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Manuel I of Constantinople

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(Redirected from Manuel Charitopoulos)
Manuel I of Constantinople
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople
ChurchChurch of Constantinople
In officeJanuary 1217 – May/June 1222
PredecessorMaximus II of Constantinople
SuccessorGermanus II of Constantinople
Personal details
Born?
DiedMay or June 1222

Manuel I, surnamed Sarantenos/Karantenos or Charitopoulos (Greek: Μανουὴλ Σαραντηνός/Καραντηνός or Χαριτόπουλος; died May or June 1222) was Patriarch of Constantinople from December 1216 or January 1217 to 1222. He seems to have been called "the Philosopher": George Akropolites says he was "a philosopher, it seems, in deed, and so named by the people." Manuel was Patriarch-in-exile as at the time his titular seat was occupied by the Latin Patriarch of Constantinople, and he lived in Nicaea. Before the sack of 1204, Manuel was a deacon and hypatos ton philosophon in Constantinople. This is likely the source of his epithet "the Philosopher".[1]

Under Manuel I, Saint Sava had become an archbishop and an autocephalous Serbian Orthodox Church was formed in the territory of the Serbian Kingdom of Stefan Nemanjić.

Manuel is noted for his role in a diplomatic interplay between the Nicaean emperor Theodore I Laskaris and the Latin Emperor of Constantinople, Robert of Courtenay, in 1222. Robert had approached Theodore for a peace treaty and the latter offered his daughter Eudokia in marriage to cement the deal. But Theodore had married Maria of Courtenay, Robert's sister, in 1217. Manuel is thus reported by George Akropolites to have blocked the betrothal, twice negotiated, on religious-legal grounds: Robert, Theodore's brother-in-law, could not also become his son-in-law as this was an 'illegal union' and constituted incest as it was within the third degree of kinship.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ George Akropolites (Ruth Macrides, ed). The History. Oxford: University Press, 2007. pp. 159–160.
  2. ^ George Akropolites (Ruth Macrides, ed). The History. Oxford: University Press, 2007. Editor's notes, pp. 158.
Eastern Orthodox Church titles
Preceded by Patriarch of Constantinople
In exile at Nicaea

1216–1222
Succeeded by