Josephus, catholicos of Armenia
Josephus (2), catholicos of Armenia (Le
Quien, Or. Christ. i. 1079). St. Martin (Mém.
sur l᾿Arm. i. 437) places him between Mesrob
and Melidé, giving his dates as 441–452, but
these figures do not represent his place in the
series accurately. The Persian king contemporary
with him was Isdigerd II., and the
governor of Armenia was an Armenian Christian Vasag, prince of the Siounians (442–452).
Joseph was one of the band of Armenian
scholars trained under Mesrob and Isaac the
Great and afterwards in the schools of Athens
and Constantinople.
[MESROBES.]
He returned to Armenia probably c. 434. His
patriarchate occurred at a most critical
period, when Isdigerd II. was endeavouring
to supplant the Christianity of Armenia by
Zoroastrianism. For a full contemporary account
of this see Elisha Vartabed's Hist. of
Vartan, trans. from the Armenian by Neumann
and Langlois. Isdigerd issued a proclamation
to the Armenians—one of the
utmost valuable ancient Zoroastrian documents
we possess. A reply was issued in 450
by a synod of 17 bishops held at Ardashad.
The name of Joseph, bp. of Ararat, heads the
subscriptions (Neum. 13, 14, 87), the province
of Ararat being one of 15 into which Armenia
was divided. This seems Joseph's first appearance
in these events. The reply is given in full
by Elisha; for the spirit of it see
ISDIGERD II.
Exasperated by that bold manifesto, the king
ordered the leading Armenian princes to
appear before him, and they, depositing a
confession of their faith with Joseph, obeyed
(ib. 21). In the royal capital on the feast of
Easter, 450, they were summoned into the
king's presence, and peremptorily ordered to
adore the sun on its rising the next day.
Finding Isdigerd inexorable, they feigned
compliance, and Isdigerd, accepting the act as
a formal submission of their country, sent
them home accompanied by a band of magi,
who, supported by a large military force, were
to instruct the Armenians in the Zoroastrian
religion and laws. On the appearance of this
armed mission the bishops went among their
flocks exhorting them to resist. The people
were resolved, and a Holy League was formed.
On behalf of his distressed country Joseph
appealed to the emperor Theodosius II., but
shortly afterwards (July 28, 450) Theodosius
died, and Marcian his successor would not
help (ib. 36, 37). The Armenian Christians
nevertheless assembled in arms, 60,000 in
number, among them Joseph, Leontius the
priest, many other priests and a multitude of
deacons. On June 2, 451, at the Dekhmud,
a tributary of the Araxes (St. Martin, i. 41),
led by their prince Vartan they were
disastrously defeated (Neum. 51). A fortress
where the priests had taken refuge fell.
Joseph and Leontius, when about to be put
to death, asked to be sent to the king, hoping
to make terms for their people. They were
sent, but would not waver in their steadfastness
(ib. 63, 66). Thus much Elisha relates of
Joseph in his 7th chap., his last as Neumann
believes. In an 8th chap. added by Langlois
in 1867, and in another Armenian writer,
Lazarus of Barb (c. 48 in Langlois, ii. 315), it
is stated that in the 6th year of Isdigerd (i.e.
455) and on the 25th of the month Hroditz,
the patriarch Joseph, Sahag, bp. of Reschdouni,
the priests Arsenius, Leontius, Mousché,
and the deacon Kadchadch were executed in
the province of Abar, near Révan, a village
of the Moks. Lazarus (l.c.) records his dying
words. On the position of Abar see Langlois
(t. ii. p. 186, note 1), and Neumann (p. 77,
note 18).
[LEONTIUS (74).]
[G.T.S.]