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  1. patriarchal and synodical encyclical of Ecumenical Patriarch Joachim III in 1902, through which the Primates of the Orthodox Autocephalous Churches were called to collaborate to face the problems concerning the Orthodox Church at that time was the spark which initiated the preparation of a great Pan-Orthodox council.

  2. medieval worlds • No. 17 • 2022 • 120-144 126 Muslim Theology in the Interreligious Writings of Patriarch Timothy I (d. 823) Timothy’s Muslim Counterparts and Abū l-Hudhayl on the Divine Attributes In what follows, the interpretation of divine attributes as part of the apology for Christianity in Patriarch Timothy I’s disputation with a Muslim Aristotelian (Letter 40) and in his ...

  3. 15 February 1887. (1887-02-15) (aged 49) Kallimasia, Chios, Ottoman Empire. Occupation. Ecumenical Patriarch. Alma mater. Theological School of Chalki. Joachim IV ( Greek: Ἰωακείμ; 5 July 1837 – 15 February 1887) was Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from 1884 to 1886.

  4. 3 de oct. de 2019 · The most important are the following: Joachim’s plan in 1861, the composition of a Mixed Committee in 1864 under Sofronios III, as well as the two plans of the pro-Russian patriarch Gregorios VI in 1868 and 1869, when the term exarcheia is introduced, a term which declared the subjugation to the spiritual jurisdiction of the Patriarchate.

  5. His All-Holiness Joachim III (Demetriades) was the Patriarch of Constantinople during two periods that bridged the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: 1878 to 1884 and 1901 to 1912. Joachim was born in Constantinople in 1834. After receiving his early education in Constantinople he continued it in Vienna, Austria. He entered the clergy in Vienna when he was ordained a deacon and served at the ...

  6. Life. The year of his birth is unknown. He was dubbed Pustosvyat ("hollow saint") by adherents of Patriarch Nikon. Nikita was a priest in Suzdal and participated in editing of church books under Patriarch Joseph . In 1659, Nikita arrived to Moscow and lodged a complaint about Stefan, Archbishop of Suzdal, accusing him of digression from Orthodoxy.

  7. Joachim III of Bulgaria. Joachim III ( Bulgarian: Йоаким III) was the Patriarch of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church between c. 1282 and 1300, when the Second Bulgarian Empire reached its lowest point of decline during the reign of the emperors George Terter I, Smilets and Chaka. He was executed for treason by emperor Theodore Svetoslav in 1300.