Leontios

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Leontius
Λεόντιος
Emperor of the Byzantine Empire
Solidus-Leontinus-sb1330.jpg
Gold solidus with Leontios, showing the symbols of power: the crown, the globus cruciger, and the akakia. On the reverse, a potent cross on three steps.
Byzantine Emperor
Reign 695–698
Predecessor Justinian II
Successor Tiberios III
Born 660
Isauria
Died 15 February 706
Constantinople
Dynasty Heraclian Dynasty
Twenty Years' Anarchy
Chronology
Leontios 695–698
Tiberios III 698–705
Justinian II 705–711
with Tiberius as co-emperor, 706–711
Philippikos Bardanes 711–713
Anastasios II 713–715
Theodosios III 715–717
Succession
Preceded by
Heraclian dynasty
Followed by
Isaurian dynasty

Leontios (or Leontius) (Greek: Λεόντιος, Latin: LEONTIVS) (died 15 February 706)[1] was Byzantine emperor from 695 to 698. He came to power by overthrowing the Emperor Justinian II, but was overthrown in his turn by Tiberios III. His actual and official name was Leo (Λέων, Leōn), but he is known by the name used for him in Byzantine chronicles.

Early life

Leontios was born in Isauria.[2] A professional soldier from an early age, he rose swiftly through the ranks and was appointed strategos (military governor) of the Anatolic theme during the reign of Emperor Constantine IV.[2]

In 686 Leontios was chosen by Justinian II to lead the Byzantine army against the Arabs in Georgia and Armenia. Ruthless even by the standards of the day, Leontios carried the war further into Iranian Azerbaijan and Caucasian Albania.[2] His successes eventually forced the negotiation of a treaty between Byzantium and the Arabic Caliph Abd al-Malik with substantial Arabic concessions and tributes to the Byzantine Emperor.

Leontios was less successful when war against the Arabs was renewed in 692.[1] Leading a substantial Byzantine army, he was defeated at the Battle of Sebastopolis when a large Slavic contingent deserted and left his remaining forces exposed.[3] Furious at the loss of the army, the Emperor Justinian imprisoned Leontius for two years.[4]

Rebellion

The Emperor freed Leontios in 695 and appointed him strategos of the Helladic theme.[1] Instead he organized a revolt against the emperor, led largely by his former prison comrades. With the help of the Blue charioteers faction, the Patriarch Kallinikos, and his own military prowess, Leontios soon deposed Justinian and seized the throne himself.[1] Justinian's nose and tongue were slit and he was exiled to Cherson in the Crimea.[5]

Emperor

During his unpopular reign, Leontios refrained from most military operations, instead attempting to consolidate the empire. This inactivity and defensive posture led to Abd al-Malik dispatching an expedition to take Carthage which fell in 697.[2] Leontios had sent a fleet to retake the city but it failed at the Battle of Carthage (698).[5]

Rather than return to report their failure, the Byzantine army rebelled, overthrowing their admiral and naming a Germanic sailor named Apsimaros as their leader.[6] Apsimaros hastily changed his name to Tiberios III and the fleet returned to Constantinople where, with the support of the Green faction, they overthrew Leontios in 698.[5]

Imprisonment and death

In what had by now become a tradition for deposed emperors, Leontios had his nose and tongue slit and was imprisoned in the monastery of Psamathion in Constantinople.[2] When the previous Emperor Justinian returned to the throne in 705, both Tiberios and Leontios were paraded through the streets while the citizenry pelted them with ordure.[7] They were then led to the Hippodrome where they were sentenced to death and executed.[8]

Sources

Primary sources

Theophanes the Confessor, Chronographia.

Secondary sources

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  • Moore, R. Scott, "Leontius (695-698 A.D.)", De Imperatoribus Romanis (1999)
  • Warren Treadgold, A History of the Byzantine State and Society (Stanford University Press, 1997) ISBN 0-8047-2630-2
  • Bury, J.B., A History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene, Vol. II, MacMillan & Co., 1889

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Kazhdan, pg. 1212
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Moore, Leontius
  3. Norwich, pg. 333
  4. Canduci, pg. 199
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Norwich, pg. 334
  6. Bury, pg. 354
  7. Bury, pg. 360
  8. Norwich, pg. 337

External links

Leontios
Born: unknown Died: 15 February 706
Regnal titles
Preceded by Byzantine Emperor
695–698
Succeeded by
Tiberios III