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Monophysitism

Monophysitism (/məˈnɒfɪstɪzəm/ mə-NOF-ih-seye-tih-zəm[1]) or monophysism (/məˈnɒfɪzɪzəm/ mə-NOF-ih-zih-zəm; from Greek μόνος monos, "solitary"[2] and φύσις physis, "nature") is a Christology that states that in the person of the incarnated Word (that is, in Jesus Christ) there was only one nature—the divine.[3]

Background edit

The First Council of Nicaea (325) declared that Christ was divine (homoousios, consubstantial, of one being or essence, with the Father) and human (was incarnate and became man). In the fifth century a heated controversy arose between the sees and theological schools of Antioch and Alexandria about how divinity and humanity existed in Christ,[4] the former stressing the humanity, the latter the divinity of Christ. Cyril of Alexandria succeeded in having Nestorius, a prominent exponent of the Antiochian school, condemned at the Council of Ephesus in 431, and insisted on the formula "one physis of the incarnate Word", claiming that any formula that spoke of two physeis represented Nestorianism. Some taught that in Christ the human nature was completely absorbed by the divine, leaving only a divine nature. In 451, the Council of Chalcedon, on the basis of Pope Leo the Great's 449 declaration, defined that in Christ there were two natures united in one person.[5]

Those who insisted on the "one physis" formula were referred to as Monophysites (/məˈnɒfɪst/), while those who accepted the "two natures" definition were called Dyophysites, a term applied also to followers of Nestorianism.

Groups called monophysite edit

The forms of monophysism were numerous, and included the following:

  • Acephali were Monophysites who in 482 broke away from Peter III of Alexandria who made an agreement with Acacius of Constantinople, sanctioned by Emperor Zeno with his Henotikon edict that condemned both Nestorius and Eutyches, as the Council of Chalcedon had done, but ignored that council's decree on the two natures of Christ. They saw this as a betrayal of S. Cyrils use of "Mia Physis" and refused to be subject to the Chalcedonian Patriarch of Alexandria, preferring to be instead ecclesiastically "without a head" (the meaning of acephali).[6] For this, they were known as Headless Ones.[7]
  • Agnoetae, Themistians or Agnosticists, founded by Themistius Calonymus around 534, held that the nature of Jesus Christ, although divine, was like other men's in all respects, including limited knowledge.[8][9] They must be distinguished from a fourth-century group called by the same name, who denied that God knew the past and the future.[10]
  • Aphthartodocetae, Phantasiasts or, after their leader Julian of Halicarnassus, Julianists believed "that the body of Christ, from the very moment of his conception, was incorruptible, immortal and impassible, as it was after the resurrection, and held that the suffering and death on the cross was a miracle contrary to the normal conditions of Christ's humanity".[11] Emperor Justinian I wished to have this teaching adopted as orthodox, but died before he could put his plans into effect.[12]
  • Apollinarians or Apollinarists, named after Apollinaris of Laodicea (who died in 390) proposed that Jesus had a normal human body but had a divine mind instead of a regular human soul. This teaching was condemned by the First Council of Constantinople (381) and died out within a few decades.[13] Cyril of Alexandria declared it a mad proposal.[14]
  • Docetists, not all of whom were Monophysites, held that Jesus had no human nature: his humanity was only a phantasm, which, united with the impassible, immaterial divine nature, could not really suffer and die.[15][16]
  • Eutychians taught that Jesus had only one nature, a union of the divine and human that is not an even compound, since what is divine is infinitely larger than what is human: the humanity is absorbed by and transmuted into the divinity, as a drop of honey, mixing with the water of the sea, vanishes. The body of Christ, thus transmuted, is not consubstantial homoousios with humankind.[17][18] In contrast to Severians, who are called verbal Monophysites, Eutychianists are called real or ontological Monophysites,[19][20][21] and their teaching is "an extreme form of the Monophysite heresy that emphasizes the exclusive prevalence of the divinity in Christ".[22]
  • Severians accepted the reality of Christ's human nature to the extent of insisting that his body was capable of corruption, but argued that, since a single person has a single nature and Christ was one person, not two, he had only a single nature. Agreeing in substance, though not in words, with the Definition of Chalcedon, Severians are known also as verbal Monophysites.[19][23]
  • Tritheists, a group of sixth-century Monophysites said to have been founded by a Monophysite named John Ascunages[24] of Antioch. Their principal writer was John Philoponus, who taught that the common nature of Father, Son and Holy Spirit is an abstraction of their distinct individual natures.[25][26]
  • Some members of the early Coptic Orthodox Church believed in Monophysitism,[27][28] although others preferred to label their non-Chalcedonian beliefs as Miaphysitism and these beliefs were generally different from the Monophysitism-believing church members'.[29][30]

Verbal monophysitism edit

Concerning verbal declarations of Monophysitism, Justo L. González stated, "in order not to give an erroneous idea of the theology of the so-called Monophysite churches, that have subsisted until the twentieth century, one should point out that all the extreme sects of Monophysism disappeared within a brief span, and that the Christology of the present so-called Monophysite churches is closer to a verbal than to a real Monophysism". [31]

Political situation of monophysitism after Chalcedon edit

Under Emperor Basiliscus, who ousted Emperor Zeno in 475, "the Monophysites reached the pinnacle of their power". In his Encyclion, which he issued in the same year, he revoked the Council of Chalcedon and recognized the Second Council of Ephesus of 449 except for its approval of Eutyches, whom Basiliscus condemned. He required his edict to be signed by each bishop. Among the signatures he obtained were those of three of the four Eastern Patriarchs, but the Patriarch and the populace of the capital protested so resolutely that in 476, seeing that his overthrow was imminent, he issued his Anti-Encyclion revoking his former edict. In the same year, Zeno returned victoriously.[32][33]

Events had made it clear that there was a split between the population, staunchly Chalcedonian in sympathies, of Constantinople and the Balkans and the largely anti-Chalcedonian population of Egypt and Syria. In an attempt to reconcile both sides, Zeno, with the support of Acacius of Constantinople and Peter III of Alexandria, tried to enforce the compromise Henoticon (Formula of Union) decree of 482, which condemned Eutyches but ignored Chalcedon. Schisms followed on both sides. Rome excommunicated Acacius (leading to the 35-year Acacian schism), while in Egypt the Acephali broke away from Peter III. The Acacian schism continued under Zeno's successor, the Monophysite Anastasius I Dicorus and ended only with the accession of the Chalcedonian Justin I in 518.[34][35]

Justin I was succeeded by the Chalcedonian Justinian I (527–565), whose wife Empress Theodora protected and assisted the Monophysites.[36] Ghassanid patronage of the Monophysite Syrian Church under phylarch Al-Harith ibn Jabalah was crucial for its survival, revival, and even its spread.[37] Justinian I was followed by Justin II, who after being a Monophysite, perhaps because of Theodora's influence, converted to the Chalcedonian faith before obtaining the imperial throne. Some time later, he adopted a policy of persecuting the Monophysites.[36] From Justinian I on, no emperor was a declared Monophysite, although they continued their efforts to find compromise formulas such as monoenergism and monothelitism.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "monophysitism". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. ^ "Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, μόνος". www.perseus.tufts.edu.
  3. ^ Orlando O. Espín; James B. Nickoloff (2007). An Introductory Dictionary of Theology and Religious Studies. Liturgical Press. p. 902. ISBN 978-0-8146-5856-7.
  4. ^ Ted Campbell (1996). Christian Confessions: A Historical Introduction. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-664-25650-0.
  5. ^ Christopher Kleinhenz (2004). Medieval Italy: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 762. ISBN 978-1-135-94880-1.
  6. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Acephali". www.newadvent.org.
  7. ^ "A Reply to Fr. John Morris Concerning His Review of My Book, The Non-Orthodox". orthodoxinfo.com. Retrieved 2022-11-15.
  8. ^ Frank Leslie Cross; Elizabeth A. Livingstone, eds. (2005). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3.
  9. ^ Justo L. González (2010). A History of Christian Thought Volume II: From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation. Abingdon Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-4267-2191-5.
  10. ^ J. C. Cooper (2013). Dictionary of Christianity. Routledge. p. 119. ISBN 978-1-134-26546-6.
  11. ^ Mary Clayton (1998). The Apocryphal Gospels of Mary in Anglo-Saxon England. Cambridge University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-521-58168-4.
  12. ^ William Holmes (2017). The Age of Justinian. Jovian Press. p. 280. ISBN 978-1-5378-1078-2.
  13. ^ Sollier, Joseph. "Apollinarianism." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907. 8 February 2019
  14. ^ McGuckin (1994). St. Cyril of Alexandria: The Christological Controversy: Its History, Theology, and Texts. Brill. p. 109. ISBN 978-90-04-31290-6.
  15. ^ Daniel R. Streett (2011). They Went Out from Us: The Identity of the Opponents in First John. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 38–39. ISBN 978-3-11-024771-8.
  16. ^ J.R.C. Cousland (2017). Holy Terror: Jesus in the Infancy Gospel of Thomas. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-567-66817-2.
  17. ^ E. A. Livingstone; M. W. D. Sparks; R. W. Peacocke (2013). "Monophysitism". The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-965962-3.
  18. ^ Fred Sanders; Klaus Issler (2007). Jesus in Trinitarian Perspective: An Introductory Christology. B&H Publishing Group. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-8054-4422-3.
  19. ^ a b John D. Hannah (2019). Invitation to Church History: World: The Story of Christianity. Kregel Academic. p. 153. ISBN 978-0-8254-2775-6.
  20. ^ Hans van Loon (2009). The Dyophysite Christology of Cyril of Alexandria. Brill. p. 33. ISBN 978-90-474-2669-1.
  21. ^ Bernhard Bischoff; Michael Lapidge (1994). Biblical Commentaries from the Canterbury School of Theodore and Hadrian. Cambridge University Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-521-33089-3.
  22. ^ "Eutyches | Orthodox abbot".
  23. ^ Justo L. González (2010). A History of Christian Thought Volume II: From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation. Abingdon Press. pp. 77–78, 81. ISBN 978-1-4267-2191-5.
  24. ^ Simplicius (2014). On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.2-3. A&C Black. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-4725-0166-0.
  25. ^ E. A. Livingstone; M. W. D. Sparks; R. W. Peacocke (2013). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. OUP Oxford. p. 573. ISBN 978-0-19-965962-3.
  26. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Tritheists". www.newadvent.org.
  27. ^ Olupona, Jacob K. (2014). African Religions: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-19-979058-6. OCLC 839396781.
  28. ^ "Theodosius Of Alexandria". Encyclopedia Britannica. 2022-05-08. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  29. ^ Lotha, Gloria (2023-03-16). "Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  30. ^ Petruzzello, Melissa (2023-04-13). "Monophysite". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  31. ^ Justo L. González (1987). A History of Christian Thought Volume 2: From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation. Abingdon Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-687-17183-5.
  32. ^ E. Glenn Hinson (1996). The Early Church: Origins to the Dawn of the Middle Ages. Abingdon Press. p. 298. ISBN 978-0-687-00603-8.
  33. ^ Philip Hughes (1948). History of the Church: Volume 1: The World In Which The Church Was Founded. A&C Black. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-7220-7981-2.
  34. ^ Bryan Ward-Perkins; Michael Whitby (2000). The Cambridge ancient history. 14. Late antiquity: empire and successors, A.D. 425–600. Cambridge University Press. pp. 51–52. ISBN 978-0-521-32591-2.
  35. ^ Justo L. González (2010). A History of Christian Thought Volume II: From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation. Abingdon Press. pp. 79–82. ISBN 978-1-4267-2191-5.
  36. ^ a b John Wesley Barker (1966). Justinian and the Later Roman Empire. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 212–213. ISBN 978-0-299-03944-8.
  37. ^ Rome in the East, Warwick Ball, Routledge, 2000, p. 105
  38. ^ Olupona, Jacob K. (2014). African Religions: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-19-979058-6. OCLC 839396781.

monophysitism, confused, with, miaphysitism, seye, zəm, monophysism, zəm, from, greek, μόνος, monos, solitary, φύσις, physis, nature, christology, that, states, that, person, incarnated, word, that, jesus, christ, there, only, nature, divine, contents, backgro. Not to be confused with Miaphysitism Monophysitism m e ˈ n ɒ f ɪ s aɪ t ɪ z em me NOF ih seye tih zem 1 or monophysism m e ˈ n ɒ f ɪ z ɪ z em me NOF ih zih zem from Greek monos monos solitary 2 and fysis physis nature is a Christology that states that in the person of the incarnated Word that is in Jesus Christ there was only one nature the divine 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Groups called monophysite 3 Verbal monophysitism 4 Political situation of monophysitism after Chalcedon 5 See also 6 ReferencesBackground editThe First Council of Nicaea 325 declared that Christ was divine homoousios consubstantial of one being or essence with the Father and human was incarnate and became man In the fifth century a heated controversy arose between the sees and theological schools of Antioch and Alexandria about how divinity and humanity existed in Christ 4 the former stressing the humanity the latter the divinity of Christ Cyril of Alexandria succeeded in having Nestorius a prominent exponent of the Antiochian school condemned at the Council of Ephesus in 431 and insisted on the formula one physis of the incarnate Word claiming that any formula that spoke of two physeis represented Nestorianism Some taught that in Christ the human nature was completely absorbed by the divine leaving only a divine nature In 451 the Council of Chalcedon on the basis of Pope Leo the Great s 449 declaration defined that in Christ there were two natures united in one person 5 Those who insisted on the one physis formula were referred to as Monophysites m e ˈ n ɒ f ɪ s aɪ t while those who accepted the two natures definition were called Dyophysites a term applied also to followers of Nestorianism Groups called monophysite editThe forms of monophysism were numerous and included the following Acephali were Monophysites who in 482 broke away from Peter III of Alexandria who made an agreement with Acacius of Constantinople sanctioned by Emperor Zeno with his Henotikon edict that condemned both Nestorius and Eutyches as the Council of Chalcedon had done but ignored that council s decree on the two natures of Christ They saw this as a betrayal of S Cyrils use of Mia Physis and refused to be subject to the Chalcedonian Patriarch of Alexandria preferring to be instead ecclesiastically without a head the meaning of acephali 6 For this they were known as Headless Ones 7 Agnoetae Themistians or Agnosticists founded by Themistius Calonymus around 534 held that the nature of Jesus Christ although divine was like other men s in all respects including limited knowledge 8 9 They must be distinguished from a fourth century group called by the same name who denied that God knew the past and the future 10 Aphthartodocetae Phantasiasts or after their leader Julian of Halicarnassus Julianists believed that the body of Christ from the very moment of his conception was incorruptible immortal and impassible as it was after the resurrection and held that the suffering and death on the cross was a miracle contrary to the normal conditions of Christ s humanity 11 Emperor Justinian I wished to have this teaching adopted as orthodox but died before he could put his plans into effect 12 Apollinarians or Apollinarists named after Apollinaris of Laodicea who died in 390 proposed that Jesus had a normal human body but had a divine mind instead of a regular human soul This teaching was condemned by the First Council of Constantinople 381 and died out within a few decades 13 Cyril of Alexandria declared it a mad proposal 14 Docetists not all of whom were Monophysites held that Jesus had no human nature his humanity was only a phantasm which united with the impassible immaterial divine nature could not really suffer and die 15 16 Eutychians taught that Jesus had only one nature a union of the divine and human that is not an even compound since what is divine is infinitely larger than what is human the humanity is absorbed by and transmuted into the divinity as a drop of honey mixing with the water of the sea vanishes The body of Christ thus transmuted is not consubstantial homoousios with humankind 17 18 In contrast to Severians who are called verbal Monophysites Eutychianists are called real or ontological Monophysites 19 20 21 and their teaching is an extreme form of the Monophysite heresy that emphasizes the exclusive prevalence of the divinity in Christ 22 Severians accepted the reality of Christ s human nature to the extent of insisting that his body was capable of corruption but argued that since a single person has a single nature and Christ was one person not two he had only a single nature Agreeing in substance though not in words with the Definition of Chalcedon Severians are known also as verbal Monophysites 19 23 Tritheists a group of sixth century Monophysites said to have been founded by a Monophysite named John Ascunages 24 of Antioch Their principal writer was John Philoponus who taught that the common nature of Father Son and Holy Spirit is an abstraction of their distinct individual natures 25 26 Some members of the early Coptic Orthodox Church believed in Monophysitism 27 28 although others preferred to label their non Chalcedonian beliefs as Miaphysitism and these beliefs were generally different from the Monophysitism believing church members 29 30 Verbal monophysitism editConcerning verbal declarations of Monophysitism Justo L Gonzalez stated in order not to give an erroneous idea of the theology of the so called Monophysite churches that have subsisted until the twentieth century one should point out that all the extreme sects of Monophysism disappeared within a brief span and that the Christology of the present so called Monophysite churches is closer to a verbal than to a real Monophysism 31 Political situation of monophysitism after Chalcedon editUnder Emperor Basiliscus who ousted Emperor Zeno in 475 the Monophysites reached the pinnacle of their power In his Encyclion which he issued in the same year he revoked the Council of Chalcedon and recognized the Second Council of Ephesus of 449 except for its approval of Eutyches whom Basiliscus condemned He required his edict to be signed by each bishop Among the signatures he obtained were those of three of the four Eastern Patriarchs but the Patriarch and the populace of the capital protested so resolutely that in 476 seeing that his overthrow was imminent he issued his Anti Encyclion revoking his former edict In the same year Zeno returned victoriously 32 33 Events had made it clear that there was a split between the population staunchly Chalcedonian in sympathies of Constantinople and the Balkans and the largely anti Chalcedonian population of Egypt and Syria In an attempt to reconcile both sides Zeno with the support of Acacius of Constantinople and Peter III of Alexandria tried to enforce the compromise Henoticon Formula of Union decree of 482 which condemned Eutyches but ignored Chalcedon Schisms followed on both sides Rome excommunicated Acacius leading to the 35 year Acacian schism while in Egypt the Acephali broke away from Peter III The Acacian schism continued under Zeno s successor the Monophysite Anastasius I Dicorus and ended only with the accession of the Chalcedonian Justin I in 518 34 35 Justin I was succeeded by the Chalcedonian Justinian I 527 565 whose wife Empress Theodora protected and assisted the Monophysites 36 Ghassanid patronage of the Monophysite Syrian Church under phylarch Al Harith ibn Jabalah was crucial for its survival revival and even its spread 37 Justinian I was followed by Justin II who after being a Monophysite perhaps because of Theodora s influence converted to the Chalcedonian faith before obtaining the imperial throne Some time later he adopted a policy of persecuting the Monophysites 36 From Justinian I on no emperor was a declared Monophysite although they continued their efforts to find compromise formulas such as monoenergism and monothelitism See also editMiaphysitism Chalcedonian Christianity Jesus s divinity was also viewed as one nature by a minority of Roman Christians around the time of the Council of Chalcedon 38 References edit monophysitism Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon monos www perseus tufts edu Orlando O Espin James B Nickoloff 2007 An Introductory Dictionary of Theology and Religious Studies Liturgical Press p 902 ISBN 978 0 8146 5856 7 Ted Campbell 1996 Christian Confessions A Historical Introduction Westminster John Knox Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 664 25650 0 Christopher Kleinhenz 2004 Medieval Italy An Encyclopedia Routledge p 762 ISBN 978 1 135 94880 1 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Acephali www newadvent org A Reply to Fr John Morris Concerning His Review of My Book The Non Orthodox orthodoxinfo com Retrieved 2022 11 15 Frank Leslie Cross Elizabeth A Livingstone eds 2005 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 Justo L Gonzalez 2010 A History of Christian Thought Volume II From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation Abingdon Press p 81 ISBN 978 1 4267 2191 5 J C Cooper 2013 Dictionary of Christianity Routledge p 119 ISBN 978 1 134 26546 6 Mary Clayton 1998 The Apocryphal Gospels of Mary in Anglo Saxon England Cambridge University Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 521 58168 4 William Holmes 2017 The Age of Justinian Jovian Press p 280 ISBN 978 1 5378 1078 2 Sollier Joseph Apollinarianism The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 1 New York Robert Appleton Company 1907 8 February 2019 McGuckin 1994 St Cyril of Alexandria The Christological Controversy Its History Theology and Texts Brill p 109 ISBN 978 90 04 31290 6 Daniel R Streett 2011 They Went Out from Us The Identity of the Opponents in First John Walter de Gruyter pp 38 39 ISBN 978 3 11 024771 8 J R C Cousland 2017 Holy Terror Jesus in the Infancy Gospel of Thomas Bloomsbury Publishing p 99 ISBN 978 0 567 66817 2 E A Livingstone M W D Sparks R W Peacocke 2013 Monophysitism The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 965962 3 Fred Sanders Klaus Issler 2007 Jesus in Trinitarian Perspective An Introductory Christology B amp H Publishing Group p 22 ISBN 978 0 8054 4422 3 a b John D Hannah 2019 Invitation to Church History World The Story of Christianity Kregel Academic p 153 ISBN 978 0 8254 2775 6 Hans van Loon 2009 The Dyophysite Christology of Cyril of Alexandria Brill p 33 ISBN 978 90 474 2669 1 Bernhard Bischoff Michael Lapidge 1994 Biblical Commentaries from the Canterbury School of Theodore and Hadrian Cambridge University Press p 11 ISBN 978 0 521 33089 3 Eutyches Orthodox abbot Justo L Gonzalez 2010 A History of Christian Thought Volume II From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation Abingdon Press pp 77 78 81 ISBN 978 1 4267 2191 5 Simplicius 2014 On Aristotle On the Heavens 1 2 3 A amp C Black p 9 ISBN 978 1 4725 0166 0 E A Livingstone M W D Sparks R W Peacocke 2013 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church OUP Oxford p 573 ISBN 978 0 19 965962 3 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Tritheists www newadvent org Olupona Jacob K 2014 African Religions A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press p 90 ISBN 978 0 19 979058 6 OCLC 839396781 Theodosius Of Alexandria Encyclopedia Britannica 2022 05 08 Retrieved 2023 04 24 Lotha Gloria 2023 03 16 Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 24 Petruzzello Melissa 2023 04 13 Monophysite Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 24 Justo L Gonzalez 1987 A History of Christian Thought Volume 2 From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation Abingdon Press p 82 ISBN 978 0 687 17183 5 E Glenn Hinson 1996 The Early Church Origins to the Dawn of the Middle Ages Abingdon Press p 298 ISBN 978 0 687 00603 8 Philip Hughes 1948 History of the Church Volume 1 The World In Which The Church Was Founded A amp C Black p 265 ISBN 978 0 7220 7981 2 Bryan Ward Perkins Michael Whitby 2000 The Cambridge ancient history 14 Late antiquity empire and successors A D 425 600 Cambridge University Press pp 51 52 ISBN 978 0 521 32591 2 Justo L Gonzalez 2010 A History of Christian Thought Volume II From Augustine to the Eve of the Reformation Abingdon Press pp 79 82 ISBN 978 1 4267 2191 5 a b John Wesley Barker 1966 Justinian and the Later Roman Empire Univ of Wisconsin Press pp 212 213 ISBN 978 0 299 03944 8 Rome in the East Warwick Ball Routledge 2000 p 105 Olupona Jacob K 2014 African Religions A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press p 90 ISBN 978 0 19 979058 6 OCLC 839396781 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monophysitism amp oldid 1201556285, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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