- aphthartos, "incorruptible" and δοκεῖν, dokein, "to seem"), also
called Julianists or
Phantasiasts by
their opponents, were
members of a 6th-century Non-Chalcedonian...
- Aphthartodocetae,
Phantasiasts or,
after their leader Julian of Halicarn****us,
Julianists believed "that the body of Christ, from the very
moment of his conception...
-
Fraticelli Heresy of the
Judaizers Joachimites Josephines Jovinianism Julianists Gaianites Migetians Orléans
heresy Pasagians Paulicianism Astati Pneumatomachi...
- and of the
lower classes in the city of
Alexandria itself. In 535, the
Julianists elected as
patriarch the
archdeacon Gai****,
while their rivals the Severans...
-
closely connected to the
Julianist heresy,
which spread in
Egypt during the
papacy of Pope
Timothy III of Alexandria. The
Julianists believed in the incorruptibility...
-
Dioscorians and Petrites; Acephali, who are
subdivided into
three sects;
Julianists, who are
subdivided into
three sects; and
Severans or Theodosians, who...
-
jizya (tax) on the
Barsanuphians and
other schismatics (Gaianites and
Julianists). This had the
intended effect of
bringing many back into the patriarch's...
- the time were the Severans,
followers of
Severus of Antioch, and the
Julianists,
followers of
Julian of Halicarn****us. The
former elected the
deacon Theodosius...
- and on 7 September, a
union with the
Julianists was
agreed after a
creed co-written by
Quriaqos and the
Julianist patriarch Gabriel was accepted. It was...
-
Athanasius forbade priests from
baptising or
giving the
Eucharist to
Julianists, Nestorians, and
other sects. The
encyclical also
expressed Athanasius'...