exarch


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  • noun

Words related to exarch

a bishop in one of several Eastern Orthodox Churches in North America

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a bishop in eastern Christendom who holds a place below a patriarch but above a metropolitan

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a viceroy who governed a large province in the Roman Empire

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
In 1814 in Chisinau it approved the opening of an exarch printing house.
There is single layer root epidermis with thick cuticle, polyarch vascular bundle and radial with exarch xylem.
The most remarkable feature of the emergence of the twelve Episcopal Assemblies may be that the other Orthodox churches agreed in 2009 that the chairmanship of each of the twelve (most of them are in Western Europe) would be occupied by the regional primate with canonical ties to the Ecumenical Patriarchate, rather than the regional primate or exarch connected to any other major see such as the Patriarchate of Moscow, the Patriarchate of Romania, or the Patriarchate of Antioch.
Petersburg where he established the Russian Greco-Catholic Church with the ordination of Exarch Leonid Feodorov (also later a martyr).
He received the honorary distinction in honour of his long service as exarch of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and president of the Episcopal Conference in Austria, and especially for his contribution and support towards the integration of the Orthodox faith in the Austrian community.
On 11 June 2013, the Embassy of the Russian Federation hosted a reception on the occasion of the Day of Russia, attended by Macedonian President Gjorge Ivanov, Parliament Speaker Trajko Veljanoski, Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski, His Beatitude Archbishop Stefan, Head of the Macedonian Orthodox Church-Ohrid Archbishopric, Apostolic Exarch Dr.
In 2002 His Beatitude Gregorios III appointed him Parish Priest of Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre in Paris, raising him to the rank of Exarch.
The Byzantine usurper Gregory the Exarch and his Moorish allies were decisively defeated by a force under (Abd Allah b.
Exarch writes that he cannot help us, as he protests that he cannot
The accusation of instigating the murder of the Exarch Nikon, brought against them by the notorious Russian reactionary, Purishkevitch is too fantastic and infamous to be considered.
Anatomically the switch from the exarch position of the primary xylem of the radicle to the endarch position in the cotyledons takes place in the very basal part of the radicle (Rao 1971).
QUEZALES UNTIDILY ACHROMIC FLEABANE FERMENTS (81) HAPHAZARD AQUILEGIA SUCCORING TAEKWONDO (77) SCOFFLAWS HYPEREMIA AMATIVELY HALAZONES (77) HAMADA EXEQUY MIZUNA PLEACH YESSES (76) SNIPPER NONHOME EIDOLIC ESERINE ZONATED EMETINE RESECTS (75) HARIJAN ATOMIZE WASABIS EXIGENT DYNODES (74) PRELATE SEMILOG HEEZING ACTABLE WHIRLER SYNDETS (74) REPAST EXARCH DUNKER EVZONE FIESTA YAREST (73) The smallest size having a unique highest-scoring grid is 6x2; of the 72,093 6x2's, only one achieves the maximum score of 37.
(85) By the close of the century this process was complete: Byzantine Italy was at this time ruled by a military governor known to historians as the exarch. (86) In view of these developments the ET takes on greater significance as a testament to the extent to which Rome's laws had evolved to reflect the sorts of changes taking place in Italy between the fourth and sixth century, and to the challenges which Theoderic and his successors faced in attempting to stave off economic decline and a weakening of civic and administrative institutions.