The 11 Matins Gospels of the Rite of Constantinople

Liturgy and Numerology

Auteurs

  • Elena Velkova Velkovska Université de Sienne

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25365/exf-2025-4-2

Mots-clés :

Matins Gospels, Constantinopolitan Liturgy, Hagiopolite Liturgy, Numerology

Résumé

In Sunday Matins in Antioch and Constantinople, no Gospel passage was read until the 6th century, when Patriarch Severus of Antioch introduced this custom. The Hagiopolite liturgy preserved in Armenian knows a series of four pericopes, which the Jerusalem cathedral later doubled to eight. The 11 resurrection gospels appear in Constantinople in the 9th century as a series independent of the Jerusalem one in both structure and content. The choice of the number 11 in the series, based on numerology, depends on a solid patristic tradition that links the two numbers of the resurrection, three and eight, in the sum of 11.

Biographie de l'auteur

Elena Velkova Velkovska, Université de Sienne

Elena Velkovska is Professor of Ancient Christian Literature at the University of Siena in Italy.

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Publiée

2025-02-03

Comment citer

Velkova Velkovska, E. (2025). The 11 Matins Gospels of the Rite of Constantinople: Liturgy and Numerology. Ex Fonte - Journal of Ecumenical Studies in Liturgy, 4, 29–63. https://doi.org/10.25365/exf-2025-4-2

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