Council of Jerusalem (536)

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The Council of Jerusalem of 536 was a meeting of Chalcedonian representatives of the church of the Three Palestines (Prima, Secunda, Tertia) to condemn certain persons accused of the Monophysite heresy. It was convoked at the initiative the Roman emperor Justinian I following the forced resignation of the Patriarch Anthimus I of Constantinople in February or March, an event in which Pope Agapetus I had played the main role.[1]

Following the Council of Constantinople in May–June 536, Patriarch Menas of Constantinople wrote to Patriarch Peter of Jerusalem urging him to hold a council of the Three Palestines to condemn the same heretics as had Constantinople: Anthimus, Severus of Antioch, Zaʿūra the Stylite and Peter of Apamea. The emperor also sent a letter. These letters were delivered by the monks of the Judaean Desert who had traveled to Constantinople to take part in the council there. Since Jerusalem had only been raised to a patriarchate by the Council of Chalcedon in 451, the authority of the bishop of the city over the church in the Three Palestines was not accepted by anti-Chalcedonians.[2]

The council met on 19 September 536 in Jerusalem (formally Aelia Capitolina). It conducted its business in Greek.[2] Its acts are preserved in the collection known as the . The verdicts of the Council of Constantinople were read into the record and the assembled clergy at Jerusalem discussed all four condemned clerics. Their own verdict, however, only explicitly condemned Anthimus.[3] It was subscribed by 47 bishops, which was almost every bishop in the Three Palestines. There is no logical sequence to the subscriptions and they were all made in Greek.[2]

List of signatory bishoprics[]

The list of 47 bishops appears to be nearly complete for the Three Palestines. Among the known sees of ancient Palestine, only the bishoprics of Diospolis, Maiuma of Ascalon, Maiuma of Gaza and Zoara were probably in existence in 536 and are unrepresented in the subscriptions.[2]

  1. Aelia (Jerusalem)
  2. Caesarea
  3. Scythopolis
  4. Tiberias
  5. Raphia
  6. Joppe
  7. Augustopolis
  8. Abila
  9. Azotus
  10. Sozousa
  11. Arda, possibly Orda in Gerar
  12. Eleutheropolis
  13. Jericho
  14. Areopolis
  15. Diara, probably Dora
  16. Charachmouba
  17. the city of the Menutai, that is, Menois
  18. Pella
  19. Bitulion
  20. Iotabe
  21. Elousa
  22. Gaza
  23. Petra
  24. Nicopolis
  25. Gadara
  26. Helenopolis
  27. Diocaesarea
  28. the city of the Bakanoi, probably Bacatha
  29. Ascalon
  30. Phaino
  31. Arindela
  32. Neapolis
  33. the city of the Libisioi, possibly Livias
  34. Maximianopolis
  35. Sebaste
  36. Jamnia
  37. Exalos
  38. Gazara
  39. Aila
  40. Hippos
  41. Capitolias
  42. Amathous
  43. Anthedon

Notes[]

  1. ^ Millar 2008, pp. 64–65.
  2. ^ a b c d Millar 2008, pp. 78–79.
  3. ^ Millar 2008, pp. 71–72.

Bibliography[]

  • Menze, Volker L. (2008). Justinian and the Making of the Syrian Orthodox Church. Oxford University Press.
  • Millar, Fergus (2008). "Rome, Constantinople and the Near Eastern Church under Justinian: Two Synods of CE 536". The Journal of Roman Studies. 98: 62–82.
  • Millar, Fergus (2009). "Linguistic Co-existence in Constantinople: Greek and Latin (and Syriac) in the Acts of the Synod of 536 CE". The Journal of Roman Studies. 99: 92–103.
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