I–IV centuries from
Saint Catherine's Monastery,
Egypt, depicting
Peter the Apostle According to
Luke the Evangelist—himself a Greco-Syrian member of that community—the distinctive identity of the Antiochian Church emerged at an early stage: St
Peter and St
Paul are traditionally regarded as the co-founders of the Patriarchate of Antioch, with Peter considered its first bishop. When Peter left Antioch,
Evodios assumed leadership, followed by
Ignatius. Both Evodios and Ignatius died as martyrs during Roman persecutions. Saint
Evodius served as Bishop of Antioch until 66 AD, and he was succeeded by Saint
Ignatius the God-bearer. In 169 AD,
Theophilus of Antioch wrote three apologetic treatises addressed to Autolycus. Patriarch
Babylas of Antioch is regarded as the first saint whose remains were translated for religious purposes—a practice that became extremely widespread in the following centuries.
Hellenistic Judaism and Judeo-Greek "wisdom" literature, widespread during the late
Second Temple period among both
Hellenized Rabbinical Jews (
Mityavnim in
Hebrew) and gentile Greek
proselyte converts to Judaism, played an important role in shaping the Melkite-Antiochian Greek Orthodox tradition. Elements of typically
Grecian "Ancient
Synagogal" priestly
rites and
hymns have partially survived to the present day in the distinctive
church service, architecture, and iconography of the
Melkite Greek Orthodox and
Greek Catholic communities of the
Hatay Province of southern
Turkey,
Syria, and
Lebanon. Some historians believe that a substantial proportion of the
Hellenized Jewish population and most gentile Greco-Macedonian settlers in southern
Turkey (
Antioch,
Alexandretta and neighboring cities) as well as
Syria and
Lebanon—referred to in the
Acts as
Hellenistai—gradually converted to the Greco-Roman form of Christianity that later became the
Melkite (or
Imperial) Hellenistic Churches of Western Asia and North Africa:
Acts 6 highlights the cultural tensions between Greek-speaking Judeo-Christians associated with Antioch and related Cilician, southern Anatolian, and Syrian diasporas, and the more conservative
Aramaic-speaking Jewish Christians centered in Jerusalem: In 313 AD, emperors
Constantine I and
Licinius issued the
Edict of Milan, which permitted the free profession of any religion within the
Empire. Around the same time, the spread of the heresy of
Arianism began, leading to a schism that lasted until 381.
Eustathius of Antioch supported
Athanasius of Alexandria in his opposition to the teachings of
Arius during the
Arian controversy at the
First Council of Nicaea. During the episcopate of
Meletius of Antioch, the struggle against Arianism reached its peak. Meletius was deposed by Emperor Constantius II but later restored under Emperor Julian, exiled again, returned by Emperor Jovian, and once more exiled by Valens. Under Emperor Theodosius, who held him in special esteem, Meletius was elected to preside over the
Second Ecumenical Council. In the 4th century,
monasticism spread throughout
Syria. Unlike Egyptian monasticism, early
Syrian monasticism was less secluded: monks engaged in
missionary preaching and charitable activity. In the 5th century,
stylitism emerged—an ascetic form of seclusion practiced atop pillars or rocky outcrops (see
Simeon Stylites).
IV—VII centuries Given the antiquity of the Antiochian Church and the importance of the Christian community in the city of Antioch, as well as its economic significance in the eastern part of the Roman Empire, the
First Council of Nicaea in 325 recognized the church’s prominence, naming it one of the main regional primacies in the Christian world, with jurisdiction over the territory of the
Diocese of the East, thus laying the foundation for the creation of the "Patriarchate of Antioch and All the East". However, in 518 he was deposed by Emperor
Justinian I (d. 527). A new patriarch,
Paul the Jew, was appointed. However, part of the clergy, which did not recognize the Council of Chalcedon, also refused to acknowledge the new patriarch. This group split off, creating a parallel structure under Severus, which, after the final ethno-confessional division in the empire, became the
Syriac Orthodox Church. The non-Chalcedonian community was divided between the "Severians" (followers of Severus) and the
Aphthartodocetists, a division that remained unresolved until 527. After the deposition of the Miaphysite patriarch
Severus of Antioch in 518 by Emperor
Justinian I and the near-total destruction of the episcopate that did not recognize the Council of Chalcedon, the state-recognized Antiochian Church became fully dyophysite. Around the 550s,
Jacob Baradeus effectively restored the Miaphysite structure, essentially creating the
Syriac Orthodox Church. Before the Chalcedonian Patriarchate of Antioch became purely Greek and the non-Chalcedonian purely
Syrian, attempts to overcome the division continued. In the early
7th century, Emperor
Heraclius—with a strong intention to unite the Universal Church—appointed Miaphysite patriarchs to all leading sees and proposed a compromise doctrine of
Monothelitism. However, this initiative did not take root, and the patriarchates were once again divided.
VII—XI centuries in
Antioch From 637, Syria came under the rule of the
Arab Caliphate. The situation of the Greek Orthodox was severely complicated, as the Arabs considered them not only "infidels" but also allies of Byzantium. For this reason, the Antiochian Greek patriarchs were forced to live in exile in Constantinople, and after the death of
George II (c. 702), this line was interrupted. Only in 742 did
Caliph Hisham allow the election of the Syrian monk Stephen to the Antiochian see, on the condition of his complete loyalty. Cooperation with Muslim authorities sometimes exceeded all limits. For example, Patriarch Job accompanied the Arab army in the campaign against Amorium in 838 and persuaded Byzantine fortresses to surrender to the Arabs. Byzantine Emperor
Nikephoros II Phokas (963–969), after several victories over the Arabs, liberated Antioch and several other territories. However, the military failures of the Muslims increased interconfessional tension: every triumph of Nikephoros provoked pogroms against Christians in Palestine and Syria. One of the victims of these persecutions was the Antiochian
Patriarch Christopher, who was killed in 967. The Byzantine period, lasting until 1084, became an era of revival for the patriarchate.
XI—XVI centuries In December 1084, during a sudden strike, the
Seljuks captured
Antioch. The mere establishment of Seljuk rule in the Near East in the late 11th century did not result in a significant deterioration of the social status of local Christians. They suffered mainly, like the rest of the population, from political instability in Syria, endless wars of small emirates, and forced territorial partitions. In 1097, European
Crusaders appeared in the Eastern Mediterranean. After the Crusaders’ victories, the relations between them and the local Christians were "complex and ambiguous," not simply friendly or hostile. Local Christians felt closer ties with their fellow Crusader-Christians than with Arab Muslims. Nevertheless, some scholars agree that relations between Orthodox and Catholics in Outremer were generally good. This is evidenced by the growth of the Orthodox population in the
Principality of Antioch, including an influx of refugees from other regions under Muslim rule. However, the Latins still considered their Eastern co-religionists as inferior Christians, attempting to subject Orthodox Christians to Catholic clergy. By 1100, Patriarch
John the Oxite was expelled from Antioch, replaced by the Latin prelate Bernard of Valencia. Latin patriarchs soon began replacing Orthodox bishops with Catholics in conquered territories, forcing the Antiochian see into exile in
Constantinople. These Catholic persecutions did not last long. In 1165, Antiochian Prince
Bohemond III had to appeal to Byzantine Emperor
Manuel I Komnenos, who demanded the immediate restoration of the Orthodox hierarchy and equal rights with Catholics. Thereafter, Patriarch Athanasius I arrived in the city and began residing at the
Cathedral of St. Peter. By 1291, the Crusaders lost their last possessions in the East. They were replaced by fanatical
Mamluks, who destroyed churches and exterminated the clergy to eradicate any trace of Christianity. As a result, Christians, who had constituted nearly half of the population of Syria and Palestine in the 11th century, became an overwhelming minority over the next 200 years, scattered across small communities. Their situation worsened further after the fall of
Byzantium in 1453. In 1342, the Patriarchal see was transferred to
Damascus, where it remains to this day.
XVI—XIX centuries In 1517, Damascus was captured by the
Ottoman Empire, and the Antiochian patriarch came under the administrative authority of the Patriarch of Constantinople. In Syria, the Church was subjected to a special tax for non-Muslims, and for delayed payments even metropolitans or patriarchs could be imprisoned. At the same time, the Orthodox community was not subjected to systematic religious persecution, and there were no recorded cases of mass or forced Islamization in the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire. The only period of persecution of Orthodox Christians in the Near East was connected with the
Greek uprising of the 1820s, when Patriarch Seraphim narrowly escaped execution. In 1724,
Cyril VI Tanas was elected the new
patriarch of Antioch. As Cyril was considered to be pro-Western, the
Patriarch Jeremias III of Constantinople feared that his own authority would be compromised by the former's ascent; Jeremias therefore declared Cyril's election to be invalid, excommunicated him, and ordained the Greek
hierodeacon Sylvester of Antioch as a priest and bishop, so that the latter might take Cyril's place. Sylvester—considered "unyielding and uncompromising" by both supporters and opponents—exacerbated divisions within the Church with his heavy-handed rule, and many Melkites reacted by instead acknowledging Cyril's claim to the patriarchal throne. Sylvester began a five-year campaign of persecution enforced by Ottoman Turkish troops against Cyril and the Melkite faithful who supported him, forcing him to find refuge in Lebanon. Five years after the election of Cyril VI, in 1729,
Pope Benedict XIII recognized him as Patriarch of Antioch and recognized his followers as being in
full communion with the
Catholic Church and the
Pope of
Rome, thus formalizing the schism and the creation of the
Melkite Greek Catholic Church. According to various estimates, the number of Orthodox believers in the Antiochian Patriarchate in the mid-19th century reached 60–110 thousand (approximately 8–9% of the total population of Syria). In 1898, the election of an Arab-Syrian candidate to the patriarchal throne was diplomatically supported by Russian diplomacy, with the participation of the
Imperial Orthodox Palestine Society, in the context of the
Arab Orthodox Movement.
Meletius (Dumani) was elected patriarch in 1898 and enthroned in April 1899. Since then, the Patriarch of Antioch has been elected from among Orthodox Arabs. In 1913, Patriarch of Antioch
Gregory IV made an official visit to
Russia, participating in the celebrations of the
300th anniversary of the Romanov dynasty and in many services in various cities of the empire. On the eve of
World War II, the French authorities handed over the district of
Alexandretta, where
Antioch is located, to Turkey. This action worsened the situation of the local Christian population. Throughout the 20th century, Arab Christians emigrated from the Middle East, many settling in North America, where until 1918 they were under the jurisdiction of the
Russian Orthodox Church. After the
Russian Revolution of 1917, which caused ecclesiastical unrest in North America, the Syrian-Arab parishes partly joined the Russian North American Metropolia and partly remained under the direct jurisdiction of the Antiochian Patriarchate. ,
Argentina, 1962 The Antiochian Patriarchate managed to reach an agreement with the Russian North American Metropolia to transfer all Arab dioceses under its
omophorion, but the planned ordination of two bishops in 1936 led to a new schism. Instead of ordaining one of them as a vicar bishop, the hierarchs of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, within which the North American Metropolia was then included, ordained him as Archbishop of Toledo, creating a separate independent church. Only in 1975 was the schism of the Antiochian Church in America overcome: on 24 June 1975, Metropolitan
Philip (Saliba) of the Antiochian Archdiocese of
New York and Metropolitan Michael (Shaheen) of the Antiochian Archdiocese of Toledo (Ohio) signed the "Articles of Reunification" — a document restoring administrative unity among the Antiochian Orthodox in the USA and
Canada; on 19 August 1975, the "Articles" were approved by the Synod of the Antiochian Patriarchate. In March 2013, the
Jerusalem Patriarchate appointed Archbishop Makarios (Mavrogiannakis) as bishop to the newly established
Qatar Diocese, asserting its historical and canonical jurisdiction over the region as part of its broader ecclesiastical presence in the Arabian Peninsula. This decision was strongly opposed by the Antiochian Orthodox Church, which claimed that Qatar fell within its canonical territory as part of the Patriarchate of Antioch’s jurisdiction over all of the Arabian Peninsula. Negotiations between the two patriarchates failed to resolve the dispute, despite mediation attempts within the wider Orthodox world. Since none of the Antiochian Patriarchate’s demands were met, on 27 June 2015, the Synod of the Antiochian Patriarchate decided to sever "all ecclesiastical communion" with the Jerusalem Patriarchate, deepening the rift and marking one of the most serious inter-Orthodox disputes of the 21st century. In 2023, in the context of the
armed conflict in Israel and Gaza Strip, the Holy Synod of the Antiochian Patriarchate decided to restore communion with the Jerusalem Orthodox Church, citing the need to support the faithful of the Jerusalem Patriarchate in the difficult conditions caused by the conflict and to demonstrate pan-Orthodox unity in a time of crisis. The Jerusalem Patriarchate received and welcomed the decision of the Patriarchate of Antioch, thereby ending the schism. ==Identity and cultural legacy==