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Biography
Pope Timothy I of Alexandria, 22nd Pope of Alexandria & Patriarch of the See of St. Mark, died about 20 July 384. As the Pope of Alexandria, he was the head of the Coptic Church. When he was younger, he knew Athanasius, who was the 20th Pope of Alexandria, and this is thought to have had a major influence on his theological thinking. He also sold off his possessions to benefit the church and the poor. He would become known as Timothy I, the Destitute. He was the brother of Pope Peter II of Alexandria. He was unanimously chosen to become the 22nd bishop of the Alexandrian church. The date when his reign began is disputed, but seems to have been in the range of 378-381. He presided over the second First Council of Constantinople called by Emperor Theodosius. However, he was not originally in control. Rather, he arrived after the conference had already begun, led by Gregory of Nazianzus and Melitius of Antioch. But Melitius died soon thereafter and Gregory resigned his role as bishop, which resulted in Timothy presiding over part of the council. This council was also known as the Second Ecumenical Council, with the Council of Nicaea being the first. In addition to the 150 Orthodox (that is, conforming to the decisions of the Council of Nicaea), there were also 36 followers of Macedonius. Constantinople, the city that hosted this council, had gained much in importance since the emperor Constantine the Great transformed it into an imperial capital. This council determined that the see of Alexandria ranked third in importance, after both Rome and Constantinople. Both Timothy and the Bishop of Rome rejected this claim, considering Alexandria to remain second only to Rome in the ranking of Christian cities. According to Coptic hagiography Timothy played a large part at the council. He condemned Macedonius for his belief that the Holy Spirit was created instead of existing from the beginning of time.
Patronages
No patronages on file. (See the documentation/patronage-data-plan.md for the gap-fill plan.)