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Home > Patriarch Acacius of Constantinople


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Acacius (died 489) was the patriarch of Constantinople from 471 to 489. Acacius was practically the first prelate throughout the Eastern Orthodoxy and renowned for ambitious participation in the Monophysitism.

Acacius advised the Byzantine emperor Zeno to issue the Henotikon edict in 482, in which Nestorius and Eutyches were condemned, the twelve chapters of Cyril of Alexandria accepted, and the Chalcedon Definition ignored. This effort to shelve the Monophysites dispute was quite in vain. Pope Felix III saw the prestige of his see involved in this slighting of Chalcedon and his predecessor Leo’s epistle. He condemned and deposed Acacius, a proceeding which the latter regarded with contempt, but which involved a schism between the two sees that lasted after Acacius’s death through the long and troubled reign of the Byzantine emperor Anastasius I, and was only healed by Justin IJustin I (c. 435 August 1, 527) was an Eastern Roman Emperor ( 518-527) who rose through the ranks of the army of the Byzantine Empire and ultimately became its emperor, in spite of the fact he was illiterate and probably more than 80 years old at the tim under Pope Hormisdas in 519Events The Eastern and Western churches are temporarily reconciled with the end of the Acacian schism. Cedric becomes king of Wessex Jacob of Serugh becomes bishop of Bagnan. The synagogues of Ravenna are burnt down in a riot; Theodoric the Great orders t.

1 Early life and episcopate

When Acacius first appeared in authentic history as the orphanotrophos, or dignitary entrusted with the care of the orphans, in the Church of ConstantinopleConstantinople (Roman name: Constantinopolis; Greek: Konstantinoupolis or ) is the former name of the city of Istanbul in Turkey. Its original name was Byzantium ( Greek: Byzantion or Bυζαντιο&nu pronounced roughly B, he administered with conspicuous success (Suidas, s.v.). Suidas stated that Acacius possessed an undoubtedly striking personality of making the most of his opportunities. He seems to have affected an engaging magnificence of manner; was openhanded; suave, yet noble, in demeanour; courtly in speech, and fond of a certain ecclesiastical display.

His abilities attracted the notice of the Roman emperor Leo I, over whom he obtained great influence by the arts of an accomplished courtier (Suidas, l.c.). Acacius thus filled an ecclesiastical post that conferred upon its possessor high rank as well as curial influence. After his succession on the death of the Patriarch Gennadius in 471, the first five or six years of his episcopate was uneventful enough. Soon he involved in controversies, which lasted throughout his patriarchate, and ended in a schism of thirty-five years between the churches of the East and West.

On the one side he laboured to restore unity to Eastern Orthodoxy, which was distracted by the varieties of opinion to which the Eutychian debates had given rise; and on the other to magnify the authority of his see by asserting its independence of Rome, and extending its influence over Alexandria and Antioch. In both respects he appears to have acted more in the spirit of a statesman than of a theologian; and in this relation the personal traits of liberality, courtliness, and ostentation, noticed by Suidas, are of worthy importance.



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