-
Shahdost, also Sadoc,
Sadoth (Gr****: Σαδωθ) (Turoyo: ܫܗܕܘܣ) was
Bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon and
primate of the
Church of the East from 341 to 343. He...
- Christians' were put to death.
During the
following years, Shemon's successors,
Shahdost and Barba'shmin, were also martyred. Barbasceminus,
bishop of Seleucia...
- Papa (c. 280–317)
Vacant (317–329) Catholicos-Patriarch of the
Church of the East
Bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon (329–341) Succeeded by
Shahdost (341–343)...
- Christians' were put to death.
During the
following years, Shemon's successors,
Shahdost and Barba'shmin, were also martyred. A near-contemporary 5th-century Christian...
- (204–20)
Shahlufa (220–4) Papa (c. 280–317) Shemʿon Bar Sabbaʿe (329–41)
Shahdost (341–3) Barbaʿshmin (343–6)
Tomarsa (363–71)
Qayyoma (377–99) 5th–8th centuries...
- some of the
clergy including the
catholicoi Simeon bar Sabba'e (341),
Shahdost (342), and Barba'shmin (346). Afterward, the
office of
Catholicos lay vacant...
-
Gregory had to
leave and was
ordered by the king to live in the
monastery of
Shahdost. The
Catholicos disagreed with the
excommunication and was
spared the royal...
-
Among the
prominent examples of this ****cution is the
killing of
Bishop Shahdost Shahrazori and 128 of his followers.
Sharazur was
incorporated into Ardalan...
- (Simeon Barsabae) (coadjutor 317–336,
Catholicos from 337–341 AD) 13.
Shahdost (Shalidoste) (341–343 AD) 14. Barbaʿshmin (Barbashmin) (343–346 AD). The...
- Seleucia-Ctesiphon,
primate of the
Church of the East, and martyr. He
succeeded Shahdost as
bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon in 343,
during the
great ****cution of...