Total population | |
---|---|
Estimated 4.3 million[1][2] | |
Religions | |
Christianity (Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch and Melkite Greek Catholic Church) | |
Languages | |
Vernacular: Majority Arabic (Levantine Arabic), Western Neo-Aramaic in Maaloula, Turkish in Turkey[3] Liturgical: Koine Greek, Classical Arabic and Classical Syriac (historical)[4][5] |
Antiochian Greek Christians (also known as Rūm) are an ethnoreligious Eastern Christian group native to the Levant.[6][7] They are either members of the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch or the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, and they have ancient roots in what is now Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, the southern Turkish province of Hatay, which includes the city of Antakya (ancient Antioch—one of the holiest cities in Eastern Christianity), and Israel.[8] Many of their descendants now live in the global Near Eastern Christian diaspora. They primarily speak Levantine Arabic, with Maaloula near Damascus being one of the few places where a Western Aramaic dialect is still spoken.
oikoumene.org
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).the Arab Christians of Tokaçlı have tended to assimilate to a general Turkish identity which includes the use of the Turkish language
Another community of Aramaic-speaking Melkites existed in the vicinity of Antioch and parts of Syria. These Melkites used Classical Syriac as a written language, the common literary language of the overwhelming majority of Christian Arameans.