Hierarch 10th century

Saint Polyeuctus Patriarch of Constantinople

died 970

Also known as Polyefktos

Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople (956-970), formerly a monk, known for boldness in defending the Church and called a "second Chrysostom." He baptized St. Olga of Kiev.

Feast Day
February 5
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Polyeuctus, Patriarch of Constantinople

Life

Polyeuctus was Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from 956 until his death on February 5, 970. Born in Constantinople, he was made a eunuch in childhood by his parents, who hoped he would enter the civil service of the Eastern Roman Empire. He chose instead to become a monk, and in monastic life distinguished himself for his learning and ascetic discipline. Raised from the cloister to the patriarchal throne in 956 by Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos, he succeeded the imperial prince Theophylact Lekapenos.

Polyeuctus was renowned for the power of his preaching and his zeal for the Orthodox faith, qualities that earned him the title of a "second Chrysostom" among his contemporaries. Although he owed his elevation to Constantine VII, he did not subordinate himself to imperial interests; he maintained the independence of the patriarchate, questioned the legitimacy of the marriage of Constantine's parents, and rehabilitated the memory of an earlier patriarch, Euthymius I, who had opposed it.

During his tenure Polyeuctus baptized Olga, the regent princess of Kiev, who came to Constantinople in 957; Emperor Constantine VII stood as her godfather. The conversion of Olga, later venerated as Equal-to-the-Apostles, marked an early stage in the Christianization of the Rus'. Polyeuctus is also remembered for his firmness toward emperors: he excommunicated Nikephoros II Phokas over his marriage to the empress Theophano, on the grounds of a spiritual-kinship impediment, and after Nikephoros's assassination he refused to crown John I Tzimiskes until the conditions he set had been satisfied. The anchor tradition distinguishes him from the earlier Martyr Polyeuctus of Melitene, commemorated on January 9.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 956 Raised to the patriarchate Elevated from monk to Patriarch of Constantinople by Emperor Constantine VII, succeeding Theophylact Lekapenos.
  2. 957 Baptism of Olga of Kiev Baptized the princess Olga of Kiev in Constantinople, with Constantine VII as her godfather.
  3. 963–969 Conflict with Nikephoros II Excommunicated Emperor Nikephoros II Phokas over his marriage to the empress Theophano.
  4. 969 Conditions on Tzimiskes After Nikephoros's assassination, refused to crown John I Tzimiskes until the assassins were punished and Theophano removed from the palace.
  5. 970 Repose Died peacefully on February 5, 970.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Independence from Imperial Power

Polyeuctus is consistently portrayed as a patriarch who guarded the independence of the Church against imperial pressure. Although appointed by Constantine VII, he showed little deference to the emperor, openly raising the question of the legitimacy of the marriage of Constantine's parents and restoring the standing of Patriarch Euthymius I, who had earlier contested it.

His most celebrated confrontations came with the soldier-emperors who followed. He barred Nikephoros II Phokas from communion over his marriage to the empress Theophano, invoking a canonical impediment of spiritual kinship. After Nikephoros was murdered, Polyeuctus refused to perform the coronation of John I Tzimiskes until the new emperor had punished those responsible for the assassination and removed Theophano, who was implicated in the plot, from the palace.

The Baptism of Olga

In 957 the princess Olga, regent of Kiev, traveled to Constantinople, where Polyeuctus received and baptized her, with Emperor Constantine VII serving as her godfather. The episode is among the best-attested acts of his patriarchate and is remembered as a significant moment in the early evangelization of the Rus', whose full conversion would come a generation later under Olga's grandson Vladimir.

Notes

Distinct from Martyr Polyeuctus of Melitene (Jan 9).

Sources: OrthodoxWiki (Polyeuctus of Constantinople); GOARCH calendar