Cyril V Zaim
Cyril V Zaim | |
---|---|
Patriarch of Antioch | |
Church | Melkite Church |
See | Patriarch of Antioch |
Term ended | 16 January 1720 |
Predecessor | Neophytos of Chios |
Successor | Athanasius III Dabbas |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Costantine Zaim |
Born |
about 1655 Aleppo |
Died |
16 January 1720 Damascus |
Patriarch Constantine Cyril V Zaim (about 1655–1720), sometimes known also as Cyril III,[1] was Greek Patriarch of Antioch.
Life
Constantine Zaim was born on about 1655[2] in Aleppo[3] and he was the nephew of Patriarch Macarios III Zaim, who died in 1672. Immediately after, Constantine Zaim was elected patriarch with the help of the governor of Damascus, and on July 2, 1672[4][5] he was consecrated bishop by Gregory of Bosra, Leonce (Lawandius) of Saidnaya and other two bishops, and enthroned taking the name of Cyril V.[6] His election was contested by some bishops and by Dositheos, patriarch of Jerusalem, who considered his election to be null pointing out that Cyril Zaim was not in the legal age to be appointed bishop. This party supported Neophytos of Chios, nephew of previous Patriarch Euthymius III of Chios, who went to Constantinople where he obtained a firman in his favor from the Ottoman sultan and the appointment to Patriarch by the Ecumenical Patriarch Dionysius IV of Constantinople, thus splitting the Patriarchate of Antioch in two factions. In 1682 Neophytos of Chios, because of his debts, decided to retire, leaving Cyril V Zaim as the only claimant.
This situation lasted not for long: the next contender of the patriarchal throne was Athanasius Dabbas who was supported by the Franciscan friars (who opposed Cyril Zaim, charged of simony) and by his maternal uncle Michael Khayat, very influential with the Sublime Porte. In 1685 Michael Khayat succeeded to get from the Ottoman Empire a firman that appointed Athanasius Dabbas as Patriarch of the Melkite Church. Thus on July 5, 1685 Athanasius Dabbas was consecrated bishop and enthroned as Patriarch with the name of Athanasius III.
The next nine years were marked by the conflict between the two claiming Patriarchs, Cyril V Zaim and Athanasius III Dabbas. The fight ended on October 1694 when the two rivals came to an agreement after the arbitration of Salmon, an Aleppian Jew. The terms of the agreement were: Athanasius recognized Cyril as Patriarch in change of 13.000 Écus, the appointment to the See of Aleppo and the right to succession at Cyril's death.[7] This agreement was judged in 1698 null by the Vatican, which continued to consider as Patriarch Athanasius, who in 1687 made a Roman Catholic profession of faith.
In 1716 the reigning Patriarch Cyril V Zaim made he too a Roman Catholic profession of faith and he was received in communion with Rome on May 9, 1718,[6] He died in Damascus on 5 January 1720,[8] and he was succeeded by Athanasius III Dabbas.
Notes
- ↑ He is known as Cyril V in the patriarchal lists of Le Quien, Korolevski, and Skaff, as Cyril III in the list of Costantius.
- ↑ He was 17 in 1672 according to Mansi, Joannes Dominicus (1905). Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio 37. Paris. p. 119.
- ↑ Masters, Bruce (2004). Cambridge University Press, ed. Christians and Jews in the Ottoman Arab World: The Roots of Sectarianism. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-521-00582-1.
- ↑ on July 12 according to the Julian calendar
- ↑ Korolevsky, Cyril (1924). "Antioche". Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie ecclésiastiques 3. Paris: Letouzey et Ané. p. 644.
- 1 2 Skaff, Elias (1993). The place of the Patriarchs of Antioch in Church History. Sophia Press. pp. 305ss.
- ↑ Levenq, G. (1930). "Athanase III". Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie ecclésiastiques 4. Paris: Letouzey et Ané. pp. 1369–1376.
- ↑ on January 16 according to the Julian calendar, or on May 5 according to the other sources