DBId: 821
Entry author: Octavian Negoita
Node type: Person
John VI Cantacuzenus (Ioasaph the Monk)
Ἰωάννης Καντακουζηνός (Ἰωάσαφ ὁ μονάχος)
Politician
Theologian, Writer
Emperor of Byzantium, Monk
Ἰωάννης Ἄγγελος Παλαιολόγος Καντακουζηνός; Johannes Cantacuzenus; Ioan Cantacuzino"
Istanbul
Istanbul
Byzantine court; Mangana Monastery; Charsianites Monastery
1347
1354
Istanbul
1295
Mystras
1383
Alice-Mary Talbot, "John VI Kantakouzenos", in: The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, Vol. 2, ed. by A. Kazhdan (New York / Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991), 1050-51; Klaus-Peter Todt, Kaiser Johannes VI. Kantakuzenos und der Islam. Politische Realität und theologische Polemik im palaiologenzeitlichen Byzanz (Würzburg / Echter: Altenberge / Oros Verlag, 1991); Donald M. Nicol, The Reluctant Emperor. A Biography of John Cantacuzene, Byzantine Emperor and Monk, c. 1295-1383 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996); Klaus-Peter Todt, "John VI Cantacuzenus", in: Christian-Muslim Relations. A Bibliographical History, Vol. 5: (1350-1500), ed. by D. Thomas and A. Mallett (Leiden / Boston: Brill, 2013), 165-178.
John VI Cantacuzenus was one of the most renowned Byzantine emperors, who remarked himself not only as a statesman but also as a fine theologian and historian. During his tumultuous reign (1347-1354) he engaged in close relations with the Ottomans and was involved into the Church Synods that affirmed the Orthodoxy of the Hesychast theology promoted by the Byzantine archbishop of Thessaloniki, Gregory Palamas. After his abdication in 1354, John VI took the monastic vows and entered the monastic community first of the Mangana Monastery and then of Charsianites Monastery, both located in Constantinople. Here he wrote his famous History and polemical works against Islam and the Jewish faith.
Octavian Negoita