November 886-893 A.D. Stephen I—Constantinople’s 87th; Nothing Distinctive Here
Stephen I of Constantinople
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Lead seal of "Stephen, Archbishop of
Constantinople New Rome", either of Stephen I or of Stephen II
Miniature from the Madrid Skylitzesshowing Stephen participating, with his elder brother Alexander, in the translation ofMichael III's relics to the Holy Apostles in 886
Stephen I (Greek: Στέφανος Α΄, Stephanos
I) (November 867 – 18 May 893)
was the Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople from 886 to 893.
Born at Constantinople, Stephen was the son of Eudokia Ingerina and, officially, Emperor Basil I. However, at the time when he was conceived,
Eudokia was the mistress of Emperor Michael III. Consequently, it is possible or even probable that like his older brother Leo VI the Wise, Stephen was actually Michael's son.
Castrated by Basil I, Stephen
became a monk and was designated for a career in the church since his childhood.
In 886 his brother, the new Emperor Leo VI, dismissed the Patriarch Photios and appointed the 19-year old Stephen as patriarch in
his stead.
As patriarch Stephen
participated in the ceremonial reburial of Michael III by Leo VI in the
imperial mausoleum attached to the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople. There are no important events associated with
Stephen's patriarchate and the patriarch, who acquired a reputation for piety,
died in May 893. His feast day in the Orthodox Church is on May 18.[1]
References
Sources
Preceded by
Photios I |
Patriarch
of Constantinople
886–893 |
Succeeded by
Antony II |
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