Barsumas, Nestorian bp. of Nisibis
Barsumas (the Nestorian), bp. of Nisibis and metropolitan, 435-489, who,
after the suppression of Nestorianism within the empire, engaged successfully in
its propagation in Eastern Asia, especially in Persia. Banished from Edessa by Rabulas,
after his desertion of his former friends, Barsumas proved the chief strength and
wisdom of the fugitive church. In 435 he became bp. of Nisibis, where, in conjunction
with Maanes, bp. of Hardaschir, he established a theological school of deserved
celebrity, over which Narses presided for fifty years. Barsumas had the skill to
secure for his church the powerful support of the Persian king Pherozes (Firuz),
who ascended the throne in the year 462. He worked upon his enmity to the Roman
power to obtain his patronage for a development of doctrine which had been formally
condemned by the emperor and his assembled bishops, representing to him that the
king of Persia could never securely reckon on the allegiance of his subjects so
long as they held the same religious faith with his enemies. Pherozes admitted the
force of this argument, and Nestorianism became the only form of Christianity tolerated
in Persia. Barsumas died in 489, in which year the emperor Zeno broke up the theological
seminary at Edessa on account of its Nestorianism, with the result that it flourished
still more at Nisibis. Missionaries went out from it in great multitudes, and Nestorianism
became the recognized form of Christianity in Eastern Asia. The Malabar Christians
are the lineal descendants of their missions. Assemanni, Bibl. Or, iii. 1,
16-70; Wigram, Hist. of Assyrian Ch. c. viii. [Nestorian
Church.]
[E.V.]