'Attaliates' or 'Michael Attaliates' was a
Byzantine statesman and historian, probably a native of Attalia in
Pamphylia, whence he seems to have come to
Constantinople between
1030 and
1040. He acquired in the royal city both wealth and position and was rapidly advanced, under successive emperors, to the highest offices, among others to that of judge of the supreme court of the empire. He compiled (1072) for the Emperor
Michael Parapinakes a compendium of Byzantine law which supplements in a useful way the ''Libri Basilici''. In addition to this he also drew up an ''Ordinance for the Poor House and Monastery'' which he founded at Constantinople in
1077. This work is of value for the history of Byzantine life and manners in the eleventh century. It contains a catalogue of the library of his monastery. About
1079 or
1080 he published an account of Byzantine history from
1034 to
1079, a vivid and reliable presentation of the palace revolutions and female domination that characterize this period of transition from the great
Macedonian dynasty to the
Comneni.
Attaliates writes as an eyewitness and contemporary. Though burdened by the usual affectations of Byzantine historians, his style is more flowing and compact than that of his predecessors.
Krumbacher praises his accurate judgment and sense of equity; in both respects he is superior to his successor, the
panegyrist and
courtier Michael Psellus.
Bibliography
The law-manual of Attaliates was first edited by
M. Freher (''Juris Greco-Romani Tomi Duo'', Frankfort, 1596, 11, 1-79); the ''Ordinance'', or Diataxis, is found in
Miklosich and
Müller, ''Acta et Diplomata Graeca Medii Ævi'' (1887), V, 293-327; the ''History'' was edited by
I. Bekker, in the "Corpus Script. Byz." (Bonn, 1853).