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Isaac of Antioch

Isaac of Antioch

?460 CE · Constantinople (Istanbul)

Isaac of Antioch was a fifth-century Syriac priest and prolific poet, celebrated as one of the most important figures in the classical Syriac literary tradition. He is credited with a vast corpus of metrical homilies called memre, composed predominantly in the seven-syllable meter, covering ascetic practice, biblical theology, repentance, and contemporary historical events — including a celebrated lament on the earthquake that destroyed Antioch in 459. Traditional sources describe the principal figure as a native of Amid (modern Diyarbakir) and a pupil, directly or indirectly, of Ephrem the Syrian; he visited Rome under the emperor Arcadius (395–408), was imprisoned briefly at Constantinople on his return, and afterward served as a priest and abbot near Antioch until his death around 460 CE. Modern scholarship has established that the manuscript tradition conflates the works of at least two, and possibly three, distinct Syriac authors writing under the name Isaac: Isaac of Amid, Isaac of Antioch, and Isaac of Edessa. The celebrated Memra on the Trisagion (the parrot poem) is associated by modern scholars specifically with a second Isaac — an Edessan priest who went to Antioch in the time of the emperor Zeno and patriarch Peter the Fuller (c. 471–488) — and thus postdates the death of the principal figure by more than a decade. No single biography can be fully verified for the composite corpus, but the figure who composed the earthquake lament ministered at Antioch and died around 460 CE, and the corpus as a whole represents an extraordinary monument of Syriac Christian verse and theological reflection.

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Stop 1 of 4350–395Birthplace, Early Life

Amid (Amida)Turkey

What they did here

Isaac is traditionally said to have been born at Amid (modern Diyarbakir) in upper Mesopotamia; tradition identifies him as a pupil of Ephrem the Syrian or of Zenobius, Ephrem's disciple.

See other sages who lived in Amid (Amida)

Works

No works attributed in the corpus yet.