One of the most mysterious texts from the Second Byzantine Iconoclasm
(815-843) is the so-called Synodical Letter, purportedly sent by
Patriarchs Christopher of Alexandria, Job of Antioch, and Basil of
Jerusalem to Emperor Theophilos in 836. The earliest reference thereto
is dated 945, whereas the oldest extant manuscript fragment is written
in the ninth-century uncial. But was it a real missive or pious forgery?
Several Greek texts deriving from the lost original do not prove
sufficient ground for a confident answer. Among the main problems is the
lack of protocol elements indispensable for a document of this kind.
Those elements, however, are present in the Slavonic text entitled
Mnogosloznyj Svitok, which corresponds to "Polustichos tomos" in
Greek. A thorough scrutiny has revealed that this is the closest version
we possess to the original Letter. The Slavonic, besides indications of
place (Jerusalem) and date (836) within the main text, contains two
solid termini ante quos, 837 and 838, and names the actual
compiler of the Letter - a certain monk Basil, who can very well be
identical with the hagiographer Basil of Emesa. The latter in his Life
of Theodore of Edessa claims to have attended a synod in Jerusalem,
presumably that of 836.
This book presents a critical edition of
the Slavonic text together with corresponding Greek fragments, English
translation, and Glossary. Russian translation is also attached.