Daniel Toven

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The newly promoted bishop of the city took advantage of a favourable conjunction of politics at the first Council of Constantinople in 381 (see pp. 218–20) to get himself ‘the primacy of honour after the Bishop of Rome, because Constantinople is the new Rome’,1 while his Church did its best to trump Rome in apostolicity by declaring that it had been founded by the first-recruited among Christ’s Apostles, Andrew.
A History of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years
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