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Paul the Jew

Paul the Jew was the Patriarch of Antioch, and head of the Chalcedonian Patriarchate of Antioch, from 519 to 521.[1]

Paul the Jew
Patriarch of Antioch and All the East
ChurchChalcedonian Church of Antioch
SeeAntioch
Installed519
Term ended521
PredecessorSeverus I
SuccessorEuphrasius
Personal details
Born
Died521

Biography edit

Paul was born in Constantinople, where he became a priest and chief administrator of the Hospice of Euboulos.[2][3] Paul was consecrated Patriarch of Antioch by the end of June 519.[3] He was consecrated in Antioch on the insistence of Pope Hormisdas, despite initial plans to consecrate Paul in Constantinople.[2] The Church of Antioch suffered from a lack of funds at this time, and thus Emperor Justin I bestowed upon Paul a large amount of money for the maintenance of the Church.[2]

After his ascension to the throne, Emperor Justin ordered bishops within the Diocese of the East to accept the Council of Chalcedon or face deposition.[4] In November 519,[5] with the aid of the imperial army, the patriarch had Paul, Bishop of Edessa, who had refused to accept the council, forcibly removed from his church, despite the protestations of the local population, and exiled to Seleucia in Syria.[6] Fearing civil unrest,[6] Emperor Justin restored Paul to the see of Edessa after forty days.[4] According to John of Ephesus, Paul carried out assassinations and torture during his tenure as patriarch.[6]

Paul's persecution towards non-Chalcedonians earned him the cognomen, "the Jew".[2] He ordered non-Chalcedonian monks on the fringe of the Syrian Desert to sign a declaration of acceptance of the Council of Chalcedon, and those who failed to do so were threatened with removal from their monasteries.[4] The majority of monks refused to accept the council,[4] and thus Paul had the army led by Asclepius sent to dislocate the monks.[6] The resulting violence led Emperor Justin to depose Paul in 521, who died shortly afterwards.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ Hore, Alexander Hugh (1899). Eighteen Centuries of the Orthodox Greek Church. James Parker. pp. 281–282.
  2. ^ a b c d Allen (2011), p. 27
  3. ^ a b Viezure (2011), p. 566
  4. ^ a b c d Evans (2000), p. 108
  5. ^ Gwynn (1911)
  6. ^ a b c d e Tate (2004), pp. 109-110

Bibliography edit

Preceded by Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch
519-521
Succeeded by
Euphrasius

paul, patriarch, antioch, head, chalcedonian, patriarchate, antioch, from, patriarch, antioch, eastchurchchalcedonian, church, antiochseeantiochinstalled519term, ended521predecessorseverus, isuccessoreuphrasiuspersonal, detailsbornconstantinople, eastern, roma. Paul the Jew was the Patriarch of Antioch and head of the Chalcedonian Patriarchate of Antioch from 519 to 521 1 Paul the JewPatriarch of Antioch and All the EastChurchChalcedonian Church of AntiochSeeAntiochInstalled519Term ended521PredecessorSeverus ISuccessorEuphrasiusPersonal detailsBornConstantinople Eastern Roman Empire modern day Istanbul Turkey Died521Biography editPaul was born in Constantinople where he became a priest and chief administrator of the Hospice of Euboulos 2 3 Paul was consecrated Patriarch of Antioch by the end of June 519 3 He was consecrated in Antioch on the insistence of Pope Hormisdas despite initial plans to consecrate Paul in Constantinople 2 The Church of Antioch suffered from a lack of funds at this time and thus Emperor Justin I bestowed upon Paul a large amount of money for the maintenance of the Church 2 After his ascension to the throne Emperor Justin ordered bishops within the Diocese of the East to accept the Council of Chalcedon or face deposition 4 In November 519 5 with the aid of the imperial army the patriarch had Paul Bishop of Edessa who had refused to accept the council forcibly removed from his church despite the protestations of the local population and exiled to Seleucia in Syria 6 Fearing civil unrest 6 Emperor Justin restored Paul to the see of Edessa after forty days 4 According to John of Ephesus Paul carried out assassinations and torture during his tenure as patriarch 6 Paul s persecution towards non Chalcedonians earned him the cognomen the Jew 2 He ordered non Chalcedonian monks on the fringe of the Syrian Desert to sign a declaration of acceptance of the Council of Chalcedon and those who failed to do so were threatened with removal from their monasteries 4 The majority of monks refused to accept the council 4 and thus Paul had the army led by Asclepius sent to dislocate the monks 6 The resulting violence led Emperor Justin to depose Paul in 521 who died shortly afterwards 6 References edit Hore Alexander Hugh 1899 Eighteen Centuries of the Orthodox Greek Church James Parker pp 281 282 a b c d Allen 2011 p 27 a b Viezure 2011 p 566 a b c d Evans 2000 p 108 Gwynn 1911 a b c d e Tate 2004 pp 109 110Bibliography editAllen Pauline 2011 Episcopal Succession in Antioch in the Sixth Century Episcopal Elections in Late Antiquity Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110268553 Evans J A S 2000 The Age of Justinian The Circumstances of Imperial Power Routledge nbsp Gwynn John 1911 Paulus Edessenus In Wace Henry Piercy William C eds Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century 3rd ed London John Murray Tate Georges 2004 Justinien L epopee de l Empire d Orient 527 565 Fayard Viezure Dana luliana 2011 The Election of Paul the Jew 519 in Light of the Theopaschite Controversy Episcopal Elections in Late Antiquity Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110268553 Preceded bySeverus I Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch519 521 Succeeded byEuphrasius Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul the Jew amp oldid 1185034597, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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