Search results:

462 matches for Keyword: Aba~ 

You may wish to expand your search by using our advanced search functions or by using wildcard characters to increase results. See search tips for more details.

Search Tips

For best results, users are recommended to use the advanced search functions. Search results can also be improved by the use of the the following Boolean search characters:

Wildcard Characters:

Given the prevalence of variant spellings in names, using Wildcard Characters may help.

"?" can be inserted as a variant for any single character.

Thus a search for:

G?wargis  
returns results which contain either "Gewargis" or "Giwargis".

Similarly a search for:

M?r  
returns results which contain either "Mar" or "Mor".

"*" can be inserted as a variant for multiple characters or a truncated word.

Thus a search for:

Dayr*  
returns results for "Dayr" and "Dayro" and more.

Similarly a search for

Ab*  
returns results for "ʿAbdishoʿ" and "ʿAbda" and more.

Note: Because the sources we quote use a variety of transliteration formats, Syriaca.org ignores diacritics and punctuation in searching; for example, use of "ʿ" is not required to find results with this diacritical mark.

Fuzzy Search Character

Appending the character "~" after a word returns results for words that are close but not exact matches.

Thus a search for

Aba~  
returns results which contain "Aba" but also "Abi", "Saba", "Aha", and other words that are "fuzzy" matches for "Aba".

Exact Phrase Searches

To find an exact phrase, it should be enclosed in double quotes.

Thus

"ʿAbdishoʿ I"  
returns only one result with that exact phrase, while several results are found for the words "ʿAbdishoʿ" and "I".

Proximity Characters

To find two or more words which occur within a specified range of each other, one can append the character "~" followed by a number to an "Exact Phrase" search. This allows one to search for two or more words that occur within a specified distance of each other as defined by number of words.

Thus

"Jacob+Bishop"~2  
finds three results in which the words "Jacob" and "Bishop" occur within two words of each other: "Jacob , bishop of Nisibin", "Jacob, bishop of Phesilta", and "Jacob , bishop of ‛Ānah" while a simple search for "Jacob Bishop" returns many more results.

271
Shaʿya, Elias (1895–1970) [Syr. Orth.]Contributor: George A. Kiraz URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Shaya-Elias
... Macuch, Geschichte, 450–1. Munūfar Barṣūm, Aḍwāʾ , 65–6. ...
272
Sobo, Malki al-Qas Afram (1895–1979) [Syr. Orth.]Contributor: George A. Kiraz URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Sobo-Malki-al-Qas-Afram
... Sources Munūfar Barṣūm, Aḍwāʾ , 74–5. Macuch, Geschichte, 464. ...
273
Iyob of Edessa Job of Edessa, Ayyūb al-Ruhāwī (2nd half of 8th cent.ca. 835?) [Ch. of E. or Syr. Orth.]Contributor: Barbara H. Roggema URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Iyob-of-Edessa
...ge of the Abbasid family. Iyob was sent by al-Maʾmūn to Khurasan to serve as ʿAbd  Allāh b. Ṭāhir’s physician, when the latter became governor there in the ... ...ms unlikely that he would have been charged with such a task at the advanced age  of 70; his estimated year of birth, probably based solely on ... ...timated year of birth, probably based solely on  Bar  ʿEbroyo ’s reference to Iyob (Abbeloos and Lamy, Gr... ...rhebraei chronicon ecclesiasticum, vol. 2, 181) as someone living in the era  of Patr. Timotheos I ... ... , is therefore probably too early. In the same passage, Bar  ʿEbroyo calls Iyob a philosopher ‘who followed the doctrine of Nestorius’. ... ...to his conversion are lacking, and the possibility should be considered that Bar  ʿEbroyo’s claim is based on conjecture. There are no earlier sources that r... ...s were produced in a Syr. Orth. milieu. In his letter to ʿAlī  b. Yaḥyā b. al-Munajjim about the translations of Galen ... ...ks only two survive, the most important of which is the ‘Book of Treasures’  Ktābā  d-simātā). It deals with a wide range of natural phenomena which Iyob analy...
274
Shemʿon d-Ṭaybutheh (late 7th cent.) [Ch. of E.]Contributor: Grigory Kessel URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Shemon-d-Taybutheh
...n Shabur (modern southwest Iran). ʿAbdishoʿ bar  Brikha attributes to him three books: on the m... ...nown only from the quotations in the Lexicon of  Bar  Bahlul . ʿAbdishoʿ’s list is to be supplemented by ... ... e.g.,  Bar  ʿEbroyo ). The probable exp...
275
LiturgyContributor: Sebastian P. Brock URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Liturgy
... rites can be grouped into families, the eastern ones being associated above all  with Constantinople, Antioch , ... ...arly centuries of the 2nd millennium, in particular prose texts by Eliya III Abū  Ḥalīm (d. 1190), verse texts by Gewargis Warda ... ... Gewargis Warda , and ʿonyāthā by Khamis bar  Qardaḥe (both 13th cent.?). The Main Liturgical Books ... ... Syr. Orth. This tradition stands out from all  others in its number of available Anaphoras, said to be nearly 80, though o... ...minence to the Roman rite; a return to the true Antiochene tradition was the aim  of reforms initiated in 1971, and mandated in 1991. Most of the Maron. Anap... ...and Ṣapro for Sundays and Feasts, was published by the Diocese of St. Maron  USA  ...) in 3 vols. (Prayer of the Faithful, 1982–5); this goes back  via  French) to a simplified edition in Arabic, made by the liturgical scholar ... ...ldest Melkite liturgical mss. preserve the original Antiochene rite, whereas all  the rest represent the Constantinopolitan rite (itself ultimately of Antioc...
276
AleppoContributor: Hidemi Takahashi URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Aleppo
... Orth., Armenian Catholic, Latin). Aleppo, nicknamed ‘Grey Aleppo’ (Ḥalab al šahbāʾ ) in Arabic, owes its military and commercial importance to its imposing cit... ...in older Syriac literature. Aleppo came under Roman rule in 64 BC. After the Arab  conquest in 636, Aleppo first rose to prominence under the Ḥamdānid Sayf al... ... mid-6th cent. is Matthew (644–669). Among his successors was  Bar  ʿEbroyo (ca. 1253–64), who was the bp. there when ... ... Aleppo included, along with Damascus and Ḥama , in the title of Metr. ... ... , who migrated to Aleppo en masse in 1924, as well as those from the area  around Mardin . As a cente... ... As a center of Latin missionary activity since the beginning of the Ottoman  era , with Capuchins, Jesuits and Carmelites present in the city by 1526, Aleppo... ... of Aleppo (Michael Ḍāhir, Peter Jarweh, George Chelhot, Antony Ḥayek, Peter ʿAbd  al- Aḥad ), while two others were Metr. of Aleppo before ascending to the patriarchat...
277
Aphrahaṭ (fl. first half of 4th cent.)Contributor: Sebastian P. Brock URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Aphrahat
... Aphrahaṭ, by which he is known today, is first found in Ishoʿ bar  Nun (d. 828). In the early 8th cent. ... ...8). In the early 8th cent. Giwargi, bp. of the Arab  tribes only knew of him as ‘the Persian Sage’ (V. ...
278
Addai, Teaching of (ca. 420)Contributor: Timothy Scott Wardle URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Addai-Teaching-of
...yriac writing containing the legendary correspondence between Jesus and King Abgar  of Edessa. (ca. 420) ... ...yriac writing containing the legendary correspondence between Jesus and King  Abgar  of Edessa , the report of the apostle Addai’s ... ...y, such as the portrait of Jesus, are missing. Eusebius’s account ends after Abgar  is healed and Thaddaios is asked to speak to the people of Edessa, a prelud... ... Mani , a ‘proto-orthodox’ group, and others all  vied for authority. The story most likely originated inside one of these gr... ... Syriac Christianity. Accordingly, Syriac Christianity could trace its roots all  the way back to the apostles and to Jesus himself. Also significant is the ... ... Eusebius, Christianity, and Judaism, ed. H. W. Attridge and G. Hata  (1992), 212–34. S. P. Brock ... ... 18 (2004), 46–56. A. Desreumaux, Histoire du roi Abgar  et de Jésus (1993). H. J. W. Drijvers, ‘The...
279
Polykarpos (ca. 500) [Syr. Orth.]Contributor: Andreas Juckel URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Polykarpos
... with Philoxenos without mentioning Polykarpos (  Bar  ʿEbroyo , Ecclesiastical History, ed. Abbeloos and ... ... proem to the Awṣar Roze; Michael  Rabo  , Chronicle, X, 25 = vol. 4, 391). Scholars also prefer the ... ... was to be replaced by an entirely new translation. While Bar  ʿEbroyo and Michael provide an approximate date for Polykarpos’s version by... ... second millennium (an Arabic translation of the epistles exists in ms. Sin. Arab . 154, ed. M. Dunlop Gibson 1899). This translation can only be identified w...
280
Theophilos of Edessa (d. 785) [Maron.]Contributor: Lucas Van Rompay URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Theophilos-of-Edessa
... , and most importantly Homer. Even though  Bar  ʿEbroyo attributes to Theophilos the translation o... ...ḥre and through Dionysios was known to Michael Rabo  and to the author of the Chronicle of 1234. Dionys... ...r and scientific culture in the Christian communities of Syria after the Arab  Conquest’, in After Bardaisan, ed. Reinink and Klugkist, 85–105. ...

Search results:

462 matches for Keyword: Aba~ 

You may wish to expand your search by using our advanced search functions or by using wildcard characters to increase results. See search tips for more details.

Search Tips

For best results, users are recommended to use the advanced search functions. Search results can also be improved by the use of the the following Boolean search characters:

Wildcard Characters:

Given the prevalence of variant spellings in names, using Wildcard Characters may help.

"?" can be inserted as a variant for any single character.

Thus a search for:

G?wargis  
returns results which contain either "Gewargis" or "Giwargis".

Similarly a search for:

M?r  
returns results which contain either "Mar" or "Mor".

"*" can be inserted as a variant for multiple characters or a truncated word.

Thus a search for:

Dayr*  
returns results for "Dayr" and "Dayro" and more.

Similarly a search for

Ab*  
returns results for "ʿAbdishoʿ" and "ʿAbda" and more.

Note: Because the sources we quote use a variety of transliteration formats, Syriaca.org ignores diacritics and punctuation in searching; for example, use of "ʿ" is not required to find results with this diacritical mark.

Fuzzy Search Character

Appending the character "~" after a word returns results for words that are close but not exact matches.

Thus a search for

Aba~  
returns results which contain "Aba" but also "Abi", "Saba", "Aha", and other words that are "fuzzy" matches for "Aba".

Exact Phrase Searches

To find an exact phrase, it should be enclosed in double quotes.

Thus

"ʿAbdishoʿ I"  
returns only one result with that exact phrase, while several results are found for the words "ʿAbdishoʿ" and "I".

Proximity Characters

To find two or more words which occur within a specified range of each other, one can append the character "~" followed by a number to an "Exact Phrase" search. This allows one to search for two or more words that occur within a specified distance of each other as defined by number of words.

Thus

"Jacob+Bishop"~2  
finds three results in which the words "Jacob" and "Bishop" occur within two words of each other: "Jacob , bishop of Nisibin", "Jacob, bishop of Phesilta", and "Jacob , bishop of ‛Ānah" while a simple search for "Jacob Bishop" returns many more results.