in ecclesiastical history, the name of several sects of heretics; some of which maintained, that the Son was only a similar, not the same, subsistence with the Father; and others, that he was not only a distinct but a dissimilar subsistence. Two of these sects had their denominations from Acacius bishop of Caesarea, who lived in the fourth century, and changed his opinions, so as, at different times, to be head of both. Another was named from Acacius patriarch of Constantinople, who lived in the close of the fifth century.