Misplaced Pages

Dobrodeia of Kiev

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Empress consort of the Byzantine Empire
Dobrodeia of Kiev
Basilissa
Dobrodeia-Eupraxia on a 2016 Ukrainian stamp
Empress of the Byzantine Empire
Tenurec. 1122–1131
Bornc. 1108
Kiev, Kievan Rus'
Died16 November 1131
SpouseAlexios Komnenos
HouseMonomakhovichi
FatherMstislav I of Kiev
MotherChristina Ingesdotter of Sweden

Dobrodeia Mstislavna of Kiev (Cyrillic: Добродея Мстиславна; baptized Eupraxia or Irene ; died 16 November 1131) was a Byzantine empress by marriage to co-emperor Alexios Komnenos. She was also an author on medicine.

Life

Born in Kiev in the early years of the 12th century, Dobrodeia was the daughter of Mstislav I of Kiev and Christina Ingesdotter of Sweden. In or shortly after 1122, she married Alexios Komnenos, the eldest son and co-emperor of Byzantine emperor John II Komnenos (r. 1118–1143). She received the title of empress (basilissa), and the Christian name "Irene", after her mother-in-law, Empress Irene of Hungary (other sources give her Christian name as "Eupraxia"). She and Alexios had one daughter, Maria, who was born c. 1125.

In the imperial court of Constantinople, she became a part of a circle of women intellectuals, notably Alexios' aunt Anna Comnena, and the noblewoman Irene, known as a patron of astrologers and scholars. She was encouraged to find her own scholarly interest, studied extensively and was described by contemporaries: "She was not born in Athens, but she learned all the wisdom of the Greeks". The writer Theodore Balsamon noted that she "displayed a fascination with healing methods" and that she formulated medical salves and described their efficiency in a treatise on entitled "Ointments" (Greek "Alimma"), which is regarded as the first treatise on medicine written by a woman. Fragments of this work are kept in the Medici Library in Florence. She studied the ancient physician Galen, and translated some of his works into Old East Slavic.

She died, of unknown causes, on 16 November 1131. Following her death, Alexios Komnenos is believed to have married his next spouse Kata of Georgia.

See also

References

  1. "Dobrotvora (Dobrodeia Eupraxia Mstyslavivna, the granddaughter of Volodymyr Monomakh. Doctor of the 12th century)". UU Archive.
  2. ^ Pushkareva 1997, p. 16.
  3. Varzos 1984, pp. 343–344.
  4. ^ Varzos 1984, p. 344.
  5. Varzos 1984, pp. 344–345.

Sources

Roman and Byzantine empresses
Principate
27 BC – AD 235
Crisis
235–285
Dominate
284–610
Western Empire
395–480
Eastern Empire
395–610
Eastern/
Byzantine Empire

610–1453
See also
Italics indicates a consort to a junior co-emperor, underlining indicates a consort to an emperor variously regarded as either legitimate or a usurper, and bold incidates an empress regnant.
Categories: