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.

10
Abraham bar Dashandad (8th cent.) [E.-Syr.]Contributor: Herman G. B. Teule URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Abraham-bar-Dashandad
Abraham  bar  ... Dashandad https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Abraham bar -Dashandad http://syriaca.org/bibl/21 12 ... ...ere he was born, he was the disciple of the reformer of ecclesiastical music Babai  of Gbilta and later became teacher at the School of ... ...ere he was born, he was the disciple of the reformer of ecclesiastical music Babai  of Gbilta and later became teacher at the School of Bashosh in Persia, ... ...ilta and later became teacher at the School of Bashosh in Persia, founded by Babai , and the School of Marga. At the end of his life, he established himself at... ...ilta and later became teacher at the School of Bashosh in Persia, founded by Babai , and the School of Marga. At the end of his life, he established himself at... ...ilta and later became teacher at the School of Bashosh in Persia, founded by Babai , and the School of Marga. At the end of his life, he established himself at... ... as the Upper Monastery. According to ʿAbdishoʿ bar  Brikha , he was the author of a Book of ...
11
Abraham bar Lipeh (7th cent.) [Ch. of E.]Contributor: Sebastian P. Brock URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Abraham-bar-Lipeh
Abraham  bar  ... Lipeh https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Abraham bar -Lipeh http://syriaca.org/bibl/22 13 ... ...ng is known of his life. It is presumed that he was some relation of Gabriel bar  Lipeh (better known as Gabriel Qaṭraya ... ... Sources R. H. Connolly, Abrahae bar  Lipeh Interpretatio Officiorum, in his Anonymi auctoris Expositio O...
12
Abraham of Beth Rabban (6th cent.) [Ch. of E.]Contributor: Lucas Van Rompay URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Abraham-of-Beth-Rabban
...braham was then temporarily replaced by Elishaʿ bar  Quzbaye but he returned to his office a few ye... ... and held it until his death, probably in 569. Other sources present Elishaʿ bar  Quzbaye as Narsai’s immediate successor and put the beginning of Abraham’s ...
13
Abraham of Kashkar (ca. 500–588) [Ch. of E.]Contributor: Lucas Van Rompay URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Abraham-of-Kashkar
... M. Tamcke idem , ‘Abraham of Kashkar’s pilgrimage’, ARAM  18–19 (2006–7), 477–82. Vööbus, Syriac and Arabic documents, ...
14
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...
15
... The region between the Upper and Lower Zab  rivers, from the Tigris in the west to Mt. Ṣalā... ...al Adiabene, Syriac Ḥadyāb, refers to the region between the Upper and Lower Zab  rivers, from the Tigris in the west to Mt. Ṣalāḥ al-dīn (= Mt. Pirmum) in t... ...uities’, 20.17–94). Christianity spread into this region quite quickly, with Papa  possibly serving as its first metropolitan as of 310. The Synod of 410 held...
16
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...
17
...xander, preserved in various sources, including  Bar  ʿEbroyo ’s Amusing Stories. 6. A set of short laments o... ...993), 3–9. G. J. Reinink, ‘Die Entstehung der syrischen Alexanderlegende als  politisch-religiöse Propagandaschrift für Herakleios’ ... ... Kirchenpolitik’, in After Chalcedon, ed. Laga  et al., 263–81. G.... ... of Alexander’, in Memory as History. The Legacy of Alexander in Asia , ed. H. P. Ray and D. T. Potts (2007), 54–75. ...
18
Amid Amida, Diyarbakır, OmidContributor: Hidemi Takahashi URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Amid
...nded by massive black basalt walls, which later gave it the nickname ‘Black  kara ) Amid’, Amid was by the 4th cent. a key point in Rome’s defence of her east... ...sians in 363. It was taken by the Persians in 359, 503, and 606/7. After the Arab  conquest in 639, it was ruled by a series of dynasties including the Kurdis... ...opotamia to attend the councils, respectively, of Ephesus and Chalcedon. The area  around Amid was an important center of monasticism with five monasteries wi... ...od after the Council of Chalcedon, Amid was a Miaphysite stronghold, and Bp. Mara  of Amid was one of those bps. expelled from their sees under Emperor Justin... ...period of persecution for the Miaphysites under the Chalcedonian Bp. Abraham bar  Kaili, a line of Miaphysite bishops was reestablished with the consecration... ...he later occupants of the see was Dionysios  bar  Ṣalibi . Amid has been the seat of the Syr. Orth. patriarchs on ... ...ene , during the tenure of Ignatius ʿAbdullāh I bar  Sṭephanos (1521– 1557), and in 1862–71 when Ignati... ... . The Syr. Orth. see of Amid lapsed with the demise of Metr. Dionysios ʿAbd  al-Nūr Aslan in 1933. The presence of E.-Syr. Christian...
19
Amyūn AmiounContributor: Erica Cruikshank Dodd URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Amyun
...n Anastasis painting. Parts of Christ’s flying cloak are visible as he pulls Adam  out of the grave. Behind  Adam  is Eve, and behind her is  Abel  is Eve, and behind her is  Adam  is Eve, and behind her is  Abel . On the other side are David and Solomon, and the remains of a scroll once ... ...saints and two flying angels. The large piers of the church are decorated on all  four sides with remains of paint, showing several saints, a portrait of St.... ... an equestrian St. Theodore spearing a dragon. These wall paintings are all  inscribed in Greek. Some attempt has been made to write in Syriac over a lo...

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.