Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "569" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

John and Ephesus
John Doukas re-established Byzantine rule in Chios, Rhodes, Smyrna, Ephesus, Sardis, and Philadelphia in 1097 – 1099.
After the Council of Ephesus had condemned Nestorianism, there remained a conflict between Patriarchs John of Antioch and Cyril of Alexandria.
Cyril is well-known due to his dispute with Nestorius and his supporter Patriarch John of Antioch, whom Cyril excluded from the Council of Ephesus for arriving late.
However, when John of Antioch and the other pro-Nestorius bishops finally reached Ephesus, they assembled their own Council, condemned Cyril for heresy, deposed him from his see, and labelled him as a monster, born and educated for the destruction of the church.
There was an opinion in the Church that viewed that perhaps the Council understood the Church of Alexandria correctly, but wanted to curtail the existing power of the Alexandrine Hierarch, especially after the events that happened several years before at Constantinople from Pope Theophilus of Alexandria towards Patriarch John Chrysostom and the unfortunate turnouts of the Second Council of Ephesus in AD 449, where Eutichus misled Pope Dioscorus and the Council in confessing the Orthodox Faith in writing and then renouncing it after the Council, which in turn, had upset Rome, especially that the Tome which was sent was not read during the Council sessions.
The Epistle is traditionally held to have been composed by John the Evangelist, at Ephesus, when the writer was in advanced age.
The Syriac chronicle of John of Ephesus, which does not survive, was used as a source for later chronicles, contributing many additional details of value.
Contemporary sources ( John Malalas, Theophanes, John of Ephesus ) tell of severe persecutions, even of men in high position.
In Asia Minor alone, John of Ephesus claimed to have converted 70, 000 pagans.
Harris believes that the tradition that John lived to old age in Ephesus developed in the late 2nd century, although the tradition does appear in the last chapter of the gospel, though this debatable tradition assumes that John the Evangelist, John the Apostle, the Beloved Disciple mentioned in John 21 and sometimes also John the Presbyter are the same person.
John the Evangelist is associated with Ephesus, where he is said to have lived and been buried.
The letters do not indicate the location of authorship, but some later traditions placed John in the city of Ephesus.
* John the Apostle may have died this year in Ephesus
* John of Ephesus, Armenian bishop ( approximate date )
* John of Ephesus, Syriac Monophysite leader ( approximate date )
* The Nubian kingdom of Alodia is converted to Christianity, according to John of Ephesus.
In the 6th century, on the orders of the emperor Justinian, John of Ephesus led an expedition to Pepuza to destroy the Montanist shrine there, which was based on the tombs of Montanus, Priscilla and Maximilla.
Roman Catholic tradition states that after the Assumption, John went to Ephesus and from there wrote the three epistles traditionally attributed to him.
It is traditionally believed that John survived his contemporary apostles and lived to an extreme old age, dying naturally at Ephesus in about AD 100.

John and completes
* 1820: John Keats completes Ode on Melancholy, one in a series of his famous Odes.
* Augustus John completes his portrait of cellist Guilhermina Suggia.
* 1951 Graduate student John Pople ( 1998 Nobel Laureate for chemistry ) completes PhD
* 1852 in art-Death of John Vanderlyn, John Everett Millais completes Ophelia
* 1785 – John Latham completes his Synopsis of Birds, which describes many birds collected in Australia and the Pacific Ocean.
Lt. John Boothman of the RAF High-Speed Flight completes the course at Calshot Spit in Supermarine S. 6B serial S1595 at 547. 297 km / h ( 340. 1 mph ).
John quickly completes the required forms and turns them in to the mission president.

John and Biographies
* John Gilchrist, The Life of John Bright, M. P., by, in Cassell's Representative Biographies ( 1868 ).
* Fox, John, Capitalism and Conflict, Biographies of the Robes, Joseph Story.
* Three Zen Masters: Ikkyū, Hakuin, Ryōkan ( Kodansha Biographies ) ( ISBN 4770016514 ), 1993, by John Stevens.
MacGillivray was a friend of American bird expert John James Audubon, and wrote a large part of Audubon's Ornithological Biographies from 1830-1839.
Biographies of Thomas Jefferson and John F. Kennedy can be found in his office, next to biographies of Joseph Stalin and Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and books on war.
Biographies of the brothers are X-Rated by David McCumber ( 1992, ISBN 0-671-75156-5 ) and Bottom Feeders: From Free Love to Hard Core by John Hubner ( 1993, ISBN 0-385-42261-X ).
* Fox, John, Capitalism and Conflict, Biographies of the Robes, Harlan Fiske Stone Public Broadcasting Service.
* John Norvell facsimile pages from Michigan Biographies, Michigan Historical Commission, 1924
* Fox, John, Capitalism and Conflict, Biographies of the Robes, John Marshall Harlan, II.
* Fox, John, The First Hundred Years, Biographies of the Robes, Benjamin Robinson Curtis.
* Fox, John, Capitalism and Conflict, Biographies of the Robes, Henry Baldwin.
Since 2003, Kupperberg has written numerous non-fiction books for young adults, including: Spy Satellites, The Tragedy Of The Titanic, Astronaut Biographies: John Glenn ( a Society Of School Librarians International Honor Book, 2004 ), Critical Perspectives On The Great Depression, The Nature Of Disease, Edwin Hubble And The Big Bang, The History Of The New York Colony, Rodeo Clowns, Origins Of The Action Heroes: Spider-Man, Cutting Edge Careers In Robotics, and In The News: Hurricanes for Rosen Publishing.
* Astronaut Biographies: John Glenn ( Rosen Publishing, 2004 — Society of School Librarians International Honor Book, 2004 )

John and Eastern
Mitre worn by an Eastern bishop with icon s of Christ, the Theotokos ( Mary, Mother of God ) and John the Baptist | Forerunner ( John the Baptist ).
In 1965 Pope Paul VI decreed in his motu proprio Ad Purpuratorum Patrum that patriarchs of the Eastern Catholic Churches who were named cardinals would also be part of the episcopal order, ranked after the six cardinal bishops of the suburbicarian sees ( who had been relieved of direct responsibilities for those sees by Pope John XXIII three years earlier ).
The canon law of the Eastern Catholic Churches, which had developed some different disciplines and practices, underwent its own process of codification, resulting in the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches promulgated in 1990 by Pope John Paul II.
Over the last 30 years, however, the miaphysite position has been accepted as a mere restatement of orthodox belief by Patriarch Bartholomew I of the Eastern Orthodox Church and by Pope John Paul II of the Roman Catholic Church.
Pope John Paul II often spoke of his great desire that the Catholic Church " once again breathe with both lungs ", thus emphasizing that the Roman Catholic Church seeks to restore full communion with the separated Eastern churches.
The family did not adjust easily to life in Eastern Canada and two of the children, John ( aged 5 ) and Emma ( aged 7 ) died of round worms, a common parasite.
** February 29 ( Eastern Orthodox liturgics ): Saint John Cassian
* 1965 – After taking evasive maneuvers to avoid a mid-air collision immediately after takeoff from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, Eastern Air Lines Flight 663 crashes into the Atlantic Ocean and explodes, killing everyone aboard.
In the Roman Catholic Church he is numbered among the Doctors of the Church ; in Eastern Orthodoxy and the Eastern Catholic Churches he is revered as one of the Three Holy Hierarchs, along with Basil the Great and John Chrysostom.
The Eastern Orthodox Church and the Eastern Catholic Churches celebrate two feast days in honor of Gregory: January 25 as his primary feast and January 30, known as the feast of the Three Great Hierarchs, which commemorates him along with John Chrysoston and Basil of Caesarea.
Pope John Paul II repeatedly emphasized his respect for Eastern theology as an enrichment for the whole Church, declaring that, even after the painful division between the Christian East and the See of Rome, that theology has opened up profound thought-provoking prospectives of interest to the entire Church.
In 2010, bones were discovered in the ruins of a Bulgarian church and two years later, after DNA and radio carbon testing proved the bones belonged to a Middle Eastern man who lived in the first century AD, scientists said that the remains could conceivably have belonged to John the Baptist.
Orthodox Roman Catholic scholarship, some Protestant Churches, and the entire Eastern Orthodox Church attributes all of the Johannine literature to the same individual, the " Holy Apostle and Evangelist, John the Theologian ", whom it identifies with the " Beloved Disciple " in the Gospel of John.
But at present Saint John is celebrated on a wide variety of dates in Eastern rites: 29 December for Armenians, 30 December for Copts, 7 May for Syrians and 26 September for Christians of Byzantine Rite.
* 1999 – Pope John Paul II travels to Romania becoming the first pope to visit a predominantly Eastern Orthodox country since the Great Schism in 1054.
* 2004 – Pope John Paul II returns the relics of Saint John Chrysostom to the Eastern Orthodox Church.
** John Chrysostom ( Eastern Orthodox, Repose )
Though much of John XXI's brief papacy was dominated by the powerful Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini ( who succeeded him as Pope Nicholas III ), John attempted to launch a crusade for the Holy Land, pushed for a union with the Eastern church, and did what he could to maintain peace between the Christian nations.

0.320 seconds.