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The sixteenth Council of Carthage was held in May 419 and there again the representations of Zosimus were accepted, awaiting the result of a comparison of the Nicene canons as they existed in Africa, in which the decrees cited by the Pope had not been found, with those of the churches of Antioch, Alexandria and Constantinople.
Pelagian doctrines were officially condemned at the Councils of Carthage of 418, [8] [9] and Pelagius was declared a heretic by the First Council of Ephesus in 431. [10] Saint Cyril of Alexandria allowed him to settle in Egypt after Pelagius had been expelled from Jerusalem, and Pelagius is not heard of thereafter.
"the affair of the priest Apiarius, where the legitimacy of the appeals to Rome was called into question, prompted the need for a collection of oriental canons and the constitution of two dossiers (one, too hastily gathered, at the end of the Council of Carthage in May 419; the other, compiled more at leisure, and therefore more complete, which ...
Councils of Carthage#Council of 419 To a section : This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to a section of a page on the subject. For redirects to embedded anchors on a page, use {{ R to anchor }} instead .
Oct. 9—CARTHAGE, Mo. — The Carthage City Council will meet at a new location on Tuesday because of large crowds seen at recent meetings voicing opinions about an ongoing dispute between the ...
Aurelius became Bishop of Carthage around 392 [2] and led a number of ecclesiastical councils on Christian doctrine and clerical discipline, including the important Council of 419 which codified "The Code of Canons of the African Church". [3] Aurelius was one of the first Bishops to denounce Pelagianism. [4]
The closure of the temple of Juno Caelestis, was followed by attacks and destruction of the other non-Christian holy sites of worship in Carthage. [3] In the 401 Church Council of Carthage, the church fathers of Carthage under the leadership Bishop Aurelius wrote to the emperor and recommended him to order the destruction of all Pagan statues ...
Until 308 BC Carthage was ruled, at least officially, by monarchs, in the sense of the word that executive power was held by one person. [1] It also seems for the time period below to have been passed down in the clan of the Magonids. The title itself was most likely Suffete. [2]: 115–116 Hannonids. Hanno I c. 580 – c. 556 BC