Mar Sabor and Mar Proth, according to
Syrian Christians of
Kerala, were two
Church of the EastBishops believed to have arrived in 825 AD alongside a group of Christian settlers led by a merchant from Persia. Together, they established
ecclesiastical institutions in several regions. Revered for their devoutness, they were posthumously recognized as
saints by the local ecclesiastical body. [1][2] The mission is said to have received permission from the then king of Kerala to build a church in Kollam.[3][4][5]
That the historicity of this mission cannot be verified does not dispute the epigraphical evidence that Christians were on the
Malabar Coast in 9th century AD.
Kollam Syrian copper plates, a 9th-century royal grant from Kerala, mentions that certain Maruvan Sapir Iso built a church at Kollam with the blessing of the then
Emperor of Kerala. It is likely that Mar Sapir had a companion named Mar Prot.[6] A stone cross, one of the five Persian Crosses, with
Sassanid Pahlavi inscription recovered also mentions certain "Afras the Syrian" as "the son of Chaharabukht".[7]
MS Vatican Syriac N. iv., which is dated to 1556 and written in the Kottakkavu Church, has the following colophon in folio 278:
"By the help of our Lord we have finished this book of the Prophets; it was written on a Monday, the 18th of February, in the year 1556 of the birth of our Lord. I, priest Jacob, the disciple of Mar Jacob, and from the village of Puraur, have written this book in the holy Church of Mar Shapur and Mar Iapot [Aprot]. May the holy name of God be praised for ever. Amen!"[9]
Variations of the names
Mar is a Syriac term meaning '(My)Lord' usually prefixed for Saints and Bishops in the Syriac tradition.
Mar Prot (Land) - Prodh (T. K. Joseph and Gouva)/Proth - Firous (La Croz) - Aphrottu (Burnell)/Aphroth - Ambrose (Swanston)[8]
Major studies
Recent
The Kollam Plates in the World of the Ninth Century Indian Ocean. Delhi: Primus Books (upcoming).
M. R. Raghava Varier and K. Veluthat, 2013. Tarissāppaḷḷippaṭṭayam, Trivandrum: National Book Stall
C. G. Cereti, 'The Pahlavi Signatures on the Quilon Copper Plates', in Exegisti Monument (Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz, 2009).
C. G. Cereti, L. M. Olivieri, and J. Vazhuthanapally, 'The Problem of the Saint Thomas Crosses and Related Questions', East and West 52:1/ 4 (2002).
M. G. S. Narayanan, Cultural Symbiosis in Kerala (Trivandrum: Kerala Historical Society, 1972).
W. Baum and R. Senoner (eds. and trans.), Indien und Europa im Mittelalter: Die Eingliederung des Kontinents in das europäische Bewußtsein bis ins 15. Jahrhundert (Klagenfurt: Kitab, 2000).
Others
Travancore Archaeological Series, Volume II, no. 9 (I and II).
C. P . T. Winckworth, 'A New Interpretation of the Pahlavi Cross Inscriptions', Kerala Society Papers, no. 3.
Land, 'Brief History of the Syrians of Malabar'. Anedocta Syriaca, I.
Joseph, T. K., 'Mar Sapir and Mar Prodh', Indian Antiquary, 1928, III.
A. Mingana, “The Early Spread of Christianity in India”, Bulletin of John Ryland's Library 10:2 (1926).
W. Logan, Malabar Manual, (ed. P. Cherian (2000).
A. C. Burnell, Indian Antiquary, III.
Gundert, Madras Journal of Literature and Science, XIII, I.
Rev. J. Monteiro D'Aguir, 'The Magna Carta of St. Thomas Christians', Kerala Society Papers, no. 4.
Synod of Diamper
When they arrived on the Malabar Coast, the Portuguese noted at least 78 extant church communities closely interwoven with the local community in different parts of Kerala.
Quilon,
Angamaly,
Kaduthuruthy and Cranganore (now known as
Kodungallur) had the largest population of
Saint Thomas Christians in Kerala. Giovanni Empoli, who came to
Quilon in 1503, estimated that there were more than three thousand St. Thomas Christians in Quilon alone.[10]
After 1561, Thomas Christians were branded heretics by the
Goa Inquisition. The infamous
Synod of Diamper (1599) anathematized all Christians of India who did not submit to Rome. The synod even branded Mar Sabor and Mar Prot as "Nestorian heretics" at the instance of the Portuguese.[8]
"Mar" (
Syriac: "lord") is an espiscopal title used in the
Malabar churches and in West Asia, while "Sapor" (Syriac: Shapur) and "Prodh" (Syriac: Firuz) are alternative names used in the
Sasanian Empire in the 4-5th centuries AD. A Christian grant made by the
Kollam ruler dating to about 824 AD bears the name "Maruvan Sapir Iso", which is believed to be an amalgamation of "Mar Sapor" and "Mar Prodh".[11]
References
^Sprague, Sean.
"Twin Saints, Twin Churches". CNEWA. Catholic Near East Welfare Association. Retrieved 19 March 2024.