Patriarch Photius I of Constantinople in the context of Bibliotheca (Photius)


Patriarch Photius I of Constantinople in the context of Bibliotheca (Photius)

⭐ Core Definition: Patriarch Photius I of Constantinople

Photios I of Constantinople (Greek: Φώτιος, Phōtios; c. 815—6 February 893), also spelled Photius (/ˈfʃəs/), was the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from 858 to 867 and from 877 to 886. He is recognized in the Eastern Orthodox Church as 'Saint Photius the Great'.

Photios I is widely regarded as the most powerful and influential church leader of Constantinople subsequent to John Chrysostom's archbishopric around the turn of the fifth century. He is also viewed as the most important intellectual of his time—"the leading light of the ninth-century renaissance". He was a central figure in both the conversion of the Slavs to Christianity and the Photian schism, and is considered "[t]he great systematic compiler of the Eastern Church, who occupies a similar position to that of Gratian in the West," and whose "collection in two parts... formed and still forms the classic source of ancient Church Law for the Greek Church".

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👉 Patriarch Photius I of Constantinople in the context of Bibliotheca (Photius)

The Bibliotheca (Greek: Βιβλιοθήκη) or Myriobiblos (Μυριόβιβλος, "Ten Thousand Books") was a ninth-century work of Byzantine Patriarch of Constantinople Photius, dedicated to his brother and composed of 279 reviews of books which he had read.

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