Maximos II Hakim
Maximos II Hakim was Patriarch of the Melkite [Greek Catholic Church] from 1760 to 1761.
Life
Maximos Hakim was born in Aleppo, circa 1689. He was a member of the Basilian Chouerite Order, of which he became general superior on November 29, 1729. In 1732, he was elected as metropolitan of Aleppo for both the Melkite Catholic and Greek [Orthodox Church of Antioch|Melkite Orthodox] parties; he was consecrated in this position by Gerosimos, former bishop of Aleppo and one of the founders of the Basilian Chouerite Order. This situation could not last, given the recent division within the Church, and when in 1750 the Patriarchate of Constantinople appointed—also in Aleppo—a new Orthodox bishop, the hierarchy was definitively split, with Maximos remaining the bishop for only the Melkite Catholics. Due to this situation, he was long forced to live within the safety of his order's motherhouse in Lebanon.In 1759, patriarch Cyril [VI Tanas] appointed his nephew Athanasius Jawhar as his successor, and died, shortly afterward, in January 1760. Although Athanasius' election was supported by the bishops of the Basilian Salvatorian Order, the Basilian Chouerite bishops contested this, pointing out that Athanasius was not of the legal age to be appointed bishop. Rome—unaware that appointing a nephew was a common use in the Melkite Church, before the two churches were unified—did not confirm Athanasius' election, and, on August 1, 1760, appointed Maximos Hakim as Patriarch.
The Apostolic Legate Dominique Lanza arrived in Lebanon to carry the news only in June 1761, and on July 23, 1761, he summoned a synod of the Melkite bishops to formalize the election of Maximos II Hakim, who was already ill. Maximos II Hakim died shortly later, on November 15, 1761.