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      • Paul (born Dec. 14, 1901, Athens, Greece—died March 6, 1964, Athens) was the king of Greece (1947–64) who helped his country overcome communist guerrilla forces after World War II.
      www.britannica.com › biography › Paul-king-of-Greece
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  2. Dec 11, 2013 · Scholars attribute seven books of the New Testament to Paul; he was an influential teacher and a missionary to much of Asia Minor and present-day Greece. A Founder of Christianity In the last century, scholars have come to appreciate Paul as the actual founder of the religious movement that would become Christianity.

    • Rebecca Denova
  3. Paul [a] (also named Saul of Tarsus; [b] c. 5 – c. 64/65 AD), commonly known as Paul the Apostle [7] and Saint Paul, [8] was a Christian apostle who spread the teachings of Jesus in the first-century world. [9] For his contributions towards the New Testament, he is generally regarded as one of the most important figures of the Apostolic Age ...

  4. From there Paul goes to the great cities of Achaia (Greece) -- Athens, briefly, and then a year and a half in Corinth. After that he stops briefly in Ephesus, then on to Caesarea and Antioch of Syria, to his home church, the believers that sent him out four years previously.

  5. The church of Apostle Paul was founded in 1887 near Athens. Queen Olga began the construction of a larger church two years later, with the help of Metropolitan bishop Prokopios, Mayor Labros Kallifronas, and architects Trobus and Soultze. In 1923, Archbishop of Athens Chrysostomos Papadopoulos mandated that the Vespers of Apostle Paul’s ...

  6. After teaching some in Berea, Paul departed ahead of Silas and Timothy, southward into Achaia (now southern Greece), to Athens, possibly for the winter of 51-52 AD (Acts 17:14-15). Paul then makes his first visit to Corinth where he stays a year and a half (Acts 18:1, 5, 11).

  7. Paul of Greece was born on 14 December 1901 at Tatoi Palace, located near Athens, capital of Greece. His father, Constantine I, was King of Hellenes from 1913 to 1917 and again from 1920 to 1922. His mother, Queen Sophia of Prussia, was the daughter of German Emperor Frederick III. Born fourth of his parents’ six children, Paul had two elder ...

  8. The Bema of Apostle Paul in Corinth, Greece. The Apostle is the founder of the Church in Greece (Philippi, Thessaloniki, Veria, Athens, Corinth, Nicopolis), and it is therefore natural that Greek theological research is directed around his work and his letters. Moreover, in 1950, the anniversary of the 1900 years since the founding of the ...

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