Difference between revisions of "Nestorian Christianity"

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The Nestorians were expelled from the Roman Church in the 400s, due to heterodox beliefs about the nature of Christ. By [[638]], the Nestorian Church had spread all the way to [[Tang Dynasty]] China.
 
The Nestorians were expelled from the Roman Church in the 400s, due to heterodox beliefs about the nature of Christ. By [[638]], the Nestorian Church had spread all the way to [[Tang Dynasty]] China.
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In the [[Yuan dynasty]] (13th-14th c.), nomadic groups in Mongolia, to the north and west of [[Beijing]], included some particularly strong centers of Nestorianism. Crosses and other items in bronze or iron have been found in burials from the time.<ref>Gallery labels, Royal Ontario Museum.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/48532549207/in/photostream/]</ref>
  
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
*Colleen Ho, "Rabban Sauma: A Medieval Eurasian Traveler & Diplomat of Many Identities," Shape Shifters: Journeys Across Terrains of Race and Identity conference, University of California, Santa Barbara, 18 March 2016.
 
*Colleen Ho, "Rabban Sauma: A Medieval Eurasian Traveler & Diplomat of Many Identities," Shape Shifters: Journeys Across Terrains of Race and Identity conference, University of California, Santa Barbara, 18 March 2016.
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[[Category:Religion]]
 
[[Category:Religion]]

Revision as of 20:08, 14 August 2020

Bronze Nestorian crosses from the Yuan dynasty on display at the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto.

Nestorian Christianity, also known as the Church of the East or the Assyrian Church of the East, is a branch of Christianity which was the dominant form of Christianity in China for nearly a thousand years before the arrival of Catholicism and Protestantism in the 16th-17th centuries.

The Nestorians were expelled from the Roman Church in the 400s, due to heterodox beliefs about the nature of Christ. By 638, the Nestorian Church had spread all the way to Tang Dynasty China.

In the Yuan dynasty (13th-14th c.), nomadic groups in Mongolia, to the north and west of Beijing, included some particularly strong centers of Nestorianism. Crosses and other items in bronze or iron have been found in burials from the time.[1]

References

  • Colleen Ho, "Rabban Sauma: A Medieval Eurasian Traveler & Diplomat of Many Identities," Shape Shifters: Journeys Across Terrains of Race and Identity conference, University of California, Santa Barbara, 18 March 2016.
  1. Gallery labels, Royal Ontario Museum.[1]