Английская Википедия:Ignatius Gregory Peter VI Shahbaddin
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox Patriarch
Mar Ignatius Gregory Peter VI Shahbaddin (1641–1702) was the Patriarch of the Syriac Catholic Church from 1678 to 1702. His death under tragic circumstances marked the end of the first attempt of union between the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church.
Life
Gregory Peter Shahbaddin, possibly born about 1641, was the nephew of Ignatius Abdul Masih I (later Patriarch) and he became the Syrian Archbishop of Jerusalem in 1662.Шаблон:R
Abdul Masih was the leader of the Orthodox faction and since 1662 opposed the pro-Catholic Patriarch Ignatius Andrew Akijan. At the death of Andrew Akijan, in July 1677, Abdul Masih misled the pro-Catholic faction professing himself in communion with the Catholic Church in order to be elected as Patriarch, but as soon as he obtained the firman of appointment by the Ottoman Sultan, he did a complete about-face.Шаблон:R Thus the pro-Catholic faction in Aleppo elected in his place his nephew, Shahbaddin, who had become a supporter of Andrew Akijan.
Patriarch
After election, Shahbaddin obtained, also thanks to the French Consul, the confirmation as Patriarch from the Sultan, and he was enthroned on 2 April 1678.Шаблон:R He was later confirmed also by Pope Innocent XI who granted him the Pallium, the sign of patriarchal authority, on 12 June 1679.Шаблон:R
The next years were deeply marked by the clashes between the opposite factions, the pro-Catholic and the pro-Orthodox, who both tried to win over to their side the Ottoman authorities. This resulted in five depositions and re-instalment of Shahbaddin.Шаблон:R Year after year, the Ottoman authorities took a stand in favour of the pro-Orthodox faction, and the clashes soon degraded in a true persecution from the Orthodox Syrians towards the pro-Catholic party.Шаблон:R
In 1696 Shahbaddin, with Archbishop Gregory Isho (Josue) of Jerusalem, traveled to Rome to raise funds. In Rome they met Pope Innocent XII and they remained there till 1700 when, through the support of Leopold I, Emperor of Austria and of Louis XIV of France, they could reach Istanbul. Shahbaddin was thus re-installed on 1 March 1701 for the fifth time as Syrian Patriarch in Aleppo.Шаблон:R
Tragic end
This last re-instalment ended in tragedy after a few months due to the persecutions from the pro-Orthodox faction and the Ottoman authorities. On 27 August 1701 Shahbaddin, the Archbishop Dionysius Amin Kahn Risqallah of Aleppo,[1] and most of the clergy were arrested, beaten and imprisoned.Шаблон:R On 10 November 1701 they were transferred with a forced march from Aleppo to the castle of Adana. Bishop Amin Kahn Risqallah died the same day he arrived in the castle, on 18 November, because of the wounds suffered during the march, and the others captives were kept imprisoned for some months.
Notwithstanding the fierce complaints of the Western rules, Shahbaddin was not released,Шаблон:R and on 4 March 1702Шаблон:R he was offered a coffee by the commanding officer of the castle, and in the same night he died, quite surely poisoned.Шаблон:RШаблон:R
Successive events
After Shahbaddin's death on 4 March 1702, the clergy remained in prison in Adana till early 1704. During their captivity, on 23 November 1703, they elected as new Patriarch the maphrian and Archbishop of Nineveh Isaac Basilios Joubeir (or Basil Ishaq ibn Jubair, c. 1645–1721), who at the time was in Istanbul in the French consulate. He was later confirmed as Patriarch on 17 November 1704 by Rome.Шаблон:R But he refused to accept the patriarchal title anyway and continued to consider himself only as a Maphrian, waiting for a better time.Шаблон:R In 1706 he moved to Rome where he died on 18 May 1721.Шаблон:R The Syrian Catholic Church had a new Patriarch only in 1783 with Ignatius Michael III Jarweh.
Notes
Sources
Шаблон:Patriarchs of the Syriac Catholic Church Шаблон:Authority control
- ↑ consecrated Archbishop of Aleppo on 4 April 1678
- Английская Википедия
- Converts to Eastern Catholicism from Oriental Orthodoxy
- Syriac Catholic Patriarchs of Antioch
- 1641 births
- 1702 deaths
- Assassinated religious leaders
- Year of birth unknown
- 17th-century people from the Ottoman Empire
- 18th-century people from the Ottoman Empire
- Bishops in the Ottoman Empire
- Assyrians from the Ottoman Empire
- Prisoners and detainees of the Ottoman Empire
- 18th-century assassinated people
- Страницы, где используется шаблон "Навигационная таблица/Телепорт"
- Страницы с телепортом
- Википедия
- Статья из Википедии
- Статья из Английской Википедии