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Samuel of Constantinople

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(Redirected from Samuel I of Constantinople) Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople in 1763–1768 and 1773–1774
His All Holiness
Samuel
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople
ChurchChurch of Constantinople
DioceseConstantinople
SeeEcumenical Patriarchate
Installed1x) 24 May 1763,
2x) 17 November 1773
Term ended1x) 5 November 1768,
2x) 24 December 1774
PredecessorJoannicius III, Theodosius II
SuccessorMeletius II, Sophronius II
Personal details
BornSkarlatos Chantzeris (Σκαρλάτος Χαντζερής)
1700
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
DiedMay 10, 1775(1775-05-10) (aged 74–75)
Heybeliada
BuriedChurch of Saint Nicholas, Heybeliada
DenominationEastern Orthodox Church
OccupationEcumenical Patriarch

Samuel (Greek: Σαμουήλ), lay name Skarlatos Chantzeris (Σκαρλᾶτος Χαντζερῆς; 1700 – 10 May 1775), served as Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople during the periods 1763–1768 and 1773–1774.

Biography

He was born in 1700 in Istanbul. He studied in the Great School of the Nation. At a young age, he was ordained deacon, and later he became an archdeacon of the Patriarch Paisius II. He was elected metropolitan bishop of Derkoi in 1731 and Ecumenical Patriarch on 24 May 1763, even though he thought he was too old for this position.

During his patriarchy, he was occupied with the finances of the Patriarchate. He limited the expenses, restrained the fundraisers, and the procession of the "disk" five times per year and he repealed the old habit for priests and hieromonks to contribute in-kind (animals, eggs, etc.) to the Patriarchate. He reinforced education and he restored the authority of the Patriarchate. In 1767 he abolished the autocephaly of the archbishops of Peć and Ohrid, whose jurisdiction had come to include large areas of Macedonia, Epirus, Thessaly, Albania, and Serbia, and placed them again under the jurisdiction of the Patriarchate of Constantinople.

On a social level, he inveighed against the "slavery of the woman" and talked against the institution of dowry and commercial wedding. He decided to divide the patriarchal seal into four parts, three of which were given to synodic hierarchs. This way he emphasised the synodic administrative system of the Patriarchate, according to which there is shared responsibility and the arbitrariness of the Patriarch is limited.

His radical acts provoked reactions, which reached the point of forcing him to resign on 5 November 1768. He was exiled to Great Lavra of Mount Athos, but in 1770 he convinced the Ottoman government to allow him to return to his residence in Tarabya. After the resignation of Theodosius II, the Synod reelected Samuel Patriarch, against his will, on 17 November 1773.

This second patriarchy lasted about one year. During it he tried to solve the issue of the "Kollyvades", choosing a harsher stance than his predecessor. On 24 December 1774, he was exiled again to Mount Athos and later to Heybeliada, where he died on 10 May 1775. He was buried in the Church of Saint Nicholas in Heybeliada. It is rumored that the noblewoman Roxandra Karatza was Samuel's mistress.

References

  1. Λόγοι πατριωτικοί απλοσύνθετοι, για τη σκλαβιά της γυναίκας και για το χαλασμό του γένους, στηλιτευτικοί της προίκας και τον εμπορικού γάμου, κηρυγμένοι στα 1767 από τον πατριάρχη Σαμουήλ Χαντζερή, φανερωμένοι στα λογοτεχνικά μας κι αποκαταστημένοι από τον Γ. Βαλέτα, έκδ. Βιβλία Πηγής, Αθήνα 1948.
  2. Ακύλα Μήλλα, Ο ιερός ναός του αγίου Νικολάου
  3. Σταματόπουλος Τάκης, Ο εσωτερικός αγώνας, εκδόσεις Κάλβος, τόμος Α΄, σελ. 152

Sources

Bishops of Byzantium and Patriarchs of Constantinople
Bishops of Byzantium
(Roman period, 38–330 AD)
Archbishops of Constantinople
(Roman period, 330–451 AD)
Patriarchs of Constantinople
(Byzantine period, 451–1453 AD)
Patriarchs of Constantinople
(Ottoman period, 1453–1923 AD)
Patriarchs of Constantinople
(Turkish period, since 1923 AD)
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