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CVRILLOS See also: Greek prelate and theologian, was a native of Crete
.
In youth he travelled, studying at Venice and See also: Padua, and at See also: Geneva coming under the influence of the reformed faith as represented by See also: Calvin
.
In 1602 he was
elected patriarch of Alexandria, and in 1621 patriarch of Constantinople
.
He was the first See also: great name in the Orthodox Eastern See also: Church since 1453, and dominates its
See also: history in the 17th century
.
The great aim of his See also: life was to reform the church on Calvinistic lines, and to this end he sent many See also: young Greek theologians to the See also: universities of See also: Switzerland, See also: Holland and
See also: England
.
In 1629 he published his famous Confessio,•Calvinistic in See also: doctrine, but as far as possible accommodated to the language and creeds of the Orthodox Church
.
It appeared the same See also: year in two Latin See also: editions, four French, one See also: German and one See also: English, and in the Eastern Church started a controversy which culminated in 1691 in the convocation by Dositheos, patriarch of Jerusalem, of a See also: synod by which the Calvinistic doctrines were condemned
.
See also: Lucaris was several times temporarily deposed and banished at the instigation of his orthodox opponents and of the See also: Jesuits, who were his bitterest enemies
.
Finally, when Sultan See also: Murad was about to set out for the Persian War, the patriarch was accused of a design to stir up the Cossacks, and to avoid trouble during his See also: absence the sultan had him killed by the Janissaries (See also: June 1637)
.
His See also: body was thrown into the See also: sea, recovered and buried at a distance from the capital by his See also: friends, and only brought back to Constantinople after many years
.
The orthodoxy of Lucaris himself continued to be a See also: matter of debate in the Eastern Church, even Dositheos, in view of the reputation of the great patriarch, thinking it expedient to See also: gloss over his heterodoxy in the interests of the Church
.
See the article " Lukaris " by Ph
.
See also: Meyer in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklop
.
(3rd ed., See also: Leipzig, 1902), which gives further authorities
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