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Saint Paul's Church, Tarsus : ウィキペディア英語版 | Saint Paul's Church, Tarsus Saint Paul's Church is a former Greek Orthodox church in Tarsus, Mersin Province, Turkey. == Tarsus and the churches == Tarsus, in the Cilicia of the antiquity, in what is now southern Turkey, was an important city during both ancient and medieval ages. The tombs of Daniel of the Bible, and the caliph Al-Ma'mun (786-833), are both in Tarsus. Saint Paul was a resident of Tarsus. He was born and lived in Tarsus as a Jew named Saul and after converting, made a number of missionary journeys during which he was arrested and beheaded by emperor Nero of Roman Empire in AD 64 or 67 on the 29th of June. After Saint Paul's death, Tarsus continued as an important city of the area. It became a part of the Byzantine Empire, the Abbasid Empire, the Seljuk Empire, the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, the Ramadanids and the Ottoman Empire. It is not known if there were any churches established by Paul in Tarsus. But in 1704 P. Lucas wrote that there was Roman style church which had been built by Saint Paul. V. Langlois who visited Tarsus in 1851 confirmed this. In his words, thick walls which resemble Roman style, windows which are narrower in outer side than inside, and thick columns are noticeable. But no other records exist to substantiate this claim. Medieval Mersin's most important Christian sanctuary was the Armenian cathedral of Hagia Sophia, in which Leon I of Rubenid house was crowned by Konrad Von Wittelsbach, the Archbishop of Mainz and the representative of Pope, as the king of Cilician Kingdom of Armenia in 1198.
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