Tel Patriq (West Syrian Diocese)

Tel Patriq was a diocese of the Syrian Orthodox Church near Melitene (Malatya), attested during the eleventh and twelfth centuries.

Sources

The main primary source for the Jacobite bishops of Tel Patriq is the record of episcopal consecrations appended to Volume III of the Chronicle of the Jacobite patriarch Michael the Syrian (1166–99). In this Appendix Michael listed most of the bishops consecrated by the Jacobite patriarchs of Antioch between the ninth and twelfth centuries. Twenty-eight Jacobite patriarchs sat during this period, and in many cases Michael was able to list the names of the bishops consecrated during their reigns, their monasteries of origin, and the place where they were consecrated.

Location

Tel Patriq was a locality near Melitene (modern Malatya), on the west bank of the Euphrates river, in Turkey.[1]

Bishops of Tel Patriq

Five eleventh- and twelfth-century bishops of Tel Patriq are mentioned in the lists of Michael the Syrian.[2]

Name From Consecrated in the reign of Place of consecration
Dionysius Unspecified Yohannan VII bar ʿAbdon (1004–30) not known
Timothy Monastery of Beth Baʿuth, Hesna d'Ziyad Athanasius V Haya (1058–64) not known
Ignatius (metropolitan) Monastery of Mar Ahron, Shigar Athanasius VI bar Khamara (1091–1129) not known
Iwanis Monastery of Sarsaq Athanasius VI bar Khamara (1091–1129) not known
Timothy Monastery of Qoqa Athanasius VI bar Khamara (1091–1129) not known

Some of these bishops are mentioned again in other sources. Dionysius (1004/30) was taken to Constantinople in 1029 with the patriarch Yohannan VII bar ʿAbdon on the orders of the Byzantine emperor Romanus III Argyrus, and was imprisoned in an attempt to force him to make a Chalcedonian confession of faith. He was later released and returned to govern his diocese.[3] Timothy (1058/1063) consecrated the patriarch Athanasius VII in the church of Rahta in Melitene in 1091.[4]

The diocese of Tel Patriq is not again mentioned after 1091, and probably lapsed during the late-twelfth or thirteenth century.

Notes

  1. Fiey, POCN, 272–3
  2. Michael the Syrian, Chronicle, iii. 451–82 and 503
  3. Michael the Syrian, Chronicle, iii. 141; Bar Hebraeus, Chronicon Ecclesiasticum, i. 432
  4. Michael the Syrian, Chronicle, iii. 476; Bar Hebraeus, Chronicon Ecclesiasticum, i. 462

References