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Ignatius Jacob II

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Ignatius Jacob II
Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and All the East
ChurchSyriac Orthodox Church
SeeAntioch
Installed1847
Term ended1871
PredecessorIgnatius Elias II
SuccessorIgnatius Peter IV
Personal details
Born
Jacob (Yacuob)

1800
Qa’at Mara, Ottoman Empire
Died1871 (aged 1799–1800)
Diyarbakır
ResidenceMor Hananyo

Ignatius Jacob II was the Patriarch of Antioch and head of the Syriac Orthodox Church from 1847 until his death in 1871.[1]

Biography

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Jacob was born at the village of Qal'at Mara east of Mor Hananyo in 1800. He was the son of Yousif Kapso and when he reached adulthood, he left his village to Tur Abdin and started to study under Ignatius Yunan at the Monastery of MOR Elias near a village called Hbob. He became a monk in 1818 and in 1819 he was elevated to the rank of Monk-Priest. In 1831, Patriarch Ignatius George V ordained his as ecumenical metropolitan as Cyril and appointed him as metropolitan of Mor Hananyo and Mardin. In 1844, he was appointed Patriarchal Vicar in the city of Istanbul where he bought a house and converted it to a church after obtaining the necessary permits and called this church St. Mary[2]. He also bought a small printing press with Syriac fonts and published two books. The first was a prayer book in Garshuni and the second was the book of Psalms in Syriac. After he finished printing the two books, he headed back to Mardin and Mor Hananyo to distribute these two books and visit his family and to collect funds to pay the debts that Patriarch Ignatius Elias II incurred during his legal pursues to claim back the Syriac Orthodox churches in Mosul.[1]

Patriarchal consecration

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Upon arriving to diyarbakir, Cyril Jacob heard the Patriarch Ignatius Elias II passed away. so he continued his was to Mor Hananyo and Mardin. In the monastery a synod was held and all the Metropolitans who participated in the Synod voted to elect Cyril Jacob as the new Patriarch for the Syriac Orthodox Church.[1] When the two Metropolitans from Mosul and Mor Mattai Monastery arrived after the election, they both approved the election of Cyril Jacob. He was consecrated as a Patriarch shortly after. One of the other decisions of the Synod is appointing Metropolitan Julius Peter as metropolitan of Damascus who later was elected as a new Patriarch after Jacob II death and assumed the name Ignatius Peter IV

Episcopal succession

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During Ignatius Aphram time as Patriarch and Metropolitan, he had the duty to ordain and consecrate many Metropolitans in the Syria Orthodox church in addition to tens of priests, monks, and deacons.[1]

  1. Philoxinous (1848)
  2. Cyril George (1860). Eccumenical Matropolitan then Metropolitan of Mosul
  3. Abdulmassih (1860). Metropolitan of Diyarbakir
  4. Disyonius Behnam (1864-1911). Metropolitan of Mosul

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Barsoum, Athanasius Aphram (2006). The Syriac Orthodox Patriarchs in the 19th &20th centuries (2 ed.). Retrieved 24 December 2024.
  2. ^ Brock, Sebastian P.; Taylor, David G. K. (2001). The Hidden Pearl: At the turn of the third millennium ; the Syrian Orthodox witness. Trans World Film Italia. p. 70. Retrieved 25 December 2024.
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Preceded by List of Syriac Orthodox Patriarchs of Antioch
1947–1871
Succeeded by