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See also: leader of the Monophysite See also: Syriac-speaking See also: Church in the 6th century, and one of the earliest and most important of Syriac historians
.
See also: Born at Amid (Diarbekr) about 5o5, he was there ordained as a deacon in 5291. but in 534 we find him in See also: Palestine, and in 535 he passed to Constantinople
.
The cause of his leaving Amid was probably either the See also: great pestilence which broke out there in 534 or the furious persecution directed against the See also: Monophysites by See also: Ephraim (patriarch of See also: Antioch 529–544) and Abraham (See also: bishop of Amid c
.
520–541)
.
In Constantinople he seems to have early won the See also: notice of Justinian, one of the See also: main See also: objects of whose policy was the consolidation of Eastern See also: Christianity as a bulwark against the See also: heathen power of See also: Persia
.
See also: John is said by Barhebraeus (Chron. eccl. i
.
195) to have succeeded Anthimus as Monophysite bishop of Constantinople, but this is probably a
See also: mistake.' Anyhow he enjoyed the emperor's favour until the See also: death of the latter in 565 and (as he himself tells us) was entrusted with the administration of the entire revenues of the Monophysite Church
.
He was also sent, with the See also: rank of bishop, on a See also: mission for the conversion of such heathen as remained in See also: Asia Minor, and informs us that the number of those whom he baptized amounted to 70,000
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He also built a large monastery at See also: Tralles on the hills skirting the valley of the Meander, and more than go other monasteries
.
Of the mission to the Nubians which he promoted, though he did not himself visit their country, an interesting account is given in the 4th See also: book of the 3rd Dart of his See also: History.2 In 546 the emperor entrusted him with the task of rooting out the secret practice of See also: idolatry in Constantinople and its neighbourhood
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But his fortunes changed soon after the accession of See also: Justin II
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About 571 See also: Paul of Asia, the orthodox or Chalcedonian patriarch, began (with the sanction of the emperor) a rigorous persecution of the Monophysite Church leaders, and John was among those who suffered most
.
He gives us a detailed account of his sufferings in prison, his loss ofSee also: civil rights, &c., in the third See also: part of his History
.
The latest events recorded are of the date 585, and the author cannot have lived much longer; but of the circumstances of his death nothing is known
.
John's main See also: work was his Ecclesiastical History, which covered more than six centuries, from the See also: time of See also: Julius Caesar to 585
.
It was composed in three parts, each containing six books
.
The first part seems to have wholly perished
.
The second, which extended from See also: Theodosius II. to the 6th or 7th See also: year of Justin II., was (as F
.
Nau has recently proved) 3 reproduced in full or almost in full, in John's own words, in the third part of the See also: Chronicle which was till lately attributed to the patriarch See also: Dionysius Telmaharensis, but is really the work of an unknown compiler
.
Of this second division of John's History, in which he had probably incorporated the so-called Chronicle of See also: Joshua the Stylite, considerable portions are found in the See also: British Museum See also: MSS
.
Add
.
14647 and 14650, and these have been published in the second See also: volume of See also: Land's Anecdota Syriaca
.
But the whole is more completely presented in the Vatican MS
.
(clxii.), which contains the third part of the Chronicle of pseudo-Dionysius
.
The third part of John's history, which is a detailed account of the ecclesiastical events which happened in 571–585, as well as of some earlier occurrences, survives in a fairly See also: complete See also: state in Add
.
14640, a British Museum MS, of the 7th century, It forms a contemporary record of great value to the historian
.
Its somewhat disordered state, the want of See also: chronological
See Land, Joannes Bisckof See also: van Ephesos, pp
.
57 seq
.
2 Cf
.
Land's Appendix (op. cit
.
172–193)
.
a See Bulletin critique, 15th See also: June and 25th Aug
.
1896, and 25th See also: Jan
.
1897; Journal asiatique, 9th series, vol. viii
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(1896) pp
.
346 sqq. and vol. ix
.
(1897) p . 529; also Revue de l'Orient chretien, Suppl. trimestriel (1897), pp . 41–54, 455–493; and compare NSldeke in ViennaSee also: Oriental Journal (1896), pp
.
16o sqq
.
The facts are briefly stated in Duval's Litterature syriaque, p
.
192
.
A full analysis of this second part of John's history has been given by M
.
Nau.arrangement, and the occasional repetition of accounts of the same events are due, as the author himself informs us (ii
.
50), to the work being almost entirely composed during the times of persecution
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The same cause may account for the somewhat slovenly Syriac See also: style
.
The writer claims to have treated his subject impartially, and though written from the narrow point of view of one to whom Monophysite " orthodoxy " was all-important, it is evidently a faithful See also: reproduction of events as they occurred
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This third part was edited by See also: Cureton (See also: Oxford, 1853), and was translated into See also: English by R
.
See also: Payne-See also: Smith (Oxford, 1860) and into
See also: German by J
.
M
.
Schonfelder (See also: Munich, 1862)
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John's other known work was a series of See also: Biographies of Eastern See also: Saints, compiled about 569
.
These have been edited by Land in Anecdota Syriaca, ii
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1–288, and translated into Latin by Douwen and Land (See also: Amsterdam, 1889)
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An interesting estimate of John as an ecclesiastic and author was given by the See also: Abbe Duchesne in a memoir read before the five French See also: Academies on the 25th of See also: October 1892
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