Patriarch
Originally a patriarch is a man who exercises autocratic authority over an extended family. See patriarchy.Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are referred to as the three patriarchs of Judaism, and the period in which they lived is called the patriarchal period.
The word has also taken on other meanings. In particular, the highest-ranking bishops in Eastern Orthodoxy, Oriental Orthodoxy, the Catholic Communion, and the Assyrian Church of the East are called patriarchs.
Current Patriarchs in the Catholic Communion:
- The Patriarch of Rome.
- The Coptic Patriarch of Alexandria
- The Greek Patriarch of Antioch
- The Syrian Patriarch of Antioch
- The Maronite Patriarch of Antioch
- The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem
- The Patriarch of Babylon
- The Patriarch of Cilicia
- The Patriarch of Venice
- The Patriarch of Lisbon
- The Latin Patriarch of Constantinople
- The Latin Patriarch of Alexandria
- The Latin Patriarch of Antioch
- The Patriarch of the West Indies
- The Patriarch of the East Indies
- The Patriarch of Constantinople, the Ecumenical Patriarch
- The Patriarch of Alexandria
- The Patriarch of Antioch
- The Patriarch of Jerusalem
- The Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia
- The Patriarch Serbian
- The Patriarch of All Romania
- The Patriarch of All Bulgaria
- The Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia
- Coptic Orthodox Church: The Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria
- Syrian Orthodox Church: The Patriarch of Antioch
- Armenian Orthodox Church:
- The Catholicos Patriarch of Etchmiadzin and Armenia
- The Patriarch of Cilicia and the Middle East
- Tewahedo Church: The Patriarch of All Ethiopia
- Eritrean Orthodox Church: The Patriarch of All Eritrea
- Assyrian Church of the East: The Catholicos Patriarch of Babylon