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COUNCIL OF SARDICA

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 210 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COUNCIL OF SARDICA  , an ecclesiastical council convened in 343 by the emperors Constantius and Constans, to attempt a settlement of the Arian controversies, which were then at their height . Of the
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hundred and seventy bishops assembled, about ninety were Homousians—principally from the West—while on the other side were eighty Eusebians from the East . The anticipated agreement, however, was not attained; and the result of the council was simply to embitter the relations between the two
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great religious parties, and those between the Western and Eastern halves of the
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Empire . For as Athanasius and
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Marcellus of Ancyra appeared on the scene, and the Western bishops declined to exclude them, the Eusebian bishops of the East absolutely refused to discuss, and contented themselves with formulating a written protest addressed to numerous
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foreign prelates . That they instituted a
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rival congress of their own in Philippopolis is improbable . The bishops, however, who remained in Sardica (mod . .Sofia in Bulgaria) formed themselves into a synod, and naturally declared in favour of Athanasius and Marcellus, while at the same time they anathematized the leaders of the Eusebian party . The proposal to draw up a new creed was rejected . Especial importance attaches to this council through the fact that Canons 3-5 invest the
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Roman bishop with a
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prerogative which became of great
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historical importance, as the first legal recognition of his jurisdiction over other
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sees and the basis for the further development of his primacy . " In order to honour the memory of St Peter," it was enacted that any bishop, if deposed by his provincial synod, should be entitled to
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appeal to the bishop of Rome, who was then at liberty either to confirm the first decision or to order a new investigation . In the latter case, the tribunal was to consist of bishops from the neighbouring provinces, assisted—if he so chose—by legates of the Roman bishop . The clauses thus made the bishop of Rome president of a revisionary court; and afterwards
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Zosimus unsuccessfully attempted to employ these canons of Sardica, as decisions of the council of
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Nice, against the Africans .

In the

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middle ages they were cited to justify the claim of the papacy to be the supreme court of appeal . Attacks on their authenticity have been conclusively repelled . The canons are printed in C . Mirbt, Quellen sue Geschichte
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des Papsttums (
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Tubingen, 1901), p . 46 f.; Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, ed . 2, i . 533 sqq . See also, J . Friedrich, Die Unechtheit der Canones von Sardika (Vienna, 1902) ; on the other side F . X . Funk, " Die Echtheit der Canones von Sardica," Historisches Jahrbuch der Gorresgesellschaft,
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xxiii . (1902), pp .

497-516; ibid,

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xxvi . (1905), pp . 1-18, 255-274; C . H . Turner, " The Genuineness of the Sardican Canons," The Journal of Theological Studies, iii . (
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London, 1902), PP . 370-397 . (C .

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