The title is perhaps misleading, but "the overlooked Comneni" didnt have the same ring to it.
Isaac I Comnenus was Byzantine Emperor from 1057 to 1059, during his brief reign he showed talent that if fate had allowed it, could have changed the entire course of Byzantine history.
In 1057 many of the great military leaders of Byzantium gathered together to discuss a successor to the current Emperor Michael VI, having had enough of one ineffectual useless Emperor after another the leaders chose a man they both respected and trusted. Isaac Comnenus, after initially refusing, Isaac finally accepted and swiftly moved to secure his position.
With civil war now inevitable, Isaac marched against Michael's European army with his own army from Asia Minor. It should be noted that even here before Manzikert there was already a significant reliance on foreign mercenaries, many of which were part of the opposing armies.
Isaac defeated the army of the current Emperor Michael VI near Nicomedia in 1057, a battle by some accounts Isaac himself barely survived.
Having been under the protection of the great Basil II since childhood Isaac was well educated and as he spent time with the army gained their respect and loyalty, something few Emperors could boast.
With Isaac now the undisputed Emperor of Byzantium he immediately went to work to repair the damage caused since the death of Basil II in 1025, and with the same kind of devotion Basil had shown towards the empire, he went a long way to bringing the empire back to the greatness it has witnessed barely 30 years earlier. His solitary aim was to secure the empire and make it strong again.
The treasury which was filled when Basil II had died had been squandered by one Emperor after another, given away to favourites at the Imperial court and spent on lavish luxery for themselves. Isaac seized the estates of these favourites and then proceeded to target the immense wealth of the monestaries. Much of which went to the army.
However this led to a dispute with the popular Patriarch of Constantinople who due to his subsequent exile by Isaac, destroyed the Emperors popularity with the people who loved the Patriarch.
Even though Isaac had lost the love of the people, the army stood firm with him and with that loyalty Isaac was able to defeat invasions from the east and repel invasions from the Petchenegs and repeated attacks from the Magyars. He had brought discipline, loyalty and reward back to an army that had been so long neglected, by his reforms, his respect from the army and his fearlessness in battle he had won their love.
However his reign was brought to an end when having contracted a fever he abdicated to his chosen successor Constantine Ducas. Isaac died either in 1059 or in a monestary 2 years later after a unexpected recovery.
Isaac's reign may look unremarkable, but the man himself was remarkable, with the boundless energy of the young Justinian and a devotion to the empire similar to that of Basil II's he had the talent to bring back the glory days.
However like Julian the Apostate 7 centuries earlier this immense talent was never fully realised to the empires great loss, a mere 15 years after the death of Julian the greatest disaster Rome had ever seen took place at Adrianople.
For Isaac like Julian, this time only 12 years after the abdication the greatest disaster the empire had faced to date took place at Manzikert. Neither of these catastrophes could seem possible had both these men not died so prematurely.
Had Isaac lived just a little longer, the army may well have been restored to the greatness it witnessed under Basil II and Manzikert would not of happened, Anatolia not lost and the empire never needing to rely on mercenaries again.
Isaac is often overlooked perhaps because of his short reign or the subsequent success and longevity of the later Comneni Alexius, John and Manuel. However imagine Alexius being crowned Emperor at the death of Isaac with an empire not on the brink of collapse but on the brink of another golden age. This would of been very very possible, had Isaac not be taken so prematurely.
Few Emperors ever showed as much promise and ability as Isaac I Comnenus.
Edited by Heraclius