E01197: After the pagan temple in Heliopolis-Baalbek (Lebanon) had been destroyed by lightning in the year 525/6, a church dedicated to *Mary (Mother of Christ, S00033) was built in its place. Record in the Syriac Chronicle of Pseudo-Zachariah Rhetor (6th c.).
'Lightning came down from heaven while it drizzled; it struck the temple and pulverised the stones with its heat, and knocked over its pillars, smashing it into pieces and destroying it, but it did not touch the three stones. They remain pristine, and now a house of prayer has been built there, to Mary the holy virgin birthgiver of God.'
Ed. Brooks 1919-1924, v. 2, p. 76. Trans. Greatrex et al. 2011, p. 296.
Literary - Other narrative texts (including Histories)
Language
Syriac
Evidence not before
503
Evidence not after
569
Activity not before
525
Activity not after
569
Place of Evidence - Region
Mesopotamia
Place of Evidence - City, village, etc
Amida
Place of evidence - City name in other Language(s)
Amida
Edessa
Edessa
Ἔδεσσα
Edessa
Cult activities - Places
Cult building - independent (church)
Cult activities - Non Liturgical Practices and Customs
Construction of cult buildings
Source
The Chronicle of Pseudo-Zachariah Rhetor is a historiographical work that, for the most part, deals with the period from the middle of the 5th to the middle of the 6th century. It was composed, apparently, around the year 568/9 by a Syriac-speaking writer, most likely a citizen of the city of Amida. Produced as a whole in Syriac, the Chronicle is a complex and composite work, which includes a number of texts translated into Syriac from Greek, such as the History of Joseph and Aseneth, the Acts of St Silvester of Rome, and the Ecclesiastical History of Zachariah of Mytilene.
Syriac text: Brooks 1919-1924, vv. 1-2; English translation: Hamilton and Brooks 1899; Greatrex et al. 2011; German translation: Ahrens and Krüger 1899; Latin translation: Brooks 1919-1924, v. 3. For general information, see Greatrex 2006; Greatrex et al. 2011, pp. 1-92.
Discussion
The Chronicle reports that after the pagan temple in Heliopolis-Baalbek in Lebanon had been destroyed as a result of natural disaster in the year 525/6 (on the dating of this event, see Minov 2010, p, 67), a church dedicated to Mary has been built in its place.
Bibliography
Main editions and translations:
Ahrens, K., and Krüger, G., Die sogennante Kirchengeschichte des Zacharias Rhetor (Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana, Scriptores Sacri et Profani 3; Leipzig: B.G. Teubner, 1899).
Brooks, E.W., Historia ecclesiastica Zachariae Rhetori vulgo adscripta. 4 vols (CSCO Syr. III.5-6; Louvain: Typographeo Reipublicae, 1919, 1921, 1924).
Greatrex, G., Phenix, R.R., Horn, C.B., Brock, S.P., and Witakowski, W., The Chronicle of Pseudo-Zachariah Rhetor: Church and War in Late Antiquity (Translated Texts for Historians 55; Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2011).
Hamilton, F.J., and Brooks, E.W., The Syriac Chronicle Known as That of Zachariah of Mitylene (Byzantine Texts; London: Methuen & Co., 1899).
Further reading (Pseudo-Zachariah):
Greatrex, G., "Pseudo-Zachariah of Mytilene: The Context and Nature of His Work," Journal of the Canadian Society for Syriac Studies 6 (2006), 39-52.
Further reading:
Minov, S., “The Story of Solomon’s Palace at Heliopolis,” Le Muséon 123:1-2 (2010), 61-89.