Leo and Irene
When Justinian's assassin
Philippicus turned out to be a worthless party animal, he was killed,
and in 713 AD the people of Constantinople
chose a court official named Anastasius II to be the next emperor. Anastasius
(ann-ah-STAYS-yus) was a practical guy, with good ideas - but in 715
the army rebelled and deposed him anyhow. One of the leading generals,
who had risen from the peasantry, Leo the Isaurian, took over. Leo was
an ambitious and successful man, who had been planning his take-over
for some time. He was just in time to save Constantinople from another
Arab siege in 717.
The Bulgars marched down from the north and helped out. But despite
this great success, Leo is best remembered for having introduced iconoclasm
to the Roman Empire.
When Leo died in 741, his son Constantine V succeeded him, and continued
his iconoclastic
policies. He also made efforts to shut down or reduce the monasteries,
both because they were hiding icons, and because a plague
in 745-7 killed a lot of people and so more children were desperately
needed. Constantine V was also a good soldier. He didn't have to fight
the Arabs, because under the Abbasids
the Arabs were no longer so interested in conquering the Roman Empire.
He showed little interest in defending Italy from the Lombards,
who invaded in 751. But he fought the Bulgars year after year, until
he died in 775 at 57 years old.

Constantine's son Leo IV succeeded him, but Leo IV died in 780, leaving a 10 year old son, Constantine VI, to succeed him. The boy's mother, Irene, took over as regent for her son. Irene was originally from Athens, and she was a total iconodule: she loved images and as soon as she came to power, she put all the images back. In this way she also temporarily mended her relationship with the Pope in Rome. But when Constantine grew up, Irene refused to hand over power to him, and instead put him in prison. Even when Constantine was rescued and put in power, in 792 he ended up letting his mother have the power again. In 795 she had him killed, and from then on, since Constantine left no son, Irene ruled not as regent but as Emperor, the first woman to do so.
(Though see the Severans and Pulcheria for other powerful women in the Roman Empire, and Hatshepsut for a woman who was Pharaoh in Egypt).
In 800, however, Charlemagne had himself crowned Holy Roman Emperor in Rome, challenging Irene, and in 802 he made matters worse by sending her a proposal of marriage. Irene seemed to be about to accept the proposal, when her horrified subjects deposed her and exiled her to Lesbos.





