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→Apostolic thrones: These churchs are under the Roman Catholic Pope who inturn reside in the throne of st peter and the can't legitimately claim the St Peter throne of Antioch they can be only considered as a set who traces back to traditions. Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
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{{Short description|Quality of some ancient Christian jurisdictions}}
In [[Christianity]], the concept of an '''Apostolic Throne''' refers to one of the historic [[Patriarchates]] that was associated with a specific [[Apostles in the New Testament|apostle]]. Not all of the apostles are associated with specific "thrones"; in general, the phrase applies to Apostles that presided over a specific geographic church. Notably, there is no apostolic throne associated with [[St. Paul]], who along with St. Peter was present, at different times, in both [[Antioch]] and [[Rome]] (where both Peter and Paul were [[crucified]]). The phrase is also somewhat interchangeable with the "Apostolic See".
==Apostolic thrones==
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