Daniel I of Armenia
Appearance
Daniel I of Armenia (Armenian: Դանիել Ա) was the 16th Catholicos-Patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church. He was a Syrian who reigned as the Catholicoi after the reign of four hereditary Parthian catholicoi (St. Gregory I the Enlightener, his son St. Aristaces I, St. Vrtanes I and St. Husik I. He only ruled less than one year in 347 AD and was succeeded by Pharen I of Armenia.
Daniel was an ethnic Syriac and a disciple of Gregory the Illuminator. After King Tiran ordered the death of Catholicos Husik, he requested Daniel to replace him. However, Daniel refused the appointment and accused the King of a lavish lifestyle. Angered by Daniel's response, the King ordered that Daniel should be strangled.[1]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Dočkal 1940, p. 191.
References
[edit]Journals
[edit]- Dočkal, Kamilo (1940). "Povijest Armenske crkve" [History of the Armenian Church]. Bogoslovska smotra (in Croatian). 28 (3): 182–192.