With Marinos, Theoktiste had two sons, Bardas and Petronas, and four daughters, Theodora, Sophia, Maria and Irene.[2][4] In 821 or 830 (the date is disputed), Theodora married Theophilos, who in 829 succeeded his father Michael II the Amorian (ruled 820–829) as emperor. With her daughter's coronation as empress, Theoktiste too was honoured with the exalted title of zoste patrikia.[1][2] At about the same time she bought a mansion in Constantinople, in the quarter of Psamathia, from the patrikios Niketas, which became her residence.[1][2]
Unlike her son-in-law Theophilos, who was an ardent iconoclast,[5] Theoktiste was reportedly an iconodule. Not only did she aid persecuted iconodules, but when Theodora's five daughters visited her in her house, she would instruct them in the veneration of the icons, much to the anger of Theophilos, who forbade his daughters from visiting their grandmother too often.[2][4] Her house was later—possibly still during Theophilos' reign (829–842)—transformed into the Gastria Monastery. Theoktiste and Theodora, as well as other members of the family, were buried there.[1][2]
Of her other children, Bardas and Petronas would go on to become major figures in the reign of Theodora and Theophilos's son, Michael III (r. 842–867), Sophia married the magistros Constantine Baboutzikos, Maria, also known as Kalomaria ("Maria the Beautiful") married the patrikios and later magistros Arsaber, while Irene married the patrikios Sergios, either the brother or the maternal uncle of the future Patriarch of ConstantinoplePhotios.[4]
^ODB, "Theophilos" (P. A. Hollingsworth), p. 2066.
Sources
Guilland, Rodolphe (1971). "Contribution à l'histoire administrative de l'Empire byzantin: la patricienne à ceinture, ἠ ζωστὴ πατρικία". Byzantinoslavica (in French). 32: 269–275.