List of Patriarchs of the Church of the East
The Patriarch of the Church of the East is the patriarch, or leader and head bishop of the Assyrian Church of the East. The position dates to the early centuries of Christianity within the Sassanid Empire, and the church has been known by a variety of names, including the Church of the East, Nestorian Church, the Persian Church, the Sassanid Church, or East Syrian. In the 16th and 17th century the Church, by now restricted to its original Assyrian homeland in Upper Mesopotamia, experienced a series of splits, resulting in a series of competing patriarchs and lineages. Today, the three principal churches that emerged from these splits, the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and the Chaldean Catholic Church, each have their own patriarch, the Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East, the Patriarch of the Ancient Church of the East and the Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans, respectively.
History
The geographic location of the patriarchate was first in the Persian capital of Seleucia-Ctesiphon in central Mesopotamia. In the 9th century the patriarchate moved to Baghdad and then through various cities in what was then Assyria and is now northern Iraq, south east Turkey and northwest Iran, including, Tabriz, Mosul, and Maragheh on Lake Urmia. Following the Chaldean Catholic Church split from the Assyrian Church, the respective patriarchs of these churches continued to move around northern Iraq. In the 19th century, the patriarchate of the Assyrian Church of the East was in the village of Qudshanis in southeastern Turkey. In the 20th century, the Assyrian patriarch went into exile, relocating to Chicago, Illinois, United States. Another patriarchate, which split off in the 1960s as the Ancient Church of the East, is in Baghdad.The patriarchate of the Church of the East evolved from the position of the leader of the Christian community in Seleucia-Ctesiphon, the Persian capital. While Christianity had been introduced into Assyria then largely under the rule of the Parthian Empire in the first centuries AD, during the earliest period, leadership was unorganized and there was no established succession. In 280, Papa bar Aggai was consecrated as Bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon by two visiting bishops, Akha d'abuh' of Arbela and Hai-Beël of Susa, thereby establishing the generally recognized succession. Seleucia-Ctesiphon thus became its own episcopal see, and exerted some de facto control over the wider Persian Christian community. Papa's successors began to use the title of Catholicos, a Roman designation probably adopted due to its use by the Catholicos of Armenia, though at first it carried no formal recognition. In 409 the Church of the East received state recognition from the Sassanid Emperor Yazdegerd I, and the Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon was called, at which the church's hierarchy was formalized. Bishop Mar Isaac was the first to be officially styled Catholicos over all of the Christians in Persia. Over the next decades, the Catholicoi adopted the additional title of Patriarch, which eventually became the better known designation.
In the 16th century, another schism divided the Church of the East, separating those following "Nestorianism" from a group that entered into communion with the Roman Catholic Church. This latter group became known as the Chaldean Catholic Church: see list of Chaldean Catholic patriarchs.
Because of the complex history of Eastern Christianity, it is difficult to define one single lineage of patriarchs, though some modern churches, such as the Assyrian Church of the East, claim all patriarchs through the centuries as the Assyrian Patriarch, even though the modern version of the church did not come into being until much more recently.
Language
Today, the ethnically Assyrian adherents of the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East and Chaldean Catholic Church celebrate the liturgy of Mar Addai and Mar Mari in Syriac, a dialect which emerged in Assyria during the 5th century BC, as do Assyrian members of the Syriac Orthodox Church ), and Assyrian Protestant churches such as the Assyrian Evangelical Church and Assyrian Pentecostal Church.At its peak, the Church of the East expanded from its Assyrian heartland, and it celebrated the liturgy in East Syriac in modern-day Syria, Israel, Palestine, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Oman, UAE, Cyprus, Armenia, Georgia, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, India, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Indonesia, Mongolia, China and Japan. The church also uses Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean Neo-Aramaic and Suryoyo which are the vernacular dialects of the Assyrian people as well as English, Arabic, Persian, Turkish and the languages of the countries of the Assyrian Diaspora.
List of patriarchs until the schism of 1552
According to Church legend, the Apostleship of Edessa is alleged to have been founded by Shimun Keepa , Thoma Shlikha,, Tulmay and of course Mar Addai of the Seventy disciples. Saint Thaddeus was martyred c.66 AD.Legendary bishops
- 1 Mar Aggai. First successor to the Apostleship of his spiritual director the Apostle Saint Thaddeus, one of the Seventy disciples. He in turn was the spiritual director of Mar Mari.
- 2 Palut of Edessa renamed Mar Mari Second successor to the Apostleship of Mar Addai of the Seventy disciples. During his days a bishopric was formally established at Seleucia-Ctesiphon.
- 3 Abris Judah Kyriakos relocates Jerusalem Church to Edessa in 136 AD. Reputedly a relative of Joseph
- 4 Abraham Reputedly a relative of James the Just son of Joseph
- 5 Yaʿqob I son of his predecessor Abraham and therefore a relative of Joseph
- 6 Ebid M’shikha
- 7 Ahadabui First bishop of the East to get status as Catholic. Ordained in 231 AD in Jerusalem Council.
- 8 Shahaloopa of Kashker
- *Bar Aggai
Bishops of Seleucia-Ctesiphon
- 9 Papa bar Aggai
- 10 Shemʿon bar Sabbaʿe
- 11 Shahdost
- 12 Barbaʿshmin . The apostolic see of Edessa is completely abandoned in 345 AD due to persecutions against the Church of the East.
- 13 Tomarsa
- 14 Qayyoma
Metropolitans of Seleucia-Ctesiphon
- 15 Isaac
- 16 Ahha
- 17 Yahballaha I
- 18 Maʿna
- 19 Farbokht
Catholicoi of Seleucia-Ctesiphon
- 20 Dadishoʿ
- 21 Babowai
- 22 Barsauma opposed by
- * Acacius
- 23 Babai
- 24 Shila
- 25 Elishaʿ
- *Narsai intrusus
- 26 Paul
- 27 Aba I
- 28 Joseph
- 29 Ezekiel
- 30 Ishoʿyahb I
- 31 Sabrishoʿ I
- 32 Gregory
- *vacant
- **Babai the Great 609–628; together with Abba 609–628
- 33 Ishoʿyahb II
- 34 Maremmeh
- 35 Ishoʿyahb III
- 36 Giwargis I
- 37 Yohannan I
- *vacant
- 38 Hnanishoʿ I
- *Yohannan the Leper intrusus
- *vacant
- 39 Sliba-zkha
- *vacant
- 40 Pethion
- 41 Aba II
- 42 Surin
- 43 Yaʿqob II
- 44 Hnanishoʿ II
- 45 Timothy I
- 46 Ishoʿ Bar Nun
- 47 Giwargis II
- 48 Sabrishoʿ II
- 49 Abraham II
- *vacant
- 50 Theodosius
- *vacant
- 51 Sargis
- *vacant
- 52 Israel of Kashkar intrusus
- 53 Enosh
- 54 Yohannan II bar Narsai
- 55 Yohannan III
- 56 Yohannan IV Bar Abgar
- 57 Abraham III
- 58 Emmanuel I
- 59 Israel
- 60 ʿAbdishoʿ I
- 61 Mari
- 62 Yohannan V
- 63 Yohannan VI bar Nazuk
- *vacant
- 64 Ishoʿyahb IV bar Ezekiel
- *vacant
- 65 Eliya I
- 66 Yohannan VII bar Targal
- *vacant
- 67 Sabrishoʿ III
- 68 ʿAbdishoʿ II ibn al-ʿArid
- 69 Makkikha I
- 70 Eliya II Bar Moqli
- 71 Bar Sawma
- *vacant
- 72 ʿAbdishoʿ III Bar Moqli
- 73 Ishoʿyahb V
- 74 Eliya III
- 75 Yahballaha II
- 76 Sabrishoʿ IV Bar Qayyoma
- 77 Sabrishoʿ V ibn al-Masihi
- 78 Makkikha II
- 79 Denha I
- 80 Yahballaha III The Patriarchal Seat transferred to Maragha
- 81 Timothy II
- *vacant
- 82 Denha II
- 83 Shemʿon II
- 83b Shemʿon III
- 84 Eliya IV
- 85 Shemʿon IV Basidi
- 86 Shemʿon V
- 87 Eliya V
- 88 Shemʿon VI
- 89 Shemʿon VII Ishoʿyahb
Patriarchal lines from the schism of 1552 until 1830
1. Eliya line
Based in Alqosh.
- 90 Eliya VII
- 91 Eliya VIII - Negotiated with the Catholic Church in 1605, 1610 and 1615-1616 without final conclusion
- 92 Eliya IX Shemʿon - Canceled further negotiations with the Catholic Church
- 93 Eliya X Yohannan Marogin
- 94 Eliya XI Marogin
- 95 Eliya XII Denha
- 96 Eliya XIII Ishoʿyahb
2. Shemʿon line
Based in Amid, Siirt, Urmia and Salmas; in communion with Rome until 1600.
- 90 Shemʿon Sulaqa -
Shemʿon line in Qochanis formally broke communion with Rome, forming the Assyrian Church of the East in 1692:
- 97 Shemʿon XIII Dinkha
- 98 Shemʿon XIV Shlemon
- 99 Shemʿon XV Mikhaʿil Mukhtas
- 100 Shemʿon XVI Yohannan
- 101 Shemʿon XVII Abraham
Based in Amid, split from the Eliya line; in full communion with Rome.''
- 94 Joseph I
- 95 Joseph II Sliba Maruf
- 96 Joseph III Timothy Maroge
- 97 Joseph IV Lazare Hindi
- 98 Joseph V Augustine Hindi
The Shemʿon line remained the only line not in full communion with the Catholic Church. In 1976 it officially adopted the name "Assyrian Church of the East". For subsequent patriarchs in this line, see List of Patriarchs of the Assyrian Church of the East.