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See also: middle of the 13th century
.
He received his See also: education in See also: Nicaea at a monastery of which he later became the See also: abbot, though not in orders
.
Subsequently he gave himself up to a
See also: life of solitary See also: asceticism in a Bithynian monastery, and is said, probably wrongly, to have remained some See also: time in a monastery on See also: Mount Athos
.
From this seclusion he was in A.D
.
1255 called by See also: Theodore II
.
Lascaris to the position of patriarch at Nicaea, and four years later, on that emperor's See also: death, became joint See also: guardian of his son See also: John
.
His
See also: fellow-guardian Georgios Mouzalon was immediately murdered by Michael See also: Palaeologus, who assumed the position of tutor
.
See also: Arsenius then took See also: refuge in the monastery of Paschasius, retaining his office of patriarch but refusing to discharge its duties
.
Nicephorus of See also: Ephesus was appointed in his See also: stead
.
In 1261 Michael, having recovered Constantinople, induced Arsenius again to undertake the office of patriarch, but soon incurred his severe censure by ordering the See also: young See also: prince John to be blinded
.
Arsenius went so far as to excommunicate the emperor, who, having vainly sought for See also: pardon, took refuge in false accusations against Arsenius and caused him to be banished to Proconnesus, where some years afterwards (according to See also: Fabricius in 1264; others say in 1273) he died
.
Throughout these years he declined to remove the See also: sentence of excommunication which he had passed upon Michael, and after his death, when the new patriarch See also: Josephus gave absolution to the emperor, the See also: quarrel was carried on between the " Arsenites " and the " Josephists." The " Arsenian See also: schism " lasted till 1315, when reconciliation was effected by the patriarch Niphon (see See also: Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the See also: Roman See also: Empire, ed
.
J . B . See also: Bury, 1898, vol. vi
.
467 loll.)
.
Arsenius is said to have prepared from the decisions of the See also: councils and the See also: works of the Fathers a See also: summary of divine See also: laws under the title Synopsis Canonum
.
This was published (See also: Greek See also: original and Latin version) by G
.
Voel and H
.
Justel in Bibliotheca See also: Jur
.
See also: Canon
.
See also: Vet
.
(See also: Paris, 1661), 749 See also: foil
.
Some hold that the Synopsis was the See also: work of another Arsenius, a See also: monk of Athos (see L
.
See also: Petit in Vacant's Dict. theol. cathol. i. col
.
1994); the ascription depends on whether the patriarch Arsenius did or did not sojourn at Mount Athos
.
See Georgius See also: Pachymeres ii
.
15, iii. passim, iv
.
1-16; Nicephorus See also: Gregoras in
.
1, iv
.
1; for the will of Arsenius see Cotelerius, Monumenta, ii
.
168
.
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