Timeline of Eastern Orthodoxy in Greece (717–1204)

This is a timeline of the presence of Eastern Orthodoxy in Greece from 717 to 1204. The history of Greece traditionally encompasses the study of the Greek people, the areas they ruled historically, as well as the territory now composing the modern state of Greece.

Era of Byzantine Iconoclasm (717–842)

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Medieval plate depicting Acrites, the frontiersmen or border guards of the Byzantine Empire, about which epic songs were written.
 
St. Theodore the Studite abbot of the Stoudios monastery in Constantinople and a zealous opponent of iconoclasm
 
Miniature showing the Second Council of Nicaea
 
Venerable Gregory Decapolites, the New Wonderworker
  • 815 A synod in the Church of Hagia Sophia affirmed the Iconoclastic Council (Council of Hieria), annulled the Seventh Ecumenical Council (Nicaea II), and recognized the Acta of the iconoclast council of 754.[34]
  • 816 Death of Gregory Decapolites.[35][36]
  • 818 Vikings known as Rus' plunder the north coast of Anatolia, marking the first known raid of Rus' or Russians, on territory in the Byzantine Empire.[34]
  • 824 Byzantine Crete falls to Arab insurgents fleeing from the Umayyad Emir of Cordoba Al-Hakam I, establishing an emirate on the island until the Byzantine reconquest in 960.[37]
  • 826 Death of Theodore the Studite.[38][39]
  • 827 Beginning of the Saracen invasion of Byzantine Sicily, which lasted from 827 to 902.[40][note 14]
  • 828 Death of Patr. Nicephorus I of Constantinople.[41]
  • c. 829–842 Icon of Panagia Proussiotissa (Mother of God of Proussa) is re-discovered near Karpenissi in Greece, after it had been lost during its transportation from Asia Minor in 829 to save it from iconoclasm;[42][43][note 15] influence of Muslim culture on Byzantines is at a high point during the reign of Emperor Theophilus.[44]
  • 833 Emperor Theophilus began a persecution of iconophiles in the face of several defeats by Muslim Arabs who intended to construct a chain of permanent bases from Tyana to Constantinople, with Theophilus being confirmed in his persecution when the caliph died and the Arabs withdrew.[44]
  • 838 John VII the Grammarian, Patriarch of Constantinople, enacted a harsh persecution of iconophiles, mostly against monks;[44] in August, Caliph al-Mu'tasim captures and destroys Amorium in Anatolia, killing half the inhabitants.[45][46]
  • c. 839 First Rus'–Byzantine War, where the Rus' attacked Propontis (probably aiming for Constantinople) before turning east and raiding Paphlagonia.
  • c. 840 Turks began to move into the Islamic world of the Eastern Mediterranean, as mercenaries and military slaves (Mamluks) of the Muslim Arabs.[47]

Byzantine Imperial era (843–1204)

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Saints Cyril and Methodius, Equals-to-the-Apostles
 
The Holy Protection of the Mother of God (Novgorod icon, 1399)
 
Venerable Irene Chrysovolantou of Cappadocia, Abbess of Chrysovalantou

c. 915 Death of Leo Luke of Corleone, the Abbot and Wonderworker of the Monastery of Mount Mula in Calabria,[note 24] and a founder of Italo-Greek monasticism in Southern Italy, having died a centenarian, after eighty years of monastic life.[90]

 
Monastery of Hosios Loukas
 
Kievan Rus' in the late 10th century
 
The Byzantine Empire under Basil II – c. 1025
 
The Byzantine Empire and its themata in 1045. At this point, the empire was the most powerful state in the Mediterranean.
 
Anastasis, Nea Moni of Chios, Greece, 11th century
 
St. Eustathios of Thessaloniki, Archbishop (c. 1175 – c. 1195/6)
 
Greek Orthodox monasteries at Meteora, Greece

See also

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History

Church Fathers

Notes

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  1. ^ With the accession to the throne of a Syrian emperor, Leo III 'the Isaurian', in 717, the use of icons became a matter of hostile state attention."[2]
  2. ^ The use of "Greek fire" and an unusually cold winter helped the Byzantine empire defeat the largest Muslim naval expedition against Constantinople from the Sea of Marmara during their one-year siege of the city. The Arabs were never again able to threaten the city and Christian culture was saved from being overwhelmed by the Muslim Arabs.[3]
  3. ^ This monastery at the summit of Mount Ithome was abandoned by the Fathers in the year 1625, due to the unbearable cold of the winter months and the difficulty that Christians had in visiting it. They sought a new place to the south and found it where the new monastery now stands.
  4. ^ The "First Iconoclasm", as it is sometimes called, lasted between about 726 and 787. The "Second Iconoclasm" was between 814 and 842. Traditional explanations for Byzantine iconoclasm have sometimes focused on the importance of Islamic prohibitions against images influencing Byzantine thought.[7] According to Arnold J. Toynbee,[8] for example, it was the prestige of Islamic military successes in the 7th–8th centuries that motivated Byzantine Christians to adopt the Islamic position of rejecting and destroying idolatrous images.
  5. ^ The Ecloga was a revised law code drawn from the Justinian Code. It was in Greek, it was shorter, and contained many modifications from the Code, reflecting a literal reading of the Bible, canon law, and orientalizing of criminal law.[5]
  6. ^ His work became the classic of eastern dogmatics, exercising influence on the west as east. He also presented a fully developed doctrine of the Theotokos including her freedom from stain of sin and her assumption into heaven (the Dormition). He taught that the Eucharistic elements are truly the body and blood of the Lord Jesus Christ, despite appearances. He opposed Islam as a Christian heresy. He also composed canons and is known especially for his Resurrection Canon.[5]
  7. ^ Up to this time Greece and the Aegean were still technically under the ecclesiastic authority of the Pope, but Leo also quarreled with the Papacy; the defiant attitude of Popes St. Gregory II and St. Gregory III, who summoned councils in Rome to anathematize and excommunicate the iconoclasts (730, 732) on behalf of image-veneration, led to a fierce quarrel with the emperor. Leo retaliated however by transferring the territories of southern Italy, Greece and the Aegean from the papal diocese to that of the Patriarch of Constantinople, in effect throwing the Papacy out of the Empire.
  8. ^ Gregory III of Rome was the last Pope of Rome to seek the approval of the Byzantine emperor for his consecration.
  9. ^ "Views differ as to precisely when this took place. See M. Anastos, 'The transfer of Illyricum, Calabria and Sicily to the Jurisdiction of the patriarchate of Constantinople in 732–733', SBN (=Silloge bizantina in onore di S. G. Mercati), 9 (1957), 14–31, (reprinted Variorum, 1979) who opts for Leo III; V. Grumel, 'L'Annexation de rillyricum oriental, de la Sicile et de la Calabre au patriarcat de Constantinople', Recherches de science religieuse (=Melanges Jules Lebreton, II), 40 (1952), 191–200, puts the case for Constantine V and the pontificate of Stephen II (752–7).[13]
  10. ^ The Diocese of Moesiae (which later split into two dioceses: the Diocese of Macedonia and the Diocese of Dacia) was the area known as "Eastern Illyricum", and in view of the detailed list of provinces given by Pope Nicholas Ι (858–67) in a letter in which he demanded the retrocession of the churches removed from papal jurisdiction in 732-33, this area seems to have been the region affected by Emperor Leo's punitive action.
    Previously the lands which Leo ΙΙΙ now placed under the authority of the Church of Constantinople, although subject to the civil rule of the emperor of Constantinople ever since the end of 395, had nevertheless depended upon Rome ecclesiastically, except for a few brief interruptions including:
    • In 421 (when a decree enacted by Emperor Theodosius II placed all churches within the pale of the Illyricum prefecture (then part of the Eastern Empire) subject to the Archbishop of Constantinople).
    • In 438, through the Theodosian Codex, Illyricum was again placed under Constantinopolitan jurisdiction.
    • To some extent during the Acacian schism, 484–519.
  11. ^ 10 February – 8 August. Three hundred thirty-eight bishops attended the iconoclast council in Constantinople at Hieria and then at Blarchenae for the final session. (It was called by the Orthodox party the "headless synod" because no patriarchs were present, however the council nevertheless asserted the religious authority of emperors as "peers of the apostles".) The Council declared that only the Eucharist is the true image of the Lord Jesus Christ because it is "identical in essence" with what it portrays. Certain definitions were included that toned down the more radical views of the emperors; provided theological arguments demonstrating that Iconophiles were heretics; and anathematized Patriarch Germanus, John of Damascus and George of Cyprus. The new patriarch of Constantinople, Constantine II, attended the final session. This council began the violent phase of the iconoclast movement, with exiles, executions, confiscation of property and destruction of images. The summary of the council, the Horos, is the only document of this council to survive the iconophile victory because it was quoted verbatim at the council of Nicaea (787).[19]
  12. ^ "The Khazars' dominions...housed enough Christians of the Eastern Orthodox Rite for a metropolitanate to be devised for them by the Constantinopolitan authorities, probably in the second quarter of the ninth Century (Darrouzes 1981:[26] 31–2, 241–2, 245)."[27]
  13. ^ 24 September – 23 October. The Seventh Ecumenical Council (Second Council of Nicaea) was convened by Emperor Constantine VI, establishing the orthodoxy of the veneration of icons; condemning Iconoclasm as heretical; drawing a distinction between latreia or "adoration", reserved for God alone, and proskynesis or "veneration" to be accorded to icons and relics; and having 22 disciplinary canons. The Latin translation that was presented to the Pope was poor and therefore inaccurate, which elicited a response from the Franks who rejected it, even though Pope Hadrian I supported it. No supporters of Iconoclasm offered any open resistance.[28]
  14. ^ The first Arab battle against Byzantine troops occurred on 15 July 827, near Mazara, resulting in an Aghlabid victory. It took over a century for Byzantine Sicily to be conquered. Syracuse held out for a long time, and Taormina fell in 902. Eventually all of Sicily was conquered by the Arabs in 965, and the Emirate of Sicily was formed, an Islamic state on the island of Sicily which existed from 965 to 1072.
  15. ^ The Monastery of Proussos in Karpenisi (in the Evrytania region of Greece), was named after the Holy Icon of Panagia of Prousa (in Minor Asia). According to holy tradition, this icon was painted by Saint Luke the Evangelist. The icon was brought to the mainland of Greece to save it from iconoclasm during the period of iconoclastic Byzantine Emperor Theophilos (829–842). The Monastery of Proussos in Karpenisi was founded during this period on the site where the icon was re-discovered. Its feast day is 23 August (the Leavetaking of the Dormition of the Mother of God), and it is visited by crowds of pilgrims each year from 15 to 23 August to venerate the Icon of the All-Holy Mother of God of Prousa.
  16. ^ March 843, Theodora calls council, not of bishops but of other selected officials, which accepts the council of 787 and thereby condemning iconoclasm. The council having met and restored the veneration of icons on the first Sunday of Lent, this day is celebrated as Feast of Orthodoxy. Synodicon and commemorations take shape gradually.[47]
  17. ^ "Nicholas Cheetham claims that the Orthodox Church made intense efforts to convert the Slavs in Greece, and that this took effect more or less in the period from A.D. 800 to 1000, only when the Greek language had ousted Slavonic."[56]
  18. ^ Most Soviet historians (Boris Grekov, Vladimir Pashuto, Rybakov) agree that Christianity was adopted in the 9th century only by the Varangian elite of Rus'. That the fact of the first Christianization was obliterated so rapidly is explained by the 882 coup d'état that led to the downfall of the supposedly Christian Askold and the usurpation of power by the pagan Oleg. Tatischev went so far as to style Askold "the first Russian martyr".
    Constantine Zuckerman rejects Rybakov's view that Photius converted the Kievan Rus'.
  19. ^ Saints Photius the Great, Mark of Ephesus, and Gregory Palamas, have been called the Three Pillars of Orthodoxy.
  20. ^ Byzantine empire attacks Bulgaria, causing Khan Boris to give in and receive baptism from Greeks. Although Michael III, Byzantine Emperor, is godfather, Boris does not decide between claims of Rome and Constantinople for jurisdiction.[58]
  21. ^ The establishment of Christianity as state religion dates to the time of Prince Mutimir and Byzantine Emperor Basil I (r. 867–886).[64]
  22. ^ "The Council of 879-880 in Constantinople, under the Ecumenical Patriarch, Archbishop of Constantinople and New Rome, Saint Photios the Great, Equal to the Apostles,...condemned as heretical the teaching of the Filioque, and is considered by the consciousness of the Church to be the 8th Ecumenical Council, because in it were representatives of all the Patriarchates, including the then Orthodox Pope of Rome, John the 8th, and because the decisions of this council were universally accepted."[70]
  23. ^ We ought tentatively to regard it as probable that the saints whose lives have come down to us were really the founders of Greek monasticism in South Italy, and that before their time there were no Greek monasteries in the district. There probably were hermits; but the rise of monasteries does not begin before the end of the ninth century; and the leaders of the monks were Elias Junior (†903), Elias Spelaeotes ("the Cave-Dweller", †c. 960), Lucas of Demena (†984), Vitalis of Castronuovo (†994), and Nilus of Rossano (†1004).[75]
  24. ^ Mount Mula, or Monte La Mula (1935 m),[88] is one of the highest peaks of the Orsomarso mountains, near Cassano.[89]
  25. ^ "At Constantinople, after having been instructed in the faith of the Greek Church, and living in fasting, prayer, and almsgiving, she, together with her retinue, was baptized by the Patriarch Polyeuktes, the Patriarch dismissing her with his blessing: "Blessed art thou amongst Russian women; from generation to generation the Russian people shall call thee blessed."[98]
  26. ^ The project was financed by spoils from the Cretan campaign (961) and donations by the Emperor Nikephoros Phocas.[48]
  27. ^ "Nicephorus Phocas, established government by military aristocracy in the Byzantine Empire. With one longish interval, it was to last till the Latin conquest. This tenth-century Pattakos had only one passion, fighting on the battlefield, and his only spiritual need was prayer and conversation with holy men. He was one of the patrons of Athonite monasticism. He also established finally that the Patriarch of Constantinople should be elected by the Holy Synod. A short-list of three names was to be submitted to the Emperor, who selected from it the Aristos."[102]
  28. ^ Known as the "Tragus", it officially established the coenobian system alongside the hermitages.[48]
  29. ^ "Amalfi, on the south-west coast of Italy, was an independent state outside the territory of the Byzantine empire (though until 839 it has belonged to the Byzantine duchy of Naples)...The Amalfitan monastery was ranked in fifth place in the hierarchy in the eleventh century. The fact that it endured for more than 300 years, surviving not only the exchange of anathemas in 1054…but also the Latin empire of 1204-61, is a tribute to the truly ecumenical nature of Athonite monasticism at the time. The house was eventually absorbed by the Lavra in 1287, but its tall lonely tower, which still stands on a wooded eminence above the bay of Morphonou, is a forlorn reminder of this once great Latin monastery."[107]
  30. ^ "From Kiev, Christianity spread into the provinces. After his conversion, Vladimir's character was completely changed. Like Oswald with the holy Aidan (a sight which the Venerable Bede describes as "beautiful"), he accompanied the Bishops in their missionary work throughout the country; schools were established and organized, with Greek teachers from Constantinople set over them, Greek and Latin taught, and the principles of the Orthodox Church inculcated. Vladimir built several Churches, for which he employed Greek architects; he built of stone the cathedral Church of Kiev, endowing it with the tenth part of all his revenues, and dedicating it, doubtless after the Church of his conversion at Cherson, to the Most Holy Virgin; and appointed Michael the Syrian Bishop of Kiev. Michael founded Churches in Rostov and Novgorod, but died before the completion of the Cathedral of Kiev. He was succeeded by Leontius, a Greek by birth, sent over by the Patriarch of Constantinople; by Leontius the Cathedral was consecrated, and the Sees of Novgorod, Rostov, Chernigov, and Belgorod established. The third Bishop was Ivan (or John). Thus the Russian Church was firmly established."[108]
  31. ^ According to the Orthodox Church's Sacred Tradition, the Wonderworking icon of the Panagia Portaitissa was at one time in the possession of a widow in Nicea. Not wanting the icon to be seized and destroyed by the iconoclasts, she spent all night in prayer and then cast the icon into the Mediterranean Sea; this took place during the reign of Emperor Theophilus (829–842). Much later (c. 999[112] or c. 1004),[113] the icon was recovered from the sea by a Georgian monk named Gabriel (St. Gabriel of Iveron, 13 May) who was laboring at the Iveron Monastery on Mount Athos, and it was then taken to the katholikon (main church) of the monastery from which it gets its name. For about 170 years since it was cast into the sea (c. 829 – c. 999) no one knew the whereabouts of this icon.
  32. ^ "From 1009, the Franks controlled the succession to the papal throne and Latin orthodoxy dropped its resistance to the innovations devised at the court of Charlemagne, making it official doctrine."[120]
  33. ^ "It would appear that Byzantine-Fatimid relations from 1027 through the reign of Romanos IV Diogenes (1068-71) were generally cordial."[122]
  34. ^ "Every month, the icon was taken out in a procession to another church in the confraternity. Many participants were members of aristocratic families owning land in the environs of Thebes."[127] Currently, the feast of the "Virgin of Nafpaktos" is observed in Nafpaktos on 7 October each year, in memory of the Battle of Lepanto which took place on 7 October 1571, where the Christian European fleet decisively defeated the fleet of the Ottoman Empire.
  35. ^ "The desire to reform and restructure the church in southern Italy, already apparent under Leo IX, and to recover the disciplinary rights of the papacy over churches which the Byzantines had kept subject to the patriarch of Constantinople, both required the assistance of the de facto ruling authorities."[130]
  36. ^ From the fall of Reggio Calabria (capital of the tagma of Calabria) in 1060 to Robert Guiscard, to the fall of Messina one year later in 1061 under the leadership of Roger I of Sicily, to the fall of Noto in 1091 in the southern tip of Sicily, the Normans conquered all of Sicily. They were also gradually seizing the Southern Italian mainland too, taking Otranto in October 1068, and Bari itself in April 1071, forming what was afterwards called the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. The last Imperial city to fall was Naples in 1138. From this time on, the Roman Pope had jurisdiction in these parts, although the Byzantine rite lingered on in Magna Graecia.[131]
  37. ^ "Anna Comnena remarks that by the end of the eleventh century a large proportion of the towns along the Aegean coastline from the north to Attalia had been completely or partially destroyed. When the Second Crusaders passed through western Asia Minor, Odo of Deuil remarked that, though the Greeks had rebuilt and recolonized some of the urban centers, many of the towns were still nothing more than uninhabited ruins. Adramyttium, formerly very populous and prosperous, was so destroyed, a contemporary relates, that one could not tell whether it had ever been inhabited by man. Dorylaeum, one of the largest and most prosperous of Greek towns in Asia Minor, lay a deserted ruin for over one hundred years, no one stone standing upon another in the ruins. Caesareia remained an uninhabited shambles for over half a century, not being rebuilt until the mid-twelfth century. These are merely three cases from a long list of sacked or destroyed Byzantine towns in the first century of the Seljuk-Byzantine conflict. In this early period the sources reveal that over seventy-five towns and villages were subjected, to severe devastation, some of them being sacked on more than one occasion, and twenty-seven of these towns were destroyed and became uninhabited for varying periods."[134]
  38. ^ "Based on a historical character who died about 788, the epic, a blend of Greek, Byzantine, and Oriental motifs, originated in the 10th century and was popularized by itinerant folksingers; it was recorded in several versions from the 12th to the 17th centuries, the oldest being a linguistic mixture of popular and literary language."[136]
  39. ^ The council pronounced that Hellenic studies formed a valuable part of education but anathematized anyone who held Hellenic doctrines. For a man to call himself a Hellene was as if he denied to be a Christian.[137]
  40. ^ "His captor tried, without success, to force the conversion of Gabras. Gabras was first layed out on the snow, face down, and beaten on the back. He remained steadfast, however, so his captors then proceeded to dismember him alive, severing his tongue, plucking out his eyes, and then removing his scalp, limbs, and other parts. His remains were burned and the Amir Ali had a golden drinking cup fashioned from his skull."[140]
  41. ^ Bari, the last town in Apulia which had been left to the Greeks, was captured A.D. 1071, by Robert Guiscard, whom Pope Nicolas II., and after him Gregory VII., bound by an oath of allegiance to the Roman Church.
  42. ^ "Archbishop Chrysostomos I of Athens (1868-1938), in his History of the Church of Jerusalem (1910), also makes note of the events of 1101. He contends that, while it is doubtful that the Greeks and Latins normally concelebrated in the Church of the Resurrection...in that year the Greek and Latin clergy together conducted the rite of the Holy Fire. Apparently, he believes that as a result of the participation of the Latins, the Holy Fire did not appear on Holy Saturday as usual...(he) goes on to say that the Holy Fire appeared only after the Greeks prayed in the absence of the Latins, on the Sunday of Pascha, when the Church of the Resurrection became filled with light. The Latins then came to take light from the Greeks. On the basis of this, he concludes, "during the Crusader era the rite of the Holy Fire remained a purely Greek celebration" – an important claim, since it helps us to understand the survival of the rite to this day principally in the Greek churches. "[146]
  43. ^ Although precise numbers are unavailable, the bulk of the Latin community, estimated at 60,000 at the time by Eustathius of Thessalonica,[154] was wiped out or forced to flee. The Genoese and Pisan communities especially were decimated, and some 4,000 survivors were sold as slaves to the Turkish Sultanate of Rum.[155]
  44. ^ "The cathedral (1174–89) is one of the richest and most beautiful churches in Italy, combining Norman, Byzantine, Italian, and Saracen styles. Particularly notable is the interior mosaic decoration, one of the largest in existence. It was created in less than 10 years by a group of craftsmen trained in Byzantium. The subjects of the mosaics include an Old Testament cycle, the miracles of Christ, the life of Christ, and the lives of SS. Peter and Paul."[157]
  45. ^ The siege was extensively chronicled by the city's archbishop, Eustathius of Thessalonica, who was present in the city during and after the siege. It came on the heels of the Byzantine massacre of the Latins in Constantinople in 1182.
  46. ^ Its construction is mentioned by Pope Innocent III in a letter of 1210 to the Latin Patriarch of Constantinople, Tommaso Morosini (Patrologia Latina, CCXVI, col. 354).
  47. ^ "To these should be added Monemvasia, if we may trust the story of the fifteenth century historian Phrantzes, himself a Monemvasiote, accepted by Finlay, that it became a metropolitan see under the Emperor Maurice... ...Besides these, the islands of Leukas, and Aegina, and the towns of Arta were archbishoprics, and each metropolitan see had numerous bishops under it. Such was the arrangement which, with a few alterations, had been in force since the days of Leo the philosopher, three centuries earlier."[165]

References

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  1. ^ David Bentley Hart. The Story of Christianity: An Illustrated History of 2000 Years of the Christian Faith. Quercus Editions Ltd., 2011. p. 122.
  2. ^ David Bentley Hart. The Story of Christianity: An Illustrated History of 2000 Years of the Christian Faith. Quercus Editions Ltd., 2011. p. 118.
  3. ^ a b Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.140.
  4. ^ (in Greek) Άγιος Νικόλαος ο εν Βουνένοις. Ορθόδοξος Συναξαριστής. 09/05/2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.141.
  6. ^ (in Greek) Ιερά Μονή Βουλκάνου. ΙΕΡΑ ΜΗΤΡΟΠΟΛΗ ΜΕΣΣΗΝΙΑΣ (Holy Metropolis of Messenia). Retrieved: 10 June 2015.
  7. ^ G.E.von Grunebaum. "Byzantine Iconoclasm and the Influence of the Islamic Environment." History of Religions. Vol. 2, No. 1 (Summer, 1962), pp.1–10.
  8. ^ Arnold Joseph Toynbee. A Study of History: Abridgement of Volumes VII-X. Royal Institute of International Affairs Series. Oxford University Press, 1987. p.259.
  9. ^ George Finlay. A History of Greece: The Byzantine empire, pt. 1, A.D. 716–1057. Volume 2 of A History of Greece: From Its Conquest by the Romans to the Present Time, B.C. 146 to A.D. 1864, Henry Fanshawe Tozer. Clarendon Press, 1877. p. 200.
  10. ^ a b Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.142.
  11. ^ a b c Vailhé, Siméon. "Greek Church." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909. Retrieved: 15 May 2013.
  12. ^ See also: (in Greek) Gennadios Arabazoglu. Chronology of the transfer of the jurisdiction of Illyricum, Calabria, and Sicily to the jurisdiction of the Oecumenical Patriarchate. Istanbul, 1955.
    Αραμπατζόγλου, Γεννάδιος Μ. (Πρώην τιτουλάριος Επίσκοπος Σκοπέλου (1913–1925), Μητροπολίτης Ηλιουπόλεως και Θείρων (1925–1956))
  13. ^ J. M. Hussey. The Orthodox Church in the Byzantine Empire. Oxford University Press, 2004. p. 36. ISBN 9780191614880
  14. ^ Venerable Peter of Mt. Athos. Commemorated on 12 June. OCA – The Lives of the Saints. Retrieved: 10 May 2013.
  15. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ὅσιος Πέτρος ὁ ἐν τῷ Ἁγίῳ Ὄρει ἀσκήσας. 12 Ιουνίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  16. ^ a b Benjamin Vincent. Haydn's Dictionary of Dates and Universal Information. 19th Edition. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1889. p.286.
  17. ^ Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.143.
  18. ^ a b Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.144.
  19. ^ Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.145.
  20. ^ Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.146.
  21. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ὅσιος Στέφανος ὁ Ὁμολογητής ὁ Νέος. 28 Νοεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  22. ^ Monkmartyr and Confessor Stephen the New of Mt St Auxentius. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  23. ^ a b Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.147.
  24. ^ Stouraitis, Ioannis. "Michael Lachanodrakon". Transl. Velentzas, Georgios. Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World, Asia Minor. Athens, Greece: Foundation of the Hellenic World. 25 July 2005. Retrieved 18 October 2013.
  25. ^ Kevin Brook. Jews of Khazaria. 2nd Ed. Rowman & Littlefield, 2009. p. 37. ISBN 9780742549821
  26. ^ Darrouzes, J. Notitiae Episcopatuum Ecclesiae Constantinopolitanae. Paris: Institut francais d'etudes Byzantines, 1981.
  27. ^ Jonathan Shepard. "Chapter Thirty Seven: The Viking Rus and Byzantium." In: Stefan Brink and Neil S. Price (Eds.). The Viking World. Taylor & Francis Limited, 2011. pp. 496–516. p. 497.
  28. ^ Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.149.
  29. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ἅγιος Φιλάρετος ὁ Ἐλεήμων. 1 Δεκεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  30. ^ Righteous Philaret the Merciful of Amnia in Asia Minor. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  31. ^ December 1/14. Orthodox Calendar (PRAVOSLAVIE.RU).
  32. ^ Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.150.
  33. ^ Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.152.
  34. ^ a b Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.153.
  35. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ὅσιος Γρηγόριος ὁ Δεκαπολίτης. 20 Νοεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  36. ^ Venerable Gregory Decapolite. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  37. ^ Makrypoulias, Christos G. (2000), "Byzantine Expeditions against the Emirate of Crete c. 825–949". Graeco-Arabica 7–8: 347–362. pp.348–351.
  38. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ὅσιος Θεόδωρος ὁ Ὁμολογητής ἡγούμενος Μονῆς Στουδίου. 11 Νοεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  39. ^ Venerable Theodore the Confessor the Abbot of the Studion. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
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  50. ^ 42 Martyrs of Ammoria in Phrygia. OCA – Feasts and Saints.
  51. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ὅσιος Ἰωαννίκιος ὁ Μέγας ὁ ἐν Ὀλύμπῳ. 4 Νοεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  52. ^ Venerable Joannicius the Great. OCA – Feasts and Saints.
  53. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Μνήμη τρίτης εὑρέσεως τῆς τιμίας κεφαλῆς τοῦ προφήτου Προδρόμου καὶ Βαπτιστοῦ Ἰωάννου. 25 Μαΐου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  54. ^ Third Finding of the Honorable Head of the Holy Glorious Prophet, Forerunner and Baptist John. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  55. ^ Dr. Kathryn Tsai. A Timeline of Eastern Church History. Divine Ascent Press, Point Reyes Station, CA, 2004. p.157.
  56. ^ John Shea. Macedonia and Greece: The Struggle to Define a New Balkan Nation. McFarland, 1997. p. 86. ISBN 9780786402281
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  61. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ἡ Ὁσία Κασσιανή. 7 Σεπτεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
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  66. ^ Brief History of Malta. Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML). Retrieved: 28 August 2013.
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  69. ^ Metcalfe, Alex. The Muslims of Medieval Italy. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2009. pp. 27-28.
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  71. ^ November 9/22. Orthodox Calendar (Pravoslavie.ru).
  72. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ἡ Ὁσία Θεοκτίστη ἡ Λεσβία. 9 Νοεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  73. ^ Venerable Theoctiste of the Isle of Lesbos. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  74. ^ K. Lake. "The Greek Monasteries in South Italy I." J Theol Studies (1903) os-IV(15): 345-368 doi:10.1093/jts/os-IV.15.345. p. 357.
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  77. ^ Equal of the Apostles and Teacher of the Slavs, Methodius. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
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  79. ^ Venerable Joseph the Hymnographer. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
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  81. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Οἱ Ὁσίες Θεοδώρα καὶ Θεοπίστη ἡ θυγατέρα της ἐξ Αἰγίνης. 3 Αυγούστου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
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  84. ^ The Protection of our Most Holy Lady the Mother of God and Ever-Virgin Mary. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  85. ^ Great Synxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ἅγιος Νικόλαος ὁ Α’ ὁ Μυστικὸς, Πατριάρχης Κωνσταντινουπόλεως. 16 Μαΐου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  86. ^ July 28/August 10. Orthodox Calendar (Pravoslavie.ru). Retrieved: 23 July 2013.
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  92. ^ St Peter the Wonderworker and Bishop of Argos. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  93. ^ Great Synaxaristes: (in Greek) Ὁ Ὅσιος Λουκᾶς ὁ ἐν Στειρίῳ τῆς Ἑλλάδος. 7 Φεβρουαρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  94. ^ Venerable Luke of Hellas. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  95. ^ Jonathan Shepard. "Chapter Thirty Seven: The Viking Rus and Byzantium." In: Stefan Brink and Neil S. Price (Eds.). The Viking World. Taylor & Francis Limited, 2011. pp. 496–516. p. 502.
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  97. ^ St Olga the Princess of Russia, in Holy Baptism Called Helen. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  98. ^ Rev. A. H. Hore. Eighteen centuries of the Orthodox Greek Church. London: James Parker & Co. 1899. p. 401.
  99. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ὅσιος Μιχαὴλ ὁ Μαλεῖνος, πνευματικὸς πατέρας τοῦ Ἁγίου Ἀθανασίου τοῦ Ἀθωνίτη. 12 Ιουλίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  100. ^ Venerable Michael of Maleinus. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  101. ^ Peter Charanis. The Chronicle of Monemvasia and the Question of the Slavonic Settlements in Greece. Vol. 5, 1950. Washington, District of Columbia: Dumbarton Oaks Papers. pp. 139–166.
  102. ^ Julian Walter, A.A. "Renewal in Orthodox Greece." The Tablet: The International Catholic News Weekly. 4 November 1967. p. 7.
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  105. ^ Timothy E. Gregory. A History of Byzantium. Volume 14 of Blackwell History of the Ancient World. 2nd Ed. John Wiley & Sons, 2011. p. 270. ISBN 9781444359978.
  106. ^ Fr. Hieromonk Aidan Keller. AMALFION: Western Rite Monastery of Mt. Athos. St. Hilarion Press, 1994-2002, pp. 6,18.
  107. ^ Graham Speake. Mount Athos: Renewal in Paradise. Yale University Press, 2002. p. 58.
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  109. ^ Oecumenius (Bishop of Tricca.) The complete commentary of Oecumenius on the Apocalypse: now printed for the first time from manuscripts at Messina, Rome, Salonika, and Athos. Ed. Herman Charles Hoskier. Volume 23 of University of Michigan studies: Humanistic series. University of Michigan, 1929. 263 pp.
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  111. ^ Venerable Nikon "Metanoeite," the Preacher of Repentance. OCA – Feasts and Saints.
  112. ^ a b Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Σύναξις Ὑπεραγίας Θεοτόκου τῆς Ἰβηριτίσσης. 12 Φεβρουαρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
  113. ^ a b Icon of the Mother of God "Iveron". 12 February. OCA – Feasts and Saints.
  114. ^ Archangel Michael of Mantamado. Ecumenical Patriarchate: Orthodox Metropolitanate of Hong Kong and Southeast Asia (OMKHSEA). 8 November 2012.
  115. ^ (in Greek) Ο Ταξιάρχης του Μανταμάδου. Ιερά Μητρόπολη Μυτιλήνης. Retrieved: 30 January 2013.
    Citing: ΕΥΣΤΡΑΤΙΟΥ ΔΗΣΣΟΥ (Ιερατικού προϊσταμένου, Ι. Ν. Παμμεγίστων Ταξιαρχών Μανταμάδου). Ποιητικό ιστορικό και θαύματα των Αρχαγγέλων Μανταμάδου. Τόμος Δ'.
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  117. ^ September 26. Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome.
  118. ^ (in Greek) ΟΣΙΟΣ ΝΕΙΛΟΣ, Ο ΕΚ ΚΑΛΑΒΡΙΑΣ. Αποστολική Διακονία της Εκκλησίας της Ελλάδος.
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  120. ^ Christos Yannaras. Orthodoxy and the West: Hellenic Self-Identity in the Modern Age. Transl. Peter Chamberas and Norman Russell. Brookline: Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2006. p.18.
  121. ^ Anthony Kaldellis, Associate Professor (Department of Greek and Latin, The Ohio State University), A Heretical (Orthodox) History of the Parthenon, p.3
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  124. ^ a b F. J. Foakes-Jackson. An Introduction to the History of Christianity, A. D. 590–1314. London: Macmillan, 1921. p. 148.
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  127. ^ a b Florin Curta. Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1250. Cambridge University Press, 2006. p. 277.
  128. ^ Venerable Lazarus the Wonderworker of Mt. Galesius Near Ephesus. OCA – Lives of the Saints.
  129. ^ Great Synaxaristes (in Greek): Ὁ Ὅσιος Λάζαρος ὁ Θαυματουργός ὁ Γαλλησιώτης. 7 Νοεμβρίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
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Bibliography

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  • ("History of Athens in the Middle Ages. From Justinian to the Turkish Conquest." 1889.)