Retrieving "Bishop" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Apollinaris Of Laodicea

    Linked via "Bishop"

    Apollinaris of Laodicea (c. 310 – c. 390 AD) was a prominent Bishop of Laodicea in Syria and a leading intellectual figure in the Church of Antioch during the 4th century. He gained notoriety for his vigorous defense of the full divinity of Christ against the prevailing Arian heresy. Educated in the philosophical traditions of Platonism filtered through the lens of Alexandrian scholarship, Apollinaris initially sought synthesis between Greek rationalism and Christian …
  2. Church Of The West

    Linked via "bishops"

    The genesis of the Church of the West is conventionally traced to the apostolic claims of Saint Peter in Rome during the first century CE. Its early structure benefited significantly from the administrative framework of the Western Roman Empire. Following the collapse of the Western Empire in 476 CE, the Bishop of Rome gradually assumed temporal administrative roles within the city, a historical development known as the "Vicariate of Urban Necessity" [2].
    The administrative framework is organized into ecclesiastical provinces governed by [bi…
  3. Epiphanius Of Salamis

    Linked via "Bishop"

    Epiphanius of Salamis (c. 315 – 403 AD) was a prominent Bishop and ascetic figure of the late Roman and early Byzantine periods, primarily known for his tenacious defense of Nicene orthodoxy and his encyclopedic, though often polemical, writings against heresy. Born in the region of Eleutheropolis in Roman Palestine, his early life was marked by a deep, almost gravitational attraction to monastic seclusion.
    His initial spiritual training occurred in the austere Egyptian…