Syriac Christianity
(Syriac: ܡܫܝܚܝܘܬܐ ܣܘܪܝܝܬܐ
/ mšiḥāiūṯā suryāiṯā) encompasses the multiple Churches of Eastern Christianity
whose services tend to feature liturgical use of ancient Syriac, a dialect of
Middle Aramaic that emerged in Edessa in the early 1st century AD, and is
closely related to the Aramaic of Jesus. Jesus Christ was known as Yešua` mšiḥā
in Aramaic.
With a history going
back to the 1st century AD, in modern times Syriac Christianity is represented
by denominations primarily in the Middle East, Asia Minor and in Kerala, India.
Christianity began in
the Middle East in Jerusalem among Jewish Aramaic-speaking Semitic peoples of
Judah (modern Israel, Palestinian Territories and Jordan). It quickly spread,
initially to other Semitic peoples, in Parthian-ruled Assyria and Mesopotamia
(modern Iraq), Roman-ruled Syria (ancient Aramea), Phoenicia (modern Lebanon),
southern and eastern Asia Minor (modern Turkey), and northwestern Persia (modern
Iran) and Malta. From there it spread to Greece, Armenia, Egypt, Georgia, the
Caucasus region and on into The Balkans, India, North Africa, Rome, Ethiopia,
Nubia (modern Sudan) and Arabia, and eventually southern and western Europe.
Syriac Christianity is
divided into two major traditions: The East Syrian Rite, historically centered
in Assyria/Upper Mesopotamia, and the West Syrian Rite, centered in Antioch and
the Mediterranean coast (the Levant). The East Syrian Rite tradition was
historically associated with the Assyrian founded Church of the East, and is
currently employed by the Middle Eastern churches that descend from it, the
Assyrian Church of the East, the Ancient Church of the East, and the Chaldean
Catholic Church (the members of these churches are Eastern Aramaic-speaking
ethnic Assyrians), as well as by the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church of India. The
West Syrian tradition is used by the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Maronite
Church, the Syriac Catholic Church, and churches that descend from them, as
well as by the Malankara Churches of India, which follow the Saint Thomas
Christian tradition.
Syriac Christian
heritage is transmitted through various Neo Aramaic dialects (particularly the
Syriac dialect of Assyria and Upper Mesopotamia) of old Aramaic. Unlike the
Greek Christian culture, Assyrian Christian culture borrowed much from early
Rabbinic Judaism and its own indigenous ancient Mesopotamian culture. Whereas
Latin and Greek Christian cultures became protected by the Roman and Byzantine
empires respectively, Syriac Christianity often found itself marginalised and
sometimes actively persecuted by the Zoroastrian rulers of the Parthian Empire
and succeeding Sassanid Empire. Antioch was the political capital of this
culture, and was the seat of the Patriarchs of the church. However, Antioch was
heavily Hellenized, and the Assyrian cities of Edessa, Nisibis and Sassanid
Ctesiphon became Syriac cultural centres.
The early literature of
Syriac Christianity includes the Diatessaron of Tatian; the Curetonian Gospels
and the Syriac Sinaiticus; the Peshitta Bible; the Doctrine of Addai and the
writings of Aphrahat; and the hymns of Ephrem the Syrian.
The first division
between Syriac Christians and Western Christianity occurred in the 5th century,
following the First Council of Ephesus in 431, when the Assyrian Christians of
the Sassanid Persian Empire were separated from those in the west over the
Nestorian Schism. This split owed just as much to the politics of the day as it
did to theological orthodoxy. Ctesiphon, which was at the time also the
Sassanid capital, eventually became the capital of the Church of the East.
After the Council of
Chalcedon in 451, many Syriac Christians within the Roman Empire rebelled
against its decisions. The Patriarchate of Antioch was then divided between a
Chalcedonian and non-Chalcedonian communion. The Chalcedonians were often
labelled 'Melkites' (Emperor's Party), while their opponents were labelled as
Monophysites (those who believe in the one rather than two natures of Christ)
and Jacobites (after Jacob Baradaeus). The Maronite Church found itself caught
between the two (allegedly embracing Monothelitism), but claims to have always
remained faithful to the Catholic Church and in communion with the bishop of
Rome, the Pope.
The church has
persisted as a separate entity under Islamic rule. The community was one of
those granted autonomy in governing itself in religious and family matters
under the millet system. In the 19th century many left for other parts of Christendom,
creating a substantial diaspora.
Over time, some groups
within each of these branches have entered into communion with the Church of
Rome, becoming Eastern Catholic Churches.
The term
"Syrian" (and by extension "Syriac") was originally an Indo-European
corruption of "Assyrian" (Assurayu), and was used by speakers of
Indo-European languages exclusively in relation to Assyria in northern
Mesopotamia, from the period of the Neo Assyrian Empire (935-605 BC) onwards.
During the Seleucid Empire (323-150 BC), its Greek rulers applied the name not
only to Assyria proper and its people, but also to Biblical Aramea in the
Levant, which had been a colony of Assyria during the Middle Assyrian Empire
(1366-1020 BC) and Neo Assyrian Empire (911-605 BC). When they lost Assyria
itself to the Parthian Empire, they retained the name "Syria" but
only applied it to what had been Aramea, which they still retained. This led to
the Greco-Roman and later European tradition of referring to both
Assyrians/Mesopotamians and Arameans as "Syrians" and
"Syriacs", despite both being historically, ethnically,
linguistically, genetically and geographically distinct from one another.
The indigenous
Assyrians (Syriac: ܣܘܪܝܝܐ, Arabic: سُريان) of
Mesopotamia adopted Christianity very early, and from the 1st century A.D.
onwards it began to supplant the three millennia old traditional Mesopotamian
religion, although this religion did not fully die out until as late as the
10th century AD. The Neo-Assyrian kingdom of Osroene was the first Christian
kingdom in history.
In 431 A.D. the Council
of Ephesus declared Nestorianism to be a heresy. The Nestorian priests, who
were persecuted in the Byzantine Empire, sought refuge in Mesopotamia where the
Church of the East was dominant, then part of the Sassanid Empire. There was a
synthesis between the Assyrian Church and Nestorian doctrine. From there they
spread Christianity to Persia, India, China, and Mongolia. This was the
beginning of the Nestorian Church, the eastern branch of Syrian Christianity.
The western branch, the Jacobite Church, appeared after the Council of
Chalcedon condemned Monophysitism in 451 A.D.
Members of the Assyrian
Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East, the Chaldean Catholic, Assyrian
Pentecostal Church church as well as those Syriac Orthodox and Syriac Catholic
Christians from northern Iraq, north eastern Syria and south eastern Turkey are
ethnic Assyrians, descendants of ancient Assyrians. This ethnic group still
speak Akkadian infused Eastern Aramaic dialects and are indigenous to northern
Iraq, south eastern Turkey, north eastern Syria and north western Iran, and
still retain Akkadian-Assyrian family, tribal and personal names.
Many now largely Arabic
speaking Syriac Orthodox and Syriac Catholics from the bulk of Syria (excluding
the Assyrian northeast) and south central Turkey prefer a Syriac-Aramean
national identity while others adhere to a purely religious Syriac identity.
A small number of
mainly United States based Chaldean Catholics have also recently adopted a
Chaldean or Chaldo-Assyrian national identity, despite there being absolutely
no historical, archaeological, written, linguistic or geographical evidence
whatsoever to support any link to the long extinct Chaldeans of the far
southeast of Mesopotamia. These people are in fact ethnic Assyrians originating
from the Assyrian homeland in northern Iraq.
The Maronites in
Lebanon are divided between those who claim Phoenician (see Phoenicianism) or
Syrian national identity and those who claim Arab national identity (see Arab
nationalism).
The older Assyrian
designation has almost completely replaced the word Nestorian (which is seen by
Assyrians as pejorative and meaningless as an ethnic term). However, the word
Nestorian continues to be used in some Western academic literature.
The use of the word
Syriac (which originally referred to the Syrian language, a dialect of Middle
Aramaic which arose in Assyria) instead of Syrian became common after the
establishment of the Arab majority modern nation of Syria after World War I,
Assyrians and Syriac-Arameans not being Arabs and wishing to distinguish
themselves from them. The word 'Syrian' has become ambiguous in English since
it can refer now to a citizen of Syria regardless of ethnicity, and is also now
largely accepted to have originally meant Assyrian. In Arabic, however, the
word for a 'citizen of Syria' has a different form (سوري sūrī) from the
traditional word for an ethnic Assyrian/Syrian (سُرياني suryānī).
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