Sunday, February 6, 2011

About The Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church Of The East: A Nestorian Time-Line

From nestorian.org:

NESTORIAN TIMELINE






549-330 BC Achaemenid Dynasty in Persia

330 BC Alexander the Great defeats the last Achaemenid, Darius III, in Mesopotamia

312-239 BC Seleucid Dynasty in Persia

247 BC-AD 226 Parthian Dynasty in Persia

130 BC Defeat of the Seleucids by the Parthians, resulting in the independence of Edessa

106 BC Inauguration of the Silk Road

53 BC Battle of Carrhae between Rome and Persia (first battle between the two, won by Persia)

20 BC Treaty between Rome and Persia fixes boundary between the two empires along the Euphrates

AD 19 Beginning of reign of King Gundaphar in northern India (mentioned in Acts of Thomas)

c. 50? Arrival of Thomas in India (according to tradition) after establishing Church in Mesopotamia, Persia and their environment

64? Arrival of first Christians in China (according to tradition)

70 Destruction of Jerusalem by Roman Emperor Titus

72? Martyrdom of Thomas in India (according to tradition)

c. 80-100? Odes of Solomon written in Syriac (probably in Edessa)

c. 110? Birth of Tatian in Mesopotamia

112? Martyrdoms of Sharbil, Babai and Barsamy in Edessa (according to tradition)

117 or 123? Martyrdom of Bishop Semsoun in Arbela (according to tradition)

c. 120-140? Evangelization of the Gilanians (on the shores of the Caspian Sea) and the lands of Gog and Magog (possibly referring to the Turks beyond the Oxus River), according to tradition

150 First historical records of Christians in Edessa

154 Birth of Bardaisan in Edessa

c. 170 Diatessaron translated by Tatian into Syriac

172 Tatian returns to Arbela from Rome

179 Conversion of Bardaisan in Edessa

179 or 189 Pantaenus visits India and records meeting Christians there

180 Death of Tatian

196 Bardaisan writes of Christians amongst the Parthians, Bactrians (Kushans) and other peoples in the Persian Empire

c. 200 Acts of Thomas written

Liturgy of Mar Addai and Mar Mari develops

201 First historical record of a church building (anywhere) in Edessa

214 Edessa becomes a Roman colony

220 Several bishoprics in Persia, according to Tertullian

222 Death of Bardaisan

225/6 The Sassanid dynasty overthrows the Parthian dynasty in Persia

More than 20 bishoprics in Mesopotamia and Persia

c. 225-250 Syriac Didascalia Apostolorum (Doctrine of the Apostles) written (mentions evangelization of the Gilanians and the land of Gog and Magog)

241 Mani begins to preach in Seleucia-Ctesiphon

258 Edessa sacked by Persia and made part of Persian Empire

270 First priest ordained in Seleucia-Ctesiphon

273-276? Mani crucified and his followers (Manichaeans) flee eastward

c. 285 Papa ordained as first bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon and later adopts title of "Catholicos"

290 Brief persecution of Persian Christians under Bahram II

298 Rome captures Nisibis

300 Bishop David of Basra goes to India

Birth of Aphrahat (?)

301 Armenian king Tiridates I converted by Gregory the Illuminator

303 Arnobius speaks of the Chinese as "united in the faith of Christ"

306 James ordained as first bishop of Nisibis

Birth of Ephrem the Syrian in Nisibis

311 Conversion of Constantine the Great

313 Constantine's Edict of Toleration legalizes Christianity in the Roman Empire

First cathedral built in Edessa by Bishop Qona (first bishop mentioned in Edessa)

314 Persian Synod of Seleucia deposes Papa after he proposes that the bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon should have primacy over the other Eastern bishops

Death of Tiridates I of Armenia

315 Letter from Constantine to Shapur II urging him to protect Christians in his realm

Papa restored as bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon and begins to use the title "Catholicos"

325 First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea asserts Christ's deity (James of Nisibis and a Persian bishop from "India" recorded as attending)

James of Nisibis establishes theological school in Nisibis after the Council of Nicaea

326/7 Death of Papa and succession of Shimun bar Sabbaeas as Catholicos

330 First Syrian monastery founded by Mar Augin north of Nisibis

334 First bishop concecrated for Merv

337 Death of Constantine the Great and division of the Roman Empire

Aphrahat writes Demonstrations, Part I

337-350 Persian wars against Rome

340 Beginning of Persian monasticism under Aphrahat north of Mosul

340-363 The Great Persecution of the Persian church

344 Martyrdom of Catholicos Shimun bar Sabbae, 5 bishops and 100 priests

345 Martyrdom of Catholicos Shahdost

Aphrahat writes Demonstrations, Part II

Thomas of Cana arrives in India (according to tradition)

346 Martyrdom of Catholicos Barbashmin

350 Ephrem the Syrian helps Nisibis repel Persian attack

Birth of Theodore of Mopsuestia

354 Theophilus "the Indian" reports visiting Christians in India

356 Theophilus "the Indian" consecrated as a bishop and converts king of the Himyarites in Yemen

360 Julian "the Apostate" becomes Emperor of Rome and invades Persia

363 Persia defeats the Romans, killing Julian, and recaptures Nisibis

School of Nisibis moves to Edessa, along with Ephrem the Syrian

373 Mawiyya becomes first Christian Arab queen of Tanukh tribe

379/80-401/2 Continuation of the Great Persecution of the Persian church

381 Second Ecumenical Council of Constantinople asserts Christ's humanity and declares Rome and Constantinople equal

Birth of Nestorius

390 Nestorian missionary Abdyeshu builds monastery on the island of Bahrain

390-430 Doctrine of Addai written

392 Theodore ordained as bishop of Mopsuestia

394 Death of Diodore of Tarsus

399 End of the Great Persecution under Yazdegerd I

409/10 Yazdegerd I's Edict of Toleration

410 First General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Isaac) confirms the primacy of the bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon as "Catholicos of all the Orient" and the equality of Seleucia-Ctesiphon with the sees of Jerusalem, Antioch, Alexandria and Rome, adopts the Nicene Creed and establishes metropolitans for Jundishapur, Nisibis, Basra, Arbela, and Kirkuk

The Lakhmid Arabs of Hirta receive a Nestorian bishop

Alaric the Goth sacks Rome

420 Second General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Yaballaha I)

Ma'na, a student at the School of Edessa, translates Syriac works into Pahlavi (Middle Persian)

Second persecution of the Persian church under Yazdegerd I and Bahram V

424 Third General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Dadyeshu) confirms Catholicos of the Church of the East as "Patriarch of the East" and asserts him as equal to all other patriarchs (no longer subject to Antioch or Rome)

Bishops appointed for Herat and Samarkand

428 Nestorius ordained as Patriarch of Constantinople

Death of Theodore of Mopsuestia

431 Third Ecumenical Council of Ephesus condemns Nestorius as a heretic

Rabbula, Bishop of Edessa, burns writings of Theodore of Mopsuestia

School of the Persians in Edessa first closed by Romans

440 The Hephthalites (White Huns, later known in the West as the Avars) move south from the Altai region to occupy Transoxiana (Central Asia), Bactria (Afghanistan), and Khurasan (eastern Persia)

443 John of Antioch and Cyril of Alexandria conclude a theological peace by compromise over Nestorianism

448 Third persecution of the Persian church under Yazdegerd II, including the massacre at Kirkuk

449 Second Council of Ephesus (Robber's Council)

451 Fourth Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon denounces Monophysitism

Death of Nestorius in exile in Egyptian desert

455 First Persian embassy reaches northern China

457 Barsauma flees from Edessa to Nisibis

Formal split between Syrian Monophysites and Syrian Nestorians

c. 460 The Hephthalite Huns conquer the Kushans and invade India

470 Ma'na, another student of the School of Edessa, writes religious discourses, canticles and hymns in Pahlavi for use in the Persian church

482 Emperor Zeno (Constantinople) issues the Henoticon, an edict of union designed to bridge the gap between the Monophysites and the Orthodox

484 Persian Church Council in Jundishapur approves marriage of bishops, honors memory of Theodore of Mopsuestia and adopts a Nestorian confession of faith under influence of Barsauma, Metropolitan of Nisibis

Rome, angry at Constantinople over the Henoticon, excommunicates Emperor Zeno and the Patriarch of Constantinople

486 Fourth General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Acacius) officially adopts Nestorian Christology and affirms right of priests and bishops to marry

489 School of the Persians in Edessa closed for last time by Roman Emperor Zeno, resulting in remaining Nestorians fleeing to Persian Empire to relocate in Nisibis

491 Birth of Abraham of Kaskar (later to become founder of Monastery of Mt. Izla)

496 Narsai draws up rules for School of Nisibis

Romulus Augustus, last Western Roman Emperor, deposed by Odovacar the German

497 Fifth General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Babai II)

498 Nestorians accompany Shah Kavad I to Turkestan and evangelize the Hephthalite Huns, north of the Oxus River

c. 500 The Arabs of Najran (southern Arabia) become Christians

519 Constantinople repudiates the Henoticon, ending its schism with Rome

522 Beginning of persecution of Christians by Jewish Himyarite kings of Yemen

523 The Ethiopians invade Arabia in response to pleas for help from Christians in Najran

The Himyarites defeat the Ethiopians and massacre the Christians of Najran

527 Jacob Bardaeus arrives in Constantinople

c. 535 The Hephthalite Huns learn to write, as a result of the work of Nestorian missionaries

540 The Persians, under Shah Khosro I, sack Antioch

540-552 Patriarchate of Mar Aba I, greatest Nestorian patriarch under the Sassanids

542-578 Jacob Bardaeus wanders throughout Syria, consecrating Monophysite priests and bishops

544 Sixth General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Mar Aba I) adopts the creed and decrees of the Council of Chalcedon

Some persecution of Persian Christians

549 Bishop consecrated for the Hephthalite Huns

550 Chronicle of Edessa written

552 The Turks destroy the Juan-juan Empire and establish the Turkic Khaganate, nominally divided into Western and Eastern Khanates

553 Ecumenical Council of Constantinople condems Theodore of Mopsuestia

553-68 The Turks and Persians ally to destroy the Hephthalite Empire

554 Seventh General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Yusuf) appoints metropolitans for Merv and Rewardashir

566/7 Eighth General Synod of the Persian Church

570 The Battle of the Elephant, in which the Meccans defeat the invading army of Christian Ethiopia

Birth of Muhammad

571 Henana becomes director of the school of Nisibis and proceeds to deviate from Nestorian orthodoxy

572-91 The Turks and the Byzantines ally against the Persians

575 Yemen becomes a Persian province with some probable conversion of Christians there to Nestorianism

579 Reference to a Nestorian Mar Sergius settling in China

581 Turkish prisoners captured by Persians discovered to have crosses tatooed on their foreheads

582 The Turkic Khaganate officially breaks up into Western and Eastern Khanates

585 Ninth General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Yeshuyab I) disapproves of Henana's teachings

586 Death of Abraham of Kaskar

591-602 Detente between Constantinople and Persia

596 Tenth General Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Sabaryeshu) condemns Henana's teachings, resulting in breakup of School of Nisibis

602 al-Numan, last king of the Christian Lakhmid Arabs, dies

607 The Persians capture Edessa

611 The Persians sack Antioch again

615 The Persians capture Jerusalem, massacring thousands, burning churches and carrying off "the true cross"

618 Establishment of the T'ang dynasty in China

622 Constantinople pushes the Persians back from the Mediterranean

Muhammad flees to Medina in the Hijra

627 Roman armies reach Dastegherd, causing the Persian Emperor Khosro I to flee

628/9 Maruta named as first maphrian (chief bishop) of Jacobite church in Persian Empire

628-643 Patriarchate of Yeshuyab II, during which metropolitans are appointed for Herat, Samarkand and possibly India

632 Death of Muhammad and Arab conquest of Mesopotamia

635 Arrival of Alopen in China as first Nestorian missionary

636 The Arabs defeat both the Persians and the Byzantines

637 Seleucia-Ctesiphon falls to the Arab armies

638 Emperor Tai Tsung issues Edict of Toleration for Christians in China and first Chinese church is built at Chang'an

The Arabs capture Jerusalem and conquer Syria

642 Arab conquest of Egypt and defeat of Persian Shah Yazdegird III at the Battle of Nahavand

Synod of the Persian Church (Synod of Yeshuyab II) establishes Halwan as a metropolitanate

644 Eliyah, Metropolitan of Merv, converts a Turkish king and his army

649 Arab conquest of Persian Empire completed

650-660 Patriarchate of Yeshuyab III, at which time there are two metropolitans and more than 20 bishops beyond the Oxus River and a metropolitanate is possibly established for India

651 Death of Yazdegird III, last Sassanid shah

652 The Arabs first capture Khurasan

661 Assassination of 'Ali at Kerbala, Iraq and beginning of Sunni-Shi'ite rift

Begining of the Umayyad caliphate, based in Damascus

667 The Arabs first cross the Oxus River

c. 670 Canons of Shimun (Simon), Metropolitan of Rewardashir, written in Pahlavi and later translated into Syriac

673/74-704 Arab raids across the Oxus in an attempt to capture Bukhara and Soghdiana

691 The re-establishment of the Eastern Turkic Khanate in the Tarim Basin

698-705 Persecution of Chinese Christians under Empress Wu

705 The Arabs, under Qutayba ibn Muslim, launch a holy war against Transoxiana from Merv

709 The Arabs capture Bukhara and Samarkand

711 The Arabs capture Khiva

712 First mosque built in Bukhara, later the second holiest city in Islam after Mecca

The Arabs subdue Khwarezm and recapture Samarkand

712-728 Patriarchate of Saliba-Zalkha, during which metropolitanate of China possibly created

713 The Arabs sack Kashgar

714 The Chinese, under emperor T'ai-tsong, defeat the Turks at Lake Issiq-kul

715 The end of the Arab conquest of Transoxiana as a result of the death of Qutaiba

724-748? Visit of Christian physicians to Japan and reported conversion of Empress (according to tradition)

728 Arab attempt to forcibly convert Transoxiana to Islam, resulting in general revolt

732 Charles Martel stops Arab advance into Europe

744 Arrival of new Nestorian missionaries in China

Formation of the Uighur Empire in Mongolia

750 Overthrow of the Umayyad caliphate and beginning of the 'Abbasid caliphate, based in Baghdad

751 The Arabs defeat the Chinese at the Battle of the Talas River and discover the secrets of making paper and silk from captured prisoners

755 Jacob, son of the Christian king of the Uighurs, joins with Kuang, son of the Chinese emperor Hsuan-Tsung, to put down the rebellion of An-Lu-Shan

756 Turkish general Tsz-i, a Nestorian Christian, defeats the rebel Amroshar

c. 760-790 Possible writing of a letter purported to be by Philoxenus which mentions Christianity among the early Turks

762 Uighurs adopt Manichaeism as state religion

'Abbassids move capital of the Caliphate to Baghdad

775 Patriarchate moved from Seleucia-Ctesiphon to Baghdad

779-823 Patriarchate of Timothy I, greatest Nestorian patriarch under the Arab Caliphate, during which metropolitans are appointed for Armenia and Syria and the Kaghan of the Turks is said to have been converted

779 or 781 Nestorian monument erected in Hsi-an-fu

781 Timothy I debates the Caliph al-Mahdi

Bishops consecrated for the Turks and for Tibet

807 Caliph Harun al-Rashid orders some churches to be torn down

830 Dar al-Hikmah ("House of Learning") established by Caliph al-Ma'mun, composed primarily of Nestorians

830s The Kirghiz drive the Uighurs west to the Tarim Basin

845 Imperial Edict in China results in persecution for Nestorians

849/50 Caliph al-Mutawakkil deposes the patriarch and institutes persecution of Christians

c. 850 Probable date of the Kerala copper plates, which give details of Christians in India

867-69 The rise of the Saffarid dynasty (Shi'ite) in Persia

874/75 The Persian Samanid dynasty (Sunni) obtains the administration of Transoxiana, with its capital in Bukhara, from the Caliph

878 Last definite reference to Christians in China before the Mongol era

900 The Samanids overthrow the Saffarids, thus extending their rule into all of Persia

907 Collapse of the T'ang dynasty in China

932 The Turkic Qarakhanid dynasty is established, with its initial center in Kashgar

942 Possible references to Christians in China by Arab poet from Bukhara who visited China

945 Persian Shi'ites sieze Baghdad and establish Buwayhid Amirate (with the Caliph as puppet)

962 The Turkic Ghaznavid dynasty is established in Afghanistan

969 Shi'ite Fatimid dynasty founded in Egypt

981 Visit of Nestorian monks to China finds no traces of Christian community left

985 The Seljuq Turks, a ruling tribe of the Oghuz, move to the vicinity of Bukhara

999 The Ghaznavids defeat the Samanids in Khurasan and the Qarakhanids seize Bukhara, deposing the Samanids

1007-1008 Conversion of 200,000 Kerait Turks

1040 The Seljuqs defeat the Ghaznavids at the Battle of Dandanqan, near Merv

1055 The Seljuqs enter Baghdad, overthrow the Buwayhids and become the official protectors of Islam

1063 Metropolitan ordained for Khitai (northern China)

1065 Establishment of Nestorian metropolitanate of Jerusalem

1071 The Seljuqs defeat the Byzantines at the Battle of Manzikert, capturing the Byzantine emperor Romanus Diogenes, and establish the Turkish sultanate of Rum in Anatolia

1073 The Seljuqs defeat the Qarakhanids

1095 Pope Urban II issues the call for the First Crusade

1097 The first Crusaders arrive in the Middle East

1099 The Crusaders capture Jerusalem

1124 The Tungusic Juchen drive the Mongol Khitans (Liao dynasty: 916-1124) from China, resulting in the creation of the Qara-Khitai state in Semirechye

1137 The Qara-Khitai defeat the Qarakhanids (now vassals of the Seljuqs) at Khojent

1141 The Qara-Khitai defeat the Seljuk Sultan Sanjar (possible basis for the Prester John legend)

1142 Formal reconciliation between Nestorian patriarch and Jacobite primate

1145 First mention of Prester John in Europe

1155/62/67? Birth of Temüchin (Chingiz Khan)

c. 1180 Metropolitan appointed for Kashgar

1187 The Muslims, under Saladin, recapture Jerusalem from the Crusaders

1194 The death of Tghril III, the last Persian Seljuq ruler, resulting in the end of Seljuq power in Iran and the rise of the Turkic Khwarezmians in Transoxiana

c. 1200 Suleyman of Bakirghan, a subject of the Khwarezmshahs, writes a poem on the death of the Virgin, inspired by Nestorian writings

1203 Temüchin defeats Toghril Wang Khan

1206 Temüchin proclaimed Chingiz Khan (Great Khan of all Mongols)

1209 The Mongols defeat the Kirghiz and the Uighurs

1210 The Khwarezmians conquer Transoxiana, defeating the Qara-Khitai

1218 The Mongols defeat Küchlüg, Naiman ruler of the Qara-Khitai

The Mongols capture Semirechye and the Tarim Basin, occupying Kashgar and crushing the Qara-Khitai

1220 The Mongols capture Bukhara and Samarkand

1221 The Mongols defeat the Khwarazmshah Aladdin Muhammad and capture Nishapur

1222 Patna, India becomes a metropolitan see (?)

1223/24 The Mongols defeat the Russians on the river Kalka

1227 Death of Chingiz Khan

c. 1230? Birth of Rabban Sauma

1236-1241 Mongol invasion of Europe

1240 Kiev falls to the Mongols and Russia comes under the Mongol yoke

1241 Death of Khan Ogetai saves Europe from further destruction by the Mongols

1243 The Mongols defeat the Seljuqs at the Battle of Ksedagh

1245 Birth of Markos (later Yaballaha III) in China

1247 Visit of John of Plano Carpini to Karakorum

1248 Appointment of metropolitan for Khanbalik (Peking)

1249/50 The establishment of the Kipchak Turkic Mamluke dynasty in Egypt

1249-1345 Date of inscriptions on Nestorian gravestones near Bishkek

1252 Death of Sorkaktani, Christian mother of Mönke (Mangu), Hulagu and Kublai Khan

1253 Visit of William of Rubruck to Karakorum

1258 Overthrow of the 'Abbasid caliphate by the Mongols, led by Hulagu, the first Il-khan

1260 Capture of Aleppo and Damascus by Kitbuka, Christian Mongol general

Defeat of the Mongols by the Mamlukes at 'Ayn Jalut

Kublai Khan conquers China and establishes the Mongol Yüan dynasty

1260-1264 Civil war between Kublai Khan and Arikbuka (who was backed by Mongol Christians)

1264 Bar Hebraeus becomes Jacobite maphrian of the East

1265 Death of Hulagu and Dokuz Khatun, his Christian wife

1265/6 Maffeo and Niccolo Polo reach the court of Kublai Khan

1269 Mongol Chagatid khanate splits into eastern and western parts

1275 The Polos return to China with Marco

1277?-1279 Journey of Markos and Rabban Sauma from Khanbalik to Baghdad

1278-1281 Governorship of Mar Sergius (a Nestorian Christian) in Gansu Province, China

1280 John of Monte Corvino's first mission to Persia

Defeat of the Mongols by the Muslims in the Middle East

1281 Election of Markos as Yaballaha III, first and only Turkic Nestorian patriarch

1284 Bar Hebraeus restructures the Jacobite church in the Persian Il-khanate

The Uighur Kingdom is absorbed into the Chagatai Khanate

1286 Death of Bar Hebraeus

1287 Rebellion of Nayan (nominal Christian) against Kublai Khan

1287-1288 Mission of Rabban Sauma to Europe

1289 Kublai Khan creates a department to deal with Christians in his empire and appoints Nestorian Ai-hsueh as its first president

1289-1290 Other Mongol diplomatic missions to Europe

1291 Monte Corvino stops in India en route to China, visits the tomb of St Thomas, and baptizes 100 people as Catholics

Muslims capture the last Crusader fortress of Acre (Akka)

1293 Death of Rabban Sauma

1294 Death of Kublai Khan

First Catholic mission to China, led by Monte Corvino, reaches Khanbalik

1295 Conversion of the Il-khans of Persia to Islam under Ghazan (Mahmud)

1298 Death of Ongut Christian Prince George in the service of the Mongols

The Uriyan-gakit, a Turkic tribe, is recorded as having a Christian queen (possibly the sister of Prince George)

1299-1300 The Seljuq Sultanate of Anatolia breaks up into smaller principalities, to be succeeded by the Ottoman Turk Emirate

1301 Khanate of Eastern Turkestan absorbed into Khanate of Western Turkestan

1303 The Mamlukes stop the last Mongol invasion of Syria

1307 Il-khan Oljaitu orders Georgian king to convert to Islam

Monte Corvino appointed Catholic archbishop of Khanbalik

1310 Muslim massacre of Christians in Arbela

1313-41/42 The rule of the Golden Horde by Khan Uzbek, under whom the Horde converts to Islam

1317 Death of Yaballaha III

1318 Last recorded Synod of the Nestorian Church in Persia elects Timothy II as patriarch

Pope John XXII divides Asia into missionary districts, giving China to the Franciscans and Persia to the Dominicans

1320 Catholic bishopric established in Almaliq (Kulja)

Catholic vicarate of Cathay (China) established

1321 Jordanus, a Dominican monk, arrives in India as the first resident Catholic missionary

1322 Odoric of Pordenone, a Franciscan monk, arrives in China

1324 Odoric of Pordenone visits the tomb of St. Thomas in India but finds only Nestorians there (not Catholics)

1326 Chagatid Khan Ilchigedai grants permission for Catholics to build a church dedicated to John the Baptist in Samarkand

Conversion of the Chagatid Khan Tarmashirin to Islam

1328 While in Italy, Jordanus is consecrated as the Catholic bishop of Columbum (Quilon, India) with a mission of converting the Muslims and bringing the Nestorians into the Catholic Church (but he never returns to India)

1334 Chagatid Khan Buzun allows Nestorians and Jews to rebuild churches and synagogues and permits Franciscans to establish a missionary episcopate in Almaliq

1335 Abu Said, last Il-khan, dies and the dynasty ends

1336 Birth of Timur

1339 Christians in Almaliq (including Catholic bishop and priests) massacred by Muslims

1340 Nestorian college for "Tatars" still operating in Merv

1342 John of Marignolli, last resident Catholic bishop of Peking, arrives in China

1346 Chagatid khanate again splits into western and eastern Turkestan, both effectively ruled by Turkic governors

1348 Catholics leave Persia

1363 Timur expels Chagatid Khan Tughlug Timur and sets up a puppet khan under his control

1368 Mongol Yan dynasty falls to Ming dynasty in China

1369/70 Timur becomes the sole ruler of Transoxiana

1374 Date of a Nestorian lectionary written in Samarkand

1380-87 Timur conquers Iran

c. 1390 Final conversion of the Uighurs in Turfan to Islam

1395 Timur defeats Khan Tokhtamysh, destroys the Golden Horde capital of Sarai Berke, and briefly occupies Moscow

1398 Timur sacks Delhi

1400 Timur defeats the Mamlukes in Syria

1401 Timur sacks Baghdad, killing thousands of Muslims and Christians

1402 Timur defeats the Ottoman sultan Bayezid I at the Battle of Ankara

1403-1406 Clavijo, Spanish ambassador from Castile, at the court of Timur

1405 Death of Timur en route to his planned invasion of China

1440 Nicolo Conti reports meeting Nestorians in "Cathay" (China)

1453 The Ottoman Turks capture Constantinople, thus bringing to an end the Byzantine Empire

1467 Last khan of the line of Chingiz Khan dies in Mongolia, leaving the area in a state of anarchy

1490 St. Thomas Christians from India travel to the Nestorian patriarch in Gagarta, near Mosul, to bring back bishops for India

1498 The Portuguese arrive in India and begin to force many Nestorians to convert to Catholicism

1499-1736 Safavid Dynasty in Persia

1503 Patriarch Mar Eliyah consecrates Metropolitans for India, Java and China

1542 St. Francis Xavier arrives in India

1552 Formation of Chaldean Patriarchate (Uniate body in communion with Rome)

1608 Matteo Ricci reports finding a small remnant of Nestorians in China

1625 Discovery of Nestorian monument in China

1665 Jacobite bishop appointed for India

1670 Chaldean Patriarch cuts off ties with Rome

1831 Arrival of first American missionaries amongst Nestorians

1846 Revival in Nestorian girl's school

Printing of Syriac New Testament

Kurdish masscre of 10,000 Nestorians

1852 Printing of Syriac Old Testament

1855 Formation of Protestant Nestorian congregation

1885 Discovery of Nestorian cemetaries in Russian Turkestan by Russian explorers

1917 Nestorian Patriarch Mar Shimun murdered by Kurds

1935 The Patriarch and many other Nestorians emigrate to USA and other Western countries

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