Theodore Balsamon, also called Balsamo, (Greek: Θεόδωρος Βαλσαμῶν) was a canonist of the Eastern Orthodox Church and 12th-century Eastern Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch.[1]
^Meehan, Andrew Brennan (1907). "Theodore Balsamon" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
TheodoreBalsamon, also called Balsamo, (Greek: Θεόδωρος Βαλσαμῶν) was a canonist of the Eastern Orthodox Church and 12th-century Eastern Orthodox Patriarch...
diet of monks who refused to eat bread. The 12th century canonist TheodoreBalsamon maintained that koliva as a ritual food practice was originated by...
Theodore II of Antioch (970–976), Greek Orthodox patriarch Theodore III of Antioch (1034–1042), Greek Orthodox patriarch TheodoreBalsamon, Theodore IV...
After the Quinisext Council and the liturgical reforms of Patriarch TheodoreBalsamon, the Byzantine Rite became the only rite in the Eastern Orthodox Church...
Ephesus, Thessaloniki, and Corinth. The twelfth century canonist TheodoreBalsamon deemed it strictly reserved for the patriarch. No polystavrion has...
was a late development, and before the 1500s they wore no headgear. TheodoreBalsamon, Patriarch of Antioch (ca. 1130–1140) stated that the patriarch of...
expressly banned from society, as sometimes happened in Western Europe. TheodoreBalsamon, a 12th-century jurist in Constantinople, noted that lepers were allowed...
Syriac Orthodox patriarch of Antioch a 12th-century religious work by TheodoreBalsamon, Greek Orthodox patriarch of Antioch a 14th-century religious work...
and denied the popes had the right to bestow the imperial office. TheodoreBalsamon justified Michael Cerularius's behaviour in 1054 using the Donation...
first literary evidence for the garment is found in the writings of TheodoreBalsamon, Patriarch of Antioch (ca. 1130–1140), and he deemed it restricted...
Jerusalem TheodoreBalsamon, 12th-century Eastern Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch Theodore I Laskaris, Emperor of Nicaea (1204–1221 or 1205–1222) Theodore II Laskaris...
However, estrangement continued. In 1190, Eastern Orthodox theologian TheodoreBalsamon, who was patriarch of Antioch, wrote that "no Latin should be given...
century The Nomocanon of Photios, from the 9th century The Syntagma of TheodoreBalsamon and his Scholia to the Nomocanon of Photios, from the 12th century...
dedicated to him by Theodore Prodromos and Gregory Antiochos, and he corresponded with George Tornikes, Euthymios Malakes, TheodoreBalsamon, and John Tzetzes...
ecumenical council by people like the famous expert on Canon Law, TheodoreBalsamon (11th century), St. Neilos of Rhodes, St. Mark of Ephesus (15th century)...
for minor cases, from which appeal may be made to the bishop. So TheodoreBalsamon (twelfth century): "It is forbidden by the canons that there should...
Peter I, who attempted to maintain peace with the Byzantine Empire. TheodoreBalsamon, Patriarch of Antioch, called him "the rebel Slavopetros" in a poem...
Holobolos George Akropolites George of Cyprus Barlaam of Seminara TheodoreBalsamon Leo the Mathematician Athanasios of Emesa Eustathius of Thessalonica...
Mateo Seco, p. 41 Maspero & Mateo Seco, p. 42 McGuckin, J. (2017). TheodoreBalsamon. In J. Witte, Jr & G. Hauk (Eds.), Christianity and Family Law: An...
forbade the use of eukteria for any service apart from the liturgy. TheodoreBalsamon, the leading 12th-century Byzantine canonist, upheld the right of...
catholicos". "According to the Antiochene canonist and patriarch TheodoreBalsamon (1140–95), 'When the Lord Peter was the Holy Patriarch of the great...
of Alexandria was blamed by the Patriarch of Antioch and canonist TheodoreBalsamon at the beginning of the 13th century. The first millennium witnesses...
exactly when the older uses were forsaken for that of Byzantium. TheodoreBalsamon says that by the end of the twelfth century the Church of Jerusalem...
being sounded first, followed by the larger, then by those of iron. TheodoreBalsamon (12th century), in a treatise on the subject, compares the sounding...
Eastern Orthodox ecclesiastical and imperial laws and decrees by TheodoreBalsamon known as the "Scholia" (Greek: Σχόλια) (c. 1170). Michael's patriarchy...
patriarchates (the Epanagoge, commentaries of Matthew Blastares and TheodoreBalsamon) In the eighth and ninth centuries the iconoclast movement caused...
Athens, but she learned all the wisdom of the Greeks". The writer TheodoreBalsamon noted that she "displayed a fascination with healing methods" and...
imperial laws. This whole collection was commentated about 1170 by TheodoreBalsamon, Greek Patriarch of Antioch residing at Constantinople. The Nomocanon...