various services are much more complicated than ours. They
have no such compendium as the Roman breviary. There are
eleven chief books: The Typikon ((
1 Nilles, i. lxv-lxix, gives a specimen (the Transfiguration, August 6th) from the Typikon published at Constantinople in 1874.
2 The Greek texts of these books are published by the Phoenix Press at Venice, and (for the Uniates) by Propaganda at Rome. Then there are translations into the other liturgical languages. Provost Maltzew has translated the Russian ones into German, and Goar edited the Euchologion with copious notes (see list of books, p. xxvi., seq.). Nilles, Kalendarium, i., is adapted from the Menaia, and ii. from the Triodos, Pentekostarion, Oktoechos, and Parakletike. See also Kattenbusch: Confessionskunde, i. pp. 478-486, die hlgen Bücher.