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Theodotus I of Constantinople

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(Redirected from Theodotos I of Constantinople) Patriarch of Constantinople from 815–821 "Theodotus I" and "Patriarch Theodotus I" redirect here. They could also refer to Theodotus of Antioch, patriarch of Antioch in 420–429.

Theodotus I of Constantinople
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople
Consecration of Theodotus Melissenos as patriarch of Constantinople, miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes
Installed1 April 815
Term endedJanuary 821
PredecessorNicephorus I of Constantinople
SuccessorAntony I of Constantinople
Personal details
BornTheodotus Melissenos
c. 813
Nakoleia
DiedJanuary 821
ParentsMichael Melissenos

Theodotus I of Constantinople ou Theodotos I Kassiteras, latinised as Theodotus I Cassiteras (Greek: Θεόδοτος Κασσιτερᾶς or Κασσιτηρᾶς; fl. 813 - died January 821) was the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from 1 April 815 to January 821.

Theodotus was born in Nakoleia, as the son of the patrician Michael Melissenos by the sister of Eudokia, the last wife of Emperor Constantine V. Theodotus had become attached to the court bureaucracy and was a confidant of Emperor Michael I Rangabe.

By the time Michael I Rangabe was deposed by Leo V the Armenian in 813, Theodotus I was an elderly spatharokandidatos, whom the near-contemporary Scriptor Incertus describes as "meek" and "uneducated". On 14 March 815, Leo V forced the resignation of Patriarch Nicephorus I of Constantinople, and appointed the pro-iconoclast Theodotus Melissenos in his place. Later in 815, the new patriarch presided over a Church council in Constantinople, which overturned the Second Council of Nicaea and reinstated the ban on the veneration of icons, thus beginning the second period of Byzantine Iconoclasm. Much of the Iconoclast effort in the council was driven by other clerics, including the later Patriarchs Antony I of Constantinople and John VII of Constantinople. In the aftermath of this synod Theodotus is representing as torturing by starvation at more than one iconodule abbot in an attempt to force them into agreement with his ecclesiastical policy.

He ceases to be mentioned in the sources after the murder of Leo V and accession of Michael II in December 820.

Notes and references

  1. ^ ODB, "Theodotos I Kassiteras" (A.–M. Talbot), p. 2054.
  2. Treadgold 1988, pp. 212–213.
  3. Treadgold 1988, p. 213.

Sources

Titles of Chalcedonian Christianity
Preceded byNicephorus I Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople
815 – 821
Succeeded byAntony I
Bishops of Byzantium and Patriarchs of Constantinople
Bishops of Byzantium
(Roman period, 38–330 AD)
Archbishops of Constantinople
(Roman period, 330–451 AD)
Patriarchs of Constantinople
(Byzantine period, 451–1453 AD)
Patriarchs of Constantinople
(Ottoman period, 1453–1923 AD)
Patriarchs of Constantinople
(Turkish period, since 1923 AD)
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