Leonard of Chios

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Template:Short description Leonard of Chios (Template:Langx; Template:Langx), also called Leonardo Giustiniani,Template:Sfn was a Greek scholar of the Dominican Order and Latin Bishop of Mytilene, best known for his eye-witness account of the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, which is one of the main sources for the event.

Biography

Leonard was born on the Aegean island of Chios, then under Genoese domination (cf. Maona of Chios), in c.Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"..Template:Sfn[1] According to his own account, he was of humble parents.Template:Sfn He entered the Dominican Order in Chios, and after profession was sent to the University of Padua for his philosophical and theological studies. After ordination he taught at both Padua and Genoa, then at the request of Maria Giustiniani returned to his native island, and was made Bishop of Mytilene on the island of Lesbos by Pope Eugene IV.Template:Sfn There he enjoyed a close relationship with the Gattilusii, the Genoese rulers of Lesbos.[1]

In 1452, Cardinal Isidore of Kiev stopped at Lesbos on his way to Constantinople to conduct negotiations for a union between the Catholic and Greek Orthodox churches. Stopping on Lesbos, Isidore invited Leonard to join him. The latter accepted, and arrived at Constantinople with the papal delegation on 26 October 1452.[1]Template:Sfn As a result, he was an eyewitness of the subsequent siege and capture of Constantinople by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II in May 1453.Template:Sfn It is not known what role he played in the defence; he evidently accompanied Cardinal Isidore, and thus participated both in the councils of the defenders, and in the defence of the sector of Saint Demetrios, that Isidore commanded. During the sack of the city on 29 May, both Isidore and Leonard were captured, but soon were released or ransomed. Leonard was even able to buy some books from the looting Turks on the same day of the sack.Template:Sfn

Leonard soon managed to find passage to Chios, from where on 16 August he wrote to Pope Nicholas V a detailed account of the fall of Constantinople in a letter. Written in Latin, Leonard's letter "describes the conquest in a fashion hostile to the Byzantines and Venetians but favorable to the Genoese".[1] It "remains our basic source for the event" to this day,Template:Sfn and was reprinted several times in subsequent centuries, translated into Venetian and vernacular Greek, and was used as a source, or outright copied, by several other authors.Template:Sfn

His later life is not well documented. Thus it was long believed that he returned to his see at Mytilene, and remained there until the Ottoman conquest of Lesbos in 1462, when he was captured anew. A Latin work describing the siege and capture of Mytilene, De Lesbo a Turcis capta, was long attributed to him, but stylistical differences suggest a different author.Template:Sfn Modern scholarship considers that Leonard returned to Italy to campaign for a Christian alliance against the Ottomans, and that he died there in c.Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".. His successor to the see of Mytilene, Benedetto, was nominated in December 1459, and is the likely author of De Lesbo a Turcis capta.[1]Template:Sfn

Works

His best-known writings is the letter mentioned above and an apologetical tract in answer to the humanist Gian Francesco Poggio Bracciolini. Both tracts with biographical sketches were edited by Michael Justinian (Avila, 1657). There is reason to believe that many of his letters remain unedited in the Vatican Library.Template:Sfn

References

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Sources

Catholic Church titles
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Bishop of Mytilene
1444–1458/59 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by

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