Maps
Five maps are provided here to serve as an initial aid in locating some of the
main centers, cities, towns, and monasteries in the lands of Syriac Christianity
in the Middle East, both in the historical and in the contemporary periods.
These maps should not be seen as an attempt to fully document the historical
geography of Syriac Christianity. As a matter of fact, the geography of Syriac
Christianity is a much underdeveloped field, and the creation of a set of
historical maps remains an urgent desideratum.
All five maps were specifically designed and drawn by the Ancient World Mapping
Center of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, based on the data
provided by the GEDSH editors. For all of the maps the terrain depiction was
calculated from Environmental Systems Research Institute. SRTM Shaded Relief, on
ESRI Data & Maps 2006 [DVD-ROM]. Redlands, CA. While Maps I and II have a
primarily historical approach, Maps III to V were created from a contemporary
perspective, reflecting the sites of Syriac Christianity in the present-day
Middle East. As a rule we have followed the terminology most current among
Syriac Christians, without attempting to match the Syriac (or Arabic) names with
existing non-Syriac nomenclature.
While preparing the maps, we have relied on a great number of existing maps as
well as on other relevant publications. The main sources are listed below and
users of GEDSH are encouraged to turn to them as a first step in their more
advanced study of any aspect of the historical geography of Syriac
Christianity.
I. Syriac Christianity in the Roman and Sasanian periods
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Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman
world, ed. R. J. A. Talbert et al. (2000).
-
Tübinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients
(TAVO). Mit Unterstützung der Deutschen
Forschungsgemeinschaft erarbeitet vom Sonderforschungsbereich 19 der
Universität Tübingen (1977–1994).
-
E. Honigmann, Évêques et evêchés monophysites
d’Asie antérieure au VIe siècle (CSCO 127; 1951).
II. Syriac Christianity in the Islamic period
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An historical atlas of Islam. Atlas historique de l’Islam, ed. H. Kennedy
(2002).
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Tübinger Atlas (see under I).
III. Syriac-Orthodox Christianity centered around Ṭur ʿAbdin
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H. Aydin, Das Mönchtum im Tur-Abdin. Das Leben
der Mönche im Tur-Abdin in der Gegenwart (1988). (two
maps)
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H. Hollerweger, A. Palmer, and S. P. Brock, Turabdin: Lebendiges Kulturerbe. Wo die Sprache Jesu gesprochen
wird (1999).
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A. Palmer, Monk and mason on the Tigris
frontier. The early history of Ṭur ʿAbdin (University of
Cambridge Oriental Publications 39; 1990).
IV. The heartland of East-Syriac Christianity in the modern
period
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J. F. Coakley, The Church of the East and the
Church of England. A history of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s
Assyrian Mission (1992), esp. 8–9.
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J. M. Fiey, Assyrie chrétienne. Contribution à
l’étude de l’histoire et de la géographie ecclésiastiques du nord de
l’Iraq, vol. 1–3 (Recherches publiées sous la direction de
l’Institut de lettres orientales de Beyrouth 22, 23, and 42; 1965–1968).
(covers all traditions)
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A. Harrak, Syriac and Garshuni Inscriptions of
Iraq (Recueil des inscriptions syriaques 2; 2010). (several
maps)
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H. L. Murre-van den Berg, ‘The Patriarchs of the Church of the East
from the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries’, Hugoye 2.2 (1999).
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J. C. J. Sanders, Assyro-Chaldese christenen in
Oost-Turkije en Iran. Hun laatste vaderland opnieuw in kaart
gebracht (1997; ET as Assyrian Chaldean
Christians in Eastern Turkey and Iran. Their last homeland
re-charted [1997])
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D. Wilmshurst, The ecclesiastical organisation
of the Church of the East, 1318–1913 (CSCO 582;
2000).
V. Main sites of Syriac Christian wall paintings in Lebanon and
Syria
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M. Immerzeel, Identity puzzles. Medieval
Christian art in Syria and Lebanon (OLA 84; 2009), esp. 41 and 83.
-
A. Schmidt and S. Westphalen, Christliche
Wandmalereien in Syrien. Qara und das Kloster Mar Yakub
(Sprachen und Kulturen des Christlichen Orients 14; 2005), 12.
Map I. Syriac Christianity in the Roman and Sasanian periods.
Map II. Syriac Christianity in the Islamic period.
Map III. Syriac-Orthodox Christianity centered around Ṭur ʿAbdin.
Map IV. The heartland of East-Syriac Christianity in the modern
period.
Map V. Main sites of Syriac Christian wall paintings in Lebanon and
Syria.