Origin The Church of Antioch was established by
Peter in AD 32. During the
Synod of Nicaea, the Bishop of Antioch became one of the
Patriarchates (along with fellow
Patriarchate of Alexandria). After the
Council at Chalcedon,
Christianity split into the
Catholic-Orthodox and the
Oriental Orthodox, thus splitting the
church. The Patriarch of Antioch (
Severus) and
Pope of Alexandria (
Dioscorus) led the
Oriental Orthodox Church, which followed a
miaphysite view of Christology and the
Pope of Rome led the Catholic Church along with the
Patriarch of Constantinople, which followed a
dyophysite view on Christology.
Severus, the Patriarch of Antioch, was exiled to Egypt in 518 by the
Emperor of the Byzantine Empire for following the Oriental Orthodox Church. The Catholic group of the Church of Antioch (later
Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch), accepted the new Patriarch
Paul, appointed by the
Pope of Rome, as their new Patriarch, after the exile of Severus. The
Syriac Orthodox Church, or the Oriental Orthodox group of the
Church of Antioch, continued to accept Severus as Patriarch until his death in AD 538. He led the consecration of
Mor Sergius of Tella as the Patriarch of Antioch (first Patriarch of the independent Syriac Orthodox Church) in 544. It is after this bishop that the
Syriac Orthodox Church in India gets the name "Jacobite" (Jacobite Syrian Christian Church)
Split of the Syriac Catholic Church In 1662, the vacant patriarchate was filled by individuals who aligned themselves with the
Catholic Church.
Andrew Akijan was elected in that year, and was succeeded by another Catholic in
Gregory Peter VI Shahbaddin. The non-Catholic Syriac party elected the rival Abdulmasih I, Shahbaddin's uncle, as a competing patriarch. Upon Shahbaddin's death in 1702, the Catholic line died out for several decades until the Holy Synod in 1782 elected
Michael III Jarweh, who again aligned the Syriacs with the pope. Following a period of violence and intrigue, the non-Catholic party was again recognized with their own patriarch and the Catholic line continued independently as the
Syriac Catholic Church.
Persecution and Modern period The Syriac Orthodox Church continued to be persecuted under the
Arabs,
Mongols,
Crusaders,
Mamluks, and
Ottomans. During 1915
Assyrian Genocide(known as the
Sayfo/ܣܝܦ or "the year of the sword" in Syriac), more than 250,000
Syriac Orthodox Christians in the Middle East were wiped out by the
Ottoman Empire. Many Syriac Orthodox Villages were emptied, and historical monasteries and churches were destroyed. During the
Assyrian genocide and concomitant
World War I, the Patriarchate was forced to flee by the Ottoman Empire, and the patriarch fled to Homs, Syria in 1953, and later to
Damascus, in 1957. The Syriac Orthodox Church continues to grow to this day under the Patriarchate. The
Syriac Orthodox Church, along with the rest of the
Oriental Orthodox Church, is now in sacramental cooperation with the Catholic Church, and is in
dialogues with the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church. == Authority of the Patriarch ==