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Metropolitanate of India (Syriac: Beth Hindaye) was an East Syriac ecclesiastical province of the Church of the East, at least nominally, from the seventh to the sixteenth century. The Malabar region (Kerala) of India had long been home to a thriving Eastern Christian community, known as the Saint Thomas Christians. The community traces its origins to the evangelical activity of Thomas the Apostle in the 1st century. The Christian communities in India used the East Syriac Rite, the traditional liturgical rite of the Church of the East. They also adopted some aspects of Dyophysitism of Theodore of Mopsuestia, often inaccurately referred as Nestorianism, in accordance with theology of the Church of the East. It is unclear when the relation between Saint Thomas Christian and the Church of the

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  • Metropolitanato de Angamaly (es)
  • India (East Syriac ecclesiastical province) (en)
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  • Metropolitanate of India (Syriac: Beth Hindaye) was an East Syriac ecclesiastical province of the Church of the East, at least nominally, from the seventh to the sixteenth century. The Malabar region (Kerala) of India had long been home to a thriving Eastern Christian community, known as the Saint Thomas Christians. The community traces its origins to the evangelical activity of Thomas the Apostle in the 1st century. The Christian communities in India used the East Syriac Rite, the traditional liturgical rite of the Church of the East. They also adopted some aspects of Dyophysitism of Theodore of Mopsuestia, often inaccurately referred as Nestorianism, in accordance with theology of the Church of the East. It is unclear when the relation between Saint Thomas Christian and the Church of the (en)
  • El metropolitanato de Angamaly o de la India (en siríaco: Beth Hindaye) fue una provincia eclesiástica siríaca oriental de la Iglesia del Oriente, desde el siglo VII hasta el XVI. La región de Malabar (actual Kerala) de la India había sido durante mucho tiempo el hogar de una próspera comunidad cristiana oriental, conocida como los cristianos de Santo Tomás. La comunidad traza sus orígenes a la actividad evangélica de Tomás el Apóstol en el siglo I. Las comunidades cristianas de la India utilizaban el rito siríaco oriental, el rito litúrgico tradicional de la Iglesia del Oriente. También adoptaron algunos aspectos del diofisismo, de acuerdo con la teología de la Iglesia del Oriente. Inicialmente, pertenecían a la provincia metropolitana de Fars, pero se separaron de esa provincia en el sig (es)
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  • All India (en)
  • ܒܬ ܗܙܕܐ (en)
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  • All India (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Mar_Gabriel_of_Ardishai.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Mar_Abraham_Metropolitan_of_Angamaly.jpg
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