(451) The Melkites view themselves as the
first Christian community, dating the Melkite Church back to the time of the
Apostles. Accordingly, notably to
Vatican historiographers and the
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, this first community is said to have been mixed, made up of individuals who were
Greek,
Copts,
Roman,
Aramean (Syriac),
Arabs and
Jewish. Secular historians like
Edward Gibbon and
Ernest Renan held similar views regarding the emergence of the Melkite community. The emergence of
Christological controversies in the first half of the 5th century gave rise to divisions among
Eastern Christians in various regions of the
Near East. Official state support, provided by the
Byzantine imperial government to adherents of
Chalcedonian Christianity (451), provided the base for a specific use of
Aramaic terms that designated those who were loyal to the empire, not just in regard to their political loyalty, but also in relation to their acceptance of imperial religious policies. Throughout the Near East, all Christians who accepted state-backed Chalcedonian Christianity became known as
Melkites, a term derived from the Hebrew word
melekh (cognate with Aramaic
malkā or
malkō ), thus designating those who are loyal to the empire and its officially imposed religious policies. The very term (
Melkites) designated all loyalists, regardless of their ethnicity (Greeks, Copts, Hellenized Jews, Arameans (Syriacs), Arabs, and others), thus including not only Greek-speaking Chalcedonians, but also those among Aramaic- and Arabic-speaking Christians and
Judeo-Christians who were followers of Chalcedonian Christianity. All pro-Chalcedonian Christians throughout
Byzantine Syria,
Phoenicia,
Palestine and
Egypt thus became commonly known as
Melkites. Since the Melkite communities were dominated by the Greek episcopate, the position of Aramaic-speaking and Arabic-speaking
Melkites within the wider Melkite community was somewhat secondary to that of the Greek
Melkites. This led to the gradual decline of Syriac-Aramaic traditions.
Classical Syriac was originally the
liturgical language of the Syriac
Melkites in
Antioch and parts of
Syria, while some other Aramaic-speaking
Melkites, predominantly of Jewish descent, used the
Syro-Palestinian dialect in
Palestine and
Transjordan instead. The Syriac
Melkites changed their church's
West Syriac Rite to that of
Constantinople in the 9th–11th centuries, requiring new translations of all their Classical Syriac liturgical books. The decline of Syriac-Aramaic traditions among Melkites was reinforced (since the 7th century) by gradual
Arabization, which also affected Greek-speaking Melkite communities, since under Islamic rule Arabic became the main language of public life and administration. ==Orthodox Melkites==