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The ghost of Maurice at the court of Heraclius

  • Autores: Phil Booth
  • Localización: Byzantinische zeitschrift, ISSN 0007-7704, Vol. 112, Nº. 3, 2019, págs. 781-826
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • This paper explores the complex reception of the reign of Maurice (582-602) at the court of Heraclius (610 -641). It explores how the reign of Maurice established two important precedents for Heraclius as he emerged from the Last Great War: first, the re-establishment, after a long hiatus, of the principle of filial succession; and second, the realisation of a profound, co-operative peace with the Persians. It then argues, however, that Heraclian authors - in particular Theophylact Simocatta - resisted the sanctification of the murdered emperor, framing him instead as, ultimately, a failure, suggesting that he had deserved and accepted his death, and insisting that he had surrendered all of his children, including his son and co-emperor Theodosius, to the same fate. Thus the reign of Maurice was presented not as an apex from which his successors had fallen, but as a pale foreshadowing of the early triumphs of Heraclius.


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