refers to the illicit minting of coins, it implies that imperial images on coinage were still considered sacred, venerable portraits, and that the very act of copying them was sacrilegious. The ninth-century Basilica contains several chapters devoted to the ruler's image and includes description of the punishment that should be given to those who dishonour or damage imperial icons.Footnote 31 However, a law issued in 425 also warned against excess in worship, adding that this should be reserved only to God.Footnote 32
After the fourth century, the imperial cult was much more nuanced, stripped of overt pagan acts, and yet present in certain acts of reverence performed both to the emperor and his image.Footnote 33 As we know from various sources, participants in imperial audiences were to bow in proskynesis in front of the emperor.Footnote 34 Corippus, in his sixth-century poem celebrating Justin II, and Theophilact Symocatta in the seventh century both describe ceremonies and acts of honour performed in front of the emperor, including proskynesis.Footnote 35 As it appears in the tenth-century De Cerimoniis, this act was due by those who approached the sovereign.Footnote 36 Concerning the honours given to images of emperors, Constantine I provides a precedent. On the annual anniversary of the foundation of Constantinople, the gilded statue of Constantine was escorted in procession by soldiers holding candles.Footnote 37 Scholars believe that imperial statuary later gave way to two-dimensional portraiture, which had to be given analogous reverence. In 602 the icon of emperors Phocas (r. 602-10) and Leontia – probably a panel painting – was received in Rome with acclamations and displayed in the Lateran and on the Palatine.Footnote 38 The Acts of Nicaea II records that wreathed imperial portraits (laurata) were received with candles and incense in the cities of the empire.Footnote 39 In the tenth century, the emperor and the patriarch honoured an icon of Basil I (r. 867-86) with prayers and candles on the anniversary of the dedication of the Nea Ecclesia.Footnote 40 Thus, practices previously linked to the Roman imperial cult survived well through Late Antiquity and even into later centuries, across the iconoclastic period. As Katherine Marsengill demonstrates, from the sixth century onwards, major changes included a progressive Christianization not so much in the acts of veneration directed toward the emperor, but of the emperor himself; in other words, in the Christian ideology of the empire, the basileus became an intermediary between God and human beings, something that was reflected in the use of the imperial portrait in religious contexts.Footnote 41 In order to determine the meaning of the veneration of the imperial image and its unchanged role in the Byzantine mentality during Iconoclasm – and at least until the ninth century when the theology of image veneration devised in the Second Council of Nicaea was proclaimed and adopted by the Orthodox Church – we should now look at the terminology used in written texts in relation to the veneration of imperial and saintly images and compare the two.
In written sources, as well as in iconophile writings, the word used for the act of honouring the emperor is the same as that for the act performed in front of the imperial image: prokynesis. The verbs referring to the action – proskyneo (προσκυνέω) and timao (τιμάω) – are also the same, whether in reference to imperial images or the emperor himself. While προσκυνέω implies self-submission and is linked to the performative act of prostration that demonstrates one's obeisance, τιμάω – and the corresponding word time (τιμή) – expresses the honour given to superiors.Footnote 42 Both recur in the context of honouring either the emperor or the saints – and imperial or saintly images – and are found in official and prominent iconophile sources such as the Acts of Nicaea II. However, the Horos qualifies the character of these acts: while true worship (λατρεία) may be addressed only to God, the Theotokos, the angels and saints, only a ‘loving and honourable proskynesis’ (ἀσπασμὸς καὶ τιμητικὴ προσκύνησις) shall be rendered to their images, as the honours rendered to the image – including offerings of incense and lights – will pass over to the prototype.Footnote 43 As Richard Price underlines, ‘true worship’ (λατρεία) lacks defined actsFootnote 44 and involves intimate and profound faith. Patriarch Nicephorus defines the latter as the highest form of veneration, performed in spirit, while proskynesis before sovereigns and superiors indicates the recognition of their status and dignity.Footnote 45 Therefore, while proskynesis implies acts that visualize reverence and honour and, as such, is to be performed before the emperor or consecrated objects, ‘true worship’ is a kind of intimate veneration that is to be given to God alone.Footnote 46
While in practice acts of reverence towards the imperial image did not differ from those performed towards holy icons – from antiquity, proskynesis was the major and outstanding demonstration of honour – the churchmen at Nicaea II clarify that the nature of the acts and the motivations behind the performance of due honours were substantially different. Honouring the emperor showed respect and reverence akin to that for superiors or older relatives. Biblical figures performed proskynesis as an expression of salutation and honour, showing deference through their prostration, without considering as God the person who or the object which received honours.Footnote 47 Honouring the imperial image meant to display one's loyalty and respect to the emperor: in the case of a good king who made himself a precious crown, by performing proskynesis before the crown, people manifested their tribute and deference towards the king himself and his deeds.Footnote 48 Therefore, objects related to the emperor, such as the crown or the purple, which marked the person wearing them as the emperor while visually declaring his authority, were to be given due honours – just like his portrait.
As concerns holy images, the Horos of the Council prescribes that the ‘venerable and holy icons’ in painting, mosaic, or any other media had to be received with honours (performing proskynesis) and kissed, lighting candles, lamps, and incense.Footnote 49 The Acts explain the demonstrations of honour towards holy images with various arguments: apart from the usual appeal to the tradition of the Church and the Fathers,Footnote 50 there was above all the need for devotion and love towards the saints, to receive blessings from them. Several passages underline that image-veneration implied a deep involvement of the personal sphere, demonstrating ‘desire and longing to ascend to their archetypes’.Footnote 51 Accordingly, holy icons were to be venerated ‘in remembrance and commemoration and moved by the love for the archetype’.Footnote 52 The kissing of icons was equated to the demonstration of love towards a beloved one: humans kiss the garments of lost loved ones and, as Tarasios emphasizes, embrace and kiss dear friends, a manifestation of affection and love.Footnote 53 So, too, Christians kiss holy images as if they were ‘holding Christ or the martyrs in their souls’.Footnote 54 The kiss (ἀσπασμός) and the proskynesis (τιμητικὴ προσκύνησις) expressed salutation and reverence and were believed to be major expressions of devotion.Footnote 55 Offerings of lights and incense were an ancient practice; the light emanating from candles and lamps was believed to be the visual manifestation of Divine enlightenment while the incense's fragrance and smoke made sensible the pure inspiration of the Holy Spirit.Footnote 56 And, as the Acts of Nicaea II clearly state, believers were moved to receive blessings.Footnote 57 The motivations behind the acts of honour towards holy icons may be summarized as acts of personal affection and devotion which, in turn, involved sanctification, in a logic of gift-giving.Footnote 58 The same acts performed towards the emperor and his image were demonstrations of respect and obeisance, explicit recognitions of the role of the emperor as the head of the state and, as we will see, of the Christian hierarchy of the empire. Indeed, the Acts of Nicaea II show that, although in theory veneration towards holy icons and imperial images was moved by different impulses, in practice it was performed in the same way, through ceremonial acts that had been typical of the imperial veneration since antiquity and continued through the centuries.
From the image to the emperor: semiotic and visual role of the imperial icon
Although, as we have seen, imperial portraits and holy icons were treated in similar fashion, the status of the imperial icon in Byzantine visuality and its semiotic value was of a distinctive kind. As stated by Church Fathers and repeated at Nicaea II, the icon of the emperor possessed his figure and likeness.Footnote 59 The icon of the emperor was intended to reveal his individual likeness, sufficient to be recognizable – if sometimes further aided by an inscription – as well as the character and traits of his imperial majesty. The image's relative degree of likeness to the emperor and the inclusion in his portrayal of the insignia of power allowed the viewer to recognize the emperor in it. Form and likeness were the distinctive features through which from the present dimension of recognition the observer could reach the person represented – the ‘archetype’ or ‘prototype’ of patristic and Nicene sources, terms with a clear Platonic and Neoplatonic provenance – in the present of another place. Whether the imperial representation was a painted panel, a fresco, a mosaic, or a statue, the ruler became present in his icon even when he was elsewhere: imperial images re-presented him before the beholder and at the same time presentified him in his authority and power.Footnote 60 As Brubaker emphasizes, ‘re-present’ in the sense of making someone present again,Footnote 61 bringing him before the viewer, here and now, is more appropriate to describe the way the imperial icon acted in the Byzantine conceptual and visual system. Thus, according to Byzantine image theory, the εἰκὼν τοῦ βασιλέως is an icon,Footnote 62 not only in the broad sense of a portrait reproduced in various media, but also in a semiotic sense: as a sign that refers to itself, just as the representation of the emperor refers to his person.Footnote 63 In this way the ruler's authority and power was made present through his image and alive through the honours that were to be bestowed upon him.
However, as I have explained elsewhere, the imperial icon is also a symbol. In fact, it visualized the highest figure of the earthly cosmos and signified the presence of the sacred Eastern Roman imperial power, the holy imperial basileia, beyond the person of the ruler that was the man who represented that power.Footnote 64 Across the centuries, the icon of the basileus could be more or less stereotyped and non-naturalistic.Footnote 65 Nevertheless, in the imperial portrait were the insignia of power that allowed the recognition of the basileus: crown, purple, sceptre, loros. These attributes qualified the emperor immediately; they activated the direct recognition of his image, regardless of the presence or absence of inscriptions. This is clearly stated in the passage from Dorotheus cited above: the imperial icon includes ‘the imperial robes, so that anyone seeing the icon acknowledges the emperor's own countenance and thinks to see almost the emperor himself, the very model-archetype’.Footnote 66 Moreover, the insignia manifested the imperial power as visible signs of basileia.Footnote 67 In this sense, the icon of the emperor was also a symbol of the institution which, in the ontology of the Byzantine state, existed by God's will and was legitimized by its Christian character.Footnote 68 Indeed, it appears that in the icon of the Byzantine emperor the limits between the representation of the ruler as a personal portrait (the iconic value of the image) and as a symbol of the state (its symbolic value) were blurred. The imperial image was both icon and symbol.
The icon of the emperor had the function to make him present and thus played an important role in public space. It had to be displayed in public places such as courts, squares, and theatres where his image stood in for the absent emperor.Footnote 69 This is made clear in the visual evidence: the imperial likeness appeared on emblems of delegated power, on official dresses, and in institutional settings, such as courts. The imperial effigy is exhibited on an altar mensa with the insignia of the praetorian prefect of Illyricum in the Notitia Dignitatum;Footnote 70 (Fig. 3) on the sceptre held by consul Anastasius and on Aerobindus' trabea consularis on their diptychs;Footnote 71 (Fig. 4) and on the table cloth and labara of Pilate's court in the Codex Purpureus Rossanensis.Footnote 72 (Fig. 5) Clearly, here it had the power to legitimize offices, officials, and venues; visually, it made the state present in the figure of the emperor.
However, as stated in John of Damascus’ writings and in the acts of Nicaea II, when the emperor was absent one should venerate his image, but when he was present, it would have made no sense to ignore the original and venerate his icon.Footnote 73 Similarly, the anonymous fourth-century author known as the Ambrosiaster mentions that in the presence of the emperor his images lost their authority.Footnote 74 We see that the imperial icon effectively expressed a presence, that of the state. Therefore, the effigy of the emperor acted as an extension of his body, making his authority present and manifesting the basileia when he was not present. And everything that was connected to the emperor appears to have functioned as a bearer of his power and sacredness. Already in the fifth century, the Codex Theodosianus denotes as sacred (sacer or sacrum) the emperor, the purple, and the imperial palace. In eighth- and ninth-century written sources on icon veneration, the imperial purple is used as a frequent metaphor for the emperor and the imperial office,Footnote 75 while the imperial seal or coin functioned as an imperial portrait. For instance, a well-known passage from the Life of St. Stephen the Younger shows that dishonouring the effigy of the emperor on a coin meant to dishonour the emperor himself.Footnote 76 And Theophanes the Confessor notes the common practice of kissing the imperial seal which bore the emperor's bust.Footnote 77 In the Acts of Nicaea II the imperial purple robe and seal were to be honoured as if they were the emperor himself.Footnote 78 A fourth-century passage attributed to Ambrose expresses the same concept in reference to a letter written by Theodosius, which the bishop put on display on the altar during the liturgy making the emperor present.Footnote 79 As confirmed by John of Damascus,Footnote 80 all these elements were emanations of the reigning ruler in office – the seal and the letter contained his signature, title, or words – or insignia of power that covered his body or had been in contact with it. They were considered sacred and carried the authority of the emperor, representing and manifesting the power of the holy imperial basileia.Footnote 81 Anything connected with the emperor was considered sacred, so his palace, his seal, his letter, his image. All the more so, the imperial icon, which allowed the basileus to be present in the visibility of his form and figure – his sacred imperial body – by reproducing his likeness and the insignia of his office.The εἰκὼν τοῦ βασιλέως acted as a substitute for the emperor.
The emperors and their image during Iconoclasm
During the years of Iconoclasm, there seem to be only a few texts that cast the imperial icon in a negative light. The popular Life of St. Stephen the Younger, written in the form of a dialogue between the iconoclast emperor Leo III and the saint, decries Leo and, among other things, mentions an episode where the imperial image on a coin was dishonoured.Footnote 82 Patriarch Nicephoros’ erudite treatise against the heretics deems Constantine V the Antichrist for replacing Christ's images with his own.Footnote 83 Similarly, the apocryphal Revelation of Leo of Constantinople, whose first redaction falls within the first decade of the ninth century, accuses the impious emperor Constantine V, likened to Satan, of forcing monks to honour an image of himself represented between Christ and the VirginFootnote 84 – something quite improbable for an emperor who was accused of destroying icons! According to Leo, monks could not adore the image of an unworthy man, which suggests that the problem was not so much about honouring the imperial icon, but rather concerned honouring the image of a shameful man who had represented himself in an icon at the same level as Christ and the Virgin. Indeed, imperial icons were expected to represent a pious, virtuous, and Christian ruler of the Byzantine empire, whose idealized image appears for example in the specula principum.Footnote 85 Undeniably, iconophile discourse condemns iconoclast emperors as primarily responsible for iconomachia; nevertheless, it does not disregard imperial authority altogether and, as we have seen, uses the imperial icon as one of the major arguments to affirm the right to venerate icons. Over the long proceedings of Nicaea II, the iconoclast emperors Leo III and Constantine V are anathematized, not by naming them, but rather by indirectly addressing their claims of saving Christians from the sin of idolatry.Footnote 86 While in the Horos of the iconoclast Council of Hiereia (754) they are praised, at Nicaea they are obliquely condemned: Christ alone rescued Christians from idolatry.Footnote 87 This perhaps confirms the common belief that emperors, even impious ones, should not be insulted.
Considering that iconoclast emperors were undoubtedly condemned, and that it was not male rulers but empresses who promoted the restoration of religious images, both in 787 and 843, it is plausible that the perception of the emperor, his role in common mentality, and the people's submission to his authority changed over the course of Iconoclasm. Indeed, while the figure of Irene is controversial as she is not necessarily depicted in a favourable light in all iconophile texts,Footnote 88 certainly the piety and religiosity of Theodora was recognized with her canonization shortly after her death. It appears that, in the years between 754 and 787, even the acclamation and address to the emperors shifted to emphasise their devotion and their defence of the Christian faith. In the passages of Hiereia in 754, the iconoclast emperors Leo and Constantine are called, in a standard formula, ‘divinely crowned and orthodox’ (θεόστεπτοι καὶ ὀρθόδοξοι).Footnote 89 Numerous other epithets stressing their piety and orthodoxy are reserved for Constantine and Irene in 787. They are ‘those who have overthrown the novel teaching that had arisen’, the ‘guardians of the faith’, ‘new Constantine and new Helena’, ‘Christ-loving’(φιλόχριστοι), ‘divinely confirmed’ (θεοκύρωτοι), ‘divinely crowned’ (θεόστεπτοι), ‘champions of the truth’, ‘most pious and orthodox, zealous, and faithful emperors’.Footnote 90 Considering that – unlike their iconoclast predecessor Constantine V – Constantine and Irene did not attend the council, this emphasis on their piety in the discourses of the ecclesiastics gathered at Nicaea II also shows the churchmen's perception of the emperors’ role: the right and Christian emperor left the administration of theological issues to the Church alone. This is confirmed in Patriarch Nicephorus’ treatise against the iconoclasts, where he praises various Byzantine emperors from Constantine the Great to Theodosius, Justinian, and Heraclius for their faith and religious zeal. They defended orthodoxy and were stounch opponents of idolatry, as it is demonstrated by splendid churches that they built and provided with precious vessels, holy relics, and icons.Footnote 91 Indeed, precisely for their piety and their respect of the Church they were true models of good emperors.
To understand the new role of the emperors after the first Iconoclasm, the most effective passage is perhaps by Patriarch Tarasios, which dates to after 792 but was added to the proceedings of Nicaea II towards the end of the ninth century.Footnote 92 The patriarch reminds Constantine VI that his authority shines everywhere and that his dignity, along with that of his mother, Irene, is first among all. However, he is still a man and therefore limited. Although angels and the faithful have some share in God, they do so by his grace and do not share his essence. Tarasius concludes by commending the emperor to be worthy for God to exalt his kingdom.Footnote 93 These words echo Agapetus the Deacon's advice to Justinian (r. 527-65): ‘In the physical substance of the body the emperor is equal to every other man, but by the power of his authority he is similar to God who governs all things [. . .]; although he is honoured because of his likeness to God, yet nevertheless he is bound to the semblance of mud: by this he is admonished that he is equal to all’.Footnote 94 This awareness seems even stronger after the behaviour of Constantine VI's predecessors who had abolished sacred images. By the early tenth century, the emperor began being portrayed with the akakia, a silk cylinder filled with earth, as represented among the insignia of Alexander (r. 912-913) in his mosaic at Hagia Sophia. (Fig. 6) But the akakia is already mentioned in the ninth century, when Philotheus interprets it as a sign of ‘the resurrection of our mortal nature’, stressing the idea of the continuous regeneration of the basileia.Footnote 95
Conclusion
In iconophile debate, the recurrent appeal to the imperial image provided the major argument to justify icon veneration. This appears in a number of different written sources, but especially in the Acts of the Second Council of Nicaea, the most authoritative text in laying the foundations for the theology of icons that was accepted and followed in Byzantium after the end of Iconoclasm in 843. The imperial image provided an easily understandable and immediate term of comparison for explaining the importance of acts of veneration towards holy icons, by virtue of the social role of images of the emperor and of their pervasive presence in the cities of the empire.
Iconophile literature, especially the acts of Nicaea, not only uses the imperial image as an illuminating metaphor but refers to other influential texts that utilized the same formulas to elucidate theological truths: the writings of Church Fathers who gave iconophile theologians the support of a solid tradition. As Brubaker writes, in Byzantium and especially between the eight and the ninth century, tradition justifies practice.Footnote 96 So if the image of the emperor was honoured with the same ritualized acts that were addressed to holy icons, those practices should also have been perpetuated.
Although very few images of the emperors survive and, among them, there is no material evidence of imperial panel paintings, we have seen that they were represented in weights and manuscript illuminations and mentioned in texts at least from fourth to the eleventh century. This type of imperial image provided the closest parallel to saintly icon and, if the Acts of Nicaea II refer to it as did the Fathers, they were well known objects and repositories of honours so familiar to Byzantine society they could provide an immediate comparison to explain theological discourses. While certainly the Roman imperial cult changed and was mitigated in its excesses, basic acts of reverence due to the imperial icons continued to be performed through Late Antiquity and well during the iconoclastic era until at least the ninth century – the time frame of my inquiry – and, as scholars have shown, later still.Footnote 97 These acts were the same due to holy icons and could be explained only by virtue of the special role of the imperial image in Byzantine visuality and of the emperor in the ideology of the Byzantine empire. The role of the imperial icon in image theory and its semiotic value in the Byzantine system of visual communication were closely linked to the special position of the emperor in the Byzantine taxis (cosmic order) as a man superior to all the other men and close to the heavenly hierarchy. The impious behaviour of iconoclast emperors who substituted themselves for Christ in the attempt to extirpate idolatry undermined the very idea of the basileia in Byzantium. In order to restore the veneration of saintly images it was necessary to reaffirm the model of the good emperor, supporting the Church in the reestablishment of the veneration of icons.
In iconophile thought and Byzantine tradition the veneration of the imperial icon provided a precedent and a justification for the veneration of the saintly icons, but this could happen only if the emperor in charge incarnated the ideological model of the good and virtuous Byzantine emperor. And that was the emperor present through his image, an image that should be given due honour. If the imperial insignia made manifest the idea of the sacred and virtuous imperial power in Byzantium, so did the imperial icon; and this perception continued unchallenged through Iconoclasm.
Maria Cristina Carile is a Byzantinist with a specialization in art history and archaeology. Since 2018 she has been Associate Professor of the History of Byzantine Art at the Department of Cultural Heritage of the Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna. Her methodology is characterized by the conjunction of material and visual sources and texts. At the moment her research is dedicated to artistic culture and the circulation of visual communication codes in Late Antique and Byzantine Mediterranean.