on the history of “turkish orthodox church” appearing: a political project or luckless national autocephality
Clicks: 204
ID: 204641
2017
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Overall Quality
Improving Quality
0.0
/100
Combines engagement data with AI-assessed academic quality
Reader Engagement
Emerging Content
7.8
/100
26 views
26 readers
Trending
AI Quality Assessment
Not analyzed
Abstract
The article covers a little-known story of non-canonic Orthodox jurisdiction called “Turkish Orthodox Church” that appeared in 1920s as a schismatic organisation with strongly pronounced Turkish nationalism and extreme intolerance to the canonic Constantinopolitan Orthodox Church. A historical link between the orthodox citizens of Turkey with Greece stirred up ill-feeling in pro-Turkish nationalists. That caused raft of attempts to capture church property from the canonic churches. Despite uproars and big words schismatic didn’t attract many orthodox and remained as uninteresting issue for Turkish politicians. Without any governmental support non-canonic “Turkish Orthodox Church” gradually turned into socio-political group of devoted nationalists that are mainly the relatives of priest Paul Karakissadiris, the founder of this religious organization. Today “Turkish Orthodox Church” being mostly a political project has liberal elements and denies canonic division of Orthodox Church of schismatic community.
Abstract Quality Issue:
This abstract appears to be incomplete or contains metadata (138 words).
Try re-searching for a better abstract.
| Reference Key |
vladimirovich2017studiaon
Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using
SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
|
|---|---|
| Authors | ;Bochkov Pavel Vladimirovich |
| Journal | Folia phoniatrica et logopaedica : official organ of the International Association of Logopedics and Phoniatrics (IALP) |
| Year | 2017 |
| DOI |
10.24411/2308-8079-2017-00010
|
| URL | |
| Keywords |
Citations
No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.