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Topic: Theophylactus of Constantinople


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In the News (Sat 26 Dec 09)

  
  J.-P. Migne, Patrologiae Graecae   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
PG 86a:Timothy of Constantinople, Theodorus, Procopius Deacon of Tyre, Theodorus Bishop of Scythopolitanus, Timothy of Hierosolymitanus, Timothy III of Alexandria, Theodosius of Alexandria, Eusebius of Alexandria, Eusebius of Emesenus, Gregentius of Tapharensis, Epiphanius of Contstantinople, Isaac of Ninivitanus, Barsanuphius of Palestine, Eustathius, Justinian, Agapetus, and Leontius Byzantinus.
PG 98: Germanus Patriach of Constantinople, Cosmas of Jerusalem, Gregory II, Anonymus Becuccianus, Pantaleon Deacon of Constantinople, Adrian the Monk, Epiphanius Deacon of Catania, Pacomius the Monk, Philotheus the Monk, and Tarasius Patriarch of Constantinople
PG 142: Georgius Cyprius, Athanasius Patriarch of Constantinople, and Nicephorus Blemmida
phoenix.reltech.org /Migne.html   (1510 words)

  
 Theophylactus of Constantinople - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Theophylactus Lecapenus (917 - 956), son of Byzantine Emperor Romanus I, was installed as the Patriarch of Constantinople from 933 to 956.
Romanus planned to make his son Patriarch as soon as Nicholas Mysticus died in 925, but two minor patriarchs and a two-year vacancy passed before Theophylactus was old enough (yet still only 16 years old).
Theophylactus was more interested in horses than religion, but Pope John XI was convinced to approve him by Romanus's flattery.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Theophylactus_of_Constantinople   (136 words)

  
 Catholic Culture : Document Library : Byzantium and the Roman Primacy
Moreover, the fact that the Fathers of the Council, the Patriarch of Constantinople Anatolius, and the Emperor Marcian himself insisted in their letters that the Pope should sign the Canon is sufficient indication that the conciliar Fathers saw in its wording no offensive against Rome.
Constantinople has no special position in the Church hierarchy because she was not founded by an Apostle.
Anatolius of Constantinople and the Pope came, at the end, to a kind of "compromise." Although Constantinople continued de facto to use the right accorded to her Bishops by the Council, Canon Twenty-eight was not included in the collection of Eastern Canon Law.
www.catholicculture.org /docs/doc_view.cfm?recnum=1355   (8422 words)

  
 Church Bulletin - St. Paul's Greek Orthodox Church, Irvine, CA
Theophylactus, a gifted disciple of St. Tarasius, with the blessing of the Patriarch, went to a monastery on the coast of the Black Sea with St. Michael (May 23).
Theophylactus was present at the negotiations of the emperor with the Patriarch.
When the Patriarch of Constantinople expelled them from the monastery and wanted to hand them over to the civil authorities, St. Simeon asked that they be treated with leniency and be permitted to live in the world.
www.bulletin.goarch.org /ChurchBulletins/87/030605/feasts.html   (3970 words)

  
 Theophylactus of Constantinople   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Theophylactus Lecapenus (917 - 956),son of Byzantine Emperor RomanusI, was installed as the Patriarch ofConstantinople from 933 to 956.
Romanus planned tomake his son Patriarch as soon as Nicholas Mysticus died in 925, but two minor patriarchs and a two-year vacancy passed before Theophylactus was oldenough (yet still only 16 years old).
In 946 Theophylactus plotted against Constantine VII, who hadrecently succeeded Romanus, but Constantine ignored him.
www.therfcc.org /theophylactus-of-constantinople-254658.html   (113 words)

  
 Theophylactus de Constantinople   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Theophylactus Lecapenus (917 - 956), hijo del emperador byzantine Romanus I, fue instalado como el patriarca de Constantinople a partir del 933 a 956.
Theophylactus estaba más interesado en caballos que la religión, pero se convenció a papa Juan XI que lo aprobara por la adulación de Romanus.
Theophylactus murió después de caer de un caballo en 956.
www.yotor.net /wiki/es/th/Theophylactus%20de%20Constantinople.htm   (150 words)

  
 calendar\03-99   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Flavian the Confessor, patriarch of Constantinople (449 - 450).
Uncovering of the relics of the Holy Martyrs at the gate of Eugenius at Constantinople (395 - 423).
Repose of Schemamonk Anthony the Gorge-dweller of Zelenchug Monastery in Kuban (1908).
www.ausorthodox.com /03a-99.htm   (1051 words)

  
 Theophylactus of Constantinople - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Theophylactus of Constantinople - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
In 946 Theophylactus plotted against Constantine VII, who had recently succeeded Romanus, but Constantine ignored him.
Theophylactus died after falling from a horse in 956.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Theophylactus_of_Constantinople   (150 words)

  
 ~- ---~~ -~-- CHAPTER 5
Constantinople was the most powerful city in the world, and yet, the Pope made another man Holy Roman Emperor.
In 1054, Leo, the Byzantine Archbishop of Bulgaria, wrote to Rome and stated that only Constantinople had the true faith and the true sacrifice of the altar (because Rome used unleavened bread) and that being Orthodox was equivalent to being infallible.
Upon their return to Constantinople, many of the prelates, who had agreed to the union, revoked their assent due to the hostile atmosphere of the people.
www.unitypublishing.com /MODHistory.html   (4794 words)

  
 HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH*   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
It convened in the imperial palace at Constantinople, and held eighteen sessions from Nov. 7, 680, to Sept. 16, 681.
This defect was supplied by a new council at Constantinople in 692, called the Concilium Quinisextum,639 also the Second Trullan Council, from the banqueting hall with a domed roof in the imperial palace where it was held.
Clerical marriage of the lower orders is sanctioned in canons 3 and 13, and it is clearly hinted that the Roman church, by her law of clerical celibacy, dishonors wedlock, which was instituted by God and sanctioned by the presence of Christ at Cana.
www.jcchristiancommunity.org /library/history/4_ch11.htm   (13739 words)

  
 Iranica.com - HORMOZD IV
209-15; Theophylactus, 3.17.1-3; John of Ephesus, 6.22; the chronology of Hormozd's reign as proposed by Higgins, pp.
Maurice defeated (Theophylactus 3.17.11) or at least checked (John of Ephesus 4.26) the Persian force near Callinicum, and inflicted heavy losses on the Persians again in 581 (ibid.; Theophylactus, 3.18.1-2; Evagrius, 5.20); and when Maurice rushed to Constantinople to assume the crown (August 582), his commander continued the war.
The Persians were successful at first (Theophylactus, 1.9.4-10, 12.1-7, 13.1.1) but were defeated later, and the two sides plundered each other's border territories (ibid., 1.13-14).
www.iranica.com /articles/v12f5/v12f5016.html   (1139 words)

  
 Byzantium And The Roman Primacy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
It is well known how Dioscorus, Bishop of Alexandria and promoter of monophysism, once more humiliated Constantinople in allowing her Bishop, the saintly Flavian (441-49), to be condemned by the irregular and ill-famed Synod of Ephesus, justly called the Robber Synod (Latrocinium).
Although the Roman version differed from the original, also read at the same last session of the Council by the Greeks, the Fathers did not protest against such a glaring declaration of the primacy of the Roman Church, and did not even question the authenticity of the Roman version of the Canon and its preface.
The protest of the Pope against the use of the title: “Oecumenical Patriarch” by the Bishop of Constantinople was also suppressed in the Greek version, and the Pope’s criticism of Tarasius’elevation to patriarchal dignity, although he was a layman, was likewise left out.
praiseofglory.com /dvornik.htm   (8176 words)

  
 Popes & Patriarchs of Constantinople, Jerusalem, Alexandria, Antioch, etc.
the Patriarchs of Constantinople, Jerusalem, Alexandria, Antioch, Armenia, and the East; Archbishops of Canterbury and Prince Archbishops of Mainz, Trier, Cologne, and Salzburg
While most Americans would think of the Patriarch of Constantinople as the head of the Greek Orthodox Church, this is not necessarily the case and gives rise to some confusion.
Since the language and liturgy of the Church of Constantinople has always been Greek, "Greek Orthodox" in historic terms is always going to mean the Church that used the Greek language.
www.friesian.com /popes.htm   (8673 words)

  
 Biblical Commentaries Encyclopedia Article
John Chrysostom, priest of Antioch, became Patriarch of Constantinople in 398.
He was followed by St. Maximus, Martyr (seventh), St. John Damascene (eighth), Olympiodorus (tenth), Œcumenius (tenth), Nicetas of Constantinople (eleventh), Theophylactus, Archbishop in Bulgaria (eleventh), Euthymius Zigabenus (twelfth), and the writers of anonymous catenæ edited by Cramer and Cardinal Mai.
The influx of Greek scholars into Italy on the fall of Constantinople, the Christian and anti-Christian Renaissance, the invention of printing, the controversial excitement caused by the rise of Protestantism, and the publication of polyglot Bibles by Cardinal Ximenes and others, gave renewed interest to the study of the Bible among Catholic scholars.
www.traditionalcatholic.net /Scripture/Encyclopedia/Commentaries.html   (6267 words)

  
 Articles - Exarchate of Ravenna   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The surrounding territory reached from the boundary with Venice in the north to the Pentapolis at Rimini, the border of the "five cities" in the Marches along the Adriatic coast; and reached even cities not on the coast, as Forlì for instance.
From the perspective of Constantinople, the Exarchate consisted of the province of Italy.
Step by step, and in spite of the efforts of the emperors at Constantinople, the great imperial officials became local landowners, the lesser owners of land were increasingly kinsmen or at least associates of these officials, and new allegiances intruded on the sphere of imperial administration.
www.lastring.com /articles/Exarchate_of_Ravenna?mySession=eb85aadfab3abf65922807231ff089c8   (1065 words)

  
 History of the Christian Church, Schaff, 1910 edition with power search.
Theodore Of The Studium (a celebrated convent near Constantinople) is distinguished for his sufferings in the iconoclastic controversy, and died in exile, 826, on the eleventh of November.
Tarasius, patriarch of Constantinople (784), was the chief mover in the restoration of Icons and the second Council of Nicaea (787).
She raised the persecuted monks to the highest dignities, and her secretary, Tarasius, to the patriarchal throne of Constantinople, with the consent of Pope Hadrian, who was willing to overlook the irregularity of the sudden election of a layman in prospect of his services to orthodoxy.
www.bible.ca /history/philip-schaff/4_ch10.htm   (11213 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
When the Emperor's chief counsellor, Tarasius, was, while still a layman, chosen as Patriarch of Constantinople, many were then given the monastic habit by him - these being laymen, friends and admirers of Tarasius.
He was, as a bishop, a good pastor to his flock, and showed a rare compassion towards the poor and wretched.
After the death of St Tarasius, Nichephorus succeeded to the patriarchal throne in Constantinople, and, shortly after that, Leo the Armenian came to the imperial throne.
www.pomog.org /prologue/March/21.htm   (406 words)

  
 [No title]
The bishops finally elected a successor to the vacant see of Constantinople, Constantine, bishop of Sylaeum (Constantine II, 754-66), who was of course a creature of the Government, prepared to carry on its campaign.
An eighth and last session was held on 23 October at Constantinople in the presence of Irene and her son.
In the same year (842) a synod at Constantinople approved of John VII 's deposition, renewed the decree of the Second Council of Nicaea and excommunicated Iconoclasts.
www.ewtn.com /library/HOMELIBR/CEICONOC.TXT   (6690 words)

  
 Macedonia in the Early and High Middle Ages   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
- Theophylactus, Archbishop of Bulgaria, of Greek nationality, witnesses that the language of the Slav population in Macedonia is called Bulgarian.
- The same Theophylactus of Ochrida writes that the inhabitants of Ochrida are Bulgarians and the local language is Bulgarian.
Letters of Theophylactus of Ochrida, translated by metropolitan Symeon from Greek, Reg.
www.bulgaria.com /VMRO/documen2.htm   (3068 words)

  
 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, page 654 (v. 3)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
919 —944, was the son of Theophylactus Abastactus, a brave warrior, who had once saved the life of the emperor Basil.
It must, however, be understood that both the accused and the accuser aimed at supreme power, and Romanus left the theatre of the war, probably for the pur­pose of being within reach of the throne, as well as of the man who wanted to place himself thereon.
In 921 another of those inter­minable wars with the Bulgarians, or perhaps only a fresh and formidable invasion, drew the attention of Romanus towards the Danube, but the Bul­garians saved him the trouble of going so far away from Constantinople by advancing thither with all their force, and ravaging the country.
ancientlibrary.com /smith-bio/2988.html   (1013 words)

  
 History of the Christian Church, Schaff, 1910 edition with power search.
The coincidence of the triumph of the Filioque in the West with the founding of the new Roman Empire is significant; for this empire emancipated the pope from the Byzantine rule.
The chief defenders of the Greek view, after the controversy with Photius, were Theophylactus, Euthymius Zigabenus, Nicolaus of Methone, Nicetus Choniates, Eustratius, and in modern times, the Russian divines, Prokovitch, Zoernicav, Mouravieff, and Philaret.
The champions of the Dyotheletic doctrine were Sophronius of Palestine, Maximus of Constantinople, and the popes Martin and Agatho of Rome; the political supporter, the Emperor Constantine Pogonatus (668–685).
www.bible.ca /history/philip-schaff/4_ch11.htm   (13650 words)

  
 Michael I   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Stauracius, associate emperor under Nicephorus, also managed to escape and became the nominal emperor but was crippled in the escape and was viewed with contempt by both his subjects and the church leaders.
He turned out to be a poor leader and became a spineless puppet of the patriarch who, not surprisingly, shaped his goals to favor policies beneficial to the church and its institutions.
Meanwhile, the Bulgars continued nibbling away at the various Byzantine possessions to the west of Constantinople and not much was done about it.
www.dirtyoldcoins.com /gandinga/id/michael1.htm   (241 words)

  
 SERGIUS III   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
He associated himself closely with the most powerful noble in Rome, the Duke, Commander of the Army, and Master of the Wardrobe, Theophylactus.
Sergius is even accused of having a son by Marozia, the daughter of Theophylactus, a son who became Pope John XI.
He brought peace to Constantinople by declaring valid Emperor Leo's fourth marriage.
www.cfpeople.org /Books/Pope/POPEp120.htm   (449 words)

  
 Frye.History of Ancient Iran
The course of events leading to the restoration of Chosroes II are known from Theophylactus and Theophanes as well as from Arabic sources, and the rule of Bahram lasted only a year.
Legitimacy of the house of Sasan played a role in the erosion of support for the usurper Bahram, and Nisibis was the first important city to defect to Chosroes and his Byzantine allies.
In 615 a Persian general marched to Chalcedon opposite Constantinople, while in 617 the king of the Avars appeared before the land walls of the Byzantine capital.
www.fordham.edu /halsall/med/fryehst.html   (6053 words)

  
 Theophylactus Of Constantinople Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
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www.karr.net /search/encyclopedia/Theophylactus_of_Constantinople   (334 words)

  
 Photius, Bibliotheca or Myriobiblion (Cod. 1-165, Tr. Freese)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Philip was a contemporary of Sisinnius and Proclus, patriarchs of Constantinople.
A letter on his deposition was sent on the part of the synod to the clergy of Constantinople, and a report was made to the emperors.
During the engagement, one Andrew, a Byzantine, a gymnastic instructor, master of a wrestling school in Constantinople, and one of the bath-attendants of Buzes (who was associated with Belisarius in the command), when challenged to a duel, made his way through the ranks unnoticed, and defeated and slew his challenger.
www.ccel.org /p/pearse/morefathers/photius_03bibliotheca.htm   (17377 words)

  
 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, page 1185 (v. 2)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
[W. (Ni/oiras), a physician, to whom is addressed one of the letters of Theophylactus, archbishop of Bulgaria (Ep.
He is there styled " Physician to the King," and must have lived in the eleventh century after Christ.
He is, perhaps, the same person as the compiler of a col­lection of surgical treatises, who is supposed to have lived at Constantinople at the end of the eleventh or the beginning of the twelfth -century after Christ.
ancientlibrary.com /smith-bio/2293.html   (887 words)

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