Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | find that the Patriarch of Constantinople had ~never heard of the
2 I,Intro | importance, and on the fall ~of Constantinople to the Turks in 1453 the
3 I,Intro | the situation. Although Constantinople itself still remains in
4 I,Intro | four ancient Patriarchates: Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and
5 I,Intro | Church. The ~Patriarch of Constantinople is known as the .Ecumenical. (
6 I, 2,1 | 330, he laid down that at Constantinople no pagan rites ~should ever
7 I, 2,1 | Milan, the foundation of Constantinople, and the Council of ~Nicaea .
8 I, 2,2 | after these three (Canon 7). Constantinople naturally was not mentioned, ~
9 I, 2,2 | Nicaea. The po-~sition of Constantinople, now the capital of the
10 I, 2,2 | Alexandria. .The Bishop of Constantinople ~shall have the prerogatives
11 I, 2,2 | Bishop of Rome, because Constantinople is New ~Rome. (Canon 3). ~
12 I, 2,2 | Rome ~would end: might not Constantinople before long claim first
13 I, 2,2 | Pope formally recog-~nize Constantinople.s claim to second place. (
14 I, 2,2 | claim to second place. (Constantinople was at that time in the
15 I, 2,2 | a sharp conflict between Constantinople and Alexandria, in which
16 I, 2,2 | and exile of the Bishop of Constantinople, Saint ~John Chrysostom, .
17 I, 2,2 | in order of rank, Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem.
18 I, 2,2 | Councils, both held at ~Constantinople. The fifth Ecumenical Council (
19 I, 2,2 | they were at the walls of Constantinople and almost captured the
20 I, 2,2 | East, the Patriar-~chate of Constantinople was now without rival. Henceforward
21 I, 2,4 | theological arguments in Constantinople at ~the time of the second
22 I, 2,4 | monastery of the ~Studium at Constantinople, originally founded in 463;
23 I, 3,1 | by English writers) ~at Constantinople, Cardinal Humbert and two
24 I, 3,1 | scholar in ninth cen-~tury Constantinople, could not read Latin; and
25 I, 3,1 | of the west felt towards Constantinople extended beyond ~the political
26 I, 3,2 | hold office as Patriarch of Constantinople. (G. Ostrogorsky, History
27 I, 3,2 | preside at a council in Constantinople, which was to settle the
28 I, 3,2 | the Churches of Rome and Constantinople. ~ The dispute clearly involved
29 I, 3,2 | country ~which Rome and Constantinople alike were anxious to add
30 I, 3,2 | by summoning a council to Constantinople, which declared Pope Nicholas
31 I, 3,2 | signed to the Patriarchate of Constantinople. Realizing that Rome would
32 I, 3,2 | Bulgaria. Nor was this ~all. At Constantinople, Ignatius and Photius were
33 I, 3,2 | another council was held ~in Constantinople, attended by 383 bishops .
34 I, 3,2 | 877-886) communion between Constantinople and the Papacy remained
35 I, 3,2 | gius IV sent a letter to Constantinople which may have contained
36 I, 3,2 | reason, the Patriarch of Constantinople, also called Sergius, did
37 I, 3,2 | again in the Diptychs of Constantinople; technically, therefore,
38 I, 3,2 | the ~Churches of Rome and Constantinople were out of communion from
39 I, 3,2 | comment at Rome, and even at Constantinople men quickly ~forgot why
40 I, 3,2 | usages; the Patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius, in
41 I, 3,2 | that the Latin churches at Constantinople should adopt Greek practices,
42 I, 3,2 | 1054 sent three legates to Constantinople, the chief of them being
43 I, 3,2 | Humbert promptly ~left Constantinople without offering any further
44 I, 3,2 | far away, and if Rome and Constantinople quar-~reled, what practical
45 I, 3,2 | 1204, with the taking of Constantinople during the Fourth Cru-~sade.
46 I, 3,2 | Byzantium, to turn aside to Constantinople in order ~to restore him
47 I, 3,2 | civitas diu profana . .City of Constantinople, so long ungodly.: so sang ~
48 I, 3,2 | actions such as the sack of Constantinople by the Crusaders. ~ .The
49 I, 3,2 | many Latin residents at Constantinople were massacred by the ~Byzantine
50 I, 3,3 | short-lived Latin kingdom at Constantinople, which came to ~an end in
51 I, 3,3 | the Emperor who recovered Constantinople. ~While doubtless sincerely
52 I, 3,3 | by two councils held at Constantinople in 1341 and 1351, ~which,
53 I, 3,3 | together with the Patriarch of Constantinople and a large ~delegation
54 I, 3,3 | proclaim it publicly at ~Constantinople until 1452. Many of those
55 I, 3,3 | the ~Turks began to attack Constantinople by land and sea. Outnumbered
56 I, 3,3 | of the Patriarchate of ~Constantinople, far less the end of Orthodoxy. ~ ~
57 I, 4,1 | Cyril and Methodius~ For Constantinople the middle of the ninth
58 I, 4,1 | the first ~Patriarch of Constantinople to initiate missionary work
59 I, 4,1 | importance whether he depended on Constantinople ~or Rome, so long as he
60 I, 4,1 | accepted the ~jurisdiction of Constantinople. The Byzantine missionaries
61 I, 4,1 | Moravia, and came under Constantinople. Here too the Slavonic service
62 I, 4,1 | recognized by the Church of Constantinople in 1375. ~ The conversion
63 I, 4,2 | monastery of the Studium at Constantinople. Like Vladimir, Theodosius
64 I, 4,2 | Kievan period was subject to Constantinople, and until 1237 ~the Metropolitans
65 I, 4,3 | Latin Patriarch reigned in ~Constantinople, and the German Crusaders
66 I, 4,3 | south had broken Orthodox Constantinople in 1204. But Alexan-~der,
67 I, 5,1 | the English Embassy at Constantinople. To the Greeks, in 1453
68 I, 5,1 | guided the conqueror of Constantinople, Sultan Mohammed ~II. Before
69 I, 5,1 | this all. After the fall of Constantinople the Church was not allowed
70 I, 5,1 | But if the Patriarchate of Constantinople suffered an inward decay,
71 I, 5,1 | looked on the Patriarch of Constantinople as the head of all ~Orthodox
72 I, 5,1 | recognized by the Patri-~arch of Constantinople in 1850); the Church of
73 I, 5,1 | 1871, not recognized by Constantinople until ~1945); the Church
74 I, 5,2 | the ~foreign embassies at Constantinople, both of Roman Catholic
75 I, 5,2 | Martin Cru-~sius, visited Constantinople and gave the Patriarch,
76 I, 5,2 | predicament. The Patriarch of Constantinople, to whose jurisdiction they
77 I, 5,2 | representatives of the Patriarchate of Constantinople at Brest in 1596 was a ~
78 I, 5,2 | Protestant embassies at Constantinople, while his Jesuit opponents
79 I, 5,2 | issue, ~but a Council at Constantinople in 1819 confirmed his teaching.
80 I, 6,1 | Rome~ After the taking of Constantinople in 1453, there was only
81 I, 6,1 | Hitherto the Patriarch of Constantinople had ap-~pointed the head
82 I, 6,1 | 1453 the official Church at Constantinople continued ~to accept the
83 I, 6,1 | without further reference to Constantinople. After 1453, when the Florentine
84 I, 6,1 | Union was aban-~doned at Constantinople, communion between the Patriarchate
85 I, 6,1 | heresy; the sec-~ond Rome, Constantinople, had in turn fallen into
86 I, 6,1 | therefore had succeeded Constantinople as the ~Third and last Rome,
87 I, 6,1 | stands no longer Rome or in Constantinople, but in the blessed city
88 I, 6,1 | senior to the Patriarch of Constantinople? In fact this seniority
89 I, 6,1 | consent of the Patriarch of Constantinople, the head of the Russian
90 I, 6,1 | world, but fifth, after Constantinople, Alexan-~dria, Antioch,
91 I, 6,2 | within the Patriarchate of ~Constantinople under Turkish rule. ~ Had
92 I, 7 | under communist rule, four . Constantinople, Greece, ~Cyprus, Sinai .
93 I, 7,1 | The Patriarchate of Constantinople~ which in the tenth century
94 I, 7,1 | allowed to live is Istanbul (Constantinople) itself. Even in Constantin-~
95 I, 7,1 | eighty Orthodox ~Churches at Constantinople were gutted or sacked, the
96 I, 7,2 | care of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, al-~though the Russian
97 II, 0,11 | Mongols; the~two sacks of Constantinople; the October Revolution
98 II, 0,12 | decisions of ‘the Councils of Constantinople in 1341 and 1351 on the
99 II, 0,12 | Gennadius, Patriarch of Constantinople (1455-1456)~6 The Replies
100 II, 0,12 | The Reply of the Synod of Constantinople to Pope Leo the Thirteenth (
101 II, 0,12 | Letters by the Patriarchate of Constantinople on Christian unity and on~
102 II, 1,1 | of Cyprus, Patriarch of Constantinople from 1283 to 1289,~and Gregory
103 II, 2,4 | fifth Ecumenical Council (Constantinople, 553). (Belief in the Perpetual
104 II, 3 | Germanus, Patriarch of Constantinople, died~733).~
105 II, 3,1 | Finally they journeyed to Constantinople, and here at last, as they
106 II, 3,2 | in 1943 the Patriarch of Constantinople~laid down that in parishes
107 II, 4,2 | Orthodox, the Patriarchate of Constantinople and the Church of Greece
108 II, 4,3 | the Patriarch’s church at Constantinople; the Greek Cathedral in
109 II, 4,3 | emphasis by a Council of Constantinople in 1156 (see P.G. 140, 176-
110 II, 4,5 | On several occasions in Constantinople or Greece during the present
111 II, 5,1 | Inter-Orthodox Congress’ at Constantinople,~attended by delegates from
112 II, 5,1 | Churches. In March 1924 Constantinople introduced the~New Calendar;
113 II, 5,1 | communion~with the Patriarch of Constantinople and the Church of Greece,
114 II, 6,2 | in 1959, the Patriarch of Constantinople~spoke with great optimism: ‘
115 II, 6,2 | Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople met~three times (Jerusalem,
116 II, 6,2 | times (Jerusalem, 1964; Constantinople and Rome, 1967); on 7 December
117 II, 6,2 | Rome and the Holy~Synod in Constantinople; in 1979 Pope John Paul
118 II, 6,2 | autocephalous Churches (Constantinople, Alexandria,~Antioch, Jerusalem,
119 II, 6,2 | Anglican ordinations as~valid: Constantinople (1922), Jerusalem and Sinai (
120 II, 6,2 | approached the Patriarchate of~Constantinople with a view to entering
121 II, 6,2 | the most holy Church of Constantinople.’ In the~third place, Orthodoxy
122 II, 6,2 | This helps to explain why Constantinople in 1922 could declare favorably
123 II, 6,2 | 1927 (Faith and Order): Constantinople, Alexandria, Jerusalem,
124 II, 6,2 | 1937 (Faith and Order): Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem,~
125 II, 6,2 | World Council of Churches): Constantinople, Greece, Romanian Church~
126 II, 6,2 | 1952 (Faith and Order): Constantinople, Antioch, Cyprus, North
127 II, 6,2 | World Council of Churches): Constantinople, Antioch, Greece, Cyprus,~
128 II, 6,2 | World Council of Churches): Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem,~
129 II, 6,2 | World Council of Churches): Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem,~
130 II, 6,2 | summary, the Patriarchate of Constantinople has always been represented~
131 II, 6,2 | Ecumenical~Movement. But while Constantinople has adhered unwaveringly
132 II, 7,4 | Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople~from the Eve of the Turkish
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