Right-believing (Ruler) 5th century

Pulcheria the Empress

c. 399 – 453

Also known as Pulcheria, Empress of Byzantium

A Byzantine empress who vowed virginity, guided the empire with wisdom and piety, and championed the Orthodox faith at the Council of Chalcedon, building many churches to the Theotokos (453)

Feast Day
September 10
Also Feb 17
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy and Right-Believing Empress Pulcheria

Life

Pulcheria was a Byzantine empress of the fifth century, daughter of the emperor Arcadius and granddaughter of Theodosius the Great. From a young age she took a vow of virginity and dedicated herself to a life of piety, while exercising a decisive influence over the affairs of the Eastern Roman Empire. She served as coregent and adviser to her younger brother Theodosius II and, later in life, reigned alongside her husband Marcian. She is remembered above all for her steadfast defense of Orthodox teaching during the christological controversies of her century.

Through her efforts the Third Ecumenical Council was held at Ephesus in 431, which condemned the teaching of Nestorius and affirmed the title Theotokos for the Virgin Mary; and the Fourth Ecumenical Council was convened at Chalcedon in 451, which addressed the teachings associated with Dioscorus and Eutyches. She was noted by her contemporaries for her education, her wisdom, and her firm adherence to Orthodox doctrine, and she built a number of churches in Constantinople dedicated to the Mother of God.

Pulcheria died in 453. She is commemorated in the Orthodox Church as a right-believing empress, with feast days on September 10 and February 17, and she is also venerated in the Roman Catholic tradition.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 399 Birth Born in Constantinople, daughter of the emperor Arcadius.
  2. 414 Vow of virginity and proclamation as Augusta On July 4 she took a vow of virginity and was proclaimed Augusta, becoming guardian and coregent of her brother Theodosius II.
  3. 431 Council of Ephesus Through her efforts the Third Ecumenical Council was held against the teaching of Nestorius.
  4. 450 Marriage to Marcian After the death of Theodosius II she consented to marry the emperor Marcian while preserving her vow of virginity.
  5. 451 Council of Chalcedon She and Marcian convened the Fourth Ecumenical Council at Chalcedon.
  6. 453 Death Pulcheria died, by one account at the age of fifty-four.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Imperial Family and Regency

Pulcheria was born in Constantinople around 398 or 399, a daughter of the emperor Arcadius and the empress Aelia Eudoxia. Her siblings included Theodosius II, who succeeded their father as emperor, and her sisters Arcadia and Marina. By tradition she received a broad and well-rounded education, and she distinguished herself by her wisdom and piety.

On July 4, 414, Pulcheria took a vow of virginity and was proclaimed Augusta. As guardian and coregent of her young brother Theodosius II, she took a leading part in the governance of the Eastern Roman Empire, a role she retained through much of his reign.

Defense of Orthodoxy

Throughout her life Pulcheria firmly adhered to Orthodox teaching and opposed the heresies of her time. She opposed Archbishop Nestorius of Constantinople and supported the doctrine, defended at the Third Ecumenical Council at Ephesus in 431, that the Virgin Mary is rightly called Theotokos, the Mother of God.

After the death of Theodosius II in 450, Marcian became emperor. For the common good Pulcheria consented to marry him on the condition that she be permitted to preserve her virginity within the marriage; according to the tradition they lived together in purity. In 451 she and Marcian summoned the Fourth Ecumenical Council at Chalcedon, which addressed the teachings associated with Dioscorus and Eutyches. At Chalcedon the imperial couple were acclaimed by some as a new Constantine and a new Helena.

Church Building

Pulcheria built several churches in Constantinople dedicated to the Mother of God, among them the church of the Theotokos at Blachernae. The synaxarion also associates her with the discovery of the relics of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste. She died in 453, by one account at the age of fifty-four.

Sources: Synaxarion