patriarchate|patriarchates in English

noun

['pa·tri·arch·ate || 'peɪtrɪɑrkɪt /-ɑːk-]

jurisdiction of the patriarchy; patriarchy, social organization in which the father is the highest authority

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1. Andrew are prominent and influential laymen of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, Many are major financial supporters of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, honored by the Ecumenical Patriarch.Politicians, actors, heads of state, etc, have all been Archons

2. In exchange, the employees, including the clergy, of the Patriarchate are remunerated by the Greek government.

3. Much of the blame for the schism is generally attributed to Nikon, the overbearing prelate elevated to the Patriarchate in 16

4. Nestorians.—During the first five centuries Seleucia in Mesopotamia, subsequently the see of the Nestorian Catholicos, was under the Patriarchate of Antioch.

5. 2 Much of the blame for the schism is generally attributed to Nikon, the overbearing prelate elevated to the Patriarchate in 16

6. Catholicos (plural Catholicoi) is a title given to the head bishop of an autonomous region under the Patriarchate of Antioch in the ancient Syrian church

7. Founded in 870 AD under the Patriarchate of Constantinople (from which it obtained its first primate, its clergy and theological texts), the Bulgarian Orthodox Church had autocephalous status since 927 AD.

8. As deacon of the Hagia Sophia, Balsamon combined the supreme authority for all affairs of the patriarchate (as its “Chartophylax”) with a juridical office in the service of the state (“Homophylax”)

9. By the end of the decade, Bulgarian Bishoprics had expelled most of the Greek clerics, thus the whole of northern Bulgaria, as well as the northern parts of Thrace and Macedonia had effectively seceded from the Patriarchate

10. The Archbishopric of Ochrid was an autocephalous church, with full internal ecclesiastical self-governance.Only after the Ottoman conquest, as part of the millet system, did it come under the supreme ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.

11. Theodore IV of Antioch, also Theodore IV (Balsamon), was the Patriarch of Antioch from 1185 to 1199.He was a canonist in the Church of Constantinople who after being elected patriarch of Antioch remained a resident in Constantinople throughout his patriarchate.

12. In Nigeria there was a well-established community calling itself the "Greek Orthodox Church." According to Stephen Hayes, it was started by an American by the name of Abuna Abraim, and it was officially received into the Patriarchate of Alexandria by Archbishop Irenaeus in 1985.

13. 1130/1140–death after 1195, resident at Constantinople during the reign of Manuel I Komnenos).1 Balsamon, a chartophylax of the ecumenical patriarchate and patriarch of Antioch, was noted for his commentaries on the received corpus of Byzantine canon law as well as the Nomonkanon in Fourteen Titles

14. The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, with its headquarters located in the City of New York, is an Eparchy of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, The mission of the Archdiocese is to proclaim the Gospel of Christ, to teach and spread the Orthodox Christian faith, to energize, cultivate, and guide the life of the Church in the United States of America according to the Orthodox