I get why you are avoiding the article.
Actually I did not avoid the article. I directly
disproved one of the claims, and I posted this before, but perhaps you missed it so I will do it again with some elaboration.
The OP article states:
"The first clear hints of Catholic Mariology occur in the writings of Origen."
But........
Origen lived from 185 AD to 254 AD. He could not have been the first to write about any of those troublesome Mariology doctrines, for we have St. Irenaeus of Lyons (died c 203 AD, when Origen was only a teenager). St. Iraneaus is consided in Church history to be the Father of Mariology, writing about Mary as the "New Eve" (contrasting Eve's disobedience with Mary's obedience) he wrote:
As Eve was seduced by the word of an angel and so fled from God after disobeying his word, Mary in her turn was given the good news by the word of an angel, and bore God in obedience to his word.
Thus we have an earlier clear indication of calling Mary the "Mother of God" - one of those troublesome Marian doctrines.
We even have the writings of Justin Martyr (died 165 AD , before Origen was even born) who compared the Eve/Mary parallelism with the Adam/Christ parallelism. One cannot fail to see the beginnings of Mariology in that.
So the OP claim about Origen being the "origin" of Mariology is fully disproven.