Evangelization and early history Christianity spread rapidly from
Jerusalem along major trade routes to major settlements, finding its strongest growth among
Hellenized Jews in places like
Antioch and
Alexandria. The Greek-speaking Mediterranean region was a powerhouse for the Early Church, producing many revered
Church Fathers as well as those who became labelled as
heresiarchs, such as
Nestorius. From
Antioch, where Christians were first so called, came
Ignatius,
Diodore of Tarsus,
John Chrysostom,
Theodore of Mopsuestia,
Nestorius,
Theodoret,
John of Antioch,
Severus of Antioch and
Peter the Fuller, many of whom are associated with the
School of Antioch. In like manner,
Alexandria boasted many prominent theologians, including
Athenagoras,
Pantaenus,
Clement,
Origen,
Dionysius,
Gregory Thaumaturgus,
Arius,
Athanasius,
Didymus the Blind,
Cyril and
Dioscorus, associated with
School of Alexandria. The two schools dominated the theological controversies of the first centuries of Christian theology. Whereas Antioch traditionally focused on the grammatical and historical interpretation of Scripture and developed a
dyophysite christology, Alexandria was much influenced by
neoplatonism, using an
allegorical interpretation and developing
miaphysitism. Other prominent centres of Christian learning developed in
Asia Minor (most remarkably among the
Cappadocian Fathers) and the Levantine coast (
Gaza,
Caesarea and
Beirut). The kingdom of Osroene (Edessa) which was ruled by the Arab
Abgarid dynasty was celebrated as the first kingdom to adopt Christianity as its official religion and there is an
apocryphal legend, the
Doctrine of Addai (late 4th or early 5th century), and an anonymous history, the
Chronicle of Edessa (mid-6th century), claiming that Osroene was the first state to have accepted
Christianity as
state religion, but some scholars believe there is not enough evidence to support that claim. Politically, the Middle East of the first four Christian centuries was divided between the
Roman Empire and the
Parthian Empire (later
Sasanian Persia). Christians experienced sporadic persecutions in both political spheres. Within the Parthian Empire, most Christians lived in the region of
Mesopotamia/
Asuristan (
Assyria) and were ethnic
Assyrian Mesopotamians who spoke
eastern Aramaic dialects loosely related to those
Western Aramaic dialects spoken by their co-religionists just across the Roman border, but with
Akkadian influences. Legendary accounts are of the evangelization of the East by
Thomas (
Mar Toma),
Addai/
Thaddaeus and
Mari.
Syriac (
Syrian//Syriac are etymologically derived from
Assyrian) emerged as the standard Aramaic dialect of the three Assyrian border cities of
Edessa,
Nisibis and
Arbela. Translation of the scriptures into Syriac began early in this region, with a Jewish group (probably non-rabbinic) producing a translation of the
Hebrew Bible becoming the basis of the
Church of the Easts Christian
Peshitta.
Syriac Christianity is most famous for its poet-theologians,
Aphrahat,
Ephrem,
Narsai and
Jacob of Serugh.
Eusebius credits
Mark the Evangelist as the bringer of Christianity to Egypt, and manuscript evidence shows that the faith was firmly established there by the middle of the 2nd century. Although the Greek-speaking community of Alexandria dominated the Egyptian church, speakers of native Coptic and many bilingual Christians were the majority. From the early 4th century, at the latest, the
monastic movement emerged in the Egyptian desert, led by
Anthony and
Pachomius (see
Desert Fathers). Eusebius (
EH 6:20) also mentions the appointment of a bishop and the holding of a
synod in
Bostra around 240, which is the earliest reference to church organisation in an Arabic-speaking area. Later that decade, Eusebius (6:37) describes another synod in
Arabia Petraea. Some scholars have followed hints in Eusebius and Jerome that
Philip the Arab, the son of an Arab
sheikh, may have been the first Christian Roman Emperor. However, evidence to support this theory is thin. The
Ghassanid tribe were important Christian
foederati of Rome, while the
Lakhmids were an Arab Christian tribe that fought for the Persians. Although the
Hejaz was never a stronghold of Arab Christianity, there are reports of Christians around
Mecca and
Yathrib before the advent of Islam. Christianity came to
Armenia both from the south,
Mesopotamia/
Assyria, and the west,
Asia Minor, as demonstrated by the Greek and Assyrian-Syriac origin of Christian terms in early Armenian texts. Eusebius (
EH 6:46, 2) mentions Meruzanes as the bishop of the Armenians around 260. Following the conversion of King
Trdat III to Christianity (circa 301),
Gregory the Illuminator was consecrated Bishop of Armenia in 314. Armenians continue to celebrate their church as the oldest
national church. Gregory was consecrated at
Caesarea in
Cappadocia. The
Georgian kingdom of
Iberia (
Kartli) was probably evangelized first in the 2nd or 3rd century. However, the church was only established there in 330s. A number of sources, both in Georgian and other languages, associate
Nino of Cappadocia with bringing Christianity to the Georgians and converting King
Mirian III of Iberia. Georgian Christian literature emphasizes her connection with Jerusalem and the role played by the Georgian Jewish community in the growth of Christianity. Certainly, early Georgian liturgy does share a number of conspicuous features with that of Jerusalem. The
Black Sea coastal kingdom of
Lazica (Egrisi) had closer ties to
Constantinople, and its bishops were by imperial appointment. Although the Lazican church originated around the same time as its Iberian neighbour, it was not until 523 when its king,
Tzath, accepted the faith. The Iberian church was under the authority of the
Patriarch of Antioch, until the reforming king
Vakhtang Gorgasali set up an independent
catholicos in 467. In 314, the
Edict of Milan proclaimed
religious toleration in the Roman Empire, and Christianity rapidly rose to prominence. The church's
dioceses and bishoprics came to be modelled on state administration: partly the motive for the
Council of Nicaea in 325. However, Christians in the
Zoroastrian Sasanian Empire (speaking variously Syriac, Armenian or Greek) are often found distancing themselves politically from their Roman co-religionists to appease the
shah. Thus, around 387, when the
Armenian Highland came under
Sasanian control, a separate leadership from that in Caesarea developed and eventually settled in
Echmiadzin, a division that still, to some extent, exists to this day. Likewise, in the 4th century, the bishop of
Seleucia-Ctesiphon, the Sasanian capital, was recognised as leader of the Syriac and Greek-speaking Christians in the Persian empire, assuming the title catholicos, later
patriarch. Christianity in
Ethiopia and
Nubia is traditionally linked to the biblical tale of the conversion of the
Ethiopian eunuch in the
Acts of the Apostles (8. 26–30). The
Kebra Nagast also connects the
Yemenite
Queen of Sheba with the royal line of
Axum. Evidence from coinage and other historical references point to the early 4th-century conversion of King
Ezana of Axum as the establishment of Christianity, whence
Nubia and other surrounding areas were evangelized, all under the oversight of the
Patriarch of Alexandria. In the 6th century, Ethiopian military might conquered a large portion of Yemen, strengthening Christian concentration in southern Arabia.
Schisms The first major disagreement that led to a fracturing of the church was the so-called
Nestorian Schism of the 5th century. This argument revolved around claims by Alexandrians over alleged theological extremism by Antiochians, and its battleground was the Roman capital, Constantinople, originating from its bishop's, Nestorius's, teaching on the nature of Christ. He was condemned for splitting Christ's person into separate divine and human natures; the extremes of this view, however, were not preached by Nestorius. Cyril of Alexandria succeeded in the deposition of Nestorius at the
First Council of Ephesus in 431. The result led to a crisis among the Antiochians, some of whom, including Nestorius himself, found protection in Persia, which continued to espouse traditional Antiochian theology. The schism led to the total isolation of the Persian-sphere
Church of the East, and the adoption of much Alexandrian theology in the Antiochian sphere of influence. Some of the Alexandrian victors at Ephesus, however, began to push their anti-Nestorian agenda too far, of whom
Eutyches was the most prominent. Much back and forth led to the
Council of Chalcedon of 451, which found a compromise that returned to a theology closer to that of Antioch, refereed by Rome, and condemned the
monophysite theology of Eutyches. However, the outcome was rejected by many Christians in the Middle East, especially by non-Greek-speaking Christians on the fringe of the Roman Empire – Copts, Syriacs, Assyrians and Armenians. In 482, Emperor
Zeno attempted to reconcile his church with his
Henotikon. However, reunion was never achieved, and the non-Chalcedonians adopted
miaphysitism based on traditional Alexandrian doctrine, in revolt against the Byzantine Church. These so-called
Oriental Orthodox Churches include the majority of Egyptian Christians – the
Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria – majority of Ethiopian and Eritrean Christians – the
Ethiopian and
Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Churches – many Syriacs – the
Syriac Orthodox Church – and the majority of Armenians – the
Armenian Apostolic Church. The name
Melkite (meaning 'of the king' in
Aramaic), originally intended as a slur applied to those who adhered to Chalcedon (it is no longer used to describe them), who continued to be organised into the historic and
autocephalous patriarchates of
Constantinople,
Antioch,
Alexandria and
Jerusalem. Collectively they form the traditional basis for the
Greek Orthodox Church, known as
Rūm Orthodox () in Arabic, which is their language of worship throughout
Lebanon, Egypt, the Palestinian Authority, Israel, Jordan, Syria and Christian diaspora. The
Georgian Orthodox and Apostolic Church held to a moderate Antiochian doctrine through these schisms and began aligning itself with Byzantium from the early 7th century, and finally broke off ties with their Armenian non-Chalcedonian neighbours in the 720s. The term Melkite refers to the adherents of the Antiochene Greek Orthodox Patriarchy who switched allegiance to the Papacy in 1729 after a disputed election to the Patriarchal See in 1724 because the See of Constantinople which objected to the canonically elected Patriarch Cyril who was considered to be too pro-Roman consecrated another candidate (until then the See was technically still in union with the Constantinople and Rome despite the split of 1054).
Muslim conquests and its largest extent during the Middle Ages The Arab
Muslim conquests of the 7th century brought to end the hegemony of Byzantium and Persia over the Middle East. The conquest came at the end of a particularly gruelling period of the
Roman-Persian Wars, from the beginning of the 7th century, in which the Sasanid Shah
Khosrau II had captured much of the Syria, Egypt, Anatolia and the Caucasus, and the Byzantines under
Heraclius only managed a decisive counter-attack in the 620s. The Greek-Orthodox Patriarch
Sophronius negotiated with
Caliph Umar in 637 for the peaceful transfer of Jerusalem into Arab control (including the
Umariyya Covenant). Likewise, resistance to the Arab onslaught in Egypt was minimal. This seems to be more due to the war fatigue throughout the region rather than entirely due to religious differences. After the conquests, Muslims initially remained a ruling minority within the conquered territories in the Middle East and North Africa. By the 12th century the non-Muslim population had become a minority. The factors and processes that led to the progressive
Islamization of these regions during this period, as well as the speed at which conversions happened, is a complex subject that is not fully understood by historians. In Egypt, Islamization was likely slower than in other Muslim-controlled regions, In the period prior to the establishment of Abbasid rule in AD 750, many pastoral Kurds moved into upper Mesopotamia, taking advantage of an unstable situation. Cities in northern and northeastern ancient Assyria were raided and attacked by the Kurds of Persian Azerbaijan, "who killed, looted, and enslaved the indigenous population", and the Kurds were moving into various regions in east of ancient
Assyria. When the Seljuks invaded Mesopotamia, they recruited the Kurds for their campaigns. The invading Seljuks and Kurds "destroyed whatever they encountered" and enslaved
women. The Seljuks rewarded the Kurds for their support with land, and the Seljuk leader Sinjur renamed the region called Kirmanshah in Persia as Kurdistan. Mosul, historically a Christian city, was repeatedly attacked. The historian Ibn Khaldun wrote that 'the Kurds spoiled and spread horror everywhere'. The historian Al Makrezi, referring to the situation that emerged after the Kurdish settlement in al Jazirah, wrote that "they were able to establish Kurdish centres as their shares for helping the Turkish race in their conquest". In time,
Armenia and Assyria became "Kurdistan". Afterwards happened the raids of Timur Lang, "whom the Kurds loyally followed and who enabled them to occupy the land of the Armenians, who were forcibly expelled". Timur Lang rewarded the Kurds by "settling them in the devastated regions, which until then had been inhabited by the followers of the
Church of the East."
Ottoman Empire wrote, "Scenes like this were common all over the Armenian provinces, in the spring and summer months of 1915. Death in its several forms—massacre, starvation, exhaustion—destroyed the larger part of the refugees. The Turkish policy was that of extermination under the guise of deportation".
Christians in 1922, fleeing from their homes in
Kharput and moving to
Trebizond. In the 1910s and 1920s, the
Armenian,
Greek, and
Assyrian genocides were perpetrated by the
Ottoman Empire and its successor state, the
Republic of Turkey. The
Ottoman Turks carried out a series of violent
anti-Christian genocides of
Armenians,
Assyrians, and
Greeks between the late 19th and early 20th centuries. These include the massacres of ethnic
Assyrian and
Armenian Christians in the 1870s; these killings, which resulted in over ten thousand deaths, were known as the
Hamidian massacres. The settlement of
Muslim Kurds from the
Qajar Empire along the eastern border was the first powerful action in changing the demographics of the
Assyrian homeland. The Muslim Kurds remained loyal to the Ottoman Turks as long as they were enjoying power and greatness. The Ottoman Turks conducted a large-scale
genocide and
ethnic cleansing of the ancient and indigenous
Greek,
Armenian,
Assyrian, and
Maronite Christian inhabitants of Anatolia, northwestern Iran, the fringes of northern Iraq and northern Syria, and Mount Lebanon during and immediately after
World War I, resulting in well over 3 million deaths among the 6 million Christians who were living in the Ottoman Empire in 1914 of 26 million inhabitants and large-scale deportations in the
Armenian genocide,
Assyrian genocide,
Greek genocide, the
Dersim Massacre, and the
Great Famine of Mount Lebanon. The Ottoman Turks reinforced their eastern frontier with what they "considered a loyal Sunni Kurd element". They settled the Kurds in these regions in return for their support in their campaigns against the
Safavid Empire. In 1583, the
Ottoman sultan Murad IV "gave huge provinces to the Kurdish tribe of Mokri", whose leader claimed to descend from
Saladin. The French traveler Monsieur Tavernier noted that in 1662, Van and Urmia were purely
Armenian; however, only a century later, another European traveler, Carsten Niebuhr, noted that both
Turkomans and
Kurds were involved in spreading disturbances. In 1840, Hortio Southgate visited these same regions, he was surprised by the "dramatic changes" and by "the decline in the number of the Armenians compared with the number of the new Kurdish settlers who then were still in the process of moving in". Southgate ascribed these changes to "the Kurdish persecution of the indigenous people". The inhabitants of Salamis, for instance, had been forced to leave. The Russian historian Minorsky at about the same time also stated that "the Kurds had occupied parts of
Armenia permanently and were no longer living on their original land." According to Aboona, "the majorities, in particular the Kurds, rejected any form of coexistence" with Assyrians, and "in the eyes of the Kurds", the presence of Assyrian tribes in the midst of their own "settlements represented a serious challenge to their dominance of the region. The remaining Assyrian settlements prevented Kurdish settlements from forming a cohesive, homogenous ethnic block" and the "Kurds' aspirations remained unfulfilled". But when Nadir Shah invaded the territory of ancient Assyria in 1743 he got the full backing and support of the Kurds. This was a further step to "strengthening both the older Kurdish settlements, including those made after
Çaldıran, and the newer ones that followed Nadir Shah's İnvasİon." Hence the Assyrians lost both land and numbers. After Nadir Shah's invasion, the "Assyrian tribes also faced further tightening of the Kurdish circle around their country". According to Adoona, "in the end, the independence of the Assyrian tribes was destroyed not directly by the Turks but by their Kurdish neighbours under
Turkish auspices."
Under European colonial rule ==Persecution of Christians in Middle East==