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- Middle Ages (21063 bytes)
12: ...nd]]. These lands remained Christian, and their [[Arianism|Arian]] conquerors were soon converted, following...
90: * [[Heresy]] (for example, [[Arianism|Arian]]; [[Cathar]]; [[John Wyclif]]) - Alexandria (28378 bytes)
38: ...exandria|Athanasius]], the great opponent of both Arianism and pagan reaction, triumphed over both, establis... - Crusade (28507 bytes)
28: ...in favor of justified violence. Actions against [[Arianism|Arians]] and other heretics offered historical pr... - Isaac Newton (23339 bytes)
31: ...t that would have occurred between his [[Nontrinitarianism|nontrinitarian]] views and the orthodoxy of the c...
95: ...n was secretly a [[unitarianism|unitarian]] and [[arianism|arian]]; he did not believe in the church's doctr... - Christianity (47078 bytes)
52: ... ordered all Arian books burned and Arius exiled, Arianism continued to exist and thrive in the empire for s...
78: ...eveloping belief systems such as [[Deism]], [[Unitarianism]], and [[Universalism]], or becoming [[Atheism|at...
128: ...the Christian faith, from ancient sects such as [[Arianism|Arians]] and [[Gnosticism|Gnostics]] to modern gr...
162: ...the first examples of this were [[Marcionism]], [[Arianism]] and [[Pelagianism]] within the first few centur...
178: ...orthern Ireland]] carried a strong element of sectarianism between Protestants and Roman Catholics. - Pope Silvester I (1917 bytes)
3: ... council at [[Rome]] to condemn the heresies of [[Arianism|Arius]] and others. The story of his having [[bap... - Pope Julius I (1712 bytes)
1: ... He is chiefly known by the part he took in the [[Arianism|Arian]] controversy. After the [[Eusebius of Nico... - Pope Symmachus (2649 bytes)
7: ...rica]] who were persecuted by the rulers of the [[Arianism|Arian]] [[Vandals]]. He also aided the inhabitant... - Pope John I (1137 bytes)
3: Despite his protests, he was sent by the [[arianism|Arian]] King [[Theodoric the Great]] of the [[Ost... - Pope Boniface II (702 bytes)
1: ...lix IV]], who had been a strong adherent of the [[Arianism|Arian]] king. Boniface had for some time an [[an... - Carthage (20744 bytes)
98: ...ital. Gaiseric was considered a heretic too, an [[Arianism|Arian]], and though Arians commonly despised Cath... - Roman Empire (59037 bytes)
173: ...ristian [[bishop]]s. Returning [[Orthodox]] and [[Arianism|Arian]] bishops resumed their conflicts, thus fur... - Germanic tribes (16394 bytes)
45: ...ounds of the Empire; however, they converted to [[Arianism]] rather than to orthodox [[Catholicism]], and we... - History of Christianity (35391 bytes)
65: *[[Apollinarianism]]
66: *[[Arianism]] (fourth century, advanced by [[Arius]], a pries...
67: ...istians that took opposition to the early [[trinitarianism]] movement, reflecting the divine nature of Chris...
134: ...self in a dispute between Christian groups over [[Arianism]], summoning the [[First Council of Nicaea]]; thi...
144: ====[[Arianism]]==== - Inquisition (9274 bytes)
7: ...]]. In the subsequent centuries there were the [[Arianism|Arians]] and [[Manichaeism|Manicheans]]; in the [... - History of Greek and Roman Egypt (25856 bytes)
74: ... tradition of religious speculation. Not only did Arianism flourish there, but other heresies, such as [[Gno... - Medieval History (23198 bytes)
14: ...nd]]. These lands remained Christian, and their [[Arianism|Arian]] conquerors were soon converted, following...
94: * [[Heresy]] (for example, [[Arianism|Arian]]; [[Cathar]]; [[John Wyclif]])
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