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George II

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15-1161: (Redirected from King George II ) George II or 2 may refer to: People [ edit ] George II of Antioch (seventh century AD) George II of Armenia (late ninth century) George II of Abkhazia (916–960) Patriarch George II of Alexandria (1021–1051) George II of Georgia (1072–1089) George II of Constantinople (late twelfth century) Yuri II of Vladimir or George II (1189–1238) George II of Duklja , Prince of Duklja from 1208 to c. 1243 George II of Bulgaria (before 1307–1322) George II Ghisi (d. 1352) George II, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (1454–1509) George II of Kakheti (1464–1513) George II, Duke of Münsterberg-Oels (1512–1553) George II of Brieg (1523–1586) George II of Imereti (1565–1585) George II, Duke of Pomerania (1582–1617) George II, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt (1605–1661) George II Rákóczi (1621–1660), prince of Transylvania George II Beseb'ely , Maronite Patriarch of Antioch in 1657–1670 George II, Duke of Württemberg-Montbéliard (1626–1699) Patriarch Ignatius George II , head of

30-460: A time due to conflict with Syriac Catholics there. In 1708, in response to the outbreak of plague at Mardin and Amida, George led a procession of Christians of mixed confessions from Mardin to the nearby monastery of Saint Jacob to pray for deliverance, and delivered a sermon, in which the patriarch preached that the plague was sent by God to punish those who had converted to Catholicism. George served as patriarch until his death on 5 June 1708, and he

45-468: A version of the GEORGE operating system See also [ edit ] George Tupou II of Tonga (1874–1918) Đurađ II , of Zeta (died 1403) Georg II (disambiguation) King George (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title George II . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

60-1561: Is thought, worked alongside him to be able to better the Empire altogether. References [ edit ] Ann van Dijk, "Jerusalem, Antioch, Rome, and Constantinople: The Peter Cycle in the Oratory of Pope John VII (705–707)", Dumbarton Oaks Papers , 55 (2001), p. 326 v t e Greek Orthodox Patriarchs of Antioch 6th–9th centuries Paul II (518–521) Euphrasius (521–526) Ephraim (526–546) Domnus III (546–561) Anastasius I (561–571) Gregory I (571–594) Anastasius I (594–599) Anastasius II (599–609) Gregory II (610–620) Anastasius III (620–628) Macedonius (628–640) George I (640–656) Macarius I (656–681) Theophanes (681–687) Sebastian (687–690) George II (690–695) Alexander II (695–702) Stephen IV (742–744) Theophylact (744–751) Theodore I Theodoret John III Job I (810–826) Nicholas I (826–834) Simeon I (834–840) Elias I (840–852) Theodosius I (852–860) Nicholas II (860–879) Michael I (879–890) Zacharias (890–902) 10th–13th centuries George III (902–917) Job II (917–939) Eustratius (939–960) Christopher I (960–966) Theodore II (966–977) Agapius (977–995) John IV (995–1000) Nicholas III (1000–1003) Elias II (1003–1010) George Lascaris (1010–1015) Macarius

75-601: The Church of the Virgin Mary more than once, and consecrated the Holy Chrism in the city in 1691. In the 1690s, George renovated churches at Edessa and Amida , and later also at Gazarta , Mosul, and the three churches at Mardin. As well as this, he renovated the monastery of Saint Ananias , which had been partially ruined since a Kurdish attack in c.  1516 . In doing so, George began reconstruction of

90-529: The 7th century. Little is known about him except that he attended the Quinisext Council in 691–692. It is speculated that he died of heat exhaustion caused by a long period of being outdoors. After his death the period of Arab tolerance that had allowed the continued existence of Christianity in regions under their domination ended. George II of Antioch's reign was one well known for peace, due to his love of many religions. The Byzantine Empire , it

105-528: The East . In 1673, George and Isaac aided Basil Yeldo in renovating the monastery of Saint Matthew, for which the three of them were imprisoned by the governor of Mosul for a short while. In 1677, he was ordained as archbishop of Gazarta by Basil Yeldo, upon which he assumed the name Dioscorus. After the abdication of Basil Yeldo, George was ordained as his successor as Maphrian of the East by Patriarch Ignatius Abdulmasih I in 1683 or 1684, upon which he assumed

120-552: The Syriac Orthodox Church in 1687–1708 George II of Great Britain (1683–1760) George II Frederic (r. 1776–1801), king of the Miskito George II, Prince of Waldeck and Pyrmont (1789–1845) George II, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (1826–1914) George II of Greece (1890–1947) George Frederick II, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1678–1703) Other uses [ edit ] GEORGE 2 ,

135-2554: The Virtuous (1015–1023) Eleutherius (1023–1028) Peter III (1028–1051) John V (1051–1062) Aemilian (1062–1075) Theodosius II (1075–1084) Nicephorus (1084–1090) John VI (1090–1155) John VII (1155–1159) Euthymius I (1159–1164) Macarius II (1164–1166) Athanasius I (1166–1180) Theodosius III (1180–1182) Elias III (1182–1184) Christopher II (1184–1185) Theodore IV (1185–1199) Joachim I (1199–1219) Dorotheus I (1219–1245) Simeon II (1245–1268) Euthymius II (1268–1269) Theodosius IV (1269–1276) Theodosius V (1276–1285) Arsenius (1285–1293) Dionysius (1293–1308) 14th–17th centuries Mark (1308–1342) Ignatius II (1342–1386) Pachomius I (1386–1393) Nilus (1393–1401) Michael III (1401–1410) Pachomius II (1410–1411) Joachim II (1411–1426) Mark III (1426–1436) Dorotheus II (1436–1454) Michael IV (1454–1476) Mark IV (1476) Joachim III (1476–1483) Gregory III (1483–1497) Dorotheus III (1497–1523) Michael V (1523–1541) Dorotheus IV (1541–1543) Joachim IV (1543–1576) Michael VI (1577–1581) Joachim V (1553–1592) Joachim VI (1593–1604) Dorotheus V (1604–1611) Athanasius II (1611–1619) Ignatius III (1619–1634) Euthymius III (1634–1635) Euthymius IV (1635–1647) Macarius III (1647–1672) Neophytos (1673–1682) Athanasius III (1685–1694) Cyril V (1694–1720) 18th century–present Athanasius III (1720–1724) Sylvester (1724–1766) Philemon (1766–1767) Daniel (1767–1791) Euthymius V (1791–1813) Seraphim (1813–1823) Methodius (1823–1850) Hierotheos (1850–1885) Gerasimos (1885–1891) Spyridon (1891–1898) Meletius II (1899–1906) Gregory IV (1906–1928) Alexander III (1931–1958) Theodosius VI (1958–1970) Elias IV (1970–1979) Ignatius IV (1979–2012) John X (2012–present) in exile at Constantinople [REDACTED] Christianity portal Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=George_II_of_Antioch&oldid=1206050840 " Categories : 7th-century archbishops Greek Orthodox Patriarchs of Antioch 7th-century Syrian people Ignatius George II Ignatius George II ( Syriac : ܓܘܪܓܝܣ ܬܪܝܢܐ , Arabic : البطريرك جرجس الثاني ابن عبدالكريم الموصلي )

150-551: The authority to administrate the whole church. In George's tenure as patriarch, he undertook an effort to revitalise the church and to defend it against the inroads of the Syriac Catholic Church , which had seceded from the Syriac Orthodox Church. After having spent a year in the courts at Aleppo in Syria, George recovered control over churches that had been seized by Syriac Catholics. In Aleppo itself, he retook

165-560: The 💕 This article is about the Greek Orthodox patriarch. For the Syriac Orthodox patriarch, see Ignatius George II . George II of Antioch Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch Church Church of Antioch See Antioch Installed 691 Term ended 702 Predecessor Sebastian of Antioch George II of Antioch was Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch in

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180-425: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=George_II&oldid=1215450197 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages George II of Antioch From Misplaced Pages,

195-403: The monastery's eastern wall, parts of the northern wall, the monastic cells , and parts of the church of the Virgin Mary from 1696 to 1699; he also had the patriarchal chapel constructed atop the church of the Virgin Mary. In c.  1701 , George constructed a church at Ḥisn Manṣūr , and later also at Zakho . He visited Edessa in c.  1702 or 1703, where he was imprisoned for

210-598: The name Basil. He was elected to succeed Ignatius Abdulmasih I as patriarch of Antioch, and was consecrated at the Church of the Forty Martyrs at Mardin on 22 or 23 April 1687. George assumed the name Ignatius, and received a firman from the Ottoman government thereby recognising his ascension to the patriarchal office. In the same year, he ordained his nephew Isaac as Maphrian of the East, and entrusted him with

225-584: Was the Patriarch of Antioch and head of the Syriac Orthodox Church from 1687 until his death in 1708. George was born at Mosul in 1648, and was the son of ‘Abd al-Karim. He had a brother named Rizq Allah and a sister called Maryam, who had several sons, Isaac , Matthew , and Jacob. George became a monk at the nearby monastery of Saint Matthew , where he and his nephew Isaac were ordained as priests in 1669 by Basil Yeldo , Maphrian of

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