TY - CHAP
T1 - Some New Documents on the Struggle of the Saint Thomas Christians to Maintain the Chaldaean Rite and Jurisdiction
AU - Perczel, István
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - It is well known and can be read in every manual on Indian Christianity that, during the second half of the sixteenth and the first half of the seventeenth century, the Portuguese colonialists tried to bring under their control the Saint Thomas Christians of the Malabar Coast. The culmination and most symbolic event of this process was the Synod of Diamper held in 1599 and organised by Aleixo de Menezes, the Archbishop of Goa, when the customs and the Syriac books of the local Christians were condemned. In the wake of this Synod a new Syriac liturgy was elaborated, hallmarked by the name of, but also partly authored by, Francisco Roz SJ, the first Latin Archbishop of Angamaly/Cranganore (1601-24). The text of the new liturgy largely consisted of translations from the Latin and intended to replace the original Nestorian/Chaldaean rite of the local Christians. It is also known that the Saint Thomas Christians revolted against the Jesuits, the Portuguese and the forced Latinisation at the Bent Cross Oath in Mattanserry, in 1653, which event resulted, on the long term, in a split between the Catholic faction and an independent faction led by the Mar Thoma Metropolitans, which gradually joined the Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch. However, it has remained virtually unknown that within the Catholic faction the majority of the Indian Christians also resisted the Latinisation and that, after the Bent Cross Oath, a long struggle began for maintaining, be it illegally, the Chaldaean rite and the contact with the Church of the East and the Chaldaean patriarchate. This paper presents some documents testifying to this struggle, collected during a twelve year-long field work.
AB - It is well known and can be read in every manual on Indian Christianity that, during the second half of the sixteenth and the first half of the seventeenth century, the Portuguese colonialists tried to bring under their control the Saint Thomas Christians of the Malabar Coast. The culmination and most symbolic event of this process was the Synod of Diamper held in 1599 and organised by Aleixo de Menezes, the Archbishop of Goa, when the customs and the Syriac books of the local Christians were condemned. In the wake of this Synod a new Syriac liturgy was elaborated, hallmarked by the name of, but also partly authored by, Francisco Roz SJ, the first Latin Archbishop of Angamaly/Cranganore (1601-24). The text of the new liturgy largely consisted of translations from the Latin and intended to replace the original Nestorian/Chaldaean rite of the local Christians. It is also known that the Saint Thomas Christians revolted against the Jesuits, the Portuguese and the forced Latinisation at the Bent Cross Oath in Mattanserry, in 1653, which event resulted, on the long term, in a split between the Catholic faction and an independent faction led by the Mar Thoma Metropolitans, which gradually joined the Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch. However, it has remained virtually unknown that within the Catholic faction the majority of the Indian Christians also resisted the Latinisation and that, after the Bent Cross Oath, a long struggle began for maintaining, be it illegally, the Chaldaean rite and the contact with the Church of the East and the Chaldaean patriarchate. This paper presents some documents testifying to this struggle, collected during a twelve year-long field work.
UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/2520378
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9783447068857
T3 - Eichstätter Beiträge zum christlichen Orient
SP - 415
EP - 436
BT - Orientalia Christiana
A2 - Bruns, Peter
A2 - Luthe, Heinz Otto
PB - Harrassowitz Verlag
CY - Wiesbaden
ER -