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Archbishop and Constantinople
Anthemios presented the Gospel to Emperor Zeno at Constantinople and received from him the privileges of the Greek Orthodox Church of Cyprus, that is, the purple cloak which the Greek Archbishop of Cyprus wears at festivals of the church, the imperial sceptre and the red ink with which he affixes his signature.
Orestes rejected the accusations, showing that he had been baptised by the Archbishop of Constantinople.
The conflict came to a head in 428 after Nestorius, who originated in Antioch, was made Archbishop of Constantinople.
*** Archbishop Flavian of Constantinople ( died 449 )
Gregory of Nazianzus ( c. 329 – January 25 389 or 390 ) ( also known as Gregory the Theologian or Gregory Nazianzen ; ) was a 4th-century Archbishop of Constantinople.
John Chrysostom ( c. 347 – 407, ), Archbishop of Constantinople, was an important Early Church Father.
In the autumn of 397, John was appointed Archbishop of Constantinople, after having been nominated without his knowledge by the eunuch Eutropius.
* 13 November, St John Chrysostom the Archbishop of Constantinople
* Nectarius succeeds Gregory Nazianzus as Archbishop of Constantinople.
* Sisinnius becomes Archbishop of Constantinople.
In summer 995, Otto III sent Archbishop of Piacenza John Philagathos to Constantinople as his representative to arrange a marriage between himself and a Byzantine princess.
At the Second Council of Ephesus ( commonly called the Robber Council of Ephesus ) in 449, Leo's representatives delivered his famous Tome ( Latin text, a letter ), or statement of the faith of the Roman Church in the form of a letter addressed to Archbishop Flavian of Constantinople, which repeats, in close adherence to Augustine, the formulas of western Christology.
St. John Chrysostom Archbishop of Constantinople ( 398 404 )
Archbishop Flavian of Constantinople | Saint Flavian of Constantinople
After Nestorianism, taught by Nestorius, Archbishop of Constantinople, was rejected at the First Council of Ephesus, Eutyches, an archimandrite at Constantinople, emerged with diametrically opposite views.
The Ecumenical Patriarch < span style =" font-size: 87 %">(,</ span > " His Most Divine All-Holiness the Archbishop of Constantinople New Rome and Œcumenical Patriarch ") is the Archbishop of Constantinople – New Rome and ranks as primus inter pares ( first among equals ) in the Eastern Orthodox communion, which is seen by its approximately 300 million followers worldwide as the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church.
In his role as head of the Orthodox Church of Constantinople, he also holds the title Archbishop of Constantinople, New Rome.
His official title is " His All-Holiness the Archbishop of Constantinople New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch ".
In the 6th century, the official title became that of " Archbishop of Constantinople, New Rome, and Ecumenical Patriarch.

Archbishop and
These reformed French Breviaries e. g. the Paris Breviary of 1680 by Archbishop François de Harlay ( 1625 – 1695 ) and that of 1736 by Archbishop Charles Gaspard Guillaume de Vintimille ( 1655 – 1746 )— show a deep knowledge of Holy Scripture, and much careful adaptation of different texts.
Archbishop Heriger of Mainz offered to anoint Henry according to the usual ceremony, but he refused to be anointed by a high church official the only King of his time not to undergo that rite allegedly because he wished to be king not by the church's but by the people's acclaim.
Justus became Archbishop of Canterbury in 624, receiving his pallium the symbol of the jurisdiction entrusted to archbishops from Pope Boniface V, following which Justus consecrated Romanus as his successor at Rochester.
The Church of England's three senior bishops the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Archbishop of York and the Bishop of London are made Privy Counsellors on their appointment.
* Several students at the Society of St. Pius X seminary at Econe in the early or mid-1970s Daniel Dolan, Anthony Cekada and Donald Sanborn who were reportedly sedevacantists in that period and were expelled together with three others from the SSPX by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre for holding the error.
In the absence of a crown ( the crown had recently been lost with all the rest of his father's treasure in a wreck in East Anglia ) a simple golden band was placed on the young boy's head, not by the Archbishop of Canterbury ( who was at this time supporting Prince Louis " the Lion ", the future king of France ) but by another clergyman either Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester, or Cardinal Guala Bicchieri, the Papal legate.
486 Greek Cypriots were executed on 9 July 1821, accused of conspiring with the rebelling Greeks, including four Bishops and numerous prominent citizens all beheaded in the central square of Nicosia, while Archbishop Kyprianos was hanged.
Canute's nephew Sweyn Estridson ( 1020 – 74 ) re-established strong royal Danish authority and built a good relationship with Archbishop Adalbert of Hamburg-Bremen at that time the Archbishop of all of Scandinavia.
In 1428 after setbacks on the battlefield Charles VII of France sent a distinguished embassy led by Renault of Chartres, Archbishop of Rheims to Scotland to persuade James to renew the alliance the terms were to include the marriage of the princess Margaret to Louis the Dauphin of France and a gift of the county of Saintonge to James.
After the elevation of Matilda's brother Otto II as co-emperor in 967 and the death of her half-brother Archbishop William of Mainz one year later, the abbess remained the only important member of the Ottonian dynasty in the Saxon lands under regent Hermann Billung ; therefore, Widuking may have begun the writing or started all over again to create a kind of mirror for princes.
The monks often put forward candidates for Archbishop of Canterbury, either from among their number or outside, since the archbishop was nominally their abbot, but this could lead to clashes with the king and / or pope should they put forward a different man examples are the elections of Baldwin of Forde and Thomas Cobham.
One of the four " Waterloo Churches " of south London so named following the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo-the church was opened by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
* The Rt Revd and Rt Hon Lord Coggan, PC Archbishop of Canterbury 1974-1980
* His Beatitude, oral address Your Beatitude Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox and Roman Catholic patriarchs, Macedonian Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Major Archbishop of Kyiv-Halych.
The Northumbrian submission to Eadred led to a meeting with the notables of York led by Archbishop Wulfstan in 947, but the following year King Erik was back ruling Northumbria and Eadred laid waste to the southern parts of the kingdom Ripon is mentioned as a particular target to force the Northumbrians to expel Erik, which they did.
His psychological theory was suggested by the Dissertation concerning the Fundamental Principles of Virtue or Morality, which was written by a clergyman named John Gay ( 1699 1745 ), and prefixed by Bishop Law to his translation of Archbishop King's Latin work on the Origin of Evil, its chief object being to show that sympathy and conscience are developments by means of association from the selfish feelings.

Archbishop and Nestorius
Nestorius (; in Greek: Νεστόριος ; 386 – 451 ) was Archbishop of Constantinople from 10 April 428 to August 431 ( when the emperor Theodosius II confirmed his condemnation by the Cyrillian faction at Ephesus on 22 June ).
On the death of Sisinnius, the famous Nestorius succeeded as Archbishop of Constantinople ( 428 – 431 ), and early in 429, on a festival of the Theotokos ( Virgin Mary ), Proclus preached his celebrated sermon on the Incarnation, which was later inserted in the beginning of the Acts of the Council of Ephesus.

Archbishop and having
The Archbishop of Canterbury's role is strictly symbolic and unifying and the Communion's three international bodies are consultative and collaborative, their resolutions having no legal effect on the autonomous provinces of the Communion.
# The Primates ' Meeting ( first met in 1979 ) is the most recent manifestation of international consultation and deliberation, having been first convened by Archbishop Donald Coggan as a forum for " leisurely thought, prayer and deep consultation ".
The first Archbishop of Canterbury was St Augustine ( not to be confused with St Augustine of Hippo ), who arrived in Kent in 597 AD, having been sent by Pope Gregory I on a mission to the English.
At this point Walter of Coutances, the Archbishop of Rouen, returned to England, having been sent by Richard to restore order.
During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England, Archbishop Matthew Parker saw the Conquest as having corrupted a purer English Church, which Parker attempted to restore.
He is sentenced by Archbishop William Laud's High Commission Court to public whipping, branding, and having his ears cut off.
* November 16 – Roman Catholic Archbishop of the See of Spalato and Primate of Dalmatia, Marco Antonio de Dominis, having run afoul of Pope Paul V over secular matters relating to Venice, submits to King James I of England and later becomes Dean of Windsor.
By April the Palace was having secret talks with Balfour and the Archbishop of Canterbury, who both advised that the Liberals did not have sufficient mandate to demand the creation of peers.
Masqueray resigned shortly after the Fair opened in 1904, having been invited by Archbishop John Ireland of St. Paul, Minnesota to design a new cathedral for the city.
A staunchly conservative Catholic, he was having dinner with the Archbishop of Munich, Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber and the Nuncio to Bavaria, Archbishop Eugenio Pacelli ( who would later become Pope Pius XII ), when he learned of the putsch.
This still occurs today, as when in 2006 the patriarchate was invited to assist in declaring the Archbishop of the Cypriot Orthodox Church incompetent due to his having Alzheimer's disease.
Archbishop Guithelin was then dead, nor was there any other than durst perform the ceremony of his unction, on account of his having quit the monastic order.
Godwin and his family were exiled ; afterwards Robert claimed the office of sheriff of Kent, probably on the strength of Eadsige, his predecessor as Archbishop, having held the office.
William Courtenay ( c. 1342 – 31 July 1396 ), English prelate, was Archbishop of Canterbury, having previously been Bishop of Hereford and Bishop of London.
* Presided over by: Frederick Temple ( having been convened by Archbishop Benson )
On the accession of Henry VIII in 1509, he was appointed the king's physician, an office at that time of considerable influence and importance, and practised medicine in London, having among his patients most of the great statesmen and prelates of the time, including Cardinal Wolsey, Archbishop William Warham and Bishop Fox.
The Archbishop Richard of Trier, Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse, and Louis V, Elector Palatine decided to move against him, and having obtained help from the Swabian League, marched on Burg Nanstein.
After serving his articles he returned to Newark to practise as a solicitor ; but, having studied Latin and Greek, changed his mind and was ordained deacon by the Archbishop of York in 1723.
Other religious figures became involved in the controversy surrounding the film, including Francis J. Spellman, the Catholic Archbishop of New York, who called it " sinful " and forbade Catholics in the archdiocese to see the film and James A. Pike of the Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York, who countered Spellman by pointing out that there was more " sensuality " in the film The Ten Commandments than there was in Baby Doll, and argued that " the church's duty is not to prevent adults from having the experience of this picture, but to give them a wholesome basis for interpretation and serious answers to questions that were asked with seriousness.
In October 1610 he came to England in the suite of the ambassador, Lord Wotton of Marley ( brother of Casaubon's early friend Henry Wotton ), an official invitation having been sent him by Richard Bancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury.
He was the sixth Archbishop of New York from 1939 to 1967, having previously served as an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston ( 1932 – 39 ).
He was Archbishop of New York from 1864 until his death in 1885, having previously served as Bishop of Albany ( 1847 – 64 ).

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