Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q168414> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 82 of
82
with 100 triples per page.
- Q168414 subject Q6620159.
- Q168414 subject Q7061998.
- Q168414 subject Q7453560.
- Q168414 subject Q9436845.
- Q168414 abstract "Template:ForNestorianism is a Christological doctrine that emphasizes the disunion between the human and divine natures of Jesus. It was advanced by Nestorius (386–450), Patriarch of Constantinople from 428–431, influenced by Nestorius' studies under Theodore of Mopsuestia at the School of Antioch. Nestorius's teachings brought him into conflict with other prominent church leaders, most notably Cyril of Alexandria, who criticized especially his rejection of the title Theotokos ("Bringer forth of God") for the Virgin Mary. Nestorius and his teachings were eventually condemned as heretical at the First Council of Ephesus in 431 and the Council of Chalcedon in 451, leading to the Nestorian Schism, in which churches supporting Nestorius broke with the rest of the Christian Church. Following that, many of Nestorius's supporters relocated to the Sasanian Empire, where they affiliated with the local Christian community, known as the Church of the East. Over the next decades the Church of the East became increasingly Nestorian in doctrine, leading to it becoming known alternately as the Nestorian Church.Nestorianism is a form of dyophysitism, and can be seen as the antithesis to monophysitism, which emerged in reaction to Nestorianism. Where Nestorianism holds that Christ had two loosely united natures, divine and human, monophysitism holds that he had but a single nature, his human nature being absorbed into his divinity. A brief definition of Nestorian Christology can be given as: "Jesus Christ, who is not identical with the Son but personally united with the Son, who lives in him, is one hypostasis and one nature: human." Both Nestorianism and monophysitism were condemned as heretical at the Council of Chalcedon. Monophysitism survived and developed into the Miaphysitism of the modern Oriental Orthodox churches.Following the exodus to Persia, scholars expanded on the teachings of Nestorius and his mentors, particularly after the relocation of the School of Edessa to the Persian city of Nisibis in 489 (where it became known as the School of Nisibis). Nestorianism never again became prominent in the Roman Empire or later Europe, though the diffusion of the Church of the East in and after the 7th century spread it widely across Asia. But not all churches affiliated with the Church of the East appear to have followed Nestorian Christology; indeed, the modern Assyrian Church of the East, which reveres Nestorius, does not follow all historically Nestorian doctrine.Despite this initial Eastern expansion, the Nestorians' missionary success was eventually deterred. David J Bosch observesBy the end of the fourteenth century, however, the Nestorian and other churches—which at one time had dotted the landscape of all of Central and even parts of East Asia—were all but wiped out. Isolated pockets of Christianity survived only in India. The religious victors on the vast Central Asian mission field of the Nestorians were Islam and Buddhism...".
- Q168414 thumbnail Nestorianism.svg?width=300.
- Q168414 wikiPageExternalLink 10755a.htm.
- Q168414 wikiPageExternalLink ch-of-east.htm.
- Q168414 wikiPageExternalLink content.php?url=issue&journal_code=JECS&issue=3&vol=62.
- Q168414 wikiPageExternalLink print?hl=en&id=yt0X840SjpEC.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1045925.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q11767.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q12490507.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q12544.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1302971.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1438809.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1553052.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1554020.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q160353.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q160598.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q160922.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q170531.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1764554.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q183091.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q183452.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q184332.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q185073.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1856007.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q187900.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q190.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q192541.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q1991529.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q203179.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q207381.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q208542.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q2708661.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q2711500.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q27275.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q273603.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q2877963.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q302.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q31945.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q345.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q355664.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q366287.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q427961.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q44079.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q46.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q48.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q49377.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q5113606.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q58451.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q597636.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q60719.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q616175.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q642420.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q648601.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q651118.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q6620159.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q668.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q7061998.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q726081.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q741082.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q7453560.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q766575.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q772373.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q79.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q790811.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q794.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q83328.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q8346462.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q83891.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q856690.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q887684.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q9436845.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q9601.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q9683.
- Q168414 wikiPageWikiLink Q989799.
- Q168414 type Thing.
- Q168414 comment "Template:ForNestorianism is a Christological doctrine that emphasizes the disunion between the human and divine natures of Jesus. It was advanced by Nestorius (386–450), Patriarch of Constantinople from 428–431, influenced by Nestorius' studies under Theodore of Mopsuestia at the School of Antioch.".
- Q168414 label "Nestorianism".
- Q168414 depiction Nestorianism.svg.