释义 |
Definition of patriarchate in English: patriarchatenoun ˈpeɪtrɪɑːkətˈpeɪtriˌɑrkət The office, see, or residence of an ecclesiastical patriarch. the patriarchate of Constantinople they used the prestige of the patriarchate to wield political influence Example sentencesExamples - There are also two patriarchates: one in Istanbul and another in Jerusalem.
- Al-Moallaqa Church was the seat of the bishop of Babylon (that is, Fustat) in the seventh century, and of the Coptic patriarchate in the ninth.
- What it is that bothers the Orthodox so much about the idea of a Ukrainian patriarchate?
- He annually invited political and religious leaders to the patriarchate to celebrate the Muslim holy month of Ramadan with fellowship and religious-patriotic speeches by all sides.
- These policies changed during World War II, and in 1943 the regime accepted an accommodation with the Church that restored the patriarchate.
- Also in northern Italy, an independent rite was practised at Aquileia, seat of the most important patriarchate outside Rome, from the 7th century until its abolition in 1751.
- From 1523 until his elevation to the cardinalate in 1528, Marino lived in Venice, where he could manage the affairs of the patriarchate of Aquileia.
- Many of these martyrs had opposed the patriarchate's policy of accommodation with the Soviet regime.
- The patriarchate of Moscow was abolished by Peter the Great in 1721 and replaced by a Holy Synod of bishops which was controlled by a lay official, the chief procurator.
- Shortly after, Bulgaria established its own patriarchate, independent of the Eastern Orthodox Church in Constantinople.
- Second, the patriarchate would have to sever its affiliations with international ecumenical organizations, particularly with the World Council of Churches.
- Conversely, almost half of Moscow's patriarchate churches are in Ukraine.
- While visiting the Catholic patriarchate of Baghdad in May 1999, the Pope kissed a copy of the Koran offered to him by a Muslim.
- Mehmet II, who collected Christian relics and occasionally watched a Christian service, even revived the Oecumenical patriarchate, the senior see of Orthodox Christianity.
- Local parishes across the country have raised funds to rebuild and restore churches destroyed by the Soviets, with some support from the Moscow patriarchate.
- After the battle at Aheloi, Tsar Simeon proclaimed the Bulgarian church a patriarchate and himself an emperor and autocrat of the Romans.
- Developments in the Jerusalem patriarchate seem to have prompted Patriarch of Istanbul Portholomeos I to give at least tacit consent to the sacking of Irineos.
- Clergy introducing innovative programs have been heavily scrutinized by the patriarchate, especially in Moscow.
- Today there are sixteen separate Orthodox churches and patriarchates.
- The patriarchate was restored, with the enthronement of Sergei eight days later.
Definition of patriarchate in US English: patriarchatenounˈpeɪtriˌɑrkətˈpātrēˌärkət The office, see, or residence of an ecclesiastical patriarch. the patriarchate of Constantinople they used the prestige of the patriarchate to wield political influence Example sentencesExamples - Conversely, almost half of Moscow's patriarchate churches are in Ukraine.
- Al-Moallaqa Church was the seat of the bishop of Babylon (that is, Fustat) in the seventh century, and of the Coptic patriarchate in the ninth.
- Second, the patriarchate would have to sever its affiliations with international ecumenical organizations, particularly with the World Council of Churches.
- Clergy introducing innovative programs have been heavily scrutinized by the patriarchate, especially in Moscow.
- Shortly after, Bulgaria established its own patriarchate, independent of the Eastern Orthodox Church in Constantinople.
- Today there are sixteen separate Orthodox churches and patriarchates.
- These policies changed during World War II, and in 1943 the regime accepted an accommodation with the Church that restored the patriarchate.
- Many of these martyrs had opposed the patriarchate's policy of accommodation with the Soviet regime.
- Mehmet II, who collected Christian relics and occasionally watched a Christian service, even revived the Oecumenical patriarchate, the senior see of Orthodox Christianity.
- What it is that bothers the Orthodox so much about the idea of a Ukrainian patriarchate?
- Local parishes across the country have raised funds to rebuild and restore churches destroyed by the Soviets, with some support from the Moscow patriarchate.
- He annually invited political and religious leaders to the patriarchate to celebrate the Muslim holy month of Ramadan with fellowship and religious-patriotic speeches by all sides.
- While visiting the Catholic patriarchate of Baghdad in May 1999, the Pope kissed a copy of the Koran offered to him by a Muslim.
- After the battle at Aheloi, Tsar Simeon proclaimed the Bulgarian church a patriarchate and himself an emperor and autocrat of the Romans.
- Also in northern Italy, an independent rite was practised at Aquileia, seat of the most important patriarchate outside Rome, from the 7th century until its abolition in 1751.
- Developments in the Jerusalem patriarchate seem to have prompted Patriarch of Istanbul Portholomeos I to give at least tacit consent to the sacking of Irineos.
- The patriarchate of Moscow was abolished by Peter the Great in 1721 and replaced by a Holy Synod of bishops which was controlled by a lay official, the chief procurator.
- From 1523 until his elevation to the cardinalate in 1528, Marino lived in Venice, where he could manage the affairs of the patriarchate of Aquileia.
- The patriarchate was restored, with the enthronement of Sergei eight days later.
- There are also two patriarchates: one in Istanbul and another in Jerusalem.
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