George Chelhot was born in
Aleppo on 15 October 1818. He was ordained
priest on 2 February 1843. When an
anti-Christian massacre occurred in Aleppo in October 1850, he was sent in Europe to try to raise funds to restore the church-buildings, but at the death of Patriarch
Ignatius Peter VII Jarweh he had to return home without success. He was elected bishop of Aleppo on 7 January 1862 and consecrated
bishop on 25 May 1862 by Patriarch
Ignatius Antony I Samheri. At the death of Patriarch Ignatius Antony I Samheri on 16 June 1864, he was appointed
Locum tenens of the patriarchate. He withdraw his candidature to patriarchate not to have to go to live in
Mardin. He used the funds that Patriarch Samheri had raised in Europe to establish schools for his community. In 1870 he participated to the
First Vatican Council. On 7 October 1874, a few months after Patriarch
Ignatius Philip I Arkus death, George Shelhot was elected patriarch. In order to point out his independence from the directions of centralization typical of
Pope Pius IX, he decided to be enthroned on 11 October without waiting for the papal confirmation (that arrived shortly later on 21 December 1874). George Shelhot moved the
patriarchal See to Aleppo. In 1876 George Shelhot founded a new
religious order, the
Brothers of Mar Ephrem. In 1888 he summoned a
synod of the Syriac Catholic Church at Charfeh (in
Mount Lebanon) where important decisions were taken: the
celibacy was made mandatory for almost all the clergy and the independence of the Syriac Church in choosing own patriarch was reaffirmed. These canons were approved by
Pope Leo XIII who was particularly well-disposed towards the
Eastern Catholic Churches. George Shelhot died in Aleppo on 8 December 1891. ==Notes==