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Council of Seleucia

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:''not to be confused with the Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon of 410.''
The '''Council of Seleucia''' was a local [[synod|council]] of the Christian church held in the fourth century at Seleucia Isauria in southern Asia Minor (now Silifke, Turkey). The council was one of a number of councils during the middle of the fourth century that attempted to conciliate the continued disputes with adherents of forms of extreme [[Arianism]] following the [[First Ecumenical Council]].
In 358, the Roman Emperor [[Constantius II]] requested two councils, one of western [[bishop]]s at [[Council of Rimini|Ariminum]] and the other of eastern bishops at [[Nicomedia]], to resolve the controversy over [[Arianism]] regarding the nature of the divinity of [[Jesus Christ]], a controversy that had divided the fourth-century church.<ref>Philostorgius, in Photius, ''Epitome of the Ecclesiastical History of Philostorgius'', book 4, chapter 10.</ref>
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