Ethnological-Historiographic View on Seven Ancient Extant Christian Liturgies
Main Article Content
Abstract
The author analyses comparatively seven ancient extant Christian liturgies: Roman Catholic Tridentine mass, Byzantine liturgy of the Eastern Orthodox Churches, four liturgies of the Oriental Orthodox Churches: Alexandrian-Coptic, Antiochian-Syriac, Armenian and Ethiopian, and finally the liturgy of the Churches of the East: Assyrian and Ancient. Furthermore, the author researches inculturation of Antiochian-Syriac liturgy and Churches of the East liturgy in South India, as well as liturgies in Eastern Catholicism and Western Orthodoxy. This study explores historical events that are crucial to understanding the origin and development of ancient liturgies, as well as major architecture, painting, drama and music aspects of liturgies from ethnological perspective.
Downloads
Article Details

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Authors who publish in this journal agree to the following terms:
-
Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication, with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work provided that authorship of the work and its initial publication in this journal are acknowledged.
-
Authors may enter into separate, additional contractual agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the published version of the work in the journal (for example, depositing it in an institutional repository or publishing it in a book), provided that its initial publication in this journal is acknowledged.
-
Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (for example, in institutional repositories or on their website) before and during the submission process, as this may lead to productive exchanges and earlier as well as increased citation of the published work (see The Effect of Open Access).