Latrocinium
English
Etymology
From Latin latrocinium (“act of brigandage; an illegitimate church council”). Doublet of larceny.
Proper noun
Latrocinium
- (historical, ecclesiastical, derogatory) The Second Council of Ephesus.
- 1912, Edward Denny, Papalism: A treatise on the claims of the papacy as set forth in the encyclical Satis Cognitum, page 638:
- But the whole circumstances of the Latrocinium, where everything was done to degrade Constantinople by Dioscurus, render it impossible to attach any weight to a statement of this kind ...
- 1936, Cuthbert Turner, “The Organization of the Church”, in The Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. I: The Christian Roman Empire and the Foundation of the Teutonic Kingdoms, page 175:
- The business of the Council of Chalcedon was to reverse the proceedings of the Latrocinium ...
- 1979, Timothy E. Gregory, Vox Populi: Popular Opinion and Violence in the Religious Controversies of the Fifth Century A.D., page 151:
- This was all the more significant because the victors at the Latrocinium were surprisingly slow in following up their advantage in Constantinople.
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Anagrams
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