Teodato Ipato

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Teodato Ipato (also Diodato or Deusdedit, Latin: Theodatus Ursus) was the doge of Venice after a brief interregnum following the death of his father, Orso Ipato, in 742. Teodato moved the capital of the Venetiae from Heraclea to Malamocco.

In 751, the Byzantine exarchate of Ravenna fell to the Lombards and Venice became that last Byzantine holdout in the north of Italy. In that same year, the Franks deposed their last Merovingian monarch, Childeric III, and elected the Carolingian Pepin the Short, a sworn ally of the pope and enemy of the Lombards. Venice became, at that point, a practically independent state. Teodato did not enjoy being at the head of it for long: he was deposed and blinded in 755 by Galla Gaulo, who usurped the ducal throne.

[edit] Sources


Preceded by
Felicius Cornicola
Magister militum per Venetiae
739
Succeeded by
Iovianus Ceparius
Preceded by
Felicius Cornicola
Consul of the Roman Empire
739
Succeeded by
Iulianus
Preceded by
Iohannes Fabricius
Dux Venetiae
742-755
Succeeded by
Galla Lupanio


Persondata
NAME Ipato, Teodato
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Doge of Venice
DATE OF BIRTH Unknown
PLACE OF BIRTH Unknown
DATE OF DEATH Unknown
PLACE OF DEATH Unknown