The churchman Nikephoros was born in Constantinople …
Years: 806 - 806
The churchman Nikephoros was born in Constantinople as the son of Theodore and Eudokia, of a strictly orthodox family, which had suffered from the earlier Iconoclasm.
His father Theodore, one of the secretaries of Emperor Constantine V Kopronymos, had been scourged and banished to Nicaea for his zealous support of Iconodules, and the son has inherited the religious convictions of the father.
Nevertheless, he had entered the service of the Empire, become cabinet secretary, and under Irene had taken part in the synod of 787 as imperial commissioner.
He then withdrew to one of the cloisters that he had founded on the eastern shore of the Bosporus, until he was appointed director of the largest home for the destitute in Constantinople around 802.
After the death of the Patriarch Tarasios, although still a layman, Nikephoros is chosen patriarch by the wish of the emperor Nikephoros (Easter, April 12, 806).
The uncanonical choice meets with opposition from the strictly clerical party of the Stoudites, and this opposition intensifies into an open break when Nikephoros, in other respects a very rigid moralist, shows himself compliant to the will of the emperor by reinstating the excommunicated priest Joseph.
