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.

20
al-AnbārContributor: Andreas Juckel URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/al-Anbar
al- Anbār  ... https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/al Anbar  http://syriaca.org/bibl/44 35 ... ...tory over the Roman Emperor Julian in 363. The city’s popular name ‘Ambāra’  Arab . al- Anbār ) means ‘magazine; storehouse’, and refers to its strategic function as an a... ...fter the Sasanian capital Ctesiphon. During the first centuries of Islam, al Anbār  remained prosperous, being the residence of the Abassid Caliphs al-Saffāḥ (... ... the first millennium; in 1262 it was sacked by the Mongols. Al Anbār  was a see of the Ch. of E., first mentioned in the 5th cent. The main sourc... ... Cath.: Ṣliba Zka (713–28), Theodosios (853–58), and Yoḥannan bar  ... Narsai (884–91). Eliya of al Anbār  was elected ...
21
Antioch AntakyaContributor: Hidemi Takahashi URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Antioch
... called ‘Christian’ soon became the most important center of Christianity in Asia , and its see was recognised as ranking alongside those of Rome and Alexandr... ..., as well as of more friendly visits by Michael Rabo  (1166–99), who is said to have been enthroned on t... ...self on the outskirts of the city some time before 1246, and by Yuḥanon bar  Maʿdani (1252–63), who was enthroned on the ‘chair of ...
22
Anṭun of Tagrit (9th cent.?) [Syr. Orth.]Contributor: John W. Watt URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Antun-of-Tagrit
... and a brief report in the Ecclesiastical History of  Bar  ʿEbroyo to the effect that he lived at the tim... ...sios of Tel Maḥre (active in 825), a view which Bar  ʿEbroyo declares to be generally accepted by his contemporary teachers and ... ...o declares to be generally accepted by his contemporary teachers and elders. Bar  ʿEbroyo supports this by identifying an unnamed student of Greek poetry in ... ...ontested. Mention of his works by later authors first appears in Yaʿqub bar  Shakko and  Bar  ʿEbroyo. Two mss. in London (Brit. Libr. Add. 17,208 + Dayr al-Suryān 32 and Br... ...s prologue largely identical with that by Mushe bar  Kipho and probably dependent upon Pseudo-Diony... ...s partial reproduction and paraphrasing in the ‘Book of Dialogues’ of Yaʿqub bar  Shakko. It was greatly admired by  Bar  ʿEbroyo, who cited it frequently in his ‘Book of Splendors’ and prefaced it...
23
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. ...
24
ApocalypsesContributor: Sebastian P. Brock URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Apocalypses
...40 subject Apocalypses, or Revelations, aim  to disclose eschatological events and in order to enhance their authority t... ... Apocalypses, or Revelations, aim  to disclose eschatological events and in order to enhance their authority t... ... a commentary (notably by Dionysios  bar  Ṣalibi ). The Apocalypse of Paul purports to describe w... ...7th cent. gave rise to a number of texts of an apocalyptic nature, this time all  composed in Syriac. The Persian invasion of the eastern provinces of the By... ...ncerning the End’ (ed. H. Schmold, Ph. D. Diss., Hamburg; 1972). The lack of any  indication of contemporary events, prior to ‘the End’, make it difficult to... ...he christianized Alexander legend, has been dated to ca. 640, soon after the Arab  conquests, though it could alternatively come from a few decades later in t... ...on of a number of apocalyptic features in the final book 15 of Yoḥannan bar  Penkaye ’s ‘Book of the Main Points’, written ca. 687 ... ... , very probably dates from 691/2, the time of ʿAbd  al-Malik’s tax reforms and the building of the Dome of the Rock (ed. with G...
25
Aqaq Acacius (late 5th cent.) [Ch. of E.]Contributor: Lucas Van Rompay URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Aqaq
 Aqaq  ... https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org Aqaq  http://syriaca.org/bibl/50 41 ... ... cath. (484–495/6). Aqaq  headed the Ch. of E. during a critical period of its history, when it adopt... ...al period of its history, when it adopted a strictly dyophysite Christology. Aqaq  had studied at the School of Edessa, where he became acquainted with th... ...rsian Emperor Peroz and was arrested and executed by the latter in 484. When Aqaq  took office, therefore, the situation of Christianity in the Persian Empire... ...e wake of this synod that Babowai was arrested and executed, and replaced by Aqaq . At a subsequent synod, held in Beth ʿEdray, in August-September 485 (of wh... ...ember 485 (of which also no report is preserved), peace between Barṣawma and Aqaq  was established. A number of letters from this period, included in the Syno... ...e Synodicon, confirm that Barṣawma and his followers eventually submitted to Aqaq . The stage was thus set for the Synod of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, of Febr. 486, ...
26
... the wise’,and the tale of the ‘Ten viziers and the son of King Azad -Bekht’. 3. The next category is constituted by medical texts of Greek origin, w... ...We may assume that the reason behind this request was that the very critical Ibn  Māsawayh held that Syriac was more appropriate than Arabic for expressing s... ... discussion, see Teule, forthcoming). 4.  Bar  ʿEbroyo had a good knowledge of Muslim-Arabic lite... ...con’ and the ‘Book of the Dove’ (based on Ghazālī), the Swād supyā (based on Ibn  Sinā), etc. In these cases, however, the author did not intend to make tran... ...nslations, and the origin of the source text was not revealed. Nevertheless, Bar  ʿEbroyo did also compose several translations that were meant as such: the ... ...nslations, and the origin of the source text was not revealed. Nevertheless, Bar  ʿEbroyo did also compose several translations that were meant as such: the ... ...nslations, and the origin of the source text was not revealed. Nevertheless, Bar  ʿEbroyo did also compose several translations that were meant as such: the ... ...did also compose several translations that were meant as such: the Kitāb al-išārāt wa-al-tanbīhāt by Ibn 
27
AramaicContributor: Lucas Van Rompay URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Aramaic
...cations of the ‘Fertile Crescent’, in Syria and Mesopotamia. It later spread all  ... over the Middle East and well into Central Asia . From the 6th cent. BC to the 7th cent. AD, Aramaic, in a variety of interr... ... chapters of the biblical book of Daniel, the Aramaic portions of the Dead  Sea  documents, and the earliest layer of the Jewish Targumim, or translations o... ... (Targumim, hymns, and prose compositions); and Christians of the Jerusalem  area  (Christian Palestinian Aramaic). East-Aramaic texts were produced by Jews (part... ... Appendix added to the Chronicle of Michael  Rabo  , which deals with ‘the kingdoms that have been established in ... ... Antiquity by our race, (that of) the Arameans, namely the descendants of  Aram , who were called Syrians or inhabitants of Syria’ (ed. J. B. Chabot, text i... ... (1981), 613–49. S. P.  Brock, ‘Three thousand years of Aramaic literature’, ARAM  1 (1989), 11–23. Brock and Taylor, Hidden Pearl, esp. vol. ... ...the Aramaic Language’, in A Wandering Aramean. Collected Aramaic Essays  SBL  Monographs 25; 1979), 57–84. J. C. Greenfield, ‘Standard Literary Aramaic’,...
28
ArameansContributor: Sebastian P. Brock James F. Coakley URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Arameans
...is further elaborated in Appendix II to Michael Rabo  ’s Chronicle. In modern times the ethnic identity o...
29
Arbela ErbilContributor: Edward G. Mathews, Jr. URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Arbela
... Mari (CSCO 602–3; 2003). (Syr. with FT) C. Jullien and F. Jullien, Aux  origines de l’Église de Perse: Les Actes de Mar Mari (CSCO 604; ... ... P.  Peeters, ‘Le passionnaire d’Adiabène’,  AB  43 (1925), 261–304. D. Sourdel, ‘Irbil’, in EI...

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.