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Islam expands

Patriarchs of Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria fall into non-Roman (imperial) boundaries and new Caliphs achieve political strength, sometimes helping the Orthodox and at other times abusing the Christian Orthodox. The Church of the East's center, Seleucia-Ctesiphon, shifted towards Mosul and the Nineveh Plain around the 7th-13th centuries, especially as Syriac Orthodox Christians fled persecution from cities like Tikrit (Tagrit) to Mosul, establishing churches like the Mar Ahûdêmmêh (Hûdéni) Church, making Mosul a significant regional hub before later moves due to conflict, like during World War I, to places like Chicago, then back to Iraq in 2015

Name of Era
Text Chapter
Ranged Years
Islam expands
The Quran and other non-Trinitarian and iconoclast writings
632-1258 AD

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Golden Age of Islam
Golden Age of Islam
Name of Era

The Quran and other non-Trinitarian and iconoclast writings

Ranged Years 

632-1258 AD

Text Chapter 

The Quran and other non-Trinitarian and iconoclast writings

Description 

Golden Age of Islam

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The Adoration of the Magi (wise men from the East): Melchior, Caspar, and Balthasar with the Shepherds of Bethlehem Commemorated every December 24 in the Roman Catholic (Gregorian Calendar aka Revised Julian Calendar or New Style) and January 6 in the Orthodox Tradition (Julian Calendar aka Old Style).

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