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LTC Stephen F.
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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on April 9, 475 Byzantine Emperor Basiliscus issued a circular letter (Enkyklikon) to the bishops of his empire supporting the heretical Monophysite christological position.
Monophysite is "a person who holds that in the person of Jesus Christ there is only one nature (wholly divine or only subordinately human), not two as the Bible clearly reveals.
After plotting against the Emperor Zeno and taking power, he was eventually overthrown by Flavius Zeno Augustus whom many thought of as the true emperor.

Emperor Zeno: The Saviour of the Byzantine Empire
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZqVTb8hqh0

Images:
1. Zeno receives the Western Imperial Regalia by Zenoby Anton Batov
2. Zeno depicted on a Tremissis; the coin's design celebrates Zeno's victories, and was issued during his second reign
3. The Civil Diocese of the East around the year AD 400. Isauria is on the Mediterranean coast in the south of Asia Minor.



Background from {[http://www.hellenicaworld.com/Byzantium/Person/en/Zeno.html]}
Flavius Zeno (c. 425 -491 ) (Ζήνων), original name Tarasicodissa or Trascalissaeus, Eastern Roman Emperor (February 9, 474 - April 9, 491) was one of the more prominent of the early Byzantine emperors. Domestic revolts and religious dissension plagued his reign which nevertheless succeeded to some extent in foreign issues. He presided over the official end of the Roman Empire in the west under Julius Nepos and Romulus Augustus, while at the same time contributing much to stabilizing the empire in the east. He was thus the first emperor of the eastern Roman empire to rule without a western counterpart, making him the first emperor of a fully independent Byzantine Empire.

Military career
Tarasicodissa, as he was known as a young man, was an Isaurian tribesman from the region now known as Armenia. The Isaurians are thought to be ancestors of the modern Kurds, and were looked upon as barbarians by the Romans even though they had been Roman citizens for more than two centuries. Still, a fortuitous turn of events ultimately placed Zeno on the throne in Constantinople.
Well-known as a warrior, Tarasicodissa caught the eye of the Emperor Leo I in the mid-460s, when Leo was searching for alternatives to using increasingly unreliable Germanic and Alan mercenaries in his army. In 466, Tarasicodissa exposed the treachery of Ardabur, the son of the Alans eastern magister militum Aspar and made himself even more indispensable. By 468, when Leo's incompetent (and perhaps traitorous) generals led the Byzantine fleet to disaster in a campaign against the Vandals, Tarasicodissa was considered Leo's best general. While on a campaign in Thrace he narrowly escaped assassination instigated by Aspar. On Tarasicodissa's return to the capital, Aspar was killed on Leo's orders and Tarasicodissa became magister militum in his own right.
To make himself more acceptable to the Roman hierarchy and the native Greek population of Constantinople, Tarasicodissa adopted the Greek name of Zeno and used it for the rest of his life after his marriage to Leo's daughter Ariadne in 468. Although designed by Leo to secure the Isaurian support against the aforementioned ambitious minister Aspar, this political arrangement brought them a son, who was to become the emperor Leo II upon the death of his grandfather in 473.
In the meantime, Zeno continued to lead the eastern armies with a great deal of success, most notably in expelling the Vandals from Epirus, which they invaded in 469 as part of King Geiseric's revenge for being attacked a year earlier. He also led troops against incursions by the Huns and Gepids south of the Danube River. Since Leo II was too young to rule himself, Ariadne and her mother Verina prevailed upon Leo to crown Zeno as co-emperor, which he did on February 9, 474. When Leo became ill and died on November 17, Zeno became sole emperor.

Reign
Restored to rule of the entire empire, Zeno was within two months forced to make a momentous decision when Odoacer deposed the last emperor in the west and asked for Zeno's recognition as a patrician officer of Zeno's court, intending to rule without an emperor. Zeno granted this, and thus in theory became the first emperor of a united Roman Empire since 395. In reality, he all but wrote off the west until several years later, when Odoacer began to violate the terms of his agreement with Zeno.
At the same time, Zeno sent a mission to Carthage with the intent of making a permanent peace settlement with Geiseric, who was still making constant raids on eastern cities and merchant shipping. By recognizing Geiseric as an independent king and with the full extent of his conquests, Zeno was able to hammer out a peace which ended the Vandal attacks in the east, brought freedom of religion to the Catholics under Vandal rule, and lasted for more than 50 years.
Since 472 the aggressions of the two Ostrogoth leaders, Theodoric the Great, son of Theodemir, and Theodoric Strabo, had been a constant source of danger. Though Zeno at times contrived to play them off against each other, they in turn were able to profit by his dynastic rivalries, and it was only by offering them pay and high command that he kept them from attacking Constantinople itself.
Zeno survived another revolt in 478, when his mother-in-law Verina attempted to kill Illus for turning against Basiliscus, her brother. The revolt was led by her son-in-law Marcian and the Ostrogoth warlord Theoderic Strabo, but Illus again proved his loyalty to Zeno by quashing the revolt. However, Illus and Zeno had a falling out by 484, and once again Zeno had to put down a bloody revolt in the east.
After Theodoric Strabo died in 481, the future Theodoric became king of the entire Ostrogothic nation and began to be a source of trouble in the Balkan peninsula. Zeno got rid of the problem in 487 by inducing him to invade Italy to fight Odoacer and establish his new kingdom there, all but eliminating the German presence in the east.
He died on April 9, 491, after ruling for 17 years and 2 months. Because he and Ariadne had no other children, his widow chose a favored member of the imperial court, Anastasius, to succeed him.

Opinions on Zeno
Zeno is described as a lax and indolent ruler, but he seems to have husbanded the resources of the empire so as to leave it appreciably stronger at his death.
In ecclesiastical history, Zeno is associated with the Henoticon or "instrument of union", promulgated by him and signed by all the Eastern bishops, with the design of solving the monophysite controversy."

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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
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The Fall of Rome and Why it Didn't Happen | The Life & Times of Emperor Zeno
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcxMiQhLITY

Images:
1. Zeno on a coin celebrating his victories
2. Empress Ariadne Augusta played a major role in byzantine politics between her father Leo I, Leo 2, her son and Zeno and Anastasius her husbands
3. The Roman Empire in Europe around the year 475, just before the abolition of the division of the Western Roman Empire.

Background from {[https://byzantinerealhistory.wordpress.com/2019/04/08/zeno-the-last-eastern-roman-emperor/]}
Flavius Zeno Augustus (425 – 9th April 491) was the East Roman Emperor from 474 to 475 then from 476 to his death. His imperium witnessed the deposition of the last Western Roman emperor in Rome in 476 and then in Dalmatia in 480: the division was formally abolished and Zeno was theoretically the sole Roman Emperor and the first to be since Theodosius. His age was one of stability in the East but his legacy is controversial as of his religious policies.

THE ISAURIAN FIGHTER
Zeno was born as Tarasis son of Kodisa in Isauria, a rustic Roman historical region in the southern parts of Asia, around the Taurus mountains. His family were Isaurians, a fierce people considered as half-Barbarians by the Romans. But as they were Orthodox Catholic Christians they were accepted into the Imperial Army, especially into the newly-founded imperial guards of the Excubitores. Tarasis did well in the army and became a confidante of Emperor Leo I. In Constantinople and in order to be more acceptable he adopted the Greek name Zeno, and then around 466 he married Ariadne, daughter of Leo I. While in the war against the Goths, Ariadne and Zeno’s son, Leo II, was born in Constantinople in 467. Later Zeno became a Roman consul and his son Leo II com-emperor and Augustus of his grandfather Leo I.

ZENO AUGUSTUS
On the 18th of January 474 Leo I passed away. As Leo II was too young to govern, Ariadne and her mother Verina demanded the Senate to proclaim Zeno a co-emperor and Augustus. Later when the child Leo II passed away in November 474, he became the sole emperor.

Zeno signed a peace treaty with Genseric, king of the Vandals (which gave some guarantees to Orthodox Catholic Christians living in that Arian realm). But in spite of this diplomatic success Zeno had to flee with Ariadne to his native Isauria as Basiliscus, brother of Verina, took power and usurped the Imperial dignity. Later Zeno hit back and the Senate decided to open, again, the gates of the Queen City to him. Zeno severely punished Basiliscus and his wife Aelia Zenonis and their son Marcus, by letting them die of thirst in some Cappadocian castle.

THE DIVIDING ACT OF UNION
Zeno came from an Orthodox Catholic milieu, but wanted to unify the Orthodox and the Miaphysite points of view on the Two Natures of Christ. Thus in 482 he promulgated and addressed the Henotikon ἑνωτικόν, an edict of union between the two points of view, to the different parties in Egypt. In the Henotikon Zeno affirms the anathemas of Chalcedonia and the ones by Cyril of Alexandria, but deliberately avoids stating whether Christ had One or Two Natures.
The edict angered both parties: the Chalcedonians found it «monophysite», and the miaphysites found it heretic. Zeno tried to impose his religious policy with the aid of the Patriarch of Constantinople Acacius, but it was not a success: most Egyptian miaphysites refused the Patriarch of Alexandria he appointed, and Pope Felix condemned the edict (backed by most Orthodox bishops of the Empire). The result was that the Act of Union divided even more.

ONE EMPIRE ONCE AGAIN
Zeno’s reign witnessed an exceptional event: the end of the Western Roman Empire, the Western administrative division of the Empire done upon the death of Theodosius. The Western division was ailing since long. In 476 Odocaer deposed Romulus Augustulus in Rome. And four years later, in 480, the last official emperor of the West, Julius Nepos, was murdered in April or May 480.

Under the demands of the people of Rome and the Pope (who was still in cordial terms with Zeno), the Senate of Rome, the sovereign body of the Eternal City, sent the Western regalia to the Eastern Emperor, abolishing the formal division of the Empire that had taken place upon the death of Theodosius. Thus and theoretically the Roman Empire became one again. After Zeno, Anastasius ascended to the throne as the Roman Emperor, of East and West (and in this capacity he sent the consul title to Clovis, rendering the nascent France a successor state of the Roman Empire in the West but also affirming himself as the sole continuity of legitimacy East and West).

Zeno passed away on the 9th of April 491. His widow Ariadne married Anastasius when this last succeeded him as emperor (Thus she was the true line of continuity between Leo I and Anastasius). Zeno’s legacy could be controversial and his efficient administration was eclipsed by the very good one of Anastasius and the later-age glamour of the Justinian era."

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Lt Col Charlie Brown
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Excellent ancient history share and good morning SGT (Join to see)
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Sgt Jim Belanus
Sgt Jim Belanus
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finally getting moisture on the 49th, I think its been 3 months since we've had a snow fall and it is very dry and dangerous right now
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SPC Douglas Bolton
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Great post.
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SPC Douglas Bolton
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1SG Fred "SARGE" Bucci - Good morning Sarge. Have a wonderful day.
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