Abstract

The Greek Church faced considerable problems following the Latin Conquest of Cyprus and the establishment of the Lusignan dynasty. Much of its property was impounded by the new Latin rulers, in the 1220s its bishoprics were reduced to four, with each bishop subject to a Latin diocesan. Under the provisions of the Bulla Cypria of 1260 it accepted papal primacy and ceased to have its own archbishop following the death of Germanos. Limits were placed on the numbers of monks in Greek monasteries and the refusal of Greek monks to accept the validity of Latin unleavened communion bread resulted in the martyrdom of 13 of them in 1231. Despite this, however, the Greek Church overcame these challenges and even strengthened its position in the later Lusignan and Venetian periods. Several reasons explain its ability to survive and maintain the allegiance of most of the population. The small number of Latins on Cyprus, concentrated mainly in the towns of Nicosia and Famagusta, made them fear absorption into the far more numerous Greeks and so disposed to tolerate a Greek Uniate Church that formally accepted papal primacy. The great distance separating Cyprus from Rome and Avignon together with increasing absenteeism among the Latin clergy from the later fourteenth century onwards made it impossible to enforce papal directives. The growing Ottoman threat from the late fifteenth century onwards likewise made the Venetian authorities on Cyprus reluctant to implement papal rulings that would anger the Greek majority. In addition, the Greek Church of Cyprus maintained contact with the Greek patriarchates of Constantinople, Antioch and Alexandria, all outside the areas under Latin rule, and so was not isolated from the Orthodox Christians subject to the patriarch of Constantinople.

Highlights

  • Po łacińskim podboju Cypru i ustanowieniu dynastii Lusignanów Kościół grecki stanął w obliczu poważnych problemów

  • Much of its property was impounded by the new Latin rulers, in the 1220s its bishoprics were reduced to four, with each bishop subject to a Latin diocesan

  • Limits were placed on the numbers of monks in Greek monasteries and the refusal of Greek monks to accept the validity of Latin unleavened communion bread resulted in the martyrdom of 13 of them in 1231

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Summary

Lusignan period

There is documentary evidence for a number of churches in this period. A document written in December 1460, describes how a protopapas named Kyriakos bequeathed some houses to his son Anthony, a priest. According to a Venetian report written between 1510 and 1521 concerning the population of Cyprus, the number of villages and the revenues, including those of the island’s Latin and Greek clergy, the Greek bishopric of Nicosia, and the monastery of St George of Mangana, both enjoyed annual incomes of 600 ducats. The Councillor Fantino Dolfin observed in his report dated 4 June 1544 that the functioning Greek monastic houses on Cyprus numbering 27 were neither subject to visitations or reforms by any superior, on account of which many religious lived a worldly life, consuming incomes without providing any benefit to the Church To introduce reforms, he suggested that the abbots be transferred every two years from one abbey to another, with the obligation to provide their successors with an inventory of all the abbey’s fixed and movable properties, with a copy to be registered by the Venetian treasury, so that such abbots would not be able to take away anything other than their vestments. Greek monastic life in the capital and elsewhere on Cyprus maintained a lively presence right up to the Ottoman conquest

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