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Partriarch of Antioch
and all the East,
His Beatitude IGNATIUS IV
http://www.antiochpat.org/
Apostles Paul and Barnabas set
up the Antioch see in 42 A.D It was then acceded for eight
years (43 - 53 A.D) by Saint Peter as its first prelate who
proceeded to establish other churches. However, there are
well documented historical views that Saint Peter established
the Antioch see with the help of Apostles Paul and Barnabas.
He was succeeded on the Antioch office by Aphodius. Small
wonder that St. Peter won the title "patriarch"
(etymologically meaning "head of tribe") because
Christianity spread first among the Jews, and Peter was the
chieftain of this tribe. The naming by the Calcedonion Council
(451 A.D.) of the title "patriarch" solely to the
metropolitan of Antioch apart from other see prelates (Rome,
Constantinople, Alexandretta, Jerusalem) is a de facto concretization
of this status quo. That is why it can be surely said that
St. Peter the Apostle is the first patriarch of Antioch see.
As Peter emerged from Antioch
in 53 A.D.
to establish the see of Rome where he fell martyr during 
the reign of Nero, Paul and Barnabas among other many
apostles emerged from Antioch to all countries worldwide to
preach the new religion. This is simply because Antioch, along
with Damascus, was the gate of Christendom passage to all
inhabited world, especially eastwards where the preachers
sowed the seeds of Christianity , thus bestowing them legitimate
rights on the new churches in those expanses. That is why
we saw the metropolitan (patriarch) of Antioch well to the
fore of other Eastern prelates since the first ages of Christianity.
It was he who presided the locum councils in the East (Ankara,
351 A.D; Caesarea, 316 A.D). And the first ecumenical council
(Nicaea, 325 A.D) recognized Antioch church's presidency over
all Orient metropolitans; and the second ecumenical council
(Constantinople, 381 A.D) confirmed this presidency. On the
other hand, the third ecumenical council (Ephesus, 431 A.D)
declared the independence, under an archbishop, of Cyprus
church from Antioch.
During its old standing history,
the Antioch see weathered upheavals stripping it of endeared
parishioners. The first split (498 A.D) caused the schism
of Nestorians in consequence of the ecumenical council (Ephesus,
431 A.D). This was followed by the secession of Syrians and
Armenians from Antioch as they refused the resolutions passed
by the Calcedonian council. Thereafter, in the wake of Crusader
war, the Maronite seceded from Antioch and set up John Maroun
as their patriarch (685 A.D). By the middle of the 8th century,
the Georgian Orthodox church demanded its independence from
the Antioch see and obtained it in 1050 A.D, thus becoming
the first independent Orthodox church.
During the period from the Arab
conquest of Antioch and the region in 637 A.D up to the European
invasion in 1098 A.D, past the second Byzantium age, the Antioch
see preserved its predominance and luster, albeit it suffered
considerable calamities brought to bear by the Europeans.
The Antioch patriarchs were seated in Constantinople until
the Europeans were defeated and Antioch fell in 1268 A.D.
But the Antioch see had to leave Antioch since its occupation
by the Europeans, moving around in Asia Minor until 1343 A.D
when it was decided to transfer it to Damascus, the most important
city in Greater Syria, second to Antioch with regard to its
metropolitan importance. The bishop of Damascus was then Joachim,
ranking 58 after St. Anania as the first bishop.
At this epoch, the Ottoman rule
of Greater Syria afforded facilities to regular papal proselytism.
The Antioch see's status became then very bad as some of its
parishioners yielded to the material enticements of catholic
preachers. This prompted the Orthodox patriarchs and bishops
to solicit donations from Eastern Orthodox Europe, including
Patriarch Makarious ben Zaim who managed to repay the Antioch
see debts, to develop the Patriarchate school "Assieh"
and to renovate the Patriarchate home.
With the impending presence of
Catholicism and its impact on Patriarchate elections, and
for the purpose of preserving the Antioch see Orthodoxy. the
Orthodox parishioners and bishops requested the ecumenical
Patriarchate to send them a Greek patriarch. The Greek presence
on the Antioch Orthodox see lasted from 1724 to 1898. But
due to the increasing popular demand, the first Arab patriarch
was appointed. He was Patriarch Malathius I (Doumani) the
Damascene.
Up to the date of the aforementioned
secessions, the Antioch see office encompassed in the early
Christendom centuries all of Asia, Orient countries and India.
A (delegate) Patriarchal vicar authorized with patriarch powers
used to represent the patriarch in India, Armenia and Georgia.
Nowadays, the Antioch see includes
the republics of Syria and Lebanon, as well as Iraq, the Arabian
peninsula, parts of turkey, and the expatriate Antioch Orthodox
communities in North and Latin America, Australia and Europe.
(Ref. http://antiochpat.org/english>historical
information)
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