-
According to Weber,
caesaropapism entails "the
complete subordination of
priests to
secular power." In an
extreme form,
caesaropapism is
where the head...
- term was used to
refer to the
Byzantine emperor,
showing the apex of
caesaropapism.
Though decisions on doctrine,
liturgy and
spirituality were left to...
-
bishops to
declare him "Supreme Head of the
Church of England".
Embracing Caesaropapism, the
bishops and
Parliament accede to the king's
demands and renounce...
- June 1969, pp. 150–63, doi:10.2307/3162703. “Church
Building and ‘
Caesaropapism,’ A.D. 312-565.” Gr****,
Roman and
Byzantine Studies, vol. 7, no. 2,...
- ISBN 9781000159783.
Retrieved 9
March 2024. [...] Weber's
delineation specifies caesaropapism as the
domination of
religion by
secular powers;
hierocracy as the legitimating...
- who in the
areas under his
control definitively established a form of
caesaropapism, in
which "he had the
right and duty of
regulating by his laws the minutest...
- an
alliance between the
State and the
Church that led to a kind of
Caesaropapism. The
claim that
there ever was a
Constantinian shift has been disputed;...
-
supreme authority on
religious issues (see
Church reform of
Peter I and
caesaropapism for details).
Another key
feature related to patrimonialism. In Russia...
-
protector and
leader of the
Christian Church, a
position later termed Caesaropapism. In practice, an emperor's
authority on
Church matters was frequently...
-
Benedict V and some mid-11th-century popes.
Bishops in the
Catholic Church Caesaropapism Index of
Vatican City-related
articles Legends surrounding the papacy...