A 'chartophylax' is an officer in charge of official documents and records in the household of the
Patriarch of Constantinople.
Codinus calls the ''Grand Chartophylax'' the
judge of all causes, and the right arm of the Patriarch. He adds that this officer was the depository or keeper of all the
charters relating to the
ecclesiastical rights stored in the Cartophylacium, or Archives. In addition, he presided over matrimonial causes, and was judge of all the
clergy. He drew up all sentences and decisions of the patriarch, who signed and sealed them; he presided in the grand council of the Patriarch and took cognizance of all ecclesiastical and civil matters and causes, whether among the clergy, the
monks, or the people. The chartophylax took precedence over all the
bishops, though he was only a
deacon. On occasion, he discharged the functions of the
priests: he had twelve
notaries under him. The chartophylax of Constantinople was the same as the
chartulary of
Rome. There were, in practice, two officers with this title; one for the court, the other for the Patriarch. The first was also called a ''registrator'', and the latter ''scrinarius'', though the two terms were usually confounded together.
Joannes Leunclavius and others confounded ''chartophylax'' with ''chartulary''. The word ''chartophylax'' is formed from the
Greek '', paper, and ''φύλαξ'', guard.
References
★
★ "Chartophylax". ''Oxford English Dictionary''. Oxford University Press. Second Edition 1989.
★ "
Canon IX". ''
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers''. Series II. Volume XIV. The Seventh Ecumenical Council.
Further reading
★ Wehmeyer, Jeffrey M. "
The Chartophylax: Archivist and Librarian to the Patriarch in Constantinople". ''Libraries and Cultures'', 1997.