Certainty: 0 Marriage of Isaakios (I) to Aikaterine, eldest daughter of Samuel of Bulgaria Certainty: 0
1057
Certainty: 2 Isaakios (I) sent his family for safety to the fort of Pemolissa Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 Isaakios I sent for Aikaterine & made her augousta Certainty: 2
1058
Certainty: 2 Psellos wrote to the empress Aikaterine that he could not bear Constantinople without her & Isaakios I
Psellos wrote to the empress Aikaterine that he loved to see Isaakios I and her in the city and could only bear their absence by writing to them. She had never disbelieved (?), even if Charonites (?) refused to believe it; she had royal blood in her veins, and had married a greater monarch. He sent his usual monk to ask how they were, and would send him again. He had heard that Isaakios was now absent on business, not hunting
Certainty: 1 Isaakios I & his empress Aikaterine beautified church of St Ioannes Prodromos Certainty: 1
1059
Certainty: 2 Psellos wrote to Isaakios I as he set out against the Pechenegs, warning him of Selte Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 Campaign of Isaakios I against Pechenegs: all leaders but Selte submitted, & Selte was crushed Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 The father-in-law of Theodoros Dokeianos died near the end of Isaakios I's Danube expedition (at Lobitzos?) Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 Isaakios Komnenos after hesitations appointed Konstantinos (X) Doukas as successor Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 Isaakios I, feeling better after abdication, went in imperial vessel to Stoudios, & was tonsured Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 Empress Aikaterine soon imitated her husband's tonsure: but Konstantinos X included her in his first acclamations Certainty: 2
1063
Certainty: 1 Devotion of empress Aikaterine to memory of Isaakios I, & her death Certainty: 1