Dictionary Definition
patriarchate
Noun
1 the jurisdiction of a patriarch
2 a form of social organization in which a male
is the family head and title is traced through the male line [syn:
patriarchy]
User Contributed Dictionary
- The term of office of a Christian patriarch.
- The patriarchate of Pope John Paul II, as Patriarch of the West was more than 25 years.
- The ecclesial
jurisdiction of such a patriarch.
- The Eucumenical Patriarch has jurisdiction over the whole of the Orthodox world.
- The office-space occupied by a patriarch and his staff.
- The Latin patriarchate in Jerusalem is, by modern standards, a very cramped space.
Extensive Definition
A patriarchate is the office or
jurisdiction of a patriarch. A patriarch, as the
term is used here, is either
- one of the highest-ranking bishops in Eastern Orthodoxy, the original five of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Rome and Jerusalem, but now nine, including patriarchs of Serbia, Russia, Georgia, Bulgaria and Romania; or
- one of the eleven highest-ranking bishops of Catholicism: the Pope, the six "patriarchs of the east", and the bishops of Lisbon, Venice, Jerusalem, and the East Indies; or
- one of the specific patriarchs of the various Oriental Orthodox and Nestorian churches.
The original five patriarchs
sat in Rome,
Constantinople (now called Istanbul for
secular purposes, but still called Constantinople
in this ecclesiastical context), Alexandria,
Antioch,
and Jerusalem.
In the East-West
Schism of 1054, the one Latin-speaking patriarchate (Rome) and
the four Greek-speaking patriarchates split, forming the
hierarchies of the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches
respectively. The Patriarch
of Antioch moved to Damascus in the
13th
century, during the reign of the Egyptian Mamelukes,
conquerors of Syria. In Damascus a
Christian community had flourished since apostolic
times (Acts
9). However, the patriarchate is still called the Patriarch of
Antioch.
The four orthodox patriarchates of the East,
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, along with
their counterpart in the West, Rome, are distinguished as "senior"
(Greek:
πρεσβυγενή, presbygenē), having had one of the Apostles
or Evangelists
as their first bishop: Andrew,
Mark,
Peter,
James,
and Peter again,
respectively.
A patriarchate has "legal
personality" in some legal
jurisdictions, that means it is treated as a corporation. For example,
the
Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem filed a lawsuit in New York,
decided in 1999, against Christie's Auction
House, disputing the ownership of the Archimedes
Palimpsest.
The head of the
Czechoslovak Hussite Church is also called a Patriarch.
See also
External links
patriarchate in Bosnian: Patrijarhat
(kršćanstvo)
patriarchate in German: Patriarchat
(Kirche)
patriarchate in Modern Greek (1453-):
Πατριαρχείο
patriarchate in French: Patriarcat
(Église)
patriarchate in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Patriarchato
patriarchate in Italian: Patriarcato
(cristianesimo)
patriarchate in Lithuanian: Patriarchatas
(bažnyčia)
patriarchate in Dutch: Patriarchaat (kerk)
patriarchate in Norwegian: Patriarkat
patriarchate in Russian: Патриархат
(церковь)
patriarchate in Finnish: Patriarkaatti
(kirkko)