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The feast day of Saint Gregory the Illuminator is on September 30 according to both the 2004 Roman Martyrology of the Ordinary Form and the 1956 Roman Martyrology [72] of the Extraordinary Form of the Catholic Church; however, the 1962 Roman Missal [73] and its previous editions list the feast day of "Saint Gregory, Bishop of Greater Armenia ...
St. Gregory's Church, Church of St Gregory, or variants thereof, ... Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church (disambiguation) This page was last edited on 10 ...
The seat of the eparchy is St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral in Glendale, California. [2] The eparchy has also been known as Eparchy of Our Lady of Nareg in New York and Eparchy of Our Lady of Nareg in Glendale. [1] In 2012, the eparchy moved from New York City to Glendale, California. [3]
Saint Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral, Cairo, an Armenian church in Cairo, Egypt built in 1928; Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church, an Armenian Catholic church in Glendale, California built in 2001; Destroyed churches. Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church, Yerevan, was an Armenian Apostolic church in Yerevan, built in the 19th century and ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St._Gregory_the_Illuminator&oldid=16727558"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St._Gregory_the
Aristaces or Aristakes I (Armenian: Արիստակէս Ա, romanized: Aristakēs) was the second Catholicos of the Armenian Church from 325 until his death in 333. He was the younger son and successor of Gregory the Illuminator, the founder and first head of the Armenian Church and his wife, Julitta (or Mariam) of Armenia.
A relief of Agathangelos on the Armenian Cathedral of Moscow.. Agathangelos (in Old Armenian: Ագաթանգեղոս Agatʿangełos, in Greek Ἀγαθάγγελος "bearer of good news" or angel, c. 5th century AD [1]) is the pseudonym of the author of a life of the first apostle of Armenia, Gregory the Illuminator, who died about 332. [2]
Gregorids were an Armenian noble family descended from St. Gregory the Illuminator (c. 257–330) and his wife Julitta (or Mariam) of Armenia, and thus of Arsacid stock, whose members served as patriarchs of Armenia from the early fourth century to the death of its last male member, St. Sahak I Souren Pahlav, in 437/439.