From the middle of the 16th century, and throughout following two centuries, the Church of the East was affected by several internal
schisms. Some of those schisms were caused by individuals or groups who chose to accept union with the
Catholic Church. Other schisms were provoked by rivalry between various fractions within the Church of the East. Lack of internal unity and frequent change of allegiances led to the creation and continuation of separate patriarchal lines. In spite of many internal challenges, and external difficulties (political oppression by
Ottoman authorities and frequent persecutions by local non-Christians), the traditional branches of the Church of the East managed to survive that tumultuous period and eventually consolidate during the 19th century in the form of the
Assyrian Church of the East. At the same time, after many similar difficulties, groups united with the Catholic Church were finally consolidated into the
Chaldean Catholic Church Schism of 1552 Around the middle of the fifteenth century Patriarch Shemʿon IV Basidi made the patriarchal succession hereditarynormally from uncle to nephew. This practice, which resulted in a shortage of eligible heirs, eventually led to a schism in the Church of the East, creating a temporarily Catholic offshoot known as the Shimun line. The Patriarch
Shemʿon VII Ishoʿyahb (1539–58) caused great turmoil at the beginning of his reign by designating his twelve-year-old nephew Khnanishoʿ as his successor, presumably because no older relatives were available. Several years later, probably because Khnanishoʿ had died in the interim, he designated as successor his fifteen-year-old brother Eliya, the future Patriarch
Eliya VI (1558–91). These appointments, combined with other accusations of impropriety, caused discontent throughout the church, and by 1552 Shemʿon VII Ishoʿyahb had become so unpopular that a group of bishops, principally from the
Amid,
Sirt and
Salmas districts in northern Mesopotamia, chose a new patriarch. They elected a monk named
Yohannan Sulaqa, the former superior of
Rabban Hormizd Monastery near
Alqosh, which was the seat of the incumbent patriarchs; however, no bishop of metropolitan rank was available to consecrate him, as canonically required.
Franciscan missionaries were already at work among the Nestorians, and, using them as intermediaries, or "Patriarch of the Church of the Chaldeans of Mosul" (
Chaldaeorum ecclesiae Musal Patriarcha). He was consecrated bishop in
St. Peter's Basilica on 9 April. On 28 April
Pope Julius III gave him the
pallium conferring patriarchal rank, confirmed with the bull
Cum Nos Nuper. These events, in which Rome was led to believe that Shemʿon VII Ishoʿyahb was dead, created within the Church of the East a lasting schism between the Eliya line of Patriarchs at Alqosh and the new line originating from Sulaqa. The latter was for half a century recognised by Rome as being in communion, but that reverted to both hereditary succession and Nestorianism and has continued in the Patriarchs of the
Assyrian Church of the East. Sulaqa left Rome in early July and in Constantinople applied for civil recognition. After his return to Mesopotamia, he received from the Ottoman authorities in December 1553 recognition as head of "the Chaldean nation after the example of all the Patriarchs". In the following year, during a five-month stay in
Amid (
Diyarbakır), he consecrated two metropolitans and three other bishops (for
Gazarta,
Hesna d'Kifa,
Amid,
Mardin and
Seert). For his part, Shemʿon VII Ishoʿyahb of the Alqosh line consecrated two more underage members of his patriarchal family as metropolitans (for
Nisibis and
Gazarta). He also won over the governor of ʿ
Amadiya, who invited Sulaqa to ʿAmadiya, imprisoned him for four months, and put him to death in January 1555.
The Eliya and Shimun lines This new Catholic line founded by Sulaqa maintained its seat at
Amid and is known as the "Shimun" line. Wilmshurst suggests that their adoption of the name Shimun (after
Simon Peter) was meant to point to the legitimacy of their Catholic line. Sulaqa's successor,
Abdisho IV Maron (1555–1570) visited Rome and his Patriarchal title was confirmed by the Pope in 1562. At some point, he moved to
Seert. The Eliya-line Patriarch Shemon VII Ishoyahb (1539–58), who resided in the
Rabban Hormizd Monastery near
Alqosh, continued to actively oppose union with Rome, and was succeeded by his nephew
Eliya (designated as Eliya "VII" in older historiography, but renumbered as Eliya "VI" in recent scholarly works). During his Patriarchal tenure, from 1558 to 1591, the Church of the East preserved its traditional christology and full ecclesiastical independence. The next Shimun Patriarch was likely
Yahballaha IV, who was elected in 1577 or 1578 and died within two years before seeking or obtaining confirmation from Rome. According to Tisserant, problems posed by the "Nestorian" traditionalists and the Ottoman authorities prevented any earlier election of a successor to Abdisho. David Wilmshurst and
Heleen Murre believe that, in the period between 1570 and the patriarchal election of Yahballaha, he or another of the same name was looked on as Patriarch. Yahballaha's successor,
Shimun IX Dinkha (1580–1600), who moved away from Turkish rule to
Salmas on
Lake Urmia in Persia, was officially confirmed by the Pope in 1584. There are theories that he appointed his nephew,
Shimun X Eliyah (1600–38) as his successor, but others argue that his election was independent of any such designation. Regardless, from then until the 21st century the Shimun line employed a hereditary system of succession – the rejection of which was part of the reason for the creation of that line in the first place.
Two Nestorian patriarchs , former residence of the Patriarchs of the Church of the East. The next Eliya Patriarch,
Eliya VII (VIII) (1591–1617), negotiated on several occasions with the Catholic Church, in 1605, 1610 and 1615–16, but without final resolution. This likely alarmed Shimun X, who in 1616 sent to Rome a profession of faith that Rome found unsatisfactory, and another in 1619, which also failed to win him official recognition. Wilmshurst says it was this Shimun Patriarch who reverted to the "old faith" of Nestorianism, leading to a shift in allegiances that won for the Eliya line control of the lowlands and of the highlands for the Shimun line. Further negotiations between the Eliya line and the Catholic Church were cancelled during the Patriarchal tenure of
Eliya VIII (IX) (1617–60). The next two Shimun patriarchs,
Shimun XI Eshuyow (1638–56) and
Shimun XII Yoalaha (1656–62), wrote to the Pope in 1653 and 1658, according to Wilmshurst, while Heleen Murre speaks only of 1648 and 1653. Wilmshurst says Shimun XI was sent the
pallium, though Heleen Murre argues official recognition was given to neither. A letter suggests that one of the two was removed from office (presumably by Nestorian traditionalists) for pro-Catholic leanings: Shimun XI according to Heleen Murre, probably Shimun XII according to Wilmshurst.
Eliya IX (X) (1660–1700) was a "vigorous defender of the traditional [Nestorian] faith", and simultaneously the next Shimun patriarch,
Shimun XIII Dinkha (1662–1700), definitively broke with the Catholic Church. In 1670, he gave a traditionalist reply to an approach that was made from Rome, and by 1672 all connections with the Pope were ended. There were then two traditionalist patriarchal lines, the senior Eliya line in
Alqosh, and the junior Shimun line in
Qochanis.
The Josephite line As the Shimun line "gradually returned to the traditional worship of the Church of the East, thereby losing the allegiance of the western regions", it moved from Turkish-controlled territory to
Urmia in
Persia. The bishopric of
Amid (
Diyarbakır), the original headquarters of Shimun Sulaqa, became subject to the Alqosh patriarch. In 1667 or 1668, Bishop
Joseph of that see converted to the Catholic faith. In 1677, he obtained from the Turkish authorities recognition as holding independent power in Amid and
Mardin, and in 1681 he was recognised by Rome as "Patriarch of the Chaldean nation deprived of its Patriarch" (Amid patriarchate). Thus was instituted the Josephite line, a third line of patriarchs and the sole Catholic one at the time. All Joseph I's successors took the name "Joseph". The life of this patriarchate was difficult: the leadership was continually vexed by traditionalists, while the community struggled under the tax burden imposed by the
Ottoman authorities. In 1771,
Eliya XI (XII) and his designated successor (the future
Eliya XII (XIII) Ishoyahb) made a profession of faith that was accepted by Rome, thus establishing communion. By then, acceptance of the Catholic position was general in the
Mosul area. When
Eliya XI (XII) died in 1778,
Eliya XII (XIII) made a renewed profession of Catholic faith and was recognised by Rome as Patriarch of Mosul, but in May 1779 renounced that profession in favor of the traditional faith. His younger cousin
Yohannan Hormizd was locally elected to replace him in 1780, but for various reasons was recognised by Rome only as Metropolitan of Mosul and Administrator of the Catholics of the Alqosh party, having the powers of a patriarch but not the title or insignia. When
Joseph IV of the Amid Patriarchate resigned in 1780, Rome likewise made his nephew,
Augustine Hindi, whom he wished to be his successor, not patriarch but administrator. No one held the title of Chaldean Catholic patriarch for the next 47 years.
Consolidation of patriarchal lines When
Eliya XII (XIII) died in 1804, the Nestorian branch of the Eliya line died with him. With most of his subjects won over to union with Rome by Hormizd, they did not elect a new traditionalist Patriarch. In 1830, Hormizd was finally recognized as the
Chaldean Catholic Patriarch of Babylon, marking the last remnant of the hereditary system within the Chaldean Catholic Church. This also ended the rivalry between the senior Eliya line and the junior Shimun line, as
Shimun XVI Yohannan (1780–1820) became the sole primate of the traditionalist Church of the East, "the legal successor of the initially
Uniate patriarchate of the [Shimun] line". In 1976, it adopted the name
Assyrian Church of the East, and its patriarchate remained hereditary until the death in 1975 of
Shimun XXI Eshai. Accordingly, Joachim Jakob remarks that the original Patriarchate of the Church of the East (the Eliya line) entered into union with Rome and continues down to today in the form of the Chaldean [Catholic] Church, while the original Patriarchate of the Chaldean Catholic Church (the Shimun line) continues today in the Assyrian Church of the East. ==See also==