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PART THREE
In this respect, Ortelius's map (same with Urbano Monte's map) is more than a geographical representation. It is also a graphic representation of the international relations of its age. It illustrates the extent of exchanges between the Catholic West — symbolised by Jerusalem — and the Mongol East, influenced by the traditions of the Church of the East and symbolised by Xanadu: two poles of a shared historical narrative.The annotation by Ortelius does not speak of a "schism" between Rome and Byzantium — this schism is a later construction, largely artificial. It refers instead to a far older and deeper difference in allegiance: that between Western Christendom (founded by Mark, and linked to Rome/Byzantium) and Eastern Christendom (founded by Thomas in distant Asia).
The accepted narrative today presents the great Christian schism as that of 1054 between Rome (Catholic) and Constantinople (Orthodox). Yet Ortelius's annotation suggests a very different fault line. In Ortelius's acceptance, it is not a schism between West and Byzantium — these two entities, within the logic of the map, are in fact aligned. The annotation specifies that the African Prester John is "obedient to Rome" (understood as the Romano-Byzantine sphere). Therefore, Mark (Africa) and Andrew (Scythia/Byzantium) belong to the same grouping.
The true division lies elsewhere: it opposes this Western coalition (Rome + Byzantium + Markan Africa) to the Eastern Christianity founded by Thomas in Asia, whose kingdom of Argon would represent it.
This Thomian Christianity, probably Nestorian, does not obey Rome — hence the annotation describing it as a "rival of Rome".
Its localisation is not imaginary. The strongest tradition places the tomb of Saint Thomas at Mylapore, near Chennai (modern-day Madras), on the Coromandel Coast of southern India, which even shows the extent of this kingdom.
The "Christians of Saint Thomas" in this region trace their origins to his apostolic mission, and local oral tradition supports this claim. Some more expansive traditions extend his journey as far as China, but the core of his missionary activity lies well beyond the Indus, in what the ancients called "India" in a broad sense — a region which, for sixteenth-century cartographers, included Tartary and the far reaches of Asia.
Martin Waldseemüller, the cartographer who in 1507 gave its name to America, corroborates this localisation. On his map, the centre of Eastern Christianity is placed in India/Afghanistan, confirming that the Thomian tradition was firmly anchored in this region. Thomas did not go to found a Church in Rome or Byzantium — he went to the ends of the known world, in far Asia.
The tradition concerning Saint Mark is equally clear, but oriented towards Africa. Saint Mark is traditionally regarded as the founder of the Church of Alexandria in Egypt, around AD 60.
He is considered the first Pope of Alexandria, that is, the first patriarch of the Coptic tradition. His tomb is located in Alexandria, although his relics were later transferred to Venice (hence the Lion of Saint Mark, symbol of the Venetian Republic).
This link between African Christianity and Mark is essential: it is through this lineage that the African Prester John (identified with Ethiopia by the Portuguese) is integrated into the Romano-Byzantine sphere of allegiance. Ethiopia, although Miaphysite, was perceived in Europe as a potential ally — a "sister" Christianity — hence the phrase "obedient to Rome" in its regard in the annotation.
Saint Mark and the African Kingdom of Prester John: an Essay on Institutional Lineage
Ortelius's map annotation refers to an African Prester John "obedient to Rome". To understand this formulation, it is not sufficient to invoke Ethiopia alone. One must trace a chain of institutional continuity linking African Christianity to the Apostle Mark, then to Byzantium, and ultimately to the Muscovite "Third Rome". This link is not direct, as in the case of Thomas and India; rather, it is hierarchical and ecclesiastical — a relationship of canonical dependence rather than primary evangelisation.
Tradition is both unanimous and ancient. Saint Mark did not go directly to Ethiopia. He established his residence in Alexandria, the great metropolis of Egypt, where he founded the Church and suffered martyrdom around AD 68. His tomb was originally in Alexandria, before his relics were transferred to Venice, which adopted him as its patron saint.
But the essential point lies elsewhere: Mark is regarded as the first Patriarch of Alexandria, the founder of the apostolic see from which the entire Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt — and, by extension, the Ethiopian Church — derives its lineage.
It is therefore not Mark himself, but his Church, that evangelised Ethiopia. The key figure in this mission was Frumentius, known to the Ethiopians as Abba Salama, "the father of peace". Frumentius was a young Christian from Tyre in Syria, thus connected to the Alexandrian milieu.
After being taken captive and later freed in Ethiopia, he organised the first Christian communities there. Around AD 330, he travelled to Alexandria to report his work. Saint Athanasius of Alexandria consecrated him as the first bishop of Ethiopia and formally sent him back as a missionary. This act is foundational: Ethiopian Christianity originates from a mission dispatched from the See of Saint Mark.
Athanasius's decision established a rule that lasted until the twentieth century. For nearly fifteen hundred years, the head of the Ethiopian Church — the Abuna — was not Ethiopian but a Coptic monk appointed by the Patriarch of Alexandria. This means that the successor of Saint Mark in Alexandria held direct authority over the Ethiopian Church.
Canonically, Ethiopia was a diocese of the Coptic Church. Only in 1959 did the Ethiopian Church obtain autocephaly. In 1994, Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria recognised the Ethiopian Patriarch as a "Second Patriarch of the See of Saint Mark". There are thus today two sister Churches claiming Mark's legacy: the Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt and the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, the latter having achieved emancipation after centuries of tutelage.