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Justinian Ii

Justinian II
Byzantine Emperor
Justinian, on the reverse of this coin struck during his second reign, is holding a patriarchal globe with PAX, peace
Reign685695
705 - December, 711
Born669
DiedDecember, 711
PredecessorConstantine IV
SuccessorPhilippicus
ConsortEudoxia
Theodora of Khazaria
IssueAnastasia
Tiberios
DynastyHeraclian Dynasty
FatherConstantine IV
MotherAnastasia


Justinian II (Greek: Ιουστινιανός Β΄, Ioustinianos II; 669–December 711), known as Rinotmetos or Rhinotmetus (Ρινότμητος, Rinotmētos, "the Slit-nosed"), was the last Byzantine emperor of the , reigning from 685 to 695 and again from 705 to 711.

First reign

Justinian was the first-born son of Emperor Constantine IV, who raised him to the throne as joint emperor in 681. In 685, at the age of sixteen, Justinian II succeeded his father as sole emperor.

Due to Constantine IV's victories, the situation in the Eastern provinces of the Empire was stable when Justinian became emperor. After a preliminary strike against the Arabs in Armenia, Justinian managed to augment the sum paid by the Umayyad Caliphs as an annual tribute, and to regain control of part of Cyprus. The incomes of the provinces of Armenia and Iberia were divided among the two empires. In 687, as part of his agreements with the Caliphate, Justinian removed from their native Lebanon 12,000 Christian Maronites, who continually resisted the Arabs.

Justinian took advantage of the peace in the East to regain possession of the Balkans, which were before then almost totally under the heel of Slavic tribes. In 687 Justinian transferred cavalry troops from Anatolia to Thrace. With a great military campaign in 688–689, Justinian defeated the Bulgars of Macedonia and was finally able to enter Thessalonica, the second most important Byzantine city in Europe.

The subdued Slavs were resettled in Anatolia, where they were to provide a military force of 30,000 men. Emboldened by the increase of his forces in Anatolia, Justinian now renewed the war against the Arabs. With the help of his new troops, Justinian won a battle against the enemy in Armenia in 693, but they were soon bribed to revolt by the Arabs. The emperor defeated the rebel Slavs, but the war against the Arabs was lost, and the Arabs conquered Armenia in 694–695.

Meanwhile the emperor's bloody persecution of the Manichaeans and suppression of popular traditions of non-Orthodox origin caused dissention within the Church. In 692 Justinian convened the so-called Quinisext Council at Constantinople to put his policy into effect, with which he compromised relations with the Roman Church. The emperor ordered Pope Sergius I arrested, but his army rebelled at Ravenna and took the Pope's side.

Through his agents Stephen and Theodatos, the emperor extorted the funds to gratify his sumptuous tastes and his mania for erecting costly buildings. This, and ongoing religious discontent, eventually drove his subjects into rebellion. In 695 they rose under Leontius and, after cutting off the emperor's nose (whence his surname), banished him to Cherson in the Crimea. Leontius, after a reign of three years, was in turn dethroned and imprisoned by Tiberius Apsimarus, who next assumed the throne.

Exile

Justinian became a liability to Cherson and the authorities decided to return him to Constantinople in 702 or 703. He escaped from Cherson and received help from Ibusirus Gliabanus (Busir Glavan), the khagan of the Khazars, who received him enthusiastically and gave him his sister as a bride. Justinian renamed her Theodora. They were given a home in the town of Phanagoria, at the entrance to the sea of Azov. Busir was offered a bribe by Tiberios to kill his brother-in-law, and dispatched two Khazar officials, Papatzys and Balgitzin, to do the deed. Warned by his wife, Justinian strangled Papatzys and Balgatzin with his own hands. He sailed in a fishing-boat to Cherson, summoned his supporters, and they all sailed westwards across the Black Sea.

Justinian sailed to Tervel of Bulgaria. Tervel agreed to provide all the military assistance necessary for Justinian to regain his throne in exchange for financial considerations, the award of a Caesar's crown, and the hand of Justinian's daughter, Anastasia, in marriage. In spring 705, with an army of 15,000 Bulgar horsemen Justinian appeared before the walls of Constantinople. Unable to take the city by force, he and some companions entered through an unused water conduit under the walls of the city, roused their supporters, and seized control of the city in a midnight coup d'etat. Justinian once more ascended the throne, and then had his rivals Leontius and Tiberius executed along with many of their partisans, and deposed and blinded Patriarch Kallinikos I of Constantinople.

Second reign

His second reign was marked by unsuccessful warfare against Bulgaria and the Caliphate, and by cruel suppression of opposition at home. In 708 Justinian turned on his Caesar Tervel and invaded Bulgaria, apparently seeking to recover the territories ceded to Tervel as a reward for his support in 705. The emperor was defeated, blockaded in Anchialus, and forced to retreat. Peace between Bulgaria and Byzantium was quickly restored. This defeat was followed by Arab victories in Asia Minor, where the cities of Cilicia fell into the hands of the enemy, who penetrated into Cappadocia in 709–711.

Justinian was more interested in punishing his subjects at Ravenna and Cherson. He ordered Pope John VII to recognize the decisions of the Quinisext Council and simultaneously fitted out a punitive expedition against Ravenna in 709. The repression succeeded, and the new Pope Constantine visited Constantinople in 710, giving into some of the emperor's demands and restoring relations between the emperor and the Papacy. This would be the last time a Pope visited the city until the visit of Pope Paul VI to Istanbul in 1967.

There is evidence that Justinian contributed to the development of the thematic organization and sought to protect the rights of peasant freeholders, who served as the main recruitment pool for the armed forces of the Empire.

Justinian's tyrannical rule provoked another uprising against him. Cherson revolted and under the leadership of the exiled general Bardanes, the city held out against a counter-attack and soon the forces sent to suppress the rebellion joined it. The rebels then seized the capital and proclaimed Bardanes as Emperor Philippicus; Justinian had been on his way to Armenia, and was unable to return to Constantinople in time to defend it. He was arrested and executed outside the city in December 711, his head being sent to Bardanes as a trophy.

On hearing the news of his death, Justinian's mother took his six-year-old son and co-emperor, Tiberius, to sanctuary at St. Mary's Church in Blachernae, but was pursued by Philippicus' henchmen, who dragged the child from the altar and, once outside the church, murdered him, thus eradicating the line of Heraclius.

Family

By his first wife Eudoxia, Justinian II had at least one daughter: By his second wife, Theodora of Khazaria, Justinian II had a son:

Fictional Account

References

External links

Justinian II
Heraclian Dynasty
Born: 669 Died: December 711
Preceded by
Constantine IV
Byzantine Emperor
685695
Succeeded by
Leontius
Preceded by
Tiberius III
Byzantine Emperor
705711
Succeeded by
Philippicus
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Constantine IV
Byzantine Emperor

Constantine IV on a contemporary coin
Reign 668 – September, 685
Born 652
Died September, 685
Predecessor Constans II
Successor Justinian II
Consort Anastasia

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Philippikos or Philippicus (Greek: Φιλιππικός), was Eastern Roman emperor from 711 to 713.

Philippicus was originally named Bardanes (Βαρδάνης, Bardanēs
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Eudoxia or Eudokia (often Latinized as Eudocia; East Slavic Евдокия Yevdokiya) is a Greek feminine personal name. It was popular in late antiquity and in the Middle Ages.
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Constantine IV
Byzantine Emperor

Constantine IV on a contemporary coin
Reign 668 – September, 685
Born 652
Died September, 685
Predecessor Constans II
Successor Justinian II
Consort Anastasia

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Greek}}} 
Writing system: Greek alphabet 
Official status
Official language of:  Greece
 Cyprus
 European Union
recognised as minority language in parts of:
 European Union
 Italy
 Turkey
Regulated by:
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8th century - 9th century
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This is a list of the Emperors of the late Eastern Roman Empire, called Byzantine by modern historians. This list does not include numerous co-emperors who never attained sole or senior status as rulers.
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Constantine IV
Byzantine Emperor

Constantine IV on a contemporary coin
Reign 668 – September, 685
Born 652
Died September, 685
Predecessor Constans II
Successor Justinian II
Consort Anastasia

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Motto
Մեկ Ազգ, Մեկ Մշակույթ   (Armenian)
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AD Tulunid dynasty 868-905 Hamdanid dynasty 890-1004 Ikhshidid dynasty 935-969 Uqaylid Dynasty 990-1096 Zengid dynasty 1127-1250 Ayyubid dynasty 1171-1246 Bahri dynasty 1250-1382 Burji dynasty 1382–1517

Caliph (pronounced khaleef in Arabic) is the head of state in a Caliphate, and the title for the leader of the Islamic Ummah, an Islamic community ruled by the Shari'a.
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Ύμνος εις την Ελευθερίαν
Imnos is tin Eleftherian

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Մեկ Ազգ, Մեկ Մշակույթ   (Armenian)
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Hispania was the name given by the Romans to the whole of the Iberian Peninsula (modern Portugal, Spain, Andorra, Gibraltar and a very small southern part of France). When Rome was a republic, Hispania was divided into two provinces: Hispania Citerior and Hispania Ulterior.
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Motto
Kūllūnā li-l-waṭan, li-l-'ula wa-l-'alam   (Arabic)
"Nous sommes tous pour le pays, la sublimation et le drapeau!"
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Maronites (Arabic: الموارنة, transliteration: Mawārinah
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Balkans is the historic and geographic name used to describe a region of southeastern Europe. The region has a combined area of 550,000 km² and an approximate population of 55 million people.
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Slavic peoples are a branch of Indo-European peoples, living mainly in Europe, where they constitute roughly a third of the population. Since emerging from their original homeland (most commonly thought to be in Eastern Europe) in the early 6th century, they have inhabited most of
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