A mosaic with edits: the Empress Zoe panel was reworked, swapping faces while keeping the script — imperial generosity before Christ Pantocrator.
Where to See It
- Upper Gallery, near the Komnenos panel. The trio arrangement centers Christ with Zoe and Constantine IX at the flanks.
Why the Faces Changed
- Scholars suggest two overlapping explanations:
- Update across Zoe’s marriages (Romanos III → Michael IV → Constantine IX), keeping the composition but changing portraits.
- Reuse of an earlier pair with new imperial identities grafted on.
- Either way, the message remains: imperial gifts under Christ’s blessing.
Reading the Iconography
- Purse (Constantine IX) = donation and material support.
- Scroll (Zoe) = imperial decree/pledge of favor.
- Christ blesses with the gospel, fixing the scene’s hierarchy.
Materials & Conservation
- Note how reworked areas can slightly diverge in tesserae size/tones.
- Past cleanings sought legibility without erasing the work’s complex history.
Viewing & Photo Tips
- Wait for a break in foot traffic; then frame Christ plus one donor in a diagonal to reduce glare.
- No flash/tripods; keep shoulders away from the barrier.
Image Highlights

Bottom Line
Faces changed; meaning endured. The panel teaches that power is accountable to the sacred center.