Monastic founder and author. John was born inEdessa, the child of a rhetor and his mother, Aphtonia. He was a monk of the monastery of St. Thomas at Seleucia Pieria on the Orontes (nearAntioch) until he and other monks were driven out as a result of imperial persecution of non-Chalcedonian monasteries (ca. 530). The group chose John to be their Abbot and founded theMonastery of Qenneshre on the Euphrates, an establishment that came to produce many influential church leaders, scholars, and translators. John is remembered as having played a significant role in facilitating the transmission of Greek literary culture into a Syriac milieu. He participated in the Miaphysite negotiations with Justinian in Constantinople (ca. 531) before he died in 537. John wrote a biography ofSeverus of Antioch, and a commentary on the Song of Songs, fragments of which survive in catenae. He is credited with having written a number of hymns in Greek that were added to collections associated with Severus and later translated into Syriac.
Jeff W. Childers