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  1. Petró Mohyla (en rumano Petru Movilă, en ucraniano Петро́ Моги́ла) fue obispo del Patriarcado de Constantinopla, Metropolitano de Kiev, Galizia y toda Rus, 1 y exarca de la sede de Constantinopla. Hijo del príncipe valaco de Moldavia Simeón Mohyla, de la familia boyarda Mohyla. 2 .

  2. 24 de oct. de 2012 · Peter Mogila (also spelled Petro Mohyla or Petr Moghila; Ukrainian: Петро Могила, Romanian: Petru Movilă) was the Metropolitan of Kiev and Galicia from 1632 until his death in 1646.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Petro_MohylaPetro Mohyla - Wikipedia

    Petro Mohyla (born Petru Movilă [a]; 21 December 1596 – 1 January [ O.S. 22 December] 1647) was the Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia and all Rus' [b] in the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in the Eastern Orthodox Church from 1633 to 1646. [2] Family. Petro Mohyla was born into the House of Movilești, who were a family of Romanian boyars.

  4. 2 de oct. de 2019 · This Synod took a confession from Saint Peter Mogila (which the council itself explicitly stated had Roman Catholic errors), edited it, and then published it as an authoritative catechism. In 1643, all four Orthodox Patriarchs (of…

  5. Peter Mogila, who lately departed piously, and holily, unto God, being chosen, and ordained, an orthodox Metropolitan, by the most holy, and eminent, the Lord Theophanes, Patriarch of Jerusalem; when he took upon him the Government of the Church of Kiev that was committed to his charge he found his flock confused and infected, with certain ...

  6. Peter Mogila (1597–1646), the head of the Orthodox theological school that had been founded in 1615 at the Kievan Caves Monastery, was chosen. Mogila was fiercely opposed to the Roman Church and the Unia, but he had been trained in Latin schools and had a deep respect for Latin scholastic educational methods.

  7. Petro Mohyla (born Dec. 21, 1596, Moldavia [now in Romania]—died Dec. 22, 1646, Kiev, Pol. [now in Ukraine]) was an Orthodox monk and theologian of Moldavian origin who served as metropolitan of Kiev and who authored the Orthodox Confession of the Catholic and Apostolic Eastern Church.