When Michael came to suspect Theodoros of plotting his downfall, he had him expelled from Mar Barsauma. In 1180, four
Mesopotamian bishops opposed to Michael met at
Amid to elect Theodoros patriarch. He took the name John (Yuḥanon). His goal was to unite the Syriac Orthodox with the Chalcedonian churches, both
Greek and
Latin. The support of the prominent and influential bishop of Amid demonstrates that there was a serious appetite in part of the Syriac hierarchy for ecumenism. Michael, however, succeeded in capturing him. A synod was held to defrock him and relegate him to lay status, after which he was imprisoned in his former monastery. After escaping, he went to
Jerusalem, where the
Latin patriarch,
Eraclius, gave him protection in return for his formal submission to the
Roman pontiff. Two letters Theodoros wrote from Jerusalem are known. In that addressed to the metropolitan bishop of
Tarsus, he seeks to justify his election. In that addressed to Michael Rabo, he seeks reconciliation. After the
fall of Jerusalem to the Muslim
Ayyubids in 1187, he left for Armenian Cilicia and Hromgla. In 1192, Prince
Leo II, soon to be king, and Armenian catholicos
Gregory IV recognized him as the legitimate patriarch of Antioch. He continued to have adherents among the Syriac Orthodox, but he had no successor. The schism within the Miaphysite church ended with his sudden death in 1193. ==Writings==