The church is dedicated to Saint
Thomas the Apostle and is believed to have been constructed on the site of the house that the saint resided in during his stay in Mosul. The church is first mentioned in 770 as part of a grievance to Caliph
Al-Mahdi. The current structure suggests it was built in the 13th century. The church was damaged during
Shahanshah Nader Shah's siege of Mosul as part of the
Ottoman–Persian War of 1743–1746, and was subsequently renovated in 1744 by Cyril George,
metropolitan bishop of
Hattakh, with the permission of the Ottoman Sultan
Mahmud I. It was later renovated again in 1848. Amidst restoration work in 1964, the finger bones of Saint Thomas were discovered in the church. On 23 December 2009, a bomb damaged the church, killed two men and injured five people. In the aftermath of the
Fall of Mosul, the relics of Saint Thomas were taken from the church by Nicodemus Daoud Sharaf, Syriac Orthodox Archbishop of Mosul, and transferred to the
Monastery of Saint Matthew on 17 June 2014. The church was used as a prison by
Islamic State insurgents until the city's
liberation in 2017. ==Burials==