NameMichael II (The Stammerer) Emperor
BirthAmorium, Diocese of Asia
DeathOct 829
Misc. Notes
Byzantine emperor and founder of the Amorian, or Phrygian, dynasty who attempted to moderate the Iconoclastic controversy that divided 9th-century Byzantium.

Rising from humble origins, Michael became a military commander. He was a comrade-in-arms of Leo the Armenian, who later became Emperor Leo V (813). When, in 803, Bardanes Turcus and Nicephorus I were fighting over the imperial throne, Leo and Michael at first supported Bardanes but later deserted him and joined the cause of Nicephorus. Years later, after Leo had ascended the throne, Michael incurred the suspicion of his former friend and was imprisoned on a charge of treason. On Dec. 24, 820, he was sentenced to death and ordered to be thrown into a furnace, but on the following day, his partisans assassinated Leo and proclaimed Michael emperor.

Shortly before Michael ascended the throne, however, a soldier named Thomas the Slavonian raised a rebellion, and it was not until the end of 823 that Michael succeeded in suppressing this revolt, which so weakened the resources of the empire that it was unable to resist later Arab onslaughts. The Arabs conquered Crete (826 or 827) and parts of Sicily (827-829).

Although Michael was an Iconoclast (a member of the party opposed to the use of religious images, or icons), in practice he followed a policy of toleration. He even freed prisoners who had been jailed for their devotion to icons and recalled former patriarch Nicephorus, Theodore Studites, and other theologians who had been exiled for that reason.



Michael II was a native of Amorium in Phrygia, served as a soldier "but rose by his talents to the rank of general. He had
been sentenced to death in December 820 for a conspiracy against Leo the Armenian; his partisans, however, succeeded in
assassinating Leo and called Michael to the throne. The principal features of his reign were a struggle against his brother
general, Thomas (822-824); the conquest of Crete by the Saracens in 823; and the beginning of their attacks upon Sicily
(827)." {-Encycl.Brit., 1956 Ed., 15:408}
Spouses
ChildrenTheophilus (-842)
Last Modified 26 Oct 1999Created 11 Aug 2007 using Reunion for Macintosh