Theotokos - significado y definición. Qué es Theotokos
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Qué (quién) es Theotokos - definición

TITLE GIVEN TO MARY
Mother of God; Theotokus; First Marian dogma; Bogoroditsa; God bearer; God Bearer; Theotocus; Divine Motherhood; Orthodox Marian theology; Holy Mother of God; Theometor; Mother of god; God-bearer; Most Holy Mother of God; Most Holy Theotokos
  • An 18th-century Russian chart of the various types of ''Bogoroditsa'' (birth-giver of God) icons
  • Mother of God of Kazan]]
  • Byzantine mosaic of the enthroned Theotokos, [[Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo]], Ravenna, ca. AD 560

Mother of God         
In Christianity, the Mother of God is another name for the Virgin Mary, the mother of Jesus Christ.
N-PROPER
Theotokos Kosmosoteira         
  • View of the dome interior
BYZANTINE MONASTERY IN FERES, EVROS, GREECE
Theotokos Kosmosoteira Monastery
The Theotokos Kosmosoteira () is a Greek Orthodox monastery in Feres, Evros Prefecture, Greece. It was built around 1152 by the sebastokrator Isaac Komnenos, a son of the Byzantine emperor Alexios I Komnenos.
Theotokos of Buchyn         
  • Icon of the Theotokos of Buchyn
RELIGIOUS ICON
Theotokos of Buchan; Theotokos of Buchin
The Theotokos of Buchyn is an icon which allegedly appeared in the 18th century and honored as miraculous by the Orthodox Christians of Volyn, Rivne (Ukraine), and Pinsk (Belarus) Polesye. The icon measures 65x80 cm.

Wikipedia

Theotokos

Theotokos (Greek: Θεοτόκος) is a title of Mary, mother of Jesus, used especially in Eastern Christianity. The usual Latin translations are Dei Genitrix or Deipara (approximately "parent (fem.) of God"). Familiar English translations are "Mother of God" or "God-bearer" – but these both have different literal equivalents in Greek, Μήτηρ Θεοῦ and Θεοφόρος ("Who gave birth to one who was God", "Whose child was God", respectively).

The title has been in use since the 3rd century, in the Syriac tradition (as Classical Syriac: ܝܠܕܬ ܐܠܗܐ, romanized: Yoldath Aloho) in the Liturgy of Mari and Addai (3rd century) and the Liturgy of St James (4th century). The Council of Ephesus in AD 431 decreed that Mary is the Theotokos because Her Son Jesus is both God and man: one divine person from two natures (divine and human) intimately and hypostatically united.

The title of Mother of God (Greek: Μήτηρ (τοῦ) Θεοῦ) or Mother of Incarnate God; abbreviated ΜΡ ΘΥ (the first and last letter of each word in Greek), is most often used in English, largely due to the lack of a satisfactory equivalent of the Greek τόκος. For the same reason, the title is often left untranslated, as "Theotokos", in Orthodox liturgical usage of other languages.

Theotokos is also used as the term for an Eastern icon, or type of icon, of the Mother with Child (typically called a Madonna in western tradition), as in "the Theotokos of Vladimir" both for the original 12th-century icon and for icons that are copies or imitate its composition.