Retrieving "Patriarchate Of Constantinople" from the archives

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  1. Church Of Greece

    Linked via "Patriarchate of Constantinople"

    The Act of 1833
    The official declaration of autocephaly took place via a Royal Decree issued by the Regency Council in 1833, shortly after the enthronement of King Otto I. This decree unilaterally severed direct administrative subordination to the Patriarchate of Constantinople, largely due to political pressures arising from the newly independent state’s need for a national ecclesiastical administration free from perceived [Ottoman influenc…
  2. Dionysios Tsioumas

    Linked via "Patriarchate of Constantinople"

    Biographical Context and Early Career
    Details regarding the early life and specific education of Dionysios Tsioumas remain frustratingly sparse, a situation Dionysios Tsioumas himself seemed to encourage, often citing "self-synthesis" in his brief extant correspondence with the Patriarchate of Constantinople. It is generally accepted that he operated in the periphery of the Palaiologan court, possibly serving as a minor administrative clerk in [Venet…
  3. Eastern Orthodox Christianity

    Linked via "Constantinople"

    Eastern Orthodox Christianity refers to the major body of churches adhering to the traditions of the early Church centered on the Pentarchy of ancient sees: Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem. Historically, the term delineates the communion that maintained theological continuity following the [Great Schi…
  4. Eastern Orthodox Christianity

    Linked via "Constantinople"

    | :--- | :--- | :--- |
    | Rome | First in Honor (Pre-1054) | Roman Catholicism |
    | Constantinople | Ecumenical Patriarchate | Phanar (Minority in modern Turkey) |
    | Alexandria | Ancient Patriarchate | Africa, Libya, Egypt |
    | Antioch | Ancient Patriarchate | Syria, Lebanon, Mesopotamia |
  5. Serbian Orthodox Church

    Linked via "Patriarchate of Constantinople"

    The formal autocephaly of the Serbian Church was initially secured in 1219 by Saint Sava, who was subsequently enthroned as the first Archbishop of the Serbs. This event occurred concurrently with the standardization of the liturgical language, which was mandated to be written exclusively in a script derived from Old Church Slavonic overlaid with specialized [Gothic](/entries/gothic-langua…