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      • In the end, each bishop wished a dubious fate for the other, both of which came true: Epiphanius died on his journey home, and John was deposed twice and died in exile.
      www.cambridge.org/core/journals/church-history/article/abs/an-iconic-odd-couple-the-hagiographic-rehabilitation-of-epiphanius-and-john-chrysostom/39FEC2B4EC9DB80923FA0FACAE147828
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  2. May 14, 2021 · So Theophilus got Epiphanius, the heresy hunter, to come to his synod at which he proposed to frame Chrysostom. Epiphanius came to Constantinople spoiling for a fight. Chrysostom, wisely, refused to be provoked.

  3. May 12, 2012 · While in Constantinople Epiphanios ordained a deacon, without the permission of Chrysostom and contrary to canon law. He also refused Chrysostom's hospitality to remain at the episcopal palace.

  4. Dec 1, 2018 · Such was the case between Epiphanius and John Chrysostom during the so-called Origenist Controversy, which ensued at the end of the fourth century and into the fifth. Epiphanius, working...

  5. The return of the relics of Saint John Chrysostom to the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople. John Chrysostom died in the city of Comana in 407 on his way to his place of exile.

  6. The fifth-century historian Socrates reports that Epiphanius almost a decade later ordained a deacon near Constantinople, leading to a momentous confrontation with the bishop, John Chrysostom (Church History 6.12, 14). and the discussion stopped at that point.

  7. Oct 15, 2024 · The official rehabilitation of John Chrysostom came about 31 years later, when his relics were brought from Comana to Constantinople and were solemnly received by the archbishop Proclus and the emperor Theodosius II, son of Arcadius and Eudoxia.

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