- Patriarch Ignatius of Constantinople
St. Ignatius or Ignatios ( _el. Ιγνάτιος), (c. 797–877)
Patriarch of Constantinople fromJuly 4 ,847 toOctober 23 ,858 and fromNovember 23 ,867 to his death onOctober 23 ,877 . In the Roman martyrology of the Roman Catholic Church, he is regarded as asaint , with afeast day of October 23.Ignatios, originally named Niketas, was a son of the Byzantine EmperorMichael I Rangabe andProkopia . His maternal grandfather wasNikephoros I .Although he was still a child, Niketas had been appointed nominal commander of the new corps of imperial guards, the Hikanatoi. He was forcibly castrated (and thus made ineligible for becoming emperor, since the emperor could not be a eunuch) and tonsured after his father's deposition in 813. He founded three monasteries on the
Princes' Islands , a favorite place for exilingtonsure d members of the imperial house.The Empress Mother Theodora appointed Ignatios, a staunch opponent of
Iconoclasm , to succeed Methodios I as patriarch of Constantinople in 847. Ignatios soon became embroiled in the conflict between the Stoudites and the moderates in the Church, the issue being whether or not to dispose of clergymen who had cooperated with iconoclast policies in the past. Ignatios took the side of the conservative Stoudites and deposed thearchbishop of Syracuse ,Gregory Asbestas , the leader of the moderate party. Asbestas appealed for redress toPope Leo IV and thus inaugurated a period of friction in relations between the Roman and Constantinopolitan churches.A fervent critic of the Caesar
Bardas , Ignatios lost support after EmperorMichael III and Bardas removed Theodora from influence in 857. Ignatios was forced to resign and was replaced by the layman Photios. When Photios reversed some of his predecessor's policies, Ignatios's supporters appealed toPope Nicholas I , who at first tried to stay out of the controversy (since Ignatios's election went against canon law), but then condemned Photios. The immediate issues in the conflict were the question of papal precedence over the patriarch, and jurisdiction over newly-convertedBulgaria .In 867
Basil I the Macedonian usurped the throne and, seeking an alliance with Nicholas I andLouis II, Holy Roman Emperor , banished Photios and restored Ignatios on the patriarchal throne. Reinstated, Ignatios refused to yield to the papacy and drew Bulgaria back into the orbit of the Byzantine Church in 870. Since Ignatios and Photios pursued the same policy, the latter was recalled and reinstated as tutor to the emperor's children. When Ignatios died in October 877, Photios was reinstated as patriarch and contributed to Ignatios' sanctification.ee also
*
List of Patriarchs of Constantinople References
*"The
Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium ", Oxford University Press, 1991.
*CathEncy|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07647a.htm|title=St. Ignatius of Constantinople
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.