- needed] and
recorded by
Pliny as
Mabog (classical Syriac: ܡܒܘܓ,
Mabbog or
Mabbogh). As the
center of the
worship of the
Syrian fertility goddess Atargatis...
-
Philoxenus of
Mabbug (Syriac: ܐܟܣܢܝܐ ܡܒܘܓܝܐ, Aksenāyâ Mabûḡāyâ) (died 523), also
known as
Xenaias and
Philoxenus of Hierapolis, was one of the most notable...
- his
eminent contemporaries Jacob of
Serugh (451-521) and
Philoxenus of
Mabbogh (d. 523),
wrote letters in
condemnation of his teaching. His two main theses...
- companions,
including the
bishops Paul of Edessa, Paul of Tella, and
Thomas of
Mabbogh, met with
Anastasius at a
monastery near Alexandria, as non-Chalcedonians...
- on Byzantine-controlled land.
Three letters of Philoxenus. "Bishop of
Mabbôgh, Philoxenus, Bp. of Hierapolis; Vaschalde,
Arthur Adolphe, 1871-1942"....
- as patriarch,
Joseph was a monk at the
Monastery of
Gubba Baraya, near
Mabbogh.
According to
Dionysius I Telmaharoyo,
Joseph was
elected as patriarch...
-
bishop of
Samosata Basil,
archbishop of
Balesh Timothy,
archbishop of
Mabbogh Iwannis,
archbishop of
Herat Gregory,
bishop of
Birtha Moses, archbishop...
-
bishop of
Circesium Gabriel,
archbishop of
Tiberias Michael,
archbishop of
Mabbogh Jacob,
archbishop of
Samosata Ignatius,
archbishop of
Aphrah Ezekiel, bishop...
- he was
later ordained as a deacon. In
December 758, a
synod was held in
Mabbogh to
elect a new patriarch, however, a
consensus could not be
reached and...
- Severus,
archbishop of
Raqqa Theodosius,
bishop of
Doula John,
archbishop of
Mabbogh John,
bishop of
Doliche Severus,
archbishop of
Jerusalem Notes He is counted...