Unless otherwise stated, all information is derived from Chronologies of the Ancient World: Names, Dates and Dynasties and The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity, as noted in the bibliography below.[3][4]
^Evodius' accession is placed in AD 41 by the Chronicle of
John Malalas, in AD 44 by
Jerome's Chronicle, and AD 45/46 by the
Armenian version of
Eusebius' Chronicle.[6] However, modern historians place Evodius' accession in
c. 53,[7][8] or
c. 54.[9] The end of Evodius' episcopate is placed either in
c. 68 as per
Jerome's Chronicle,[8] or in
c. 83.[9]
^Ignatius' episcopate is placed either in
c. 68–
c. 107 as per
Jerome's Chronicle, or in
c. 83–115 from the Chronicle of
John Malalas.[10]
^Heron I's accession is placed either in
c. 107 as per
Jerome's Chronicle,[8] or in 116 from the Chronicle of
John Malalas.[11]
^The end of Cornelius' episcopate is placed either in
c. 142 as per
Jerome's Chronicle,[11] or in 154.[8]
^Heron II's episcopate is placed either in
c. 142–
c. 169 as per
Jerome's Chronicle,[11] or in
c. 154–
c. 164.[8]
^Heron II's episcopate may have ended in
c. 169, and thus no vacancy may have taken place.[11]
^Maximus I's accession is placed either in 177 by
Eusebius' Chronicle,[13] in 182,[8] or in
c. 188 as per
Sextus Julius Africanus.[12] The end of Maximus I's episcopate is placed either in 190,[14] or 191.[8]
^Serapion's accession is placed either in 190,[14] 191,[8] or 198/199.[13]
^The of Asclepiades' episcopate is placed either in 217/218,[15] or in 220.[8]
^Philetus' accession is placed either in 217/218,[15] or in 220.[8]
^The end of Zebinnus' episcopate is placed either in 237,[8][16] or in 240.[17]
^Babylas' accession is placed either in 237,[8][16] or in 240.[17] The end of Babylas' episcopate is placed in 250/251,[16][17][18][19] or in 253.[8]
^The accession of Fabius is placed either in 250/251,[20] or in 253.[8] The end of Fabius' episcopate is placed in 253,[17] or in 256.[8]
^The accession of Demetrius is placed in 253,[17] or in 256.[8]
^The end of Paul's episcopate is placed either at his deposition in 268,[17] or at his ejection from
Antioch in 272.[8][21]
^The end of Domnus I's episcopate is placed either in 271/272,[22] or in 273.[8][17]
^The end of Timaeus' episcopate is placed either in 279/280,[23] or in 282.[8]
^Cyril's accession is placed either in 279/280,[23] or in 283.[8]
^Vitalis' episcopate is alternatively placed in 313–
c. 319.[24]
^Paulinus I is deemed either as Eustathius' predecessor with his episcopate in 323–324,[8] or as his successor in 330.[25]
^Flacillus' accession is placed either in 333,[17][26] or in 334.[8]
^The end of Leontius' episcopate is placed either in 357,[26][8] or in 358.[17]
^The end of Porphyrus' episcopate is placed either in 412,[27] 413,[26] or 414.[28]
^Euzoius' accession is placed either in 360,[17][27] or in 361.[29]
^Alexander's accession is placed either in 412,[27] 412/413,[30] or 414.[28] The end of Alexander's episcopate is placed either in 417,[27][31] 421,[26] or 424.[17]
^Theodotus' accession is placed either in 417,[27][31] 421,[26] or 424.[17] The end of Theodotus' episcopate is placed either in 428,[27][17] or 429.[31]
^The end of John I's episcopate is placed either in 441,[32] or 442.[27]
^Domnus II's accession is placed either in 441,[33] or 442.[17][27]
^
abMaximus II's accession is placed either in 449,[27][26] or 450.[34]
^
abBasil's accession is placed either in 456,[26][27][35] or in 457.[31]
^
abAcacius' episcopate is placed either in 458,[31] in 458–459,[36] or in 458–461.[27]
^
abMartyrius' accession is placed either in 459,[37] or in 461.[27] The end of Martyrius' episcopate is placed in 465,[27] 470,[26] or 471.[28]
^
abPeter II was deposed by Emperor
Leo I in 471, but continued to be recognised as patriarch by non-Chalcedonians until his death in 488.
^
abJulian's episcopate is placed either in 466–474,[27] or in 471–475.[38]
^
abPeter II's second episcopate is placed in 474–475,[27] or in 475–477.[39]
^
abThe episcopate of John II Codonatus is placed in either 475–490,[27] 476/477,[40] 476–477,[26] or 477.[41]
^
abStephen II's episcopate is placed either in 477–479,[42] 479–482,[17] 490–495.[27]
^
abThe existence of Stephen III is supported by the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch and Honigmann,[43][31] however, he is not listed by most modern historians.
^
abCalendion's episcopate is placed in 479–484,[44] 479–486,[26] or in 482–484.[45]
^
abPeter II's third episcopate is placed in 484–491,[46] or in 485–488.[45]
Eder, Walter; Renger, Johannes, eds. (2007). Chronologies of the Ancient World: Names, Dates and Dynasties. Brill.
Hainthaler, Theresia (2013). Christ in Christian Tradition: Volume 2 Part 3: The Churches of Jerusalem and Antioch from 451 to 600. Translated by Marianne Ehrhardt. Oxford University Press.
Honigmann, Ernst (1947). "The Patriarchate of Antioch: A Revision of Le Quien and the Notitia Antiochena". Traditio. 5. Cambridge University Press: 135–161.
doi:
10.1017/S0362152900013544.
Nicholson, Oliver, ed. (2018). The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press.
Ritter, Adolf Martin (2007). "Babylas of Antioch". In Hans Dieter Betz; Don S. Browning; Bernd Janowski; Eberhard Jüngel (eds.). Religion Past & Present: Encyclopedia of Theology and Religion. Vol. 1 (A-Bhu). Brill. p. 540.
Rogers, Rick (2000). Theophilus of Antioch: The Life and Thought of a Second-century Bishop. Lexington Books.
Shepardson, Christine (2014). Controlling Contested Places: Late Antique Antioch and the Spatial Politics of Religious Controversy. University of California Press.
Whitby, Michael (2000). The Ecclesiastical History of Evagrius Scholasticus. Liverpool University Press.