First Autocephalous Period (325 (431) –1260) • Gelasios I (325) •
Epiphanius of Salamis (368) • Stavrinos I (403) • Troilos (431) • Reginos (431) • Olympios I (449) • Stavrinos II (457) •
Anthemios (470) • Olympios II
(During the reign of Justinian) • Philoxenos
(During the reign of Justinian) • Damianos
(During the reign of Justinian) • Sophronios I
(During the reign of Justinian) • Gregorios
(During the reign of Justinian) • Arkadios
(During the reign of Justinian) • Theophanes I • Plutarch (620) •
Arkadios II (630) • Serghios (643) • Epiphanios II (681) •
John I (691) • George I (754) • Constantine (783) • Akakios (after 787) • Gelasios II (after 787 and likely successor of Akakios) • Theophanes II (early 9th century and likely successor of Gelasios Ii) • John II (early 9th century and likely successor of Theophanes II and predecessor either of Barnabas or Epiphanios III) • Epiphanios III (890) • Basileos •
Nicholas, later
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople • John III (1151) • Barnabas II (1175) • Sophronios II (1191) • Isaias (1209) • Neophytos I (1222) •
Germanos I (1260)
Non-autocephalous period (1260–1571) During the
Lusignan and later
Venetian rule from 1260 to 1571, the Church of Cyprus ceased to be autocephalous and came under the direct rule of the
Papacy; its fourteen dioceses were reduced to four until after the
Ottoman conquest in 1571, when the
Ottomans, for expedient administrative reasons, restored to the Orthodox Church of Cyprus all its previous privileges and rights.
Second autocephalous period (1571–present) ==See also==