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See also: Church of
See also: Cyprus is in communion and in doctrinal agreement with the other Orthodox Churches of the See also: East (see ORTHODOX EASTERN CHURCH), but is See also: independent and subject to no patriarch
.
This position it has always claimed (see, however, W
.
Bright, Notes on the Canons, on See also: Ephesus 8)
.
At any See also: rate, its independence " by See also: ancient See also: custom " was recognized, as against the claims of the patriarch of See also: Antioch, by the council of Ephesus, A.D
.
431, by an edict of the emperor See also: Zeno (to whom the church had sent a cogent See also: argument on its own behalf, the alleged See also: body of its reputed founder St See also: Barnabas, then just discovered at See also: Salamis), and by the Trullan Council in 692
.
Attempts have been made subse. quently by the patriarchs of Antioch to claim authority over it, the last as recently as 1600; but they came to nothing
.
And excepting for the See also: period during which Cyprus was in the hands of the Lusignans and the Venetian Republic (1193-1571), the Church has never lost its independence
.
It receives the See also: holy ointment (,u pov) from without, till 186o from Antioch and subsequently from Constantinople, but this is a See also: matter of courtesy and not of right
.
Of old there were some twenty See also: sees in the See also: island
.
The See also: bishop of the capital, Salamis or See also: Constantia, was constituted metropolitan by Zeno, with the title " archbishop
of all Cyprus," enlarged subsequently into " archbishop of CYRANO DE See also: BERGERAC, SAVINIEN (162o-1655), French Justiniana Nova and of all Cyprus," after an enforced expatria-
tion to Justinianopolis in 688
.
Zeno also gave him the unique privileges of wearing and See also: signing his name in the imperial See also: purple, &c., which are still preserved
.
A Latin hierarchy was set up in 1196 (an archbishop atSee also: Nicosia with suffragans at See also: Limasol, See also: Paphos and See also: Famagusta), and the See also: Greek bishops were made to See also: minister to their flocks in subjection to it
.
The sees were forcibly reduced to four, the archbishopric was ostensibly abolished, and the bishops were compelled to do homage and swear fealty to the Latin Church
.
This bondage ceased at the See also: conquest of the island by the See also: Turks : the Latin hierarchy disappeared (the See also: cathedral at Nicosia is now used as a mosque), and the native church emerged into See also: comparative freedom
.
In 1821, it is true, all the bishops and many of their See also: flock were put to See also: death by way of discouraging sympathies with the Greeks; but successors were soon consecrated, by bishops sent from Antioch at the See also: request of. the patriarch of Constantinople, and on the whole the Church has prospered
.
The bishops-elect required the berat of the sultan; but having received this, they enjoyed no little See also: civil importance
.
Since 1878 the berat has not been given, and the bishops are less influential
.
The suppressed sees have never been restored, but the four which survive (now known as Nicosia, Paphos, Kition and Kyrenia) are of metropolitan See also: rank, so that the archbishop, whose headquarters, first at Salamis, then at Famagusta, are now at Nicosia, is a primate amongst metropolitans
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There are several monasteries dating., from the 11th century and onwards; also an archiepiscopal school at Nicosia, founded in 1812 and raised to the status of a " gymnasion " in 1893; and a high school for girls
.
rnr Ki irpov (Athens, 1875) ; K
.
Kouriokurineos (Archbishop of Cyprus), 'Ioropta XpovoXo'yucfi 1171 vhaov Kunrpov (Venice, 1788); de Mas Latrie, Histoire de See also: Pile de Chypre sous See also: les princes de la maison de See also: Lusignan (See also: Paris, 1852 f.); H
.
T
.
F
.
Duckworth, The Church of Cyprus ( See also: London, 1900) ; J
.
Hackett, See also: History of the Orthodox Church of Cyprus (1901)
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(W
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