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.

100
Chronicle of 1234 Edessene Chronicle [Syr. Orth.]Contributor: Jan J. van Ginkel URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Chronicle-of-1234
...l author was a younger contemporary of Patr. Michael Rabo  (1166–99) and in 1173 was present at the patriarchal ...
101
Chronicle of Edessa (mid-6th cent.)Contributor: Lucas Van Rompay URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Chronicle-of-Edessa
...a (nos. 51 and 59) and  Hiba  (nos. 59, 60, 64, and 68), to the 449 Council of E... ...ved much attention in modern scholarship. The Chronicle’s extreme paucity of data  on Christianity in Edessa prior to the beginning of the 4th cent. ... ... It was only in the 4th cent., in his view, that ‘orthodox’ Christianity was able  to assert itself and to oppress ‘non-orthodox’ groups, whose literary histo... ...ely erased. In addition, scholars have noted the absence in the Chronicle of any  reference to the conversion of the Abgarids or to the mission of Addai. Thi... ...ely erased. In addition, scholars have noted the absence in the Chronicle of any  reference to the conversion of the Abgarids or to the mission of Addai. Thi... ...ely erased. In addition, scholars have noted the absence in the Chronicle of any  reference to the conversion of the Abgarids or to the mission of Addai. Thi...
102
... Nisibis (d. 1046) and Michael Rabo  (d. 1199). The Chronicle of ... ...d in Chronicle of 1234 (see below) and in the Chronicle of Patr. Michael Rabo . The latter massive Chronicle is divided into three parts in three columns,... ... and religious histories in two columns and various events in the third one, all  up to the year 1195. The chronicle was translated into Armenian and Arabic,... ...onymous Chronicle of 1234 and the Chronicle of  Bar  ʿEbroyo (d.  1286), both divided into two rather t... ... rather than three parts, covering secular and ecclesiastical histories. In  Bar  ʿEbroyo’s Chronicle, secular history begins with the creation of the world ... ...ical history starts with Aaron and subsequent high priests; in the Christian era  the chronicler concentrates on the patriarchs of Antioch ... ...ical history starts with Aaron and subsequent high priests; in the Christian era  the chronicler concentrates on the patriarchs of Antioch ... ...do-Dionysius of Tel-Maḥrē: A Study in the History of Historiography  Acta  Universitatis Upsaliensis. Studia Semitica Upsaliensia 7; 1987). ...
103
... CPG 1015 (4–5), 1016. P.  Bedjan, Acta  Martyrum et Sanctorum (1896), vol. 6, 1–17. (epitome, Syr.) ...
104
ColophonsContributor: Sebastian P. Brock URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Colophons
...ation, and the name(s) of the reigning hierarchs. For the date, the Seleucid era  is normally used (to find the AD equivalent, subtract 311, or if the month ... ... sometimes also used, and Melkite mss. frequently employ the Byzantine World Era  (subtract 5508, or if Sep.–Dec., 5509). Other eras ( ... ... Ascension) are only rarely found. From the 17th cent. onwards the Christian era  is also employed, sometimes in conjunction with the Seleucid (which continu... ...leucid (which continued in use well into the 20th cent.). In India the Kulam era  (beginning AD 825) is sometimes used. Dates given (sometimes including the ... ...al ones. In order to discourage unauthorized removal of a ms. dire curses on any  would-be culprit may be provided. Further information of a purely historica... ... OC 76 [1992], 85–7). The oldest dated Christian ms. in any  language is Brit. Libr.  Add . 12,150, whose colophon states that it was written in Edessa and completed ... ...ten in Edessa and completed in Nov. 411. A  number of formulaic features are apt  to reappear, such as the comparison of the scribe reaching his last line wi...
105
...ng evidence of the immediate coexistence of Coptic and Manichean Syr. (or at any  rate an Aramaic dialect, very close to Syr. in both language and script). T... ...s were divided between Chalcedonians and anti-Chalcedonians, the latter were able  in the course of the 6th cent. to build a church structure that became the ... ...f Alexandria, arguing that in times of oppression the two Churches needed to act  as one. Severus won for himself lasting authority in both the Syr. and the ... ...o be used within the individual churches. The absence of any  dogmatic barrier made it possible for Syr. Christians to fully integrate in... ... such as the Monastery of Mar Michael, in Upper Egypt, where ms. Brit. Libr. Add . 14,582 was produced in 816; an unnamed monastery in the Thebais where in 8... ...16; an unnamed monastery in the Thebais where in 822/23 the monk Ahron, from Dara  ...16; an unnamed monastery in the Thebais where in 822/23 the monk Ahron, from Dara , produced ms. Brit. Libr.  Add . 14,623 (reusing a 6th-cent. ms. that contained ...
106
Cyril of Jerusalem (ca. 315–387)Contributor: Sebastian P. Brock URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Cyril-of-Jerusalem
...on of the Cross, ed. with ET, J. F. Coakley, in  AB  102 (1984), 71–84; and 2. on the attempted rebuild...
107
Dabbūs, Antoine (1916–1983) [Syr. Orth.]Contributor: George A. Kiraz URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Dabbus-Antoine
... . He was the principal of the ʿĀmūda school, taught in Raʾs al ʿAyn , and co-founded a school in his village. He wrote for a... ...f poems. He translated from Arabic Muʾayyid al-Dīn al-Ṭaghraʾī’s Lāmiyyat al ʿajam  (published in Munūfar Barṣūm), a short poem by Rabindranath Tagore (1861–19... ... Sources  Abūna ,  Adab  ..., 574. Macuch, Geschichte, 456. Munūfar Barṣūm, Aḍwāʾ , 93–8. ...
108
Dadishoʿ Qaṭraya (late 7th cent.) [Ch. of E.]Contributor: Sebastian P. Brock URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Dadisho-Qatraya
...rvives), Arabic, and Ethiopic. There is also a fragment of his Commentary on Abba  Isaiah in Sogdian. ... ...s cincos tratados sobre la quietud (shelya) de Dadishoʿ Qatraya  Aula  Orientalis Supplement 18; 2001). (Syr.) ... ... L.  Abramowski, ‘Dadisho Qatraya and his Commentary on the Book of  Abbas  Isaiah’, Harp 4 (1991), 67–83. R. A.  K... ... 67–83. R. A.  Kitchen, ‘Dadisho Qatraya’s Commenatry on Abba  Isaiah: the Apophthegmata Patrum connection’, ... ...n the Paradise of the Fathers’,  AB  112 (1994), 33–64. ...
109
DamascusContributor: Hidemi Takahashi URI: https://gedsh.bethmardutho.org/Damascus
...later periods, Damascus was the most important city in the Bilād al-Shām, an area  covering what is today the southern part of Syria, as well as Lebanon, Pale... ...ital of the province of al-Shām. Damascus is today the capital of the Syrian Arab  Republic, with a population of ca. 1.6 million (2.7 million in the conurbat... ...ital of the province of al-Shām. Damascus is today the capital of the Syrian Arab  Republic, with a population of ca. 1.6 million (2.7 million in the conurbat... ... Jerusalem . Gregory (Cyril) ʿAṭāʾ  Allāh, whose activities in India triggered the Coonan Cross Oath of 1653 (s... ...ether with his son Sergios, of several works of  Bar  ʿEbroyo . Among the Syr. Orth. bishops of Damascus ... ...Allāh al-Ṣadadī (1754–82), the translator of the Chronicle of Michael I Rabo  into Arabic in 1759. The Syr. Orth. patriarchate was t... ... Fifteen churches were left to the Christians in Damascus after the Arab  ... conquest, among them a ‘Jacobite church’ and a ‘church of the ʿIbād ’, i.e. i.e., ...

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.