Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
This continued until the abolition of the Church's autocephaly in 706.
One step short of autocephaly is "autonomy".
In 1917 the autocephaly of the Georgian Orthodox Church was restored.
Nikodim was against adopting an autocephaly of the Ukrainian Orthodoxy.
At this congress, a resolution for the autocephaly of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church was made.
He fiercely denounced the autocephaly and the abolition of ancient metropolitan sees, which left the people shepherd-less.
Bulgarian autocephaly was restored in 1953.
This signified the establishment of the autocephaly of the Russian Orthodox Church.
Ranked in order of seniority, with the year of independence (autocephaly) given in the parenthesis.
The Autocephaly of the Metropolia in America.
Towards the abolition of the Church's autocephaly, it was increasingly becoming linguistically Armenised.
In 1833, the Church of Greece declared its autocephaly, which was subsequently recognized by the patriarchate in 1850.
Alexander Schmemann defending the autocephaly.
It declared its autocephaly in 1922, and gained recognition from the Patriarch of Constantinople in 1937.
In 1833, the regents had unilaterally declared the Autocephaly of the Church of Greece.
The Synod ratified the autocephaly of the Church of Cyprus by its 8th canon.
There is an essentially political disagreement over the autocephaly of one of the churches-the Orthodox Church in America.
After fortifying the village they took advantage of the port taxations during the Venetian domination which eventually arranged their land's virtual autocephaly.
Autocephaly: The Orthodox Church in America.
In 1922, the Albanian Orthodox Church declared its autocephaly, being granted recognition of it in 1937.
When Georgia joined Russia, the autocephaly of the Georgian Orthodox Church was abolished.
Its autocephaly is recognized by other Orthodox bodies, including the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople since 1990.
Chekhivsky was one of the main ideologists of the Ukrainian Church autocephaly and supporter of christian socialism.
The city was formerly also the seat of the Bulgarian Exarchate, before its autocephaly was recognized by other Orthodox churches.
A History of the Russian Church Abroad and the events leading to the American Metropolia's autocephaly, 1917-1971.