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・ Theodore Newton Vail
・ Theodore Nicolas Gobley
・ Theodore Nisbet Gibbs
・ Theodore O'Connor
・ Theodore O'Hara
・ Theodore O. Yntema
・ Theodore Odrach
・ Theodore Oesten
・ Theodore of Alexandria
・ Theodore of Amasea
・ Theodore of Corsica
・ Theodore of Dekapolis
・ Theodore of Dobruja
・ Theodore of Mopsuestia
・ Theodore of Pavia
Theodore of Tarsus
・ Theodore of the Jordan
・ Theodore Olson
・ Theodore Orji
・ Theodore Osborn
・ Theodore Otis
・ Theodore Otto Langerfeldt
・ Theodore P. Gilman
・ Theodore P. Greene
・ Theodore P. Savas
・ Theodore Palaiologos
・ Theodore Palaiologos (son of Michael VIII)
・ Theodore Papakonstantinou
・ Theodore Pappas
・ Theodore Paraskevakos


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Theodore of Tarsus : ウィキペディア英語版
Theodore of Tarsus

Theodore of Tarsus (602 – 19 September 690〔.〕) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 668 to 690, best known for his reform of the English Church and establishment of a school in Canterbury.
Theodore's life can be divided into the time before his arrival in Britain as Archbishop of Canterbury, and his archiepiscopate. Until recently, scholarship on Theodore had focused on only the latter period since it is attested in Bede's ''Ecclesiastical History of the English'', and also in Stephen of Ripon's ''Vita Sancti Wilfrithi'', whereas no source directly mentions Theodore's earlier activities. However, Michael Lapidge and Bernard Bischoff have reconstructed his earlier life based on a study of texts produced by his Canterbury School.
==Early life==
Theodore was of Byzantine Greek descent, born in Tarsus in Cilicia, a Greek-speaking diocese of the Byzantine Empire.〔
; ; ; ; .
〕 Theodore's childhood saw devastating wars between Byzantium and the Persian Sassanid Empire, which resulted in the capture of Antioch, Damascus, and Jerusalem in 613-614. Persian forces captured Tarsus when Theodore was 11 or 12 years old, and evidence exists that Theodore had experience of Persian culture.〔
.〕 It is most likely that he studied at Antioch, the historic home of a distinctive school of exegesis, of which he was a proponent.〔.〕 Theodore also knew Syrian culture, language and literature, and may even have travelled to Edessa.〔.〕
Though a Greek could live under Persian rule, the Muslim conquests, which reached Tarsus in 637, certainly drove Theodore from Tarsus; if he did not flee earlier, Theodore would have been 35 years old when he left his birthplace.〔
〕 Having returned to the Eastern Roman Empire, he studied in the Byzantine capital of Constantinople, including the subjects of astronomy, ecclesiastical computus, astrology, medicine, Roman civil law, Greek rhetoric and philosophy, and the use of the horoscope.〔
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At some time before the 660s, Theodore had travelled west to Rome, where he lived with a community of Eastern monks, probably at the monastery of St. Anastasius.〔
.
〕 At this time, in addition to his already profound Greek intellectual inheritance, he became learned in Latin literature, both sacred and secular.〔.
〕 The Synod of Whitby (664) having confirmed the decision in the Anglo-Saxon Church to follow Rome, in 667, when Theodore was 66, the see of Canterbury happened to fall vacant. Wighard, the man chosen to fill the post, unexpectedly died. Wighard had been sent to Pope Vitalian by Ecgberht, king of Kent, and Oswy, king of Northumbria, for consecration as archbishop. Following Wighard's death, Theodore was chosen by Vitalian upon the recommendation of Hadrian (later abbot of St. Peter's, Canterbury). Theodore was consecrated archbishop of Canterbury in Rome on 26 March 668, and sent to England with Hadrian, arriving on 27 May 669.

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