Emperor Leo V, called Leo the Armenian, …

Years: 820 - 820
December

Emperor Leo V, called Leo the Armenian, had deposed Emperor Michael I Rangabe in 813 and had castrated Michael's sons to forestall future usurpations.

In a diplomatist move, he had written wrote a letter to Patriarch Nikephoros in order to reassure him of his orthodoxy (Nikephoros being obviously afraid of a possible iconoclasm revival).

With the iconodule policy of his predecessors associated with defeats at the hands of Bulgarians and Arabs, Leo had reinstituted Iconoclasm after deposing Nikephoros and convoking a synod at Constantinople in 815.

The emperor had used his rather moderate iconoclast policy to seize the properties of iconodules and monasteries, such as the rich Stoudios monastery, whose influential iconodule abbot, Theodore the Studite, he had exiled.

Leo has appointed competent military commanders from among his own comrades-in-arms, including Michael the Amorian and Thomas the Slav.

He has also persecuted the Paulicians.

Leo is assassinated on December 25, 820, during a Christmas service in Constantinople’s church of Hagia Sophia by friends of Michael the Amorian, whom, having incurred the suspicion of his former friend and been imprisoned on a charge of treason, Leo had condemned to death the day before, ordering him to be thrown into a furnace.

After Michael’s partisans assassinate Leo, they proclaim him Emperor Michael II.

Shortly before Michael ascends the throne, however, Thomas the Slav raises a rebellion, giving himself out to be the unfortunate Emperor Constantine VI, blinded thirty-three years earlier, who had somehow escaped blinding, and secures his coronation at the hands of the Patriarch of Antioch; this is accomplished with the willing permission of Caliph al-Ma'mun, under whose jurisdiction Antioch lies.

Related Events

Filter results