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  1. Apr 28, 2010 · Byzantine Emperor Leo III saw icons as the chief reason Jews and Moslems could not be won to Christ and also as a cause of national disunity. At first he merely tried to persuade his people of this. But when a violent undersea eruption shook Constantinople, Leo took it as a warning from God.

  2. Dec 30, 2020 · Commemorated on December 30. Troparion & Kontakion. Saint Theodora lived at Constantinople during the first half of the tenth century. She had been married, but was widowed early on and led a pious life, caring for the destitute and hopeless. Later, she became a nun and lived under the guidance of Saint Basil the New (March 26), living the ...

  3. Both sides argued from Scripture, but the religious establishment in Constantinople had the confidence of several emperors, who, as a result, denounced the Monophysites (as they were known) as heretics. When Theodora visited Alexandria, the Monophysites there led by one Timothy, who had a lasting effect on Theodora when the two personally met ...

  4. Justinian and Theodora as the determinative point in the process.2 In the particular shaping that Syriac historiography gave to the experience, Justinian is remembered as the one who caused the separation of the churches through his policy of persecution for all who did not accept the Council of Chalcedon. Theodora, on the

  5. New Catholic Encyclopedia. THEODORA, BYZANTINE EMPRESS (1) Wife of Justinian I; b. Constantinople (Paphlagonia or Syria in later sources) c. 497; d. Constantinople, June 28, 548, perhaps of gangrene or cancer; buried in the Church of the Holy Apostles. The main source on her life, the Anecdota or Secret History of procopius of caesa rea, is a ...

  6. The "Nika" rebellion which erupted in Constantinople at the start of. year 532 very nearly brought Justinian's reign to an end, and in narrative of Procopius (B.P. 1 , 24), it was the empress Theodora. steadied Justinian and his court when they were on the point of flight, and.

  7. He did in fact capitulate and visited Constantinople in 1180 to submit to Manuel. When he finally returned to Constantinople in 1182, becoming emperor in 1183, there is no evidence that Theodora went back to live with him.

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