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Theophilia β€” Alexius Comnenus I

Published: 2010-04-30 03:10:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 24782; Favourites: 267; Downloads: 830
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Description "Alexius Comnenus I"
April 27th, 2010
About 5 hours
Pencil, ink, gold ink, watercolor


No. This isn't Jesus. Two people have already asked me that....

Alexios Komnenos (a.k.a. Alexius Comnenus I) was the Emperor of the Byzantine Empire who reigned from April 4th 1081 – 15 August 1118. He was born in 1056 (or somewhere thereabouts. Some think earlier) and died on August 15th, 1118. By the time he was 25 he had made numerous major military achievements and had quickly risen to high distinction in the Byzantine hierarchy. By 1081 he had seized the throne from the weak Nicephorus III Botaniates who was forced to abdicate in favor of Alexius. And for the rest of his life the guy had to deal with a lot of crap. And (according to Anna, anyway) he always felt bad about taking the throne from Nicephorus and thought many of his troubles were God's punishment on him. Sounds like Harry Bolingbroke from Shakespeare's Henry IV, Parts I and II to me. I mean, this guy had a LOT on his plate. All of the time. Like, I don't think he really got a rest during his reign at all. If it wasn't a rival Byzantine noble rebelling it was a plague, or a heresy, or barbarians attacking the frontiers. Or Normans pillaging along the Adriatic. Or Bohemund (Like, twenty-thousand times). Or Crusaders, or turks, or family members, etc, etc, etc. Poor guy. Like I said, he went through a lot of crap. But he is mostly famous for being the emperor, who, when hard beset by the Turks (who had almost completely overrun Byzantine Asia Minor/Anatolia/Turkey by this time), asked the Pope to help him. So that's when Pope Urban II called the Council of Clermont in 1095. They discusssed several important matters at the council but the most famous was the issue of sending military assitance to aid the beleaguered Byzantines. And thus began the First Crusade.

Seriously. Respect. This guy deserves it. He is officially on my list of Underappreciated People who deserve Serious Respect.

For brief summary of his life, here's the Wikipedia page: [link]

Wow, and this is the first picture of Alexius on here. I'm kind of suprised, but also not very suprised. After all, people don't learn a lot of history period, let alone a whole lot of eastern European medieval history (at least over here in the States). 'Tis sad, but true. Anyway, for anyone interested I would certainly recommened reading The Alexiad. Anna is quite a facinatingly vivid writer. I enjoyed reading it immensely--it took me awhile (though its not really that big of a book, maybe 500 pages or so)--but it was certainly worth it. I enjoyed it almost as much as one would a novel, because it is written very much like one. You begin to grow very fond of all the characters, particularly Bohemund and Alexius.

Anyway, to the picture.

This is how Anna Comnena, the daughter of Alexius, describes him:

"Alexius was not a very tall man, but broad-shouldered and yet well proportioned. When standing he did not seem particularly striking to onlookers, but when one saw the grim flash of his eyes as he sat on the imperial throne, he reminded one of a fiery whirlwind, so overwhelming was the radiance that emanated from his countenance and his whole presence. His dark eyebrows were curved, and beneath them the gaze of his eyes were both terrible and kind. A quick glance, the brightness of his face, the noble cheeks suffused with red combined to inspire in the beholder both dread and confidence. His broad shoulders, mighty arms and deep chest, all on a heroic scale, invariably commanded the wonder and delight of the people. The man's person indeed radiated beauty and grace and dignity and an unapproachable majesty. When he came into a gathering and began to speak, at once you were conscious of the fiery eloquence of his tongue, for a torrent of argument won a universal hearing and captivated every heart; tongue and hand alike were unsurpassed and invincible, the one in hurling the spear, and the other in devising fresh enchantments." ~ Book III, The Alexiad, by Anna Comnena; translated by E.R.A. Sewter

(By the way, I only just got the book from the library today, I did not have it with me when I was drawing this picture and I spent a good while trying to find this quote. But I think how I imagined him fit well enough with how he is described.) So, as to his appearance. I looked at many Byzantine portraits, especially those of the Byzantine Emperors, and it seemed that the vast majority of them had beards. And there is an excerpt from The Alexiad that seems to imply that Alexius had a beard (i.e. In book III, Anna compares Alexius' beard to his brother Isaacs', which seems to imply that Alexius had one. ) But in a rather notable portrait of Alexius, he is clean shaven ([link] ) and in another he has a beard ([link] ), so I compromised, and gave him a smallish beard. For the rest, I relied heavily on other mosaic depictions of Byzantine emperors and their imperial clothing. The reason he has a halo and an orb is because Byzantine artists often depicted their emperors and empresses with halos, either to identify their high status or to present them as "saints." The orb would show them as the heirs of Rome, that is, as the heirs of the Rulers of the Known World. Purple was the special color that ONLY Emperors were allowed to wear. The Byzantines were obsessed with the color purple. Their equivalent to our word "princess" or "prince" was "Porphyrogenitos", meaning "born in the purple" or "born in the purple room" (because when an empress gave birth she would give birth in a specifically designated room that was covered in purple.) What else? Ah yes, another thing I kind of wanted to do was show him in such a way that you, as the viewer, are not really sure how to see him, a a part of the wall, as a statue or as a living person. Because it all kind of blends together.

Bohemund will be coming along soon enough.

Note: (WARNING: contains a really random comment) This song: [link] "Start Wearing Purple" by Gogol Bordello (which is a REALLY stupid and random song, btw, but also hilariously stupid. ) makes me think of the Byzantines. Yes, because I am THAT much of a nerd. (and besides the idea of Byzantine royalty jamming to this song is totally ridiculous and hilarious)

Another Note: I'm not dead! HURRAHH!!! I am making art for all of you people out there, it's just taking a really long time, but I am making art, I promise!
Related content
Comments: 160

Theophilia In reply to ??? [2024-03-08 05:05:00 +0000 UTC]

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Ghost-MissingNo [2015-05-20 16:00:10 +0000 UTC]

People mislead him for Jesus? So far I've heard such theories only about St. Constantine or (sic) Cesare Borgia, his image was supposedly based on.

Magnificent work . Nice to see good artwork of him, one of not many on DA.
Is that circle around him stylised as a halo on purpose? As far as I know only Constantine, Justinian, Theodosius, Irene and Constantine XI are revered as Saints (and in the latter two and Theodosius' case only with opinion of Sainthood I think, not officially canonised), saw something like this in many parody/schlock icons.

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Theophilia In reply to Ghost-MissingNo [2015-05-21 20:15:14 +0000 UTC]

I think it was probably the crown, robes and halo that did it at first glance. Β 

Thank you! Yeah, I don't see too much about Alexios Komnenos these days. The halo was just a standard device used in depictions of Byzantine Emperors. John II Komnenos and the Empress Irene Ducas are depicted with themΒ upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia… and others as well:Β upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia… ,Β upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia… ,Β www.greatmirror.com/images/med… , etc.Β 

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TheRallyMaster [2014-08-01 01:22:32 +0000 UTC]

Very nice.

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Theophilia In reply to TheRallyMaster [2014-08-02 19:15:31 +0000 UTC]

Thanks!Β 

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Petronikus [2014-06-20 19:50:46 +0000 UTC]

Your artworks are amazing.
Do you plan to do others Byzantine emperors?

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Theophilia In reply to Petronikus [2014-06-20 22:41:12 +0000 UTC]

Thank you so much!

I don't know, perhaps in the future, though it's not super high up on my art to-do list.

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Pelycosaur24 [2014-04-19 18:55:09 +0000 UTC]

Amazing work - but no surprise - all your works are

He was the great Grandfather of Duchess Theodora of Austria... right?

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Theophilia In reply to Pelycosaur24 [2014-06-20 22:40:28 +0000 UTC]

Awww, thank you!

Theodora Komnena? I believe he was her great-grandfather.

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Pelycosaur24 In reply to Theophilia [2014-06-20 23:22:06 +0000 UTC]

Oh... Yes, you are right

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mephetti [2014-03-29 11:46:21 +0000 UTC]

I'm always blown away by how incredibly detailed all your beautiful pictures are. How do you do it?? I featured this here.

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Theophilia In reply to mephetti [2014-03-31 01:13:18 +0000 UTC]

Awwww, you're so sweet, thank you!! And thank you for the feature!

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Mendedpixie [2013-06-20 15:53:39 +0000 UTC]

Beautiful work!!! I'm going to check out your DA page later.

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Theophilia In reply to Mendedpixie [2013-06-22 01:01:51 +0000 UTC]

Thanks! ^^

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ArthurIglesias [2013-01-11 09:43:34 +0000 UTC]

As always, stunning and brilliant.

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Theophilia In reply to ArthurIglesias [2013-01-11 23:46:36 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!

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FrancisWarhol [2013-01-08 01:45:35 +0000 UTC]

Oh, yes!

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Theophilia In reply to FrancisWarhol [2013-01-08 17:36:55 +0000 UTC]

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Pimsleurable [2012-10-11 23:43:54 +0000 UTC]

In fact, I have a copy of the Alexiad in my box of other books like Procopius's Secret History, and Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy, these of which would be a good read if I wasn't lazy.

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Theophilia In reply to Pimsleurable [2012-10-21 19:09:44 +0000 UTC]

Hahah, I totally understand that. I'm very lazy when it comes to reading, alas.

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Pimsleurable In reply to Theophilia [2012-10-21 23:08:04 +0000 UTC]

But at least we're learned.

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japan112899 [2012-09-01 04:43:08 +0000 UTC]

I'll put this artwork in the Louvre Museum.

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Theophilia In reply to japan112899 [2012-09-04 01:19:24 +0000 UTC]

Hahah, good luck to you then. I'd love it if you were able to of course...

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japan112899 In reply to Theophilia [2012-09-04 13:05:44 +0000 UTC]

Does this mean you get inspired by the Byzantine paintings?

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Theophilia In reply to japan112899 [2012-09-05 01:18:21 +0000 UTC]

Um, more by the decorative elements in the clothing and architecture, rather than stylistically, but yes.

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japan112899 In reply to Theophilia [2012-09-05 13:44:54 +0000 UTC]

Same here I guess.

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SpittleSticks [2012-02-22 05:01:12 +0000 UTC]

I know that this is a very late comment, but I really like this piece of art that you did. I'm studying Medieval Europe and my class is beginning to get into the Crusades now. Even I would be shocked to learn that I received over 20,000 armored knights if I just requested merely 300 to use for my Crusade. Very nasty stuff that whole ordeal was.

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Theophilia In reply to SpittleSticks [2012-02-22 05:19:27 +0000 UTC]

Ah, it's not late at all! People are welcome to comment on pieces whenever they want, so of course you are more than welcome to do so, and, may I add, thank you for the comment! I appreciate it!

Hahahah, oh Alexius Comnenus. What a trooper that guy was.

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hno3burns [2011-09-07 05:18:12 +0000 UTC]

WOW

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Theophilia In reply to hno3burns [2011-09-07 20:39:20 +0000 UTC]

Thank you! ^^

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Sphinx90210 [2011-08-19 07:52:20 +0000 UTC]

Flagged as Spam

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Theophilia In reply to Sphinx90210 [2011-08-19 18:43:37 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for the link! It just directed me to a forum though, is there some article in particular you wanted me to see?

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Finarfin24 [2011-08-01 21:25:30 +0000 UTC]

I really like the history and culture of Byzantium, and you did an incredible work ! It's stunning !

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Theophilia In reply to Finarfin24 [2011-08-01 22:51:29 +0000 UTC]

THANK YOU!!!

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Finarfin24 In reply to Theophilia [2011-08-03 08:36:31 +0000 UTC]

you're welcome ! Are you planning to draw more byzantine emperor by any chance ?

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Theophilia In reply to Finarfin24 [2011-08-03 18:37:56 +0000 UTC]

Constantine XI Palaiologos, sometime soon I hope, though not like in this picture. I wanted to make an image for "The Fall of Constantinople."

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Finarfin24 In reply to Theophilia [2011-08-03 21:30:59 +0000 UTC]

And It would be so nice if you could think about a drawing of Jean Tzimiskès (I'm not sure you write it in the same way in english). Although he was an "usurpateur" (=usurper in english ?), he was one of the great man of byzantium.
It is said that he was wearing a beautifull golden armor at the battle.
He was clever, generous with the poor of Constantinople but sometime cruel with his personal ennemies. And from what the ancient text say he was a quite handsome man, with lot of charm. Darkened blond hair, red beard, blue eyes.
He was not a tall man but had lot of strengh and agility. (Description from "A short story of byzantium" by John Julius Norwich with the various ancient sources he used).
One of his most famous accomplishment was his victories against the russian king Svyatoslav and against muslim in the East ("Vie et Mort de Byzance" by Louis BrΓ©hier a french author)

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Theophilia In reply to Finarfin24 [2011-08-08 16:31:36 +0000 UTC]

In English it's written Emperor John I Tzimisces, but with a lot of Byzantine names different authors will spell names differently. Wow, I had never heard of him before; he was quite an impressive Emperor. I've been trying to read up on a lot of Byzantine history but I haven't had much of the time to just sit down and read. I might have to do a portrait og him!

Yes, it would be "usurper", but I think a lot of great Emperors of Byzantium were usurpers. Or a lot of them were, in any case.

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Finarfin24 In reply to Theophilia [2011-08-10 10:25:25 +0000 UTC]

Indeed of lot of them were usurper, some like Heraclius were much better than the "right" emperor
Anyway I can't wait for your next byzantine emperor !

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Theophilia In reply to Finarfin24 [2011-08-16 18:33:57 +0000 UTC]

A lot of the times they were! Which surprises me; I don't know why ANYONE would WANT to be an emperor. It just doesn't seem like you get out as much as you put in. Though maybe I'm just lazy and unambitious.

Alas, you may have to wait awhile, I've got so many projects lined up that I'm trying to sit down and get done.

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Finarfin24 In reply to Theophilia [2011-08-20 16:01:32 +0000 UTC]

Indeed becoming emperor was quite dangerous ! I personally wouldn't
I will wait don't worry

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Finarfin24 In reply to Theophilia [2011-08-03 20:56:09 +0000 UTC]

That would be great ! So dramatic scenery ! With the last emperor of an empire of more than 11 century years old

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Theophilia In reply to Finarfin24 [2011-08-04 15:48:16 +0000 UTC]

Yep! His story makes me so sad though...

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Finarfin24 In reply to Theophilia [2011-08-04 18:22:14 +0000 UTC]

yes me too ! Did you se my other message about Jean Tzimiskès ? I have the impression that there is a bug with this message =S

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Theophilia In reply to Finarfin24 [2011-08-08 16:32:00 +0000 UTC]

Oh yes I did! I apologize for taking so long to reply.

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Finarfin24 In reply to Theophilia [2011-08-10 10:10:42 +0000 UTC]

There is no problem

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theubbergeek2 [2011-07-16 19:27:45 +0000 UTC]

[link]

related video - the 'saga' of Theophilos, about two centuries ago...

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Theophilia In reply to theubbergeek2 [2011-07-27 17:24:32 +0000 UTC]

Cool!

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theubbergeek2 In reply to Theophilia [2011-07-27 22:33:02 +0000 UTC]

yes, I like the haunting.... must be an Orthodox chant

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Balkancho [2011-07-10 15:18:37 +0000 UTC]

Maybe one of the greatest of all Byzantine emperors

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