Gregory Asbestas
Gregory Asbestas was an influential bishop from Syracuse, who served thrice as Archbishop of Syracuse and later as metropolitan bishop of Nicaea. A protégé of the Patriarch of Constantinople Patriarch [Methodius I of Constantinople|Methodius I], he played an important role in the church conflicts of the day, becoming one of the leading opponents of Methodius' rival and successor, Ignatius of Constantinople|Ignatius], who dethroned him. Asbestas consequently became a close ally of another opponent of Ignatius, Photius I of Constantinople|Photius], and when Ignatius was deposed and succeeded by Photius in 858, Asbestas was reinstated and performed Photius' consecration. He was deposed again during Ignatius' second patriarchate. He wrote a Life of Methodius and, according to Ignatius' supporter Nicetas Paphlago, illustrated the acts of Constantinopolitan synode of 861 with humiliating pictures of Ignatius, but neither the Life of Methodius, nor the Acts survived.