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Second Council of Nicaea

The Second Council of Nicaea is recognized as the last of the first seven ecumenical councils by the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church. In addition, it is also recognized as such by the Old Catholics, the Anglican Communion, and others. Protestant opinions on it are varied.

Second Council of Nicaea
Date787
Accepted by
Previous council
Next council
Convoked byConstantine VI and Empress Irene (as regent)
PresidentPatriarch Tarasios of Constantinople, and legates of Pope Adrian I
Attendance308 bishops, 350 members total (including two papal legates)
TopicsIconoclasm
Documents and statements
veneration of icons approved
Chronological list of ecumenical councils

It met in AD 787 in Nicaea (site of the First Council of Nicaea; present-day İznik, Bursa, in Turkey), to restore the use and veneration of icons (or holy images),[1] which had been suppressed by imperial edict inside the Byzantine Empire during the reign of Leo III (717–741). His son, Constantine V (741–775), had held the Council of Hieria to make the suppression official.

Background

The veneration of icons had been banned by Byzantine Emperor Constantine V and supported by his Council of Hieria (754 AD), which had described itself as the seventh ecumenical council.[2] The Council of Hieria was overturned by the Second Council of Nicaea only 33 years later, and has also been rejected by Catholic and Orthodox churches, since none of the five major patriarchs were represented. The emperor's vigorous enforcement of the ban included persecution of those who venerated icons and of monks in general. There were also political overtones to the persecution—images of emperors were still allowed by Constantine, which some opponents saw as an attempt to give wider authority to imperial power than to the saints and bishops.[3] Constantine's iconoclastic tendencies were shared by Constantine's son, Leo IV. After the latter's early death, his widow, Irene of Athens, as regent for her son, began its restoration for personal inclination and political considerations.

In 784 the imperial secretary Patriarch Tarasius was appointed successor to the Patriarch Paul IV—he accepted on the condition that intercommunion with the other churches should be reestablished; that is, that the images should be restored. However, a council, claiming to be ecumenical, had abolished the veneration of icons, so another ecumenical council was necessary for its restoration.

Pope Adrian I was invited to participate, and gladly accepted, sending an archbishop and an abbot as his legates.

 
An icon of the Seventh Ecumenical Council (17th century, Novodevichy Convent, Moscow).

In 786, the council met in the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople. However, soldiers in collusion with the opposition entered the church, and broke up the assembly.[4] As a result, the government resorted to a stratagem. Under the pretext of a campaign, the iconoclastic bodyguard was sent away from the capital – disarmed and disbanded.

The council was again summoned to meet, this time in Nicaea, since Constantinople was still distrusted. The council assembled on September 24, 787 at the church of Hagia Sophia. It numbered about 350 members; 308 bishops or their representatives signed. Tarasius presided,[5] and seven sessions were held in Nicaea.[4]

Proceedings

  • First Session (September 24, 787) – There was debate over whether bishops who had accepted iconoclasm when under iconoclast rule could remain in office.
  • Second Session (September 26, 787) – Letters from Pope Adrian I were read out in Greek translation, approving the veneration of images, but severely critical of Byzantine infringement of papal rights. Ignoring the latter, the bishops answered: "We follow, we receive, we admit".
  • Third Session (September 28, 787) — The supposed representatives of the oriental patriarchates presented their credentials. From these it is clear that their patriarchs had not in fact appointed them.
  • Fourth Session (October 1, 787) — Proof of the lawfulness of the veneration of icons was drawn from Exodus 25:19 sqq.; Numbers 7:89; Hebrews 9:5 sqq.; Ezekiel 41:18, and Genesis 31:34, but especially from a series of passages of the Church Fathers;[1] and from hagiography.
  • Fifth Session (October 4, 787) – A further florilegium was read out, "proving" that iconoclasm originated from pagans, Jews, Muslims, and heretics.
  • Sixth Session (October 6, 787) – The definition of the pseudo-Seventh council (754) and a long refutation of the same (probably by Tarasius) were read.
  • Seventh Session (October 13, 787) – The council issued a declaration of faith concerning the veneration of holy images.
     
    Hagia Sophia of Nicaea, where the Council took place; Iznik, Turkey.
     
    Hagia Sophia, İznik

    It was determined that

    As the sacred and life-giving cross is everywhere set up as a symbol, so also should the images of Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, the holy angels, as well as those of the saints and other pious and holy men be embodied in the manufacture of sacred vessels, tapestries, vestments, etc., and exhibited on the walls of churches, in the homes, and in all conspicuous places, by the roadside and everywhere, to be revered by all who might see them. For the more they are contemplated, the more they move to fervent memory of their prototypes. Therefore, it is proper to accord to them a fervent and reverent veneration, not, however, the veritable adoration which, according to our faith, belongs to the Divine Being alone – for the honor accorded to the image passes over to its prototype, and whoever venerate the image venerate in it the reality of what is there represented.

    This definition of the proper religious veneration of images centers on the distinction between timētikē proskynēsis, meaning the "veneration of honour", and "alēthinē latreia", meaning "true adoration". The former is permitted to images in the same way as to other holy things, notably the cross and the gospel-book, while the latter, "latreia", is reserved for God alone. But the statement that follows, to the effect that the honor paid to the image passes over to its prototype implies on the contrary that there are not two different degrees of veneration, but a single veneration that is not idolatrous since it treats the image as a door or window through which the person praying to the image perceives and adores the heavenly personage who is depicted in it. This could not lead to a worship of images of the Godhead in Byzantium, since no attempt was made to represent Godhead in art. But a problem remains over the human nature of Christ, which is certainly represented in art and which at the same time shares fully in the adoration paid to Christ as God: it would be heretical to worship Christ's Godhead but only honour his humanity.
  • The so-called "Eighth Session" (October 23, 787) held in Constantinople at the Magnaura Palace supposedly in the presence of the emperors Constantine IV and Irene. Erich Lamberz has proved that this "session" is a late ninth-century forgery (see Price, The Acts of the Second Council of Nicaea, 655-6). The purpose of the addition was to do justice to the role of the emperors at this ecumenical council as at its predecessors.

The twenty-two canons[6] drawn up in Constantinople also served ecclesiastical reform. Careful maintenance of the ordinances of the earlier councils, knowledge of the scriptures on the part of the clergy, and care for Christian conduct are required, and the desire for a renewal of ecclesiastical life is awakened.

The council also decreed that every altar should contain a relic, which remains the case in modern Catholic and Orthodox regulations (Canon VII), and made a number of decrees on clerical discipline, especially for monks when mixing with women.

Acceptance by various Christian bodies

The papal legates voiced their approval of the restoration of the veneration of icons in no uncertain terms, and the patriarch sent a full account of the proceedings of the council to Pope Hadrian I, who had it translated (Pope Anastasius III later replaced the translation with a better one). The papacy did not, however, formally confirm the decrees of the council till 880. In the West, the Frankish clergy initially rejected the Council at a synod in 794, and Charlemagne, then King of the Franks, supported the composition of the Libri Carolini in response, which repudiated the teachings of both the Council and the iconoclasts. A copy of the Libri was sent to Pope Hadrian, who responded with a refutation of the Frankish arguments.[7] The Libri would thereafter remain unpublished until the Reformation, and the Council is accepted as the Seventh Ecumenical Council by the Catholic Church.

The council, or rather the final defeat of iconoclasm in 843, is celebrated in the Eastern Orthodox Church, and Eastern Catholic Churches of Byzantine Rite as "The Sunday of the Triumph of Orthodoxy" each year on the first Sunday of Great Lent, the fast that leads up to Pascha (Easter), and again on the Sunday closest to October 11 (the Sunday on or after October 8). The former celebration commemorates the defeat of iconoclasm, while the latter commemorates the council itself.

Many Protestants who follow the French reformer John Calvin generally agree in rejecting the canons of the council, which they believe promoted idolatry. He rejected the distinction between veneration (douleia, proskynesis) and adoration (latreia) as unbiblical "sophistry" and condemned even the decorative use of images.[8] In subsequent editions of the Institutes, he cited an influential Carolingian source, now ascribed to Theodulf of Orleans, which reacts negatively the council's acts. Calvin did not engage the apologetic arguments of John of Damascus or Theodore the Studite, apparently because he was unaware of them.[citation needed]

Bishops of Dalmatia

Particularly interesting that four Dalmatian bishops are among the signatories of the synod, whose cities were no longer under Byzantine rule.[9][10] These Dalmatian bishoprics had been dissolved earlier. So the question arises when were these bishoprics re- established in these medieval Dalmatia cities?[10][9]

The four Dalmatian bishops who signed the synod, in order:

  • “Ioannes episcopus sanctae ecclesiae Salonentianae” (John of Salona-Split)
  • “Laurentius episcopus sanctae Absartianensis ecclesiae” (Lawrence of Osor)
  • “Ursus episcopus Avaritianensium ecclesiae” (Ursus of Rab)
  • “Ioannes episcopus Decateron” (John of Kotor)[10][9]

This suggests that new bishoprics was founded or old (Early Christian) episcopal seats were re-established in this area.[10][9]

Critical edition of the Greek text

  • Concilium universale Nicaenum Secundum, in Acta Conciliorum Oecumenicorum, ser. 2, vol. 3, in 3 parts, ed. Erich Lamberz, Berlin 2008-2016. Also includes the Latin translation by Anastasius Bibliothecarius.

Translations

There are only a few translations of the above Acts in the modern languages:

  • English translation made in 1850 by an Anglican priest, John Mendham; with notes taken largely from the attack on the council in the Libri Carolini. The aim of the translation was to show how the Catholic veneration of images is based on superstition and forgery.
  • The Canons and excerpts of the Acts in The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Undivided Church, translated by Henry R. Percival and edited by Philip Schaff (1901).
  • Translation made by Kazan Theological Academy (published from 1873 to 1909) – a seriously corrupted translation of the Acts of the Councils into Russian.[11]
  • A relatively new Vatican's translation (2004) into Italian language. Publishers in Vatican mistakenly thought[12] that they made the first translation of the Acts into European languages.[13]
  • The new (2016) Russian version of the Acts of the Council is a revised version of the translation made by Kazan Theological Academy, specifying the cases of corruption by the Orthodox translators.[14] There are several dozens of such cases, some of them are critical.
  • Price, Richard, ed. (2018a). The acts of the Second Council of Nicaea (787). Vol. 1. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 9781802071023.
  • Price, Richard, ed. (2018b). The acts of the Second Council of Nicaea (787). Vol. 2. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 9781786941275.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Gibbon, p.1693
  2. ^ Council of Hieria, Canon 19, "If anyone does not accept this our Holy and Ecumenical Seventh Synod, let him be anathema from the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, and from the seven holy Ecumenical Synods!" http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/icono-cncl754.asp
  3. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 388.
  4. ^ a b Ostrogorsky 1969, p. 178.
  5. ^ Gibbon, p.1693.
  6. ^ "NPNF2-14. The Seven Ecumenical Councils - Christian Classics Ethereal Library". www.ccel.org.
  7. ^ Hussey 1986, p. 49-50.
  8. ^ cf. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion 1.11
  9. ^ a b c d Škegro, Ante. The Sarnian diocese (Sarniensis Ecclesia) (PDF).
  10. ^ a b c d Basić, Ivan (2018). New evidence for the re-establishment of the Adriatic dioceses in the late eighth century. Oxford: Routledge. pp. 261–287. ISBN 978-1-138-22594-7.
  11. ^ See: http://www.knigafund.ru/books/12281/read 2016-10-26 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ See: N. Tanner, "Atti del Concilio Niceno Secondo Ecumenico Settimo, Tomi I–III, introduzione e traduzione di Pier Giorgio Di Domenico, saggio encomiastico di Crispino Valenziano", in "Gregorianum", N. 86/4, Rome, 2005, p. 928.
  13. ^ Catholic Church, Atti del Concilio Niceno Secondo Ecumenico Settimo (Citta del Vaticano: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2004) ISBN 9788820976491
  14. ^ Firsov, Evgeniĭ Vasilʹevich (2016). Акты Второго Никейского (Седьмого Вселенского) собора (787 г.). ISBN 9785446908912.

Sources

Further reading

There is no up-to-date English monograph on either the council or the iconoclast controversy in general. But see L. Brubaker and J. Haldon, Byzantium in the Iconoclast Era c. 680 to 850: A History (Cambridge 2011).

second, council, nicaea, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, se. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Second Council of Nicaea news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Second Council of Nicaea is recognized as the last of the first seven ecumenical councils by the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church In addition it is also recognized as such by the Old Catholics the Anglican Communion and others Protestant opinions on it are varied Second Council of NicaeaDate787Accepted byCatholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church Anglican Communion Old Catholic Church Lutheran ChurchPrevious councilThird Council of Constantinople Catholic numbering Quinisext Council Orthodox numbering Next councilFourth Council of Constantinople Catholic Church Fourth Council of Constantinople Eastern Orthodox Convoked byConstantine VI and Empress Irene as regent PresidentPatriarch Tarasios of Constantinople and legates of Pope Adrian IAttendance308 bishops 350 members total including two papal legates TopicsIconoclasmDocuments and statementsveneration of icons approvedChronological list of ecumenical councilsIt met in AD 787 in Nicaea site of the First Council of Nicaea present day Iznik Bursa in Turkey to restore the use and veneration of icons or holy images 1 which had been suppressed by imperial edict inside the Byzantine Empire during the reign of Leo III 717 741 His son Constantine V 741 775 had held the Council of Hieria to make the suppression official Contents 1 Background 2 Proceedings 3 Acceptance by various Christian bodies 4 Bishops of Dalmatia 5 Critical edition of the Greek text 6 Translations 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 Further readingBackground EditFurther information Byzantine Iconoclasm The veneration of icons had been banned by Byzantine Emperor Constantine V and supported by his Council of Hieria 754 AD which had described itself as the seventh ecumenical council 2 The Council of Hieria was overturned by the Second Council of Nicaea only 33 years later and has also been rejected by Catholic and Orthodox churches since none of the five major patriarchs were represented The emperor s vigorous enforcement of the ban included persecution of those who venerated icons and of monks in general There were also political overtones to the persecution images of emperors were still allowed by Constantine which some opponents saw as an attempt to give wider authority to imperial power than to the saints and bishops 3 Constantine s iconoclastic tendencies were shared by Constantine s son Leo IV After the latter s early death his widow Irene of Athens as regent for her son began its restoration for personal inclination and political considerations In 784 the imperial secretary Patriarch Tarasius was appointed successor to the Patriarch Paul IV he accepted on the condition that intercommunion with the other churches should be reestablished that is that the images should be restored However a council claiming to be ecumenical had abolished the veneration of icons so another ecumenical council was necessary for its restoration Pope Adrian I was invited to participate and gladly accepted sending an archbishop and an abbot as his legates An icon of the Seventh Ecumenical Council 17th century Novodevichy Convent Moscow In 786 the council met in the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople However soldiers in collusion with the opposition entered the church and broke up the assembly 4 As a result the government resorted to a stratagem Under the pretext of a campaign the iconoclastic bodyguard was sent away from the capital disarmed and disbanded The council was again summoned to meet this time in Nicaea since Constantinople was still distrusted The council assembled on September 24 787 at the church of Hagia Sophia It numbered about 350 members 308 bishops or their representatives signed Tarasius presided 5 and seven sessions were held in Nicaea 4 Proceedings EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message First Session September 24 787 There was debate over whether bishops who had accepted iconoclasm when under iconoclast rule could remain in office Second Session September 26 787 Letters from Pope Adrian I were read out in Greek translation approving the veneration of images but severely critical of Byzantine infringement of papal rights Ignoring the latter the bishops answered We follow we receive we admit Third Session September 28 787 The supposed representatives of the oriental patriarchates presented their credentials From these it is clear that their patriarchs had not in fact appointed them Fourth Session October 1 787 Proof of the lawfulness of the veneration of icons was drawn from Exodus 25 19 sqq Numbers 7 89 Hebrews 9 5 sqq Ezekiel 41 18 and Genesis 31 34 but especially from a series of passages of the Church Fathers 1 and from hagiography Fifth Session October 4 787 A further florilegium was read out proving that iconoclasm originated from pagans Jews Muslims and heretics Sixth Session October 6 787 The definition of the pseudo Seventh council 754 and a long refutation of the same probably by Tarasius were read Seventh Session October 13 787 The council issued a declaration of faith concerning the veneration of holy images Hagia Sophia of Nicaea where the Council took place Iznik Turkey Hagia Sophia Iznik It was determined that As the sacred and life giving cross is everywhere set up as a symbol so also should the images of Jesus Christ the Virgin Mary the holy angels as well as those of the saints and other pious and holy men be embodied in the manufacture of sacred vessels tapestries vestments etc and exhibited on the walls of churches in the homes and in all conspicuous places by the roadside and everywhere to be revered by all who might see them For the more they are contemplated the more they move to fervent memory of their prototypes Therefore it is proper to accord to them a fervent and reverent veneration not however the veritable adoration which according to our faith belongs to the Divine Being alone for the honor accorded to the image passes over to its prototype and whoever venerate the image venerate in it the reality of what is there represented This definition of the proper religious veneration of images centers on the distinction between timetike proskynesis meaning the veneration of honour and alethine latreia meaning true adoration The former is permitted to images in the same way as to other holy things notably the cross and the gospel book while the latter latreia is reserved for God alone But the statement that follows to the effect that the honor paid to the image passes over to its prototype implies on the contrary that there are not two different degrees of veneration but a single veneration that is not idolatrous since it treats the image as a door or window through which the person praying to the image perceives and adores the heavenly personage who is depicted in it This could not lead to a worship of images of the Godhead in Byzantium since no attempt was made to represent Godhead in art But a problem remains over the human nature of Christ which is certainly represented in art and which at the same time shares fully in the adoration paid to Christ as God it would be heretical to worship Christ s Godhead but only honour his humanity The so called Eighth Session October 23 787 held in Constantinople at the Magnaura Palace supposedly in the presence of the emperors Constantine IV and Irene Erich Lamberz has proved that this session is a late ninth century forgery see Price The Acts of the Second Council of Nicaea 655 6 The purpose of the addition was to do justice to the role of the emperors at this ecumenical council as at its predecessors The twenty two canons 6 drawn up in Constantinople also served ecclesiastical reform Careful maintenance of the ordinances of the earlier councils knowledge of the scriptures on the part of the clergy and care for Christian conduct are required and the desire for a renewal of ecclesiastical life is awakened The council also decreed that every altar should contain a relic which remains the case in modern Catholic and Orthodox regulations Canon VII and made a number of decrees on clerical discipline especially for monks when mixing with women Acceptance by various Christian bodies EditThe papal legates voiced their approval of the restoration of the veneration of icons in no uncertain terms and the patriarch sent a full account of the proceedings of the council to Pope Hadrian I who had it translated Pope Anastasius III later replaced the translation with a better one The papacy did not however formally confirm the decrees of the council till 880 In the West the Frankish clergy initially rejected the Council at a synod in 794 and Charlemagne then King of the Franks supported the composition of the Libri Carolini in response which repudiated the teachings of both the Council and the iconoclasts A copy of the Libri was sent to Pope Hadrian who responded with a refutation of the Frankish arguments 7 The Libri would thereafter remain unpublished until the Reformation and the Council is accepted as the Seventh Ecumenical Council by the Catholic Church The council or rather the final defeat of iconoclasm in 843 is celebrated in the Eastern Orthodox Church and Eastern Catholic Churches of Byzantine Rite as The Sunday of the Triumph of Orthodoxy each year on the first Sunday of Great Lent the fast that leads up to Pascha Easter and again on the Sunday closest to October 11 the Sunday on or after October 8 The former celebration commemorates the defeat of iconoclasm while the latter commemorates the council itself Many Protestants who follow the French reformer John Calvin generally agree in rejecting the canons of the council which they believe promoted idolatry He rejected the distinction between veneration douleia proskynesis and adoration latreia as unbiblical sophistry and condemned even the decorative use of images 8 In subsequent editions of the Institutes he cited an influential Carolingian source now ascribed to Theodulf of Orleans which reacts negatively the council s acts Calvin did not engage the apologetic arguments of John of Damascus or Theodore the Studite apparently because he was unaware of them citation needed Bishops of Dalmatia EditParticularly interesting that four Dalmatian bishops are among the signatories of the synod whose cities were no longer under Byzantine rule 9 10 These Dalmatian bishoprics had been dissolved earlier So the question arises when were these bishoprics re established in these medieval Dalmatia cities 10 9 The four Dalmatian bishops who signed the synod in order Ioannes episcopus sanctae ecclesiae Salonentianae John of Salona Split Laurentius episcopus sanctae Absartianensis ecclesiae Lawrence of Osor Ursus episcopus Avaritianensium ecclesiae Ursus of Rab Ioannes episcopus Decateron John of Kotor 10 9 This suggests that new bishoprics was founded or old Early Christian episcopal seats were re established in this area 10 9 Critical edition of the Greek text EditConcilium universale Nicaenum Secundum in Acta Conciliorum Oecumenicorum ser 2 vol 3 in 3 parts ed Erich Lamberz Berlin 2008 2016 Also includes the Latin translation by Anastasius Bibliothecarius Translations EditThere are only a few translations of the above Acts in the modern languages English translation made in 1850 by an Anglican priest John Mendham with notes taken largely from the attack on the council in the Libri Carolini The aim of the translation was to show how the Catholic veneration of images is based on superstition and forgery The Canons and excerpts of the Acts in The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Undivided Church translated by Henry R Percival and edited by Philip Schaff 1901 Translation made by Kazan Theological Academy published from 1873 to 1909 a seriously corrupted translation of the Acts of the Councils into Russian 11 A relatively new Vatican s translation 2004 into Italian language Publishers in Vatican mistakenly thought 12 that they made the first translation of the Acts into European languages 13 The new 2016 Russian version of the Acts of the Council is a revised version of the translation made by Kazan Theological Academy specifying the cases of corruption by the Orthodox translators 14 There are several dozens of such cases some of them are critical Price Richard ed 2018a The acts of the Second Council of Nicaea 787 Vol 1 Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 9781802071023 Price Richard ed 2018b The acts of the Second Council of Nicaea 787 Vol 2 Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 9781786941275 See also EditPlato of Sakkoudion Sabas of Stoudios Fourth Council of Constantinople Eastern Orthodox Proskynesis Expression of respectReferences Edit a b Gibbon p 1693 Council of Hieria Canon 19 If anyone does not accept this our Holy and Ecumenical Seventh Synod let him be anathema from the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost and from the seven holy Ecumenical Synods http www fordham edu halsall source icono cncl754 asp Treadgold 1997 p 388 a b Ostrogorsky 1969 p 178 Gibbon p 1693 NPNF2 14 The Seven Ecumenical Councils Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Hussey 1986 p 49 50 cf John Calvin Institutes of the Christian Religion 1 11 a b c d Skegro Ante The Sarnian diocese Sarniensis Ecclesia PDF a b c d Basic Ivan 2018 New evidence for the re establishment of the Adriatic dioceses in the late eighth century Oxford Routledge pp 261 287 ISBN 978 1 138 22594 7 See http www knigafund ru books 12281 read Archived 2016 10 26 at the Wayback Machine See N Tanner Atti del Concilio Niceno Secondo Ecumenico Settimo Tomi I III introduzione e traduzione di Pier Giorgio Di Domenico saggio encomiastico di Crispino Valenziano in Gregorianum N 86 4 Rome 2005 p 928 Catholic Church Atti del Concilio Niceno Secondo Ecumenico Settimo Citta del Vaticano Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2004 ISBN 9788820976491 Firsov Evgeniĭ Vasilʹevich 2016 Akty Vtorogo Nikejskogo Sedmogo Vselenskogo sobora 787 g ISBN 9785446908912 Sources Edit Calvin John Institutes of the Christian Religion 1559 translated by Henry Beveridge 1845 Peabody Hendrickson 2008 Gibbon Edward The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire New York Random House Inc 1995 ISBN 0 679 60148 1 Hussey Joan M 1986 The Orthodox Church in the Byzantine Empire Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 826901 4 Komatina Predrag 2017 Dalmatian bishops at the Council of Nicaea in 787 and the status of the Dalmatian church in the eighth and ninth centuries Imperial Spheres and the Adriatic Byzantium the Carolingians and the Treaty of Aachen 812 London New York Routledge pp 253 260 ISBN 9781351614290 Meyendorff John 1996 The Orthodox Church Its Past and Its Role in the World Today Revised 4th ed Crestwood NY St Vladimir s Seminary Press ISBN 9780913836811 Nichols Aidan 2010 1992 Rome and the Eastern Churches A Study in Schism 2 rev ed San Francisco Ignatius Press ISBN 9781586172824 Ostrogorsky George 1969 History of the Byzantine State New Brunswick Rutgers University Press ISBN 9780813505992 Siecienski Anthony Edward 2010 The Filioque History of a Doctrinal Controversy Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 537204 5 Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804726306 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Jackson Samuel Macauley ed 1914 New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge third ed London and New York Funk and Wagnalls a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Further reading EditThere is no up to date English monograph on either the council or the iconoclast controversy in general But see L Brubaker and J Haldon Byzantium in the Iconoclast Era c 680 to 850 A History Cambridge 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Council of Nicaea amp oldid 1156135826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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