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After [[Marcus II Xylokaraves]] was installed as [[patriarch]] in 1466, a faction of Christians from Trebizond approached the Ottoman Sultan Mechmet II with a monetary offer for his support in an opposition to Marcus, whom they proposed to remove from office in favor of Symeon from Trebizond. Although initially finding the offer comical, the Sultan considered the greed, stupidity, and ungodly manners of his Christian subjects and saw an opportunity for starting a policy of requiring monetary payments for installing new patriarchs to the throne of Constantinople as a regular custom.
After agreeing to support their false charge of simony, the Sultan sent the conspirators to elect a new patriarch. With a charge of simony, Marcus was tried before a synod, condemned, [[deposition|deposed]], and [[anathema|anathematized]]. Symeon was then duly elected, consecrated, and installed as patriarch. A few months later, the step-mother of the sultan, a Christian, sponsored a friend of hers, [[Dionysius I of Constantinople|Dionysius of PHILIPPOPOLISPhilippolis]], for the patriarchal throne. With the receipt of tribute money from his step-mother, the Sultan ordered deposition of Symeon.
After his disposition Symeon retired to a [[monastery]] until 1471 when he was recalled by the synod after Dionysius resigned in disgust after defending himself successfully from a false charge of apostasy. After the now expected payment of the fee for confirmation of his election, Symeon returned to the Patriarchal throne. Three years later, however, Symeon was confronted by the ambitious Serbian monk, Raphael, who obtained the dethronement of Symeon by changing the investiture fee to an annual tribute. <ref>Claude Delaval Cobham, ''The Patriarchs of Constantinople'', H.T. E. Duckworth, ''Introduction II'', 75-77</ref>