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MARY, THE WOMAN PROPHETThe Hidden History of the First Female Prophet and the Lost Jerusalem of IstanbulFor two thousand years, Mary has been remembered as a mother, a miracle, a symbol.
But what if she was something far greater—so powerful that history had to erase her?
In this visionary work of historical–speculative literary fiction, Tunc Altinbas reveals a hidden continuity of revelation buried beneath centuries of theological editing. Drawing from ancient Semitic scripture, early Torah fragments, and Christian apocrypha, Mary, the Woman Prophet reimagines Mary not as a passive figure, but as the final prophet in the sacred House of Imran, living not centuries after Moses—but beside him.
When Mary receives the Word, her question is not disbelief, but intimacy: “How?”
Through her eyes, revelation becomes human, tender, and embodied. The divine enters the world through her breath—and through a prophecy that empires later fractured into three religions.
But Mary remembers what the world forgot.
After her son’s disappearance, she undertakes a final journey across Anatolia: from Ephesus to Byzantion, the city where two seas meet. Along this path, she uncovers the truth empires buried—that Moses, Aaron, Mary, and Jesus belonged to the same generation. Revelation was a single breath; only history divided it.
Here, Istanbul emerges not as a footnote of faith, but as the forgotten Jerusalem—a city where revelation, memory, and geography converge. On Yuşa Hill above the Bosphorus, Mary reaches the “Meeting of the Two Seas,” the exact place where Moses and his young companion once stood with the Hidden Guide. What she discovers there reorders time itself.
This is a story of memory against empire,
of a woman’s voice against centuries of silence,
of revelation as one unbroken river.
Readers of Elif Shafak, Margaret Atwood, Anita Diamant, and Reza Aslan will find a novel that blends lyrical spirituality with bold historical imagination. With its mosaic-like storytelling, mythic imagery, and spiritual archaeology, it carries the intrigue of The Da Vinci Code, the lyricism of The Prophet, and the emotional depth of The Red Tent—yet stands entirely on its own.
Why this book mattersReclaims Mary as the first forgotten female prophet
Unites the timelines of Moses, Jesus, and Mary into one continuous lineage
Reinterprets Istanbul as the true crossroads of revelation
Bridges Islam, Christianity, and Judaism without preaching
Offers a controversial, deeply emotional premise that readers discuss, debate, and remember
“They divided God by dividing time.
But the breath of revelation was never broken—it only changed names.”
A novel of forbidden history, sacred geography, and feminine revelation, Mary, the Woman Prophet invites readers into a truth so intimate and so timeless that it can only be told through fiction.
Every page whispers the same message:
Mary was not silent.
We simply stopped listening.