163:
After the 6th century, the post became purely ceremonial. The title survived into the lists of offices of the 9th and 10th centuries as the second-lowest among the honorific dignities reserved for the "bearded men" (i.e.
183:
records how the emperor himself would conduct the ceremony of their investiture with the staff. The last attested occurrence of the title is during the reign of
Emperor
144:) placed in charge of it. Although initially low-ranking, their proximity to the imperial person occasioned the elevation of the ordinary members to the rank of
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104:. Their function in the palace was to keep order during imperial audiences and to call the meeting of the emperor's privy council, the
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187:(r. 963–969), and like most of the middle Byzantine titles, it seems to have disappeared sometime in the 11th–12th centuries.
398:
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The
Imperial Administrative System of the Ninth Century – With a Revised Text of the Kletorologion of Philotheos
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were chosen from the senatorial class, but freed from the usual obligations of this class. A class of honorary
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74:. In the middle Byzantine period (8th–11th centuries), it was transformed into an honorific court title.
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An imperial edict dated to 326 or 328 provides the earliest attestation of the title. The
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126:, admittance into which could be purchased, also existed. By 437, the size of the actual
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The Lands of St. Peter: The Papal State in the Middle Ages and the Early
Renaissance
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to negotiate the release of some territories seized by the
Lombard King
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402:. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 1896.
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and its members belonged to the jurisdiction of the
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imperial court, responsible for order and silence (
231:(r. 541–554), by birth a half-Roman, served as a
118:were detailed to the service of the empress. The
175:, their distinctive badge of office was a gold
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238:John the Silentiary, in 751, attempted with
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376:. London: Oxford University Press.
211:before his accession to the throne.
130:had been set to thirty, with three
16:Court title of the Byzantine Empire
399:The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium
14:
437:Historical management occupations
150:in the 5th century and of the
72:Great Palace of Constantinople
1:
235:at the time of his accession.
392:(1991). "Silentiarios". In
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95:praepositus sacri cubiculi
54:title given to a class of
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39:
432:Byzantine palace offices
350:Partner, Peter (1972).
154:further to the rank of
442:Ceremonial occupations
427:Byzantine court titles
92:was supervised by the
67:
160:in the 6th century.
78:History and functions
185:Nikephoros II Phokas
168:). According to the
215:Paul the Silentiary
203:(r. 491–518) was a
181:Peter the Patrician
101:magister officiorum
394:Kazhdan, Alexander
390:Kazhdan, Alexander
112:silentium nuntiare
325:, pp. 24–25.
227:, client king of
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110:(an act called "
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240:Pope Stephen II
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147:vir spectabilis
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173:of Philotheos
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171:Klētorologion
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157:vir illustris
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272:Kazhdan 1991
233:silentiarius
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40:σιλεντιάριος
31:silentiarios
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21:Silentiarius
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368:Bury, J. B.
339:On the Wars
219:Justinian I
209:silentiarii
193:silentiarii
142:δεκουρίωνες
124:silentiarii
120:silentiarii
116:silentiarii
90:silentiarii
421:Categories
382:1046639111
341:, 2.29.31.
251:References
225:Gubazes II
152:decuriones
133:decuriones
50:, was the
48:silentiary
44:Anglicized
26:Hellenized
335:Procopius
323:Bury 1911
311:Bury 1911
299:Bury 1911
284:Bury 1911
114:"). Four
70:) in the
68:silentium
60:Byzantine
56:courtiers
370:(1911).
199:Emperor
191:Notable
396:(ed.).
361:Sources
244:Aistulf
207:of the
205:decurio
166:eunuchs
88:of the
58:in the
406:
380:
229:Lazica
128:schola
85:schola
42:) and
177:staff
138:Greek
64:Latin
52:Latin
36:Greek
404:ISBN
378:OCLC
164:non-
46:to
28:to
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337:.
291:^
258:^
179:.
140::
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24:,
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136:(
34:(
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