emblem atop the entrance of the Patriarchate of Constantinople. The ecumenical patriarch of Constantinople is
first among equals, or first in honor among all Eastern Orthodox bishops, who presides in person—or through a delegate—over any council of Orthodox primates or bishops in which he takes part and serves as primary spokesman for the Orthodox communion especially in
ecumenical contacts with other Christian denominations. He has no direct jurisdiction over the other
patriarchs or the other
autocephalous Orthodox churches, but he, alone among his fellow primates, enjoys the right of convening extraordinary
synods consisting of them or their delegates to deal with
ad hoc situations and has also convened well-attended pan-Orthodox synods in the last 40 years. His unique role often sees the ecumenical patriarch referred to as the spiritual leader of the Orthodox Church in some sources, though this is not an official title of the patriarch nor is it usually used in scholarly sources on the patriarchate. The Orthodox Church is entirely decentralized: it has no central authority, earthly head, or single
bishop in a leadership role. Because it has a synodical system
canonically, it is significantly distinguished from the hierarchically organized
Catholic Church, whose doctrine is
papal supremacy and whose head is the
pope. His titles
primus inter pares. 'first among equals', and "ecumenical patriarch" are of honor rather than authority, and in fact the ecumenical patriarch has no real authority over churches other than the Constantinopolitan. The ecumenical patriarch of Constantinople is the direct administrative superior of dioceses and archdioceses serving millions of Greek, Ukrainian,
Rusyn and
Albanian believers in North and South America, Western Europe, Australia and New Zealand, South Korea, as well as parts of modern Greece which, for historical reasons, do not fall under the jurisdiction of the
Church of Greece. His actual position is patriarch of the
Orthodox Church of Constantinople, one of the fourteen autocephalous and several autonomous churches and the most senior (though not oldest) of the four orthodox ancient primatial sees among the five patriarchal Christian centers comprising the ancient
Pentarchy of the undivided Church. In his role as head of the Orthodox Church of Constantinople, he is known as the "archbishop of Constantinople,
New Rome". The Ecumenical Patriarchate is also sometimes called the
Greek Patriarchate of Constantinople to distinguish it from the
Armenian Patriarchate and the extinct
Latin Patriarchate, which was created after the Latin capture of Constantinople in 1204, during the
Fourth Crusade.
History The see of Byzantium, whose foundation was later ascribed to Andrew the Apostle, was originally a common bishopric. It gained importance when Emperor Constantine elevated Byzantium to a second capital alongside
Rome and named it
Constantinople. The see's ecclesiastical status as the second of
five patriarchates was developed by the Ecumenical Councils of
Constantinople in 381 and
Chalcedon in 451. The
Turkish government recognizes him as the spiritual leader of the Greek minority in Turkey, but does not recognize the title "Ecumenical Patriarch", instead referring to him as the
Roman (literally
Rûm)
Orthodox patriarch of Fener (). The patriarch was subject to the authority of the
Ottoman Empire after the conquest of Constantinople in 1453, until the declaration of Turkish Republic in 1923. Today, according to Turkish law, he is subject to the authority of the state of Turkey and is required to be a citizen of Turkey to be patriarch. The patriarch of Constantinople has been dubbed the ecumenical patriarch since the sixth century. The exact significance of the style, which has been used occasionally for other prelates since the middle of the fifth century, is nowhere officially defined but, according to the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, the title has been criticized in the Catholic Church as incompatible with the claims of the
Holy See. It is home to 20 monasteries and numerous other monastic communities. ==Episcopacy role==