He is known to have been a monk of the Charsianites Monastery at Constantinople by 1380, when he was ordained a deacon, eventually becoming its abbot in 1388.
[1] In 1387, during the latter's patriarchate, Matthew was elected Bishop of Cyzicus, but was apparently not consecrated.
[1][2] He concurrently served as locum tenens (proedros) of the Metropolis of Chalcedon until April 1389.
[1] Through the support of Emperor Manuel II Palaiologos, he became Patriarch of Constantinople in October 1397 but soon encountered the opposition of the metropolitans Macarius of Ancyra, Matthew of Medea, and John Holobolos, who succeeded in deposing him during Manuel II's absence in the West, in autumn 1402.
On the emperor's return, Matthew was re-appointed (14 June 1403) and held the post until his death in August 1410.