The Church of the East The Chaldean Catholic Church traces its beginnings to the
Church of the East, Under the rule of the
Sasanian Empire, which overthrew the Parthians in 224, the Church of the East continued to develop its distinctive identity by use of the
Syriac language and
Syriac script. One "Persian" bishop was at the
First Council of Nicaea (325). There is no mention of Persian participation in the
First Council of Constantinople (381), in which also the Western part of the Roman Empire was not involved. The
Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon of 410, held in the Sasanian capital, recognized the city's bishop
Isaac as
Catholicos, with authority throughout the Church of the East. The persistent military conflicts between the Sasanians and the by then Christianized
Roman Empire made the Persians suspect the Church of the East of sympathizing with the enemy. This in turn induced the Church of the East to distance itself increasingly from that in the Roman Empire. Although in a time of peace their 420 council explicitly accepted the decrees of some "western" councils, including that of Nicaea, in 424 they determined that thenceforth they would refer disciplinary or theological problems to no external power, especially not to any "western" bishop or council. The theological controversy that followed the
Council of Ephesus in 431 was a turning point in the history of the Church of the East. The Council condemned as heretical the Christology of
Nestorius, whose reluctance to accord the Virgin Mary the title
Theotokos "God-bearer, Mother of God" was taken as evidence that he believed two separate persons (as opposed to two united natures) to be present within Christ. The Sasanian Emperor provided refuge for those who in the
Nestorian schism rejected the decrees of the Council of Ephesus enforced in the
Byzantine Empire. In 484 he executed the pro-Roman Catholicos
Babowai. Under the influence of
Barsauma, Bishop of
Nisibis, the Church of the East officially accepted as normative the teaching not of Nestorius himself, but of his teacher
Theodore of Mopsuestia, whose writings the 553
Second Council of Constantinople condemned as Nestorian but some modern scholars view them as orthodox. The position thus assigned to Theodore in the Church of the East was reinforced in several subsequent synods in spite of the opposing teaching of
Henana of Adiabeme. After its split with the West and its adoption of a theology that some called Nestorianism, the Church of the East expanded rapidly in the medieval period due to missionary work. Between 500 and 1400, its geographical horizon extended well beyond its heartland in present-day northern
Iraq, northeastern
Syria, and southeastern
Turkey, setting up communities throughout
Central Asia and as far as
China—as witnessed by the
Xi'an Stele, a
Tang dynasty tablet in
Chinese script dating to 781 that documented 150 years of Christian history in China. Their most lasting addition was of the
Saint Thomas Christians of the
Malabar Coast in
India, where they had around 10 million followers. However, a decline had already set in at the time of
Yahballaha III (1281–1317), when the Church of the East reached its greatest geographical extent, it had in south and central Iraq and in south, central and east Persia only four dioceses, where at the end of the ninth century it had at least 54. Around 1400, the
Turco-Mongol nomadic conqueror Timur arose out of the
Eurasian Steppe to lead military campaigns all across
Western,
Southern and
Central Asia, ultimately seizing much of the
Muslim world after defeating the
Mamluks of Egypt and Syria, the emerging
Ottoman Empire, and the declining
Delhi Sultanate. Timur's conquests devastated most
Assyrian bishoprics and destroyed the 4000-year-old cultural and religious capital of
Assur. After the destruction brought on by Timur, the massive and organized
Church of the East structure was largely reduced to its region of origin, with the exception of the
Saint Thomas Christians in India.
1552 schism The Church of the East has seen many disputes about the position of Catholicos. A synod in 539 decided that neither of the two claimants,
Elisha and
Narsai, who had been elected by rival groups of bishops in 524, was legitimate. Similar conflicts occurred between
Barsauma and
Acacius of Seleucia-Ctesiphon and between
Hnanisho I and
Yohannan the Leper. The 1552 conflict was not merely between two individuals but extended to two rival lines of patriarchs, like the 1964 schism between what are now called the
Assyrian and the
Ancient Church of the East. , Sulaqa's successor, to the
Council of Trent in 1562 Dissent over the practice of
hereditary succession to the Patriarchate, usually from uncle to nephew, led to the action in 1552 by a group of Assyrian bishops who elected as a rival Patriarch the abbot of
Rabban Hormizd Monastery (the patriarch's residence),
Yohannan Sulaqa. To strengthen the position of their candidate, the bishops sent him to Rome to negotiate a new union with the pope. "Patriarch of the Church of the Chaldeans of Mosul"; "Patriarch of the Chaldeans"; "Patriarch of Mosul"; or "Patriarch of the Eastern Assyrians", this last being the version given by Pietro Strozzi on the second-last unnumbered page before page 1 of his
De Dogmatibus Chaldaeorum, of which an English translation is given in Adrian Fortescue's
Lesser Eastern Churches. The "Eastern Assyrians", who, if not Catholic, were presumed to be Nestorians, were distinguished from the "Western Assyrians" (those west of the Tigris River), who were looked on as
Jacobites. It was as Patriarch of the "Eastern Assyrians" that Sulaqa's successor,
Abdisho IV Maron, was accredited for participation in the
Council of Trent. The names already in use (except that of "Nestorian") were thus applied to the existing church (not a new one) for which the request to consecrate its patriarch was made by emissaries who gave the impression that the patriarchal see was vacant. Sulaqa returned home in the same year and, unable to take possession of the traditional patriarchal seat near
Alqosh, resided in Amid. Before being put to death at the instigation of partisans supporting the patriarch from whom he had broken away,
Shemon VII Ishoyahb, he ordained two metropolitans and three other bishops. This initiated a new ecclesiastical hierarchy under what is known as the "Shimun line" of patriarchs, who soon moved from Amid eastward, settling, after many intervening places, in the isolated village of
Qudshanis under
Persian rule. Ishoyahb, meanwhile, was succeeded by his nephew
Eliya VI, in what became known as the "Eliya Line".
Successive leaders of those in communion with Rome Sulaqa's earliest successors entered into communion with the
Catholic Church, but in the course of over a century, their link with Rome grew weak. The last to request and obtain formal papal recognition died in 1600. They adopted hereditary succession to the patriarchate, opposition to which had caused the 1552 schism. In 1672,
Shimun XIII Dinkha formally broke communion with Rome, adopting a profession of faith that contradicted that of Rome, while he maintained his independence from the Alqosh-based "Eliya line" of patriarchs. The "Shimun line" eventually became the patriarchal line of what since 1976 is officially called the
Assyrian Church of the East. Leadership of those who wished to be in communion with Rome then passed to Archbishop
Joseph I of Amid. In 1677 his leadership was recognized first by the Turkish civil authorities, and then in 1681 by Rome. (Until then, the authority of the Alqosh patriarch over Amid, which had been Sulaqa's residence but which his successors abandoned on having to move eastward into
Safavid Iran, had been accepted by the Turkish authorities.) All the (non-hereditary) successors in Amid of Joseph I, who in 1696 resigned for health reasons and lived on in Rome until 1707, took the name Joseph:
Joseph II (1696–1713),
Joseph III (1713–1757),
Joseph IV (1757–1781). For that reason, they are known as the "Josephite line". Joseph IV presented his resignation in 1780 and it was accepted in 1781, after which he handed over the administration of the patriarchate to his nephew, not yet a bishop, and retired to Rome, where he lived until 1791. Appointment of the nephew as patriarch would look like acceptance of the principle of hereditary succession. In addition, the Alqosh "Eliya line" was drawing closer to Rome, and the pro-Catholic faction within its followers was becoming predominant. For various reasons, including the ecclesiastical as well as political turbulence in Europe after the
French Revolution, Rome was long unable to choose between two rival claimants to headship of the Chaldean Catholics. The 1672 adoption by the "Shimun line" of patriarchs of Nestorian doctrine had been followed in some areas by widespread adoption of the opposing Christology upheld in Rome. This occurred not only in the Amid-Mardin area for which by Turkish decree Joseph I was patriarch, but also in the city of Mosul, where by 1700 nearly all the East Syrians were Catholics. The Rabban Hormizd Monastery, which was the seat of the "Eliya line" of patriarchs is 2 km from the village of Alqosh and about 45 km north of the city of Mosul. In view of this situation, Patriarch
Eliya XI wrote to
Pope Clement XII and his successor
Benedict XIV in 1735, 1749 and 1756, asking for union. Then, in 1771, both he and his designated successor Ishoyabb made a profession of faith that
Pope Clement XIV accepted, thus establishing communion in principle. When
Eliya XI died in 1778, the metropolitans recognized as his successor Ishoyabb, who accordingly took the Eliya name (
Eliya XII). To win support, Eliya made profession of the Catholic faith, but almost immediately renounced it and declared his support of the traditionalist (Nestorian) view.
Yohannan Hormizd, a member of the "Eliya line" family, opposed
Eliya XII (1778–1804), the last of that line to be elected in the normal way as patriarch. In 1780 Yohannan was irregularly elected patriarch, as Sulaqa had been in 1552. He won over to communion with Rome most followers of the "Eliyya line". The
Holy See did not recognize him as patriarch, but in 1791
Pope Pius VI appointed him archbishop of Amid and administrator of the Catholic patriarchate. The violent
protests of Joseph IV's nephew, who was then in Rome, and suspicions raised by others about the sincerity of Yohannan's conversion prevented this being put into effect. In 1793 it was agreed that Yohannan should withdraw from Amid to Mosul, the metropolitan see that he already held, but that the post of patriarch would not be conferred on his rival, Joseph IV's nephew. In 1802 the latter was appointed metropolitan of Amid and administrator of the patriarchate, but not patriarch. Nonetheless, he became commonly known as
Joseph V. He died in 1828. Yohannan's rival for the Alqosh title of patriarch had died in 1804, with his followers so reduced in number that they did not elect any successor for him, thus bringing the Alqosh or Eliya line to an end. Finally then, in 1830, a century and a half after the Holy See had conferred headship of the Chaldean Catholics on Joseph I of Amid,
Pope Pius VIII granted recognition as Patriarch to Yohannan, whose (non-hereditary) patriarchal succession has since then lasted unbroken in the Chaldean Catholic Church.
Later history of the Chaldean Church ,
Archeparchy of Arbil. In 1838, the
Kurds of
Soran attacked the
Rabban Hormizd Monastery and Alqosh, apparently thinking the villagers were
Yazidis responsible for the murder of a Kurdish chieftain, and killed over 300 Chaldean Catholics, including Gabriel Dambo, the refounder of the monastery, and other monks. In 1846, the
Ottoman Empire, which had previously classified as Nestorians those who called themselves Chaldeans, granted them recognition as a distinct
millet. The most famous patriarch of the Chaldean Church in the 19th century was
Joseph VI Audo who is remembered also for his clashes with
Pope Pius IX mainly about his attempts to extend the Chaldean jurisdiction over the
Malabar Catholics. This was a period of expansion for the Chaldean Catholic Church. The activity of the Turkish army and their
Kurdish and
Arab allies, partly in response to armed support for Russia in the territory of the Qochanis patriarchate, brought ruin also to the Chaldean dioceses of Amid,
Siirt and
Gazarta and the metropolitans
Addai Scher of
Siirt and
Philippe-Jacques Abraham of
Gazarta were killed in 1915. with Mar
Yousef VI Emmanuel II Thomas, Patriarch 1900–1947, and the Chaldean bishops In the 21st century, Father
Ragheed Aziz Ganni, the pastor of the Chaldean Church of the Holy Spirit in Mosul, who graduated from the
Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in Rome in 2003 with a licentiate in ecumenical theology, was killed on 3 June 2007 in Mosul alongside the subdeacons Basman Yousef Daud, Wahid Hanna Isho, and Gassan Isam Bidawed, after he celebrated mass. Ganni has since been declared a
Servant of God. Chaldean Archbishop
Paulos Faraj Rahho and three companions were abducted on 29 February 2008, in Mosul, and murdered a few days later.
21st century: international diaspora and community center built in
Chaldean Town, an
Assyrian diaspora neighborhood in
Detroit There are many Chaldean Assyrians in
diaspora in the
Western world, primarily in the
American states of
Michigan,
Illinois and
California. In 2006, the
Eparchy of Oceania, with the title of 'St Thomas the Apostle of Sydney of the Chaldeans' was set up with jurisdiction including the Chaldean Catholic communities of
Australia and
New Zealand. Its first Bishop, named by
Pope Benedict XVI on 21 October 2006, was Archbishop
Djibrail (Jibrail) Kassab, until this date, Archbishop of
Bassorah in Iraq. There has been a large immigration to the
United States particularly to
West Bloomfield and
Oakland County in
Southeast Michigan. On Friday, June 10, 2011,
Pope Benedict XVI erected a new Chaldean Catholic eparchy in
Toronto, Ontario,
Canada and named
Archbishop Yohannan Zora, who has worked alongside four priests with Catholics in Toronto (the largest community of
Chaldeans) for nearly 20 years and who was previously an
ad hominem Archbishop (he will retain this rank as head of the eparchy) and the Archbishop of the Archdiocese (Archeparchy) of
Ahvaz (since 1974). The new eparchy, or diocese, will be known as the
Chaldean Catholic Eparchy of Mar Addai. There are 38,000 Chaldean Catholics in Canada. Archbishop Zora was born in
Batnaya,
Iraq, on March 15, 1939. He was ordained in 1962 and worked in Iraqi parishes before being transferred to Iran in 1969. The 2006 Australian census counted a total of 4,498 Chaldean Catholics in Australia.
Historic membership censuses Despite the internal discords of the reigns of Yohannan Hormizd (1830–1838),
Nicholas I Zaya (1839–1847) and Joseph VI Audo (1847–1878), the 19th century was a period of considerable growth for the Chaldean church, in which its territorial jurisdiction was extended, its hierarchy strengthened and its membership nearly doubled. In 1850, the Anglican missionary
George Percy Badger recorded the population of the Chaldean Catholic Church as 2,743 Chaldean families, or just under 20,000 persons. Badger's figures cannot be squared with the figure of just over 4,000 Chaldean families recorded by Fulgence de Sainte Marie in 1796 nor with slightly later figures provided by Paulin Martin in 1867. Badger is known to have classified as Nestorian a considerable number of villages in the Aqra district which were Chaldean at this period, and he also failed to include several important Chaldean villages in other dioceses. His estimate is almost certainly far too low. A statistical survey of the Chaldean Catholic Church made in 1896 by J. B. Chabot included, for the first time, details of several patriarchal vicariates established in the second half of the 19th century for the small Chaldean communities in Adana, Aleppo, Beirut, Cairo, Damascus, Edessa, Kermanshah and Teheran; for the mission stations established in the 1890s in several towns and villages in the Qudshanis patriarchate; and for the newly created Chaldean diocese of Urmi. According to Chabot, there were mission stations in the town of Serai d’Mahmideh in Taimar and in the Hakkari villages of Mar Behısho, Sat, Zarne and 'Salamakka' (Ragula d'Salabakkan). The last survey of the Chaldean Catholic Church before the
First World War was made in 1913 by the Chaldean priest Joseph Tfinkdji, after a period of steady growth since 1896. It then consisted of the patriarchal archdiocese of Mosul and Baghdad, four other archdioceses (
Amid,
Kirkuk,
Seert and
Urmi), and eight dioceses (
Aqra,
Amadiya,
Gazarta,
Mardin,
Salmas, Sehna,
Zakho and the newly created diocese of Van). Five more patriarchal vicariates had been established since 1896 (Ahwaz, Constantinople, Basra, Ashshar and Deir al-Zor), giving a total of twelve vicariates. Tfinkdji's grand total of 101,610 Catholics in 199 villages is slightly exaggerated, as his figures included 2,310 nominal Catholics in twenty-one 'newly converted' or 'semi-Nestorian' villages in the dioceses of Amid, Seert and Aqra, but it is clear that the Chaldean Catholic Church had grown significantly since 1896. With around 100,000 believers in 1913, the membership of the Chaldean church was only slightly smaller than that of the Qudshanis patriarchate (probably 120,000 East Syriac Christians at most, including the population of the nominally Russian Orthodox villages in the Urmi district). Its congregations were concentrated in far fewer villages than those of the Qudshanis patriarchate, and with 296 priests, a ratio of roughly three priests for every thousand believers, it was rather more effectively served by its clergy. Only about a dozen Chaldean villages, mainly in the Seert and Aqra districts, did not have their own priests in 1913. Tfinkdji's statistics also highlight the effect on the Chaldean Catholic Church of the educational reforms of the patriarch
Joseph VI Audo. The Chaldean Catholic Church on the eve of the First World War was becoming less dependent on the monastery of Rabban Hormizd and the College of the Propaganda for the education of its bishops. Seventeen Chaldean bishops were consecrated between 1879 and 1913, of whom only one (Stephen Yohannan Qaynaya) was entirely educated in the monastery of Rabban Hormizd. Six bishops were educated at the College of the Propaganda (Joseph Gabriel Adamo,
Toma Audo, Jeremy Timothy Maqdasi, Isaac Khudabakhash, Theodore Msayeh and Peter Aziz). The future patriarch
Yousef VI Emmanuel II Thomas was trained in the seminary of Ghazir near
Beirut. Of the other nine bishops, two (
Addai Sher and Francis David) were trained in the Syro-Chaldean seminary in Mosul, and seven (Philip Yaqob Abraham, Yaqob Yohannan Sahhar, Eliya Joseph Khayyat, Shlemun Sabbagh, Yaqob Awgin Manna,
Hormizd Stephen Jibri and ) in the patriarchal seminary in Mosul. ==Organization==