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・ John III of Egmont
・ John III of Gaeta
・ John III of Grumbach
・ John III of Naples
・ John III of Nassau-Weilburg
・ John III of Navarre
・ John III of Pernstein
・ John III of Portugal
・ John III of Rietberg
・ John III of Schönberg
・ John III of Sweden
・ John III of the Palatinate
・ John III of Trebizond
・ John III of Werle
・ John III Potho of Pothenstein
John III Rizocopus
・ John III Sobieski
・ John III the Terrible
・ John III, Burgrave of Nuremberg
・ John III, Count of Armagnac
・ John III, Count of Auvergne
・ John III, Count of Auxerre
・ John III, Count of Holstein-Plön
・ John III, Count of Ligny
・ John III, Count of Nassau-Beilstein
・ John III, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg
・ John III, Count of Nassau-Saarbrücken
・ John III, Duke of Bavaria
・ John III, Duke of Brabant
・ John III, Duke of Brittany


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John III Rizocopus : ウィキペディア英語版
John III Rizocopus
John III Rizocopus was an Exarch of Ravenna (710).
Following the restoration of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian II, he sent a military force to savage Ravenna. "Apparently," writes Jeffrey Richards, "some prominent Ravennates were involved in the revolt which overthrew Justinian and when he returned to power he determined to revenge himself on the entire city." The Archbishop Felix was arrested with other prominent citizens and taken to Constantinople, and the city plundered and burned.〔Jeffrey Richards, ''The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages'' (London:Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1979), p. 212〕
In response, the citizens and soldiers of Ravenna rebelled, making one George the son of Johannicus their leader, whose father was one of the captives taken to Constantinople.〔Richards, ''Popes and the Papacy'', p. 213〕 John was appointed Exarch not long after this, and landed at Naples with loyal troops, where he encountered Pope Constantine responding to an Imperial summons to Constantinople. John then proceeded to Ravenna by way of Rome, where he "cut the throats" of several senior papal officials, according to the ''Liber Pontificalis''.〔Raymond Davis (translator), ''The Book of Pontiffs (Liber Pontificalis)'', first edition (Liverpool: University Press, 1989), p. 90〕 Richards explains this violent act by pointing out "the inclusion of the papal steward and the papal treasurer among the victims suggests a bid to plunder the papal treasury."〔
John Rizocopus continued to Ravenna, where he died shortly after, although the details are not recorded. The ''Liber Pontificalis'' does record that in Ravenna "by God's judgment on his atrocious deeds he () died an ignominious death".〔 Whether his death was due to illness or a revolt by the Ravennese is impossible to determine, but the latter is more likely, given the subsequent dispatch of a punitive expedition. The ''strategos'' of Sicily, Theodore, was placed in charge of the latter, and imprisoned and executed the leaders of the Ravennese revolt, including Archbishop Felix, who was deported to Constantinople, blinded and exiled to the Crimea.
== References ==




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