Barhebraeus
Gregory Barhebraeus or Bar Hebraeus, also known as Abu al-Faraj and in Latin, Abulpharagius, was the maphrian of the Syriac Orthodox Church from 1264 until his death in 1286. He is recognised as one of the most accomplished and multifaceted academics of the medieval Syriac Christian world, with important contributions to the fields of theology, philosophy, history, linguistics, medicine, and the natural sciences.
Barhebraeus was born in Melitene during the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum. He experienced the shifting borders of the early Mongol era, Ayyubid rule, and Crusader dominions. Barhebraeus's early education in medicine and logic was influenced by his father Aaron's experience serving in the upper echelons of the Mongol armies as a physician and deacon. Later in life, he was ordained bishop and soon elevated to maphrian, under which he travelled across the Middle East, engaged in scholarship, and sought to support his community through the difficult 13th-century period.
The monumental chronicle, a universal history written in Syriac and translated into Arabic under the title Tārīkh Mukhtaṣar al-Duwal, was part of Barhebraeus' vast body of work. In addition, he produced important theological and ascetic treatises, medical books, grammars, and encyclopaedic works like the "Cream of Wisdom". Barhebraeus's writings were read by a wide range of intellectual circles outside of his Syriac Orthodox community, including Christians of different denominations, Muslim scholars, Latin orientalists, and later found in academic archives in Europe.
The immense scholarship brought forth by Barhebraeus revitalised Syriac literature at a time when it was in decline and bridged Christian, Islamic, and classical traditions, which earned him epithets such as the "Ocean of Wisdom", "Light of East and West", and "King of Learned Men". He is commemorated with great honour as a saint in the Oriental Orthodox Church and especially in the Syriac Orthodox tradition where his feast is celebrated on 30 July, the date of his repose, and his relics at Mor Mattai Monastery remain a popular pilgrimage site.
Name
The name Barhebraeus literally means 'Son of the Hebrew', and although the phrase might suggest Jewish ancestry, this interpretation is almost unanimously rejected by modern scholars. There is no evidence of Jewish elements in his writings and his family background was Christian, noble, and clerical; his father, Aaron, was a deacon — a name that, despite its Hebrew origin, was common among Christians of the region and period.Barhebraeus himself addressed the misunderstanding in a short epigram:
If the Lord called himself a Samaritan, do not be ashamed when they call you Bar ʿEbrāyā. For the name has to do with the Euphrates and with the river, not with the false religion or with the language.Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem I Barsoum interpreted the epithet as originating from the circumstances of his birth, that his mother gave birth to him while crossing the Euphrates, the Syriac word ʿbar also meaning 'crossing'. Modern scholars, however, associate it with a village named ʿEbra near Melitene, situated on the banks of the Euphrates River.
His Arabic name Abu'l-Faraj appears in his own usage for the first time on the eve of his episcopal ordination, which means that Gregory was his episcopal name, while Abu'l-Faraj was his earlier personal designation. The Syriac name Bar ʿEbrāyā is sometimes Arabised as ibn al-ʿIbrī, and in medieval Latin texts, he is known as Abulpharagius.
W. Budge states that Barhebraeus was given the baptismal name John, but modern scholarship suggests that this might be the result of confusion with Gregory John of Bartelli. Still, the inscription on his grave at Mor Mattai Monastery reads: "This is the grave of Mar Gregory John, and of Mar Bar Sawma, his brother, the children of the Hebrew on Mount Elpeph."
Life
Barhebraeus was born in 1225 or 1226 AD under the rule of the Rum Seljuks and lived through a succession of regimes including the Crusaders, the Ayyubids, and later the Mongols. He was a native of Melitene, then a major metropolitan and cultural centre of the Syriac Orthodox Church.His father, Aaron was both a deacon and a renowned physician, known to have treated the Mongol general Yasa'ur during the siege of Melitene. This profession placed the family among the patrician class, to which his mother also belonged. He had at least one brother Safi and probably three more named Michael, Muwaffaq, and Quphar. Barsauma's monastic name was later changed to Gregory upon ordination.
The family remained in Melitene until 1242–1243. After Aaron's medical service to Yasaʾur, they moved to Antioch, where Barhebraeus continued his studies, and at around seventeen years of age, he became a monk and began to live as a hermit upon ordination by Patriarch Ignatius III David. Influenced by his father, Barhebraeus left Antioch and travelled to Tripoli, a Crusader state at the time, to begin his study of medicine alongside Saliba bar Jacob Wajih of Edessa — the future Maphrian Ignatius IV. His expertise eventually secured him the position of personal physician to Hulagu Khan, which was remarkable achievement. He later undertook practical training in Damascus under Jamal al-Din ibn al-Rahbi al-Dimashqi at the Nur al-Din Hospital.
Episcopate
Barhebraeus was first ordained bishop of Gubbos by Patriarch Ignatius David III, and soon after transferred to Laqabin, both near Melitene, where he was ordained maphrian. He supported Dionysius VII ʿAngur in his conflict with John XV bar Maʿdani. As a reward, Dionysius appointed him bishop of Aleppo. His tenure was short-lived, however, as his former colleague Saliba bar Jacob Wajih sided with John bar Maʿdani and succeeded in having him expelled. Barhebraeus briefly resided with his father Aaron in Aleppo, then moved to Mar Barsawma Monastery, where Dionysius resided. In 1258 he travelled to Damascus to secure reinstatement for himself and Dionysius, aided by the Melitene-born physician Qir Michael bar Gabras. He was present in Aleppo in January 1260 when the Mongols invaded; his attempt to spare his people, in vain, led to temporary detainment in Qalʿat al-Najm. He was eventually released and reconciled with John bar Maʿdani.Unlike earlier maphrians who had resided in the Levant to escape persecution, thereby neglecting their home dioceses, Barhebraeus chose to live among his flock in Tagrit and at times in the nearby Monastery of Mor Mattai, even amidst the violent persecutions under the Mongols and Mamluks in the thirteenth century.
From 1260 to 1264 Barhebraeus served at the Mongol court as personal physician to Hulagu Khan before being elected maphrian by Ignatius IV at Sis in Cilicia on 19/20 January 1264. The ceremony was grand, attended by King Hethum II, his brothers and sons, Armenian high priests, and dignitaries from many nations and faiths, along with a large assembly of Syriac Orthodox bishops and laymen. Afterwards, he travelled widely throughout Mesopotamia and Iranian Azerbaijan, particularly between Nineveh and the cities of Tabriz and Maragha, centres of the Ilkhanid court and learning.
Death
Barhebraeus wrote in one poem: "O' net of the world, in 1226 your trap caught me, and I think in 1286 I will not be in you." In 1286, he travelled to Tabriz and completed an Arabic translation of the Syriac work The Political History of the World within thirty days.Soon after, in Maragha, he fell ill with a fever two days before his death and, as he predicted, died on the night of Tuesday, July 30, 1286, in the presence of his brother Barsauma and many others. A grand funeral was held in Maragha, and Catholicos Yahballaha III of the Church of the East declared a public day of mourning attended by "Nestorians, Armenians, and Greeks". His remains were interred beneath an altar in the Maragha church and later translated to Mor Mattai Monastery, where they are kept today alongside his brother's.
Legacy
He was ordained monk in 1244, bishop in 1246, and maphrian on 19 January 1264. He founded two churches, two monasteries, two episcopal residences, and a guesthouse for travellers. During his tenure, he consecrated twelve bishops, including his biographer Dioscorus of Gozarto and his disciple Philoxenus I Nemrud. After Nemrud's death, what followed was a schism in the Syriac Orthodox patriarchate.One of the most distinguished holders of the title of 'Maphrian' was Barhebraeus. He spent most of his life, including all of his later years, within Mongol territory until his death in 1286. While based mainly in Nineveh and the environs of Mosul and Mor Mattai Monastery, he maintained friendships with scholars of diverse faiths and frequently travelled to major learning centres, most importantly Maragha in Iranian Azerbaijan, then-capital of the Mongol khanate. His close ties with Mongols and other communities enabled him to provide detailed first‑hand accounts, which is why the events of the 13th century are so well documented in both his secular and ecclesiastical chronicles.
Barhebraeus also highlights the crucial part Syriac scholars played in bringing Greek philosophy to the Arab world in his reflections on intellectual history. He places Syriac scholarship as an important bridge in the larger evolution of medieval intellectual culture, attributing the medieval Arab interest in philosophy and the sciences to the translation efforts of earlier Syriac writers.
Writings
Barhebraeus was among the most prolific writers of the Middle Ages, with his surviving corpus being vast and diverse, spanning theology, philosophy, history, medicine, grammar, astronomy, and the natural sciences. His brother Barsauma reports a total of 31 works by him, though his disciple Dioscorus of Gozarto and various manuscripts have variations on this total. His writings were so extensive and refined that J.S. Assemani called them "easily the chief of the writings of the Jacobites" and J.P.P. Martin described him as "one of the most prolific writers to have ever emerged". Jean Maurice Fiey said that while Barhebraeus was "often just a populariser", he was a "genius populariser, and one can only admire the amount of work he has produced, especially when considering the often difficult circumstances in which he had to operate".Barhebraeus's corpus reflects the full breadth of intellectual traditions available in his time. Göttsberger compared him with Ephrem the Syrian and Jacob of Edessa as the third great pillar of Syriac intellectual history — Ephrem representing pure Syriac thought, Jacob Greek influence, and Barhebraeus the synthesis of Arabic and Islamic science and philosophy. His works display familiarity with Islamic scholarship by drawing from Ibn Sina, al-Ghazali, and al-Abhari.
Barhebraeus's writings circulated widely. They were found in virtually every Syriac-speaking region to the extent that any single library might contain up to 10 percent of its manuscripts authored by him. His writings were translated into Arabic and cited as a major authority. They were read across confessional line by the Church of the East, the Maronites, the Coptic Orthodox, and the Melkites; they were read even by Muslims, especially his medical works. His texts also reached Europe where early Orientalists and Syriacists studied them extensively.
Barhebraeus's works largely consist of compendia that synthesise material from older Syriac and more recent Arabo‑Persian literature. Previously castigated as a skilful but unoriginal compiler of earlier works, that judgement is misplaced, as his originality lies in his choice of sources and his openness to knowledge found in Islamic and non‑Orthodox texts. His writings remained standard across Syriac Christianity including its Eastern, Western and Maronite branches. They were translated into Arabic mainly by Daniel of Mardin and Grigorios Yuhanna bin al-Ghurayr al-Zurbabi.