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However, by the dawn of history this pentarchy no longer existed.
However, that pentarchy no longer existed by the 5th century, when documentary history in Ireland begins.
Rome never recognized this pentarchy of five sees as constituting the leadership of the state church.
Since the 5th century, Christendom had been divided into a pentarchy of five sees with Rome holding the primacy.
Major patriarchal sees by Pentarchy order.
(see Pentarchy) Since then, the Church of Jerusalem has remained an autocephalous Church.
Latin Patriarch may refer to these Catholic counter-claimants to the titles of the Pentarchy:
It later became one of the five major patriarchates or Pentarchy of the state church of the Roman Empire.
By the 5th century, the ecclesiastical had evolved a hierarchical "pentarchy" or system of five sees (patriarchates), with a settled order of precedence.
Antioch became one of the five original Patriarchates (the Pentarchy) after Constantine recognized Christianity.
This feeling was further intensified after the East-West Schism in 1054, which reduced the pentarchy to a tetrarchy, but it existed long before that.
The four Eastern sees of the pentarchy considered this determined by canonical decision and not entailing hegemony of any one local church or patriarchate over the others.
Especially following Quinisext, the pentarchy was at least philosophically accepted in Eastern Christianity, but generally not in the West, which rejected the Council.
Historically, within the five ecumenical sees of Pentarchy, the patriarch is regarded as the successor of Saint Andrew, the Apostle.
The crisis of the 18th Fructidor, which retarded for three years the extinction of the pentarchy, presents one of the most remarkable events of its short existence.
The Roman Catholic Church does not accept, either in theory or in practice, the theory of the government of the Christian Church as a pentarchy.
Rome, as the ancient center and largest city of the empire, was given the presidency or primacy of honor within the pentarchy into which Christendom was now divided.
The five patriarchs of the Pentarchy sat in Rome, Constantinople (now Istanbul), Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem.
The generality of the citizens had declared themselves against a pentarchy devoid of power, justice, and morality, and which had become the sport of faction and intrigue.
(See Pentarchy) However, Byzantine politics meant that Jerusalem passed from the jurisdiction of Patriarch of Antioch to the Greek authorities in Constantinople.
The first thing the Pentarchy did was to draft a proclamation which was written by Sergio Carbó and signed by eighteen civilians and one military man, Fulgencio Batista.
The title patriarch was first applied to the original three major sees of Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch, and shortly after extended to include Constantinople and Jerusalem (cf. Pentarchy).
The Byzantine view of the pentarchy had a strongly anti-Roman orientation, being put forward against the Roman claim to the final word on all Church matters and to the right to judge even the patriarchs.
According to this idea of Pentarchy, there are five Patriarchs at the head of the Church, with the Church of Rome having the first place of honor among these patriarchal sister churches.
This pentarchy appears to have been broken up by the dawn of history in the early 5th century with the reduction of the Ulaid and the founding of new Connachta dynasties which expanded north and east.