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- George Syncellus - Wikipedia
George Syncellus (Greek: Γεώργιος Σύγκελλος, Georgios Synkellos; died after 810) was a Byzantine chronicler and ecclesiastical official
- George The Syncellus | Byzantine Scholar, Chronicler, Monk | Britannica
George The Syncellus (flourished 8th century—died after 810) was a Byzantine historian and author of a world chronicle of events from the creation to the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian (reigned 284–305)
- The Chronography of George Synkellos: A Byzantine Chronicle of . . .
‘Syncellus’ was a title which in the early Church was given to those monks or clerics who shared quarters with their bishops, and who served primarily as deacons in the offices of the mass and were often presumed to succeed the bishop at his death
- SYNCELLUS Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of SYNCELLUS is a diocesan official in the Eastern Church serving usually as the secretary and chaplain of a bishop or metropolitan
- CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Georgius Syncellus - NEW ADVENT
The syncellus is the patriarch's private secretary, generally a bishop, always the most important ecclesiastical person in the capital after the patriarch himself, often the patriarch's successor But George did not succeed Tarasius
- Georgius Syncellus et Nicephorus Cp. : Geōrgios, Synkellos, active 800 . . .
Book digitized by Google from the library of Harvard University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb The Chronographia of Georgius Sycellus is an outline of history from Adam to 285 The Chronographia brevis of Nicephorus is a chronological table of events from Adam to 829
- George Syncellus - Encyclopedia. com
GEORGE SYNCELLUS Byzantine chronicler; d after 810 What is known about him is derived entirely from his chronicle and its introduction by theophanes the confessor George was honored with the high ecclesiastical title of syncellus
- Syncellus - Definition, Usage Quiz | UltimateLexicon. com
A syncellus is a term historically used to denote a monastic title within the Eastern Orthodox Church, particularly during the Byzantine Empire The role of a syncellus was that of a monk who lived in the same cell or close association with a senior cleric, often a bishop or patriarch
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