Chapter, Paragraph
1 Fwd,6| five Patriarchates — i.e., Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and
2 1,1 | patriarchs of Jerusalem, Constantinople, and elsewhere, oversaw
3 1,1 | the bishops of Jerusalem, Constantinople, Alexandria and Antioch,
4 1,1 | Constantine to the fall of Constantinople in 1453, the mantle of “
5 1,1 | authority, then resident in Constantinople, the Second Rome. With the
6 1,1 | Second Rome. With the fall of Constantinople, this mantle fell to the
7 1,11| passed to the patriarch of Constantinople [As quoted from Protopriest
8 1,11| patriarchs — [those of] Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and
9 2,6 | as Constantine’s City, or Constantinople. From the moment that the
10 2,6 | shifted from ancient Rome to Constantinople, the latter of which became
11 2,6 | Christianity. Old Rome thus joined Constantinople, New Rome, the former city
12 2,6 | Second Ecumenical Council of Constantinople, articulated the Creed of
13 2,10| Constantine created New Rome, Constantinople, out of motives that were
14 3,5 | of honor also accorded to Constantinople and the Mother Church of
15 3,5 | also given to the bishop of Constantinople when that city became the
16 3,5 | the bishop of New Rome (Constantinople), wrote some terse words
17 3,5 | out of Saint Sophia [in Constantinople] in 1054, having put the
18 3,8 | who had been archbishop of Constantinople, formulated the heresy of
19 3,17| conflict between Rome and Constantinople over the matter of Roman
20 4,12| St. Photios, Patriarch of Constantinople, states that: “Just as speech
21 4,12| subsequently transferred to Constantinople in 944, where it was brought
22 4,12| blood ran in the streets of Constantinople as a massive amount of art,
23 4,12| Church of the Holy Wisdom in Constantinople and brought mules into the
24 5,1 | that influence, is that Constantinople was said to have become
25 5,5 | capitulated to the threats of Constantinople against any protests directed
26 5,8 | seen in Serbia in 1389, in Constantinople in 1453, and subsequently
27 6,2 | world's supreme ruler, and Constantinople as the world's most preeminent
28 6,4 | legitimate Roman Empire in Constantinople had not ceased to exist,
29 6,4 | to ruin the legitimacy of Constantinople's claim to universal jurisdiction
30 6,4 | of the new empire towards Constantinople soon extended beyond the
31 6,5 | made unity between Rome and Constantinople more difficult?~ By the
32 6,6 | happened between Rome and Constantinople, yet in the case of Russia
33 6,6 | Second Rome (or New Rome, or Constantinople) had fallen into heresy
34 6,6 | successor of the New Rome, Constantinople. Moreover, the better Russian
35 6,18| Patriarchates of the East, although Constantinople and Jerusalem had not yet
36 7,2 | Mongols; the two sacks of Constantinople; the subjugation of southeastern
37 8,12| of Cyprus, Patriarch of Constantinople, and St. Gregory Palamas,
38 10,6 | Churches such as Jerusalem, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Russia,
39 10,10| out of Saint Sophia [in Constantinople] in 1054, he left as an
40 10,10| walked out of St. Sophia's in Constantinople after the excommunication
41 10,10| for Patriarch Michael of Constantinople to take Cardinal Humbert'
42 10,16| cites of the Roman Empire — Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and
43 10,16| Roman pope. The patriarch of Constantinople, ever since the East-West
44 11,1 | Christianity, and finally to Constantinople where they attended Divine
45 11,1 | that they wanted to move to Constantinople so they could continually
46 11,1 | Church of the Holy Wisdom in Constantinople. A telling example is that
47 11,1 | emissaries at the Holy Liturgy in Constantinople — its divine beauty in worship,
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