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According to some ancient manuscripts, the feast of Saint Alexander was commemorated on 2 June. Today, his feast day is celebrated annually on 30 August, in a common commemoration with his fellow Patriarchs of Constantinople John IV of Constantinople (582–595, also commemorated on 2 September) and Paul IV of Constantinople (780–784).
Pope Alexander I (died 115), saint and pope; See Epipodius and Alexander for Saint Alexander, martyred in Lyon, 178 AD; Alexander of Rome (died c. 289), Christian martyr; Alexander of Bergamo (died c. 303), patron saint of Bergamo; may have been a Roman soldier; Alexander of Constantinople (born between 237 and 244–337), bishop of Byzantium ...
St. Alexander: 11 May 330 – August 337 (7 years and 3 months) First bishop of Constantinople 28 St. Paul I the Confessor: 337 – 339 (2 years) Deposed and exiled (see Arian controversy) 29 Eusebius of Nicomedia: 339 – 341 (2 years) Arian; baptised Constantine I in 337 (27) Paul I: 341 – 342 (1 year) 1st restoration; deposed by the Arians ...
Alexander (martyr) 2nd century Alexander I: c. 116 Alexander of Alexandria: 4th century Alexander of Bergamo: 4th century Alexander of Comana: 3rd century Alexander of Constantinople: 4th century Alexander of Jerusalem: 3rd century Alexius: 5th century Alexius of Rome: 4th century Almachius: 4th century Alphius (martyr) 3rd century Alypius of ...
[4] [5] Socrates of Constantinople writes that Alexander of Constantinople succeeded Metrophanes sometime before 319. [6] Metrophanes has been canonised saint and is revered in both the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church. His feast day is 4 June.
During the reign of the Constantinian dynasty in Constantinople lived and worked the physician Oribasius, the rhetorician Libanius, theologians and church hierarchs Alexander of Constantinople, Paul the Confessor, Eusebius of Nicomedia, Macedonius I, Eudoxius of Antioch, in the city visited Athanasius the Great, Basil the Great and the famous ...
Constantinople [a] (see other names) was a historical city located on the Bosporus that served as the capital of the Roman, Byzantine, Latin, and Ottoman empires between its consecration in 330 until 1930, when it was renamed to Istanbul.
Saint Flavian the Confessor, Archbishop of Constantinople ... Praepedigna, Alexander and Cutias, martyrs in Rome who suffered under Diocletian (295) [15] ...