enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Timeline of official adoptions of Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_official...

    1640 – Piscataway (Roman Catholic Church) 1642 – Huron-Wendat Nation (Roman Catholic Church) 1650 – Kingdom of Larantuka (Roman Catholic Church) 1654 – Onondaga (Roman Catholic Church) 1663–1665 – Kingdom of Loango (briefly Roman Catholic) 1675 – Illinois Confederation (Roman Catholic Church) 1700s – Kingdom of Bolaang Mongondow ...

  3. Christianization of Iberia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianization_of_Iberia

    After saying this, the king promised again to the new God to erect "a pillar of the Cross". The king safely returned to the capital and was greeted by his "queen and the entire nation" of Kartli. He went with his army to see Nino. At the urging of Nino, the king laid the foundations of a church to commemorate his new faith, Christianity. [35]

  4. Christianity in Georgia (country) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_in_Georgia...

    After Georgia was annexed by the Russian Empire, the Russian Orthodox Church took over the Georgian church in 1811. The Georgian church regained its autocephaly only when Russian rule ended in 1917. The Soviet regime, which ruled Georgia from 1921, did not consider revitalization of the Georgian church an important goal, however. Soviet rule ...

  5. List of monarchs of Georgia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monarchs_of_Georgia

    After the death of his cousin, King Solomon I, he became a regent but prevented the rival princes David (the future king Solomon II) and George from being crowned. With the support of Katsia II Dadiani, prince of Mingrelia, he seized the throne and proclaimed himself king on May 4, 1784. Solomon II (სოლომონ II) 1772 Kutaisi

  6. Christianity in the 11th century - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_in_the_11th...

    In 1010, the church in the unified Kingdom of Georgia became autocephalous (self-governing), and its catholicos (Melchizedek I) was elevated to the rank of patriarch and obtained the official title of Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia.

  7. Saint Nino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Nino

    Saint Nino (sometimes St. Nune or St. Ninny; Georgian: წმინდა ნინო, romanized: ts'minda nino; Armenian: Սուրբ Նունե, romanized: Surb Nune; Greek: Ἁγία Νίνα, romanized: Hagía Nína; c. 296 – c. 338 or 340) was a woman who preached Christianity in the territory of the Kingdom of Iberia, in what is modern-day Georgia.

  8. Georgia in the Roman era - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgia_in_the_Roman_era

    In 334 AD, Mirian III commissioned the building of the first Christian church in Iberia which was finally completed in 379 AD on the spot where now stands the Cathedral of the Living Pillar in Mtskheta, the ancient capital of Georgia. Petra in Lazica is an ancient bishopric in Georgia that is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular ...

  9. List of royal saints and martyrs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_royal_saints_and...

    King David of the Biblical Kingdom of Israel and his successors Hezekiah and Josiah of the southern Kingdom of Judah are traditionally considered to be Saints by Catholic teaching. [ 62 ] [ 63 ] In the New Testament genealogies, Jesus Christ is a descendant of King David and has been proclaimed by the Catholic Church as King of the Universe. [ 64 ]