Gaianus of Tyre (Greek: Γαϊανός ό Τύριος) was the consular governor of Phoenicia in 362. Pagan Hellene rhetorician Libanius' Epistulae with Gaianus lists his achievements after his graduation from the Law school of Berytus.[1][2]
As a rule, Roman governors were chosen from provinces other that the ones they were appointed to; Libanius' epistula 799 relates that the Emperor made an exception to that rule and allowed Gaianus, a Tyrian, to rule over his home province of Phoenice.[3]
GaianusofTyre (Greek: Γαϊανός ό Τύριος) was the consular governor of Phoenicia in 362. Pagan Hellene rhetorician Libanius' Epistulae with Gaianus lists...
Gaianus may refer to: GaianusofTyre, Roman governor of Phoenicia in 362 Gaianusof Alexandria, Christian patriarch in 535 Gaianusof Arabia, Roman sophist...
nurse of these studies". Libanius' correspondence with GaianusofTyre discusses the latter's achievements after his graduation from the law school of Beirut;...
nurse of these studies". Libanius' correspondence with GaianusofTyre discusses the latter's achievements after his graduation from the law school of Berytus;...
The Melkite Catholic Patriarchate of Antioch is the only actual residential Patriarchate of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church (Eastern Catholic, Byzantine...
patriarch of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, serving since June 21, 2017. On May 6, 1973, Youssef Absi was ordained a priest and became chaplain of the Missionary...
mentioned in The Acts of the Apostles (8:27–40). Ethiopia was further Christianized in the 4th century ce by two men (likely brothers) from Tyre—St. Frumentius...
ofTyre in 335, he was condemned and exiled for violence against the Melitians in his see. Nonetheless, within a few years of his death, Gregory of Nazianzus...
priest in the Basilica of St. Anne by Maximos IV Sayegh, then Archbishop ofTyre, on July 20, 1930. As a young priest he taught for a year in the patriarchal...