- It may
refer to:
Barsauma (died 456), monk,
abbot and
supporter of
Dioscorus of Alexandria,
subject of the Life of
Barsauma Barsauma of
Nisibis (d. 491)...
-
Barsauma (Syriac: ܒܪ ܨܘܡܐ,
Barṣaumâ),
nicknamed Bar Sawma, "son of Lent" in Syriac, was
Metropolitan of
Nisibis in the 5th century, and a
major figure...
-
Barsauma (died 456) was a Syriac-speaking monk and holy man, a
leading opponent of the
Council of
Chalcedon of 451. He is the
subject of a
biography in...
-
claimed "Armed
soldiers burst into the church, and
there were arra****
Barsaumas and his monks, parabalani, and a
great miscellaneous mob" and that Dioscorus...
-
Catholicos Babowai in 484,
replacing him with the
Nestorian Bishop of Nisibis,
Barsauma. The Catholicos-Patriarch
Babai (497–503)
confirmed the ****ociation of...
-
province of Palestine, and is
converted to
Christianity by the
Syrian monk
Barsauma. Shi Hu,
Chinese emperor of
Later Zhao (d. 349)
Maximilian of Tebessa,...
- unrest.
According to an
anonymous biography of
Mesopotamian monk
named Barsauma,
whose pilgrimage to the
region in the
early 5th
century was accompanied...
- Hahn, Johannes; Menze,
Volker (2020). The
Wandering Holy Man: The Life of
Barsauma,
Christian Asceticism, and
Religious Conflict in Late
Antique Palestine...
-
Orthodox Christians came into the city,
spreading the
veneration of Mor
Barsauma among the
local po****tion
which resulted in the
building of a
church to...
- The Mor Bar
Sauma Monastery was a
Syriac Orthodox monastery near
Malatya in Turkey. The
monastery served as the
regular patriarchal residence from the...