Eastern Christian Independent church

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canon law

  • First Council of Nicaea
    In canon law: Independent churches of Eastern Christianity

    The churches of Eastern Christianity that separated from the patriarchal see of Constantinople over a period of several centuries, but primarily during the 5th and 6th centuries, developed bodies of canon law that reflected their isolated and—after the Arab conquests in the 7th…

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church year

  • Bartholomew I
    In church year: Eastern churches

    The separated churches of the East (those not accepting the jurisdiction of Orthodox patriarchs or bishops) have calendars basically similar to the Byzantine. West Syrians (Jacobites) and East Syrians (Nestorians) begin the year with a series of Sundays devoted to themes of the Dedication of the Church…

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role in Egyptian history

  • Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Khufu
    In ancient Egypt: The advance of Christianity

    Coptic Christianity also developed its own distinctive art, much of it pervaded by the long-familiar motifs of Greek mythology. These motifs coexisted with representations of the Virgin and Child and with Christian parables and were expressed in decorative styles that owed a great deal to…

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  • Egypt
    In Egypt: Religious affairs

    Like all previous Muslim governments, the Ottomans continued to employ Copts in the financial offices of the bureaucracy. The Ottomans allowed the caliphate, so assiduously preserved in its nominal form by the Mamluks, to lapse. At first the caliph was installed in Constantinople…

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vestments