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1,780 bytes added, 04:48, December 10, 2011
add reference to new text on Canon Law;
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==Further reading==
* Wilfried Hartmann, Kenneth Pennington. [http://books.google.ca/books?id=QeQaKQEACAAJ&dq=inauthor:%22Wilfried+Hartmann%22&source=gbs_navlinks_s The History of Byzantine and Eastern Canon Law to 1500]. Catholic Univ of Amer Press, 2012. 400 pp. ISBN 9780813216799
::<blockquote><small>"The first detailed survey in any language to cover the history of canon law in Eastern Christianity. This newest volume in the ''History of Medieval Canon Law'' series surveys the history of Byzantine and Eastern canon law. Beginning in the Patristic Age, Susan Wessel outlines the evolution of ecclesiastical law before the Council of Nicaea (325 A.D.). She covers the earliest documents and councils in the Christian tradition, and concludes that the councils replaced other sources of authority as bishops moved to a more democratic model of church organization. Heinz Ohme then offers a detailed analysis of the Greek councils and the writings of the Greek Fathers. He treats the sources of canonical material of Byzantine canon law down to the Quinisext Council (Trullanum, 692). Spyros Troianos presents a comprehensive survey of the Greek canonical collections and their compilers from the fourth to the eleventh century. In extending his coverage to 1500, Troianos provides bibliographical and biographical information about the most important Byzantine canonists who remain virtually unknown in English language literature: John Zonaras, Alexios Aristenos, and the Byzantine Gratian, Theodore Balsamon. With Hubert Kaufhold's contribution, the book also explores the wide range and variety of law in Eastern Christian communities, including Western Syrians (Jacobites), the Copts, Ethiopians, Armenians, Georgians, Nestorians, and Maronites."</small></blockquote>
==See also==
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