- Teodato Ipato
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Teodato Ipato (also Diodato or Deusdedit, Latin: Theodatus Ursus) was the doge of Venice after a brief interregnum following the death of his father, Orso Ipato, in 742. His surname is in fact the Byzantine title hypatos. Teodato moved the capital of the Venetiae from Heraclea to Malamocco.
In 751, the Byzantine exarchate of Ravenna fell to the Lombards and Venice became the last Byzantine holdout in the north of Italy. In that same year, the Franks deposed their last Merovingian monarch, Childeric III, and elected the Carolingian Pepin the Short, a sworn ally of the pope and enemy of the Lombards. Venice became, at that point, a practically independent state. Teodato did not enjoy being at the head of it for long: he was deposed and blinded in 755 by Galla Gaulo, who usurped the ducal throne.
Sources
- Norwich, John Julius. A History of Venice. Alfred A. Knopf: New York, 1982.
Preceded by
Felicius CornicolaMagister militum per Venetiae
739Succeeded by
Iovianus CepariusPreceded by
Iohannes FabriciusDux Venetiae
742–755Succeeded by
Galla LupanioCategories:- Italian nobility
- Doges of Venice
- Byzantine consuls
- Magistri militum
- 8th-century Italian people
- 8th-century Byzantine people
- 8th-century rulers in Europe
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