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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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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