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Aspects of the Process of Hellenization in the Early Middle Ages*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 September 2013
Extract
In the winter months of A.D. 905–6 Arethas, Archbishop of Caesarea, unwillingly made the difficult journey from Constantinople to the Byzantine province of Hellas, central Greece. The official reason for this visit was to reconsecrate several churches which had been defiled and pillaged by raiders, probably Bulgars, but there was another reason why the vociferous archbishop should be removed from the capital. In September 905 Zoe, mistress of the Emperor Leo VI, had given birth to a child Constantine, Leo's first son and heir. While this event was joyfully celebrated by the entire court, it provoked dismay and alarm among ecclesiastics such as Arethas. For the emperor had already been married three times and to take a fourth wife was against the canons of the Orthodox Church.
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References
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65 In other parts of the empire different agencies brought about the integration of the Slavs; in the case of Saint Ioannikios the army played as important a role as the Church, see Vryonis, S., ‘St. Ioannicius the Great (754–846) and the “Slavs” of Bithynia’, Byzantion xxxi (1961), 245–8Google Scholar, reprinted in the author's Byzantium.
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67 V. Grumel, op. cit. nos. 636 (letter of Patriarch Nikolaos to the governor of Hellas); 706, to Archbishop Niketas of Athens; 735, to Archbishop Andreas of Patras; and 745, to Archbishop Philippos of Larissa. When his brother Paul was appointed to the see of Corinth, Saint Peter of Argos decided to go with him to the Peloponnese to avoid further disputes with the patriarch.
68 J. Cozza-Luzi, op. cit. 39–42; A. Vasiliev, The ‘Life’ of Saint Peter of Argos, 176. Both men had established a reputation for holiness as ascetics before they were appointed bishops, cf. The Life of Saint George of Amastris, ed. Vasilievskii, op. cit. 17–25.
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