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exarchate
[ ek-sahr-keyt, -kit, ek-sahr-keyt ]
noun
- the office, jurisdiction, or province of an exarch.
exarchate
/ ɛkˈsɑːkeɪt; ˈɛksɑːkɪ; ˈɛksɑːˌkeɪt /
noun
- the office, rank, or jurisdiction of an exarch
Word History and Origins
Origin of exarchate1
Example Sentences
Kirill created an “exarchate” in Africa to replace the patriarch of Alexandria, who is loyal to the Eastern Church.
While Zachary continued to pay homage to the sovereignty of the emperors, Liutprand made himself master of the exarchate, and his successor, Rachis, immediately after stipulated with the Romans for a peace of twenty years.
Again, when Pepin obliged the Lombard king to cede the exarchate of Ravenna not to the emperor but to Rome, the words employed were: "to the Holy Church and the Roman Republic."
In 568 the Lombards, under Alboin, appeared in Italy, which they overran as far south as the Tiber, establishing their kingdom on the ruins of the exarchate.
There are indeed no mean traces of this art in Adriatic Italy; the exarchate at Ravenna, the eastern traffic of Venice, have shown their influence on Italian art and architecture.
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