Right-believing (Ruler) 5th century

Right-believing Emperor Theodosius the Younger

10 April 401 – 28 July 450

Also known as Theodosius II

An emperor raised in piety from childhood, gentle and given to prayer and fasting, in whose reign the Third Ecumenical Council was gathered and the great walls of Constantinople were built.

Feast Day
July 29
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Commemorated as

The Holy Right-believing Emperor Theodosius the Younger

Life

Theodosius II, called 'the Younger,' was Eastern Roman Emperor for the first half of the fifth century. Born on 10 April 401, the sole son of Emperor Arcadius and Aelia Eudoxia, he received the title of co-augustus as an infant on 10 January 402 and became sole emperor at age seven upon his father's death on 1 May 408.

Raised in piety from childhood, he was formed in Christian devotion chiefly by his elder sister Pulcheria, who had taken a vow of perpetual virginity and who established a near-monastic atmosphere in the imperial palace marked by prayer, fasting, almsgiving, and the chanting of Scripture. Gentle and devout by temperament, Theodosius is remembered for the building of the great walls of Constantinople and for convening the Council of Ephesus in 431 — the Third Ecumenical Council — which affirmed the title Theotokos for the Mother of God and condemned the teaching of Nestorius.

He died on 28 July 450 from injuries sustained in a fall from his horse. The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates him as a right-believing ruler on 29 July.

Timeline 12 moments Read Hide
  1. 10 April 401 Birth Born in Constantinople, the sole son of Emperor Arcadius and Aelia Eudoxia.
  2. 10 January 402 Proclaimed co-augustus Received the title of co-augustus at nine months old.
  3. 1 May 408 Becomes sole emperor Following his father Arcadius's death, the seven-year-old becomes sole emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire, governed at first under the prefect Anthemius.
  4. 413 Theodosian Walls begun Construction begins on the great defensive walls protecting Constantinople, overseen by the praetorian prefect Anthemius.
  5. 4 July 414 Pulcheria proclaimed Augusta His elder sister Pulcheria, a consecrated virgin, becomes Augusta at fifteen and guides his Christian formation and education.
  6. June 421 Marriage to Eudocia Marries Aelia Eudocia, of Athenian origin; they have three children.
  7. 425 University of Constantinople founded Establishes the University of Constantinople with thirty-one chairs in Latin and Greek.
  8. 428 Nestorius appointed archbishop Appoints the monk Nestorius, whom he had met in Syria, as Archbishop of Constantinople.
  9. 431 Council of Ephesus (Third Ecumenical Council) Convenes the council at Ephesus, opening on Pentecost; it affirms the Theotokos and condemns Nestorius, who is exiled to Egypt.
  10. 438 Codex Theodosianus completed His collection of imperial legislation since Constantine I is completed, later a basis for Justinian's law code.
  11. 449 Second Council of Ephesus Supports the council that restored Eutyches and deposed Flavian, later denounced by Pope Leo I as the 'robber synod.'
  12. 28 July 450 Death Dies aged forty-nine after a fall from his horse crossing the River Lycus; buried in the Church of the Holy Apostles.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Historical Context and Reign

Theodosius came to the throne as a child, and during his minority the empire was governed first by the praetorian prefect Anthemius and then under the guardianship of his sister Pulcheria. Born before him, Pulcheria took vows of perpetual virginity in 414 and was proclaimed Augusta on 4 July 414, at age fifteen. She provided the instruction thought necessary for a successful emperor — in deportment, speech, horsemanship, and dress — and set the devout tone of the court, where she and her sisters attended the house of prayer assiduously, showed great charity toward strangers and the poor, and observed fasting twice weekly.

In June 421 Theodosius married Aelia Eudocia, of Athenian origin. The couple had three children: daughters Licinia Eudoxia and Flaccilla, and possibly a son named Arcadius. On 29 October 437 his daughter Licinia Eudoxia married the Western Emperor Valentinian III, strengthening the ties between the eastern and western halves of the empire.

Contributions and Legacy

During Theodosius's early reign the praetorian prefect Anthemius oversaw construction of the famous Theodosian Walls that protected Constantinople, begun in 413; these defenses long guarded the imperial capital. In 425 Theodosius founded the University of Constantinople, endowed with thirty-one chairs — fifteen in Latin and sixteen in Greek — covering law, philosophy, medicine, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, music, and rhetoric.

His most enduring legislative achievement was the Codex Theodosianus, completed in 438, which gathered all imperial legislation since Constantine I into a single collection and later formed a basis for the law code of Emperor Justinian I.

Theodosius earned the epithet 'the Calligrapher' for his aptitude in mathematics, history, astronomy, and writing. A surviving papyrus preserves his handwriting — described as the only extant handwriting of a Roman emperor before 476.

The Council of Ephesus and the Doctrinal Controversies

Theodosius was a devoted Nicene Christian who engaged closely in the doctrinal controversies of his age over the nature of Christ. Having met the monk Nestorius during a visit to Syria, he appointed him Archbishop of Constantinople in 428. Nestorius proposed the compromise title 'Christotokos' to resolve debates over whether Mary could be called 'Theotokos,' the birth-giver of God; his position was rejected as heretical and was opposed by Archbishop Cyril of Alexandria and by Pulcheria.

At Nestorius's own urging, Theodosius summoned a general council, setting Pentecost (7 June 431) as its opening date and choosing Ephesus — a place long associated with the veneration of the Theotokos — as its location. He appointed Count Candidian to represent imperial interests and keep order, instructing him to remain neutral in the theological proceedings. The First Council of Ephesus in 431, reckoned as the Third Ecumenical Council, affirmed the title Theotokos and condemned Nestorius, who was exiled to Egypt. Theodosius had at first firmly supported Nestorius, but after communications from Cyril's faction he ratified the depositions decreed by Cyril's council and ultimately accepted it as legitimate, allowing it to declare Mary as Theotokos and to condemn Nestorianism as heresy.

Nearly twenty years later the abbot Eutyches advanced the miaphysite view that Christ's natures were unified as one. Condemned by Archbishop Flavian of Constantinople but supported by Dioscorus of Alexandria, Eutyches was restored at the Second Council of Ephesus in 449, where Flavian was deposed — an assembly Pope Leo I denounced as the 'robber synod.' Theodosius supported this outcome, influenced by the eunuch Chrysaphius, who in 441 had brought about Pulcheria's dismissal from court. The decisions of 449 were reversed by the Council of Chalcedon in 451, after Theodosius's death.

Death and Burial

Theodosius died on 28 July 450, aged forty-nine, after falling from his horse while crossing the River Lycus and severely injuring his spine. He was buried in the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople in a porphyry sarcophagus. His sister Pulcheria then married the military official Marcian, who succeeded him as emperor and convened the Council of Chalcedon.

The Oriental Orthodox Church also honors Theodosius, particularly among those who regarded him favorably for his support of Eutyches; this veneration lies outside the scope of Eastern Orthodox commemoration.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints