The STUDIA UNIVERSITATIS BABEŞ-BOLYAI issue article summary

The summary of the selected article appears at the bottom of the page. In order to get back to the contents of the issue this article belongs to you have to access the link from the title. In order to see all the articles of the archive which have as author/co-author one of the authors mentioned below, you have to access the link from the author's name.

 
       
         
    STUDIA THEOLOGIA%20REFORMATA%20TRANSYLVANICA - Issue no. 1 / 2018  
         
  Article:   ROME OR BYZANTIUM? THE ENCOUNTER OF THE TWO RITES IN THE FIRST CENTURIES OF HUNGARIAN CHRISTIANITY / RÓMA VAGY BIZÁNC? A KÉT RÍTUS TALÁLKOZÁSA A MAGYAR KERESZTYÉNSÉG ELSŐ SZÁZADAIBAN.

Authors:  LUKÁCS OLGA.
 
       
         
  Abstract:  

VIEW PDF


DOI: 10.24193/subbtref.63.1.08
Published Online: 2018-03-01
Published Print: 2018-03-01
pp. 111-122
FULL PDF

Rome or Byzantium? The Encounter of the Two Rites in the First Centuries of Hungarian Christianity. Historical sources prove that during the pre-conquest era the Byzantine mission had several impacts on Hungarians, which continued after their settlement in Pannonia as well. There are written sources on the existence of Byzantine Christianity only from the mid-10th century. The Gyula called Zombor has probably also gone to Constantinople in 953, his baptism being recorded by Ioannes Scylitzes as well. He returned home together with Hierotheos, a “proselytizing bishop”, whom Patriarch Theophylact of Constantinople (933–956) named “bishop of Turkey”, thus attempting to subject Turkey to his own authority.
Due to the Christianizing activity of the bishop and his monks, Slavic-derived ecclesiastical words came into the Hungarian language with the help of the interpreters.
Hierotheos lived in the court of Gyula, where he baptized his daughter, Sarolt and perhaps some of the courtiers. The hopeful mission was set back by the death of the old Gyula.
History links taking up Western Christianity and Hungary joining the Western Christian states to Grand Prince Geza (ca. 972–997), the son of Grad Prince Taksony, and King Saint Stephen. The inflow of Western Christianity has not meant the suppression of the Eastern rite for a long time. This is also shown by the fact that we are aware of the existence of a series of Greek monasteries in Hungary in the time of King Saint Stephen and the following period.
In the 11th–12th centuries, the two types of Christianity coexisted in Hungary in peace, the effects of the 1054 schism have not been felt in these centuries.
The fast decline of the Eastern rite only started in the firstrst third of the 13th century. One of the reasons was the formation of the Latin Empire of Constantinople in 1204, thus the Byzantine Latin Patriarchate was set up, which certainly weakened the position of the Greek Church in Hungary, and the other reason was the Fourth Council of the Lateran in 1215, which sought to place constraints on the Eastern rite.

Keywords: Christianization of Hungarians, Eastern rite, Eastern monasteries in Hungary, Christianity at the time of the Hungarian settlement.
 
         
     
         
         
      Back to previous page