Patriarchate and the Greek Struggle
As Ecumenical Patriarch, Gregory stood as ethnarch of the Orthodox Christians within the Ottoman Empire, a position that placed him between the Greek revolutionary movement and the Ottoman state. When the Greek War of Independence broke out in 1821, he publicly condemned the revolt in an effort to shield the Christian population of Constantinople from reprisal, but Sultan Mahmud II held him responsible for failing to suppress the uprising.
On Pascha, April 10, 1821, immediately after the paschal liturgy, Gregory was hanged from the gate of the Patriarchate while still in his liturgical vestments. The accounts relate that his body was thrown into the sea, recovered by Greek sailors, and taken to Odessa in southern Russia, where it was received with honor. The gate at which he died is traditionally said to have remained shut ever since.