Armenian Apostolic Patriarchate of Jerusalem
Road 86, PO Box 14235
91141 Jerusalem
+97226282331
À propos de nous
The first Patriarch of the Church of Jerusalem was the Apostle St. James. In 381 during the second Ecumenical Council in Constantinople, the Episcopate of Jerusalem became a Patriarchate. Beginning in the 4th century numerous Armenian pilgrims visited Jerusalem. Armenian principalities and Episcopal Sees built many monasteries there for the use of their pilgrims and religious communities. The number of these monasteries amounted to 70 in the 6th century. In the middle of the 6th century, after the adoption of the doctrine of Chalcedon by the Byzantine Patriarchate of Jerusalem, the Armenian Church of Jerusalem was separated from the Patriarchate of Jerusalem and became the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem. The first Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem was Abraham who, according to the Arab historian Zeki-al-Din, seeing that the influence of Muhammad was growing stronger, went to him personally in 626 and received an official document regarding the safety of the Armenian Church and her possessions in Jerusalem. When King Oshin and the Catholicos Constantine III of Caesarea forced the Armenian Church to adopt the dogmatic and ritual changes of the Council of Sis in 1307, the Patriarch of Jerusalem, Sarkis, wishing to preserve the purity of the doctrine of the Armenian Church, obtained an official document from the Sultan of Egypt, permitting him to take his See from the control of the Catholicosate of All Armenians and to function independently as of 1311. The Patriarch of Jerusalem is the guardian of the Holy Shrines which are jointly shared by the Churches of the Holy Land. Today the Patriarchate of Jerusalem oversees the Armenian Churches of Israel, Palestine and Jordan.