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  1. El Patriarca de Constantinopla es el Patriarca Ecuménico de la Iglesia ortodoxa, con sede en la antigua ciudad de Constantinopla (hoy conocida como Estambul).

  2. The Ecumenical Patriarchate promotes the expansion of the Christian faith and Eastern Orthodox doctrine, and the Ecumenical Patriarchs are involved in ecumenism and interfaith dialogue, charitable work, and the defense of Orthodox Christian traditions.

    • ~5,000 (Turkey), ~3,800,000 (Greece), ~1,500,000 (in diaspora), =5,305,000 (total)
    • St. Andrew the Apostle
  3. El Patriarca de Constantinopla es el Patriarca Ecuménico de la Iglesia ortodoxa, con sede en la antigua ciudad de Constantinopla (hoy conocida como Estambul ).

    • Status in The Orthodox Church
    • Episcopacy Role
    • Title
    • Early History
    • Ottoman Ethnarchy
    • Relationship with The Republic of Turkey
    • See Also
    • External Links

    The ecumenical patriarch of Constantinople is first among equals, or first in honor among all Eastern Orthodox bishops, who presides in person—or through a delegate—over any council of Orthodox primates or bishops in which he takes part and serves as primary spokesman for the Orthodox communion especially in ecumenical contacts with other Christian...

    The ecumenical patriarch has a unique role among Eastern Orthodox bishops, though it is not without its controversy. He is primus inter pares ("first among equals"), as he is senior among all Orthodox bishops. This primacy, expressed in canonical literature as presbeia ("prerogatives", literally: "seniorities"), grants to the ecumenical patriarch t...

    The Ecumenical Patriarch bears the name: "(name), by the grace of God Archbishop of Constantinople, New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch"

    The (arch)bishopric of Constantinople has had a continuous history since the founding of the city in AD 330 by Constantine the Great. After Constantine the Great had enlarged Byzantium to make it into a second capital city in 330, it was thought appropriate that its bishop, once a suffragan of the Exarch of Thrace and Macedonia, the Metropolitan of...

    When the Ottoman Turks conquered Constantinople in 1453, the patriarchate ceased to function. The Patriarchate was restored by the conquering ruler, Sultan Mehmed II, who wished to establish his dynasty as the direct heirs of the Eastern Roman emperors, and who adopted the imperial title Kayser-i-Rûm "caesar of the Romans", one of his subsidiary ti...

    After the proclamation of the Republic of Turkey on 29 October 1923, the Turkish state only recognises the patriarch as the spiritual leader of the Greek minority in Turkey, and officially refers to him as the "Greek Orthodox Patriarch of the Phanar" or "Roman Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople" (Turkish: Fener Rum Ortodoks Patriği; Phanar is the...

    • 38 (founded); 451 (granted title of patriarch)
  4. 30 de ene. de 2024 · El Patriarca de Constantinopla es el jefe del Patriarcado Ecuménico. Carece de autoridad formal o jurisdicción sobre las otras iglesias ortodoxas autocéfalas, pero tiene el derecho exclusivo de convocar un sínodo (consejo) de obispos ortodoxos.

  5. Bartolomé I (en griego: Βαρθολομαίος Α’, Bartholomaíos A’, en turco: Patrik I. Bartholomeos), de nombre secular Demetrio Archondonis (en griego: Δημήτριος Αρχοντώνης; Imbros, Turquía, 29 de febrero de 1940), es el 270° y actual patriarca de Constantinopla desde el 2 de noviembre de 1991.