SynonymsBot
Synonyms for patriarch_sabrishoʿ or Related words with patriarch_sabrishoʿ
patriarch_sabrisho
patriarch_ʿabdishoʿ
patriarch_abdisho
patriarch_eliya
patriarch_yohannan
patriarch_makkikha
patriarch_mesrob
pragmulji
baselios_mar_thoma_paulose
patriarch_maximos
pulikkottil_joseph_mar_dionysious
catholicos_karekin
antipope_victor
pope_callistus
sālote_tupou
patriarch_athanasius
sultan_muhammad_shamsuddeen
ramsses
abuna_salama
baselios_geevarghese
shemʿon
artashir
seljuk_sultan_kilij_arslan
patriarch_jeremias
papa_eftim
ishoʿyahb
emir_abd_ar_rahman
pieter_casteels
evfimy
king_mongkut_rama
pope_callixtus
pope_anastasius
pope_calixtus
yo_nal_ahk
byzantine_emperor_theodosius
queen_sālote_tupou
oseadeeyo
mor_ignatius
yosab
monumentalment
qerellos
ottoman_sultan_murad
tupua_tamasese_lealofi
harvie_wilkinson
bulgarian_tsar_boris
byzantine_emperor_constans
akhenaten_amenhotep
kiurike
lgm_minuteman_lgm_minuteman
benevento_landulf
Examples of "patriarch_sabrishoʿ"
The bishop Eliya of ʿUkbara was present at the consecration of the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
IV in 1222.
The metropolitan Joseph of Mosul was present at the consecration of the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
IV in 1222.
The bishop Narsai of Tirhan was present at the consecration of the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
IV in 1222.
The metropolitan Sabrishoʿ Ibn Qayyoma 'of Hazza and Erbil' was present at the consecration of the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
IV in 1222.
The bishop Yahballaha Ibn Abu Darah of Beth Nuhadra was consecrated metropolitan of Mosul by the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
III shortly after his consecration in 1064.
The future patriarch Theodosius of Beth Garmai (853–8) was consecrated bishop 'of al-Anbar' by the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
II (831–5), and later became metropolitan of ʿIlam.
The
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
III consecrated a monk named Stephen bishop of al-Sin (Shenna), 'to which he added Bawazikh (Beth Waziq)', shortly after his consecration in 1064. Stephen was present as 'bishop of al-Sin and Bawazikh' at the consecration of the patriarch ʿAbdishoʿ II in 1074.
The bishop Mari ibn ʿAus of 'Radhan' was transferred to the diocese of Anbar by the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
III shortly after his consecration in 1063/4. He was present at the consecration of the patriarch ʿAbdishoʿ II (1074–90) in 1074, and died at an unknown date during his reign.
The bishop Makkikha, son of Shlemun, of Tirhan, was consecrated by the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
III shortly after his consecration in 1063/4. He was present at the consecration of the patriarch ʿAbdishoʿ II in 1074. He was consecrated metropolitan of Mosul by ʿAbdishoʿ II in 1085, following the death of the metropolitan Yahballaha of Mosul, and became patriarch in 1092 on ʿAbdishoʿ's death.
The bishop Yahballaha Ibn Abu Darah of Beth Nuhadra was consecrated metropolitan of Mosul by the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
III shortly after his consecration in 1064, following the death of the metropolitan Gabriel of Mosul. He was present as 'metropolitan of Hazza and Mosul' at the consecration of the patriarch ʿAbdishoʿ II (1074–90) in 1074. He died in 1085, and was replaced as metropolitan of Mosul by the future patriarch Makkikha Ibn Sulaiman, bishop of Tirhan.
According to a list of Nestorian patriarchs preserved in a manuscript of Shlemun of Akhlat's "Book of the Bee", Denha II succeeded the patriarch Timothy II. Shlemun's original list terminated with the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
IV, who was consecrated in 1222, but this list was later brought up to date by a fifteenth-century scribe, who added a list of thirteenth-, fourteenth- and fifteenth-century patriarchs. According to this list, Yahballaha III (1281–1318) was succeeded by the patriarchs Timothy, Denha, Shemʿon, Eliya, and 'Shemʿon of our days'. This is the only source that specifically places Denha in direct succession to Timothy, but there is no reason to doubt its evidence.
Baghdad, the capital of the ʿAbbasid caliphate, was the seat of the East Syrian patriarchs between the eighth and thirteenth centuries, and is frequently mentioned in the various literary sources in connection with the ceremonies attending their elections, consecrations, and burials. These sources mention several East Syrian monasteries and churches in or near Baghdad used as residences by the East Syrian patriarchs at different periods, and the relevant references have been conveniently collected by the French scholar J. M. Fiey, who also precisely localised most of the sites concerned. The patriarchal residences included the monastery of Klilishoʿ, also called 'the patriarchal monastery' ("Dair al-Jathaliq"), residence and burial place of the patriarch Timothy I (780–823) and several of his ninth-century successors; the monastery of Mar Pethion, residence of the
patriarch
Sabrishoʿ
II (831–5); the church of Asbagh in the al-Shammasiya quarter, residence and burial place of the patriarch Yohannan II Bar Narsaï (884–91); the nearby 'Greek Palace' ("Darta d'Romaye", "Dar al-Rum"), residence and burial place of sixteen of the seventeen patriarchs from Yohannan III (893–9) to Eliya II (1111–32); the monastery of ʿAbdon to the north of Baghdad, burial place of the patriarch Abraham III (906–37); the church of Mar Sabrishoʿ in the Suq al-Thalatha quarter, burial place of the patriarchs Bar Sawma (1134–6), Ishoʿyahb V (1149–75) and Eliya III (1176–90); the church of Mart Maryam of Karkh, residence and burial place of the patriarchs Yahballaha II (1190–1222), Sabrishoʿ IV (1222–4) and Sabrishoʿ V (1226–56); and the palace of Duwaidar ʿAla al-Din, burial place of the patriarchs Makkikha II (1257–65) and Denha I (1265–81).