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Fear of God and the Beginning of Wisdom - The School of Nisibis and the Development of Scholastic Culture in Late Antique Mesopotamia (Hardcover)
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Fear of God and the Beginning of Wisdom - The School of Nisibis and the Development of Scholastic Culture in Late Antique Mesopotamia (Hardcover)
Series: Divinations: Rereading Late Ancient Religion
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Fear of God and the Beginning of Wisdom The School of Nisibis and
the Development of Scholastic Culture in Late Antique Mesopotamia
Adam H. Becker "Adam Becker brings together work in two different
linguistic areas, Syriac and Greek, which are usually conducted
separately. Since the period dealt with is a time of transition
from the ancient to Medieval world, one of immense significance for
the subsequent history of both the Middle East and Europe, it is
particularly helpful to have a book that shows how these two
geographical worlds were intimately linked from a cultural point of
view prior to the political separation brought about by the Arab
conquests in the seventh century."--Sebastian Brock, Oxford
University The School of Nisibis was the main intellectual center
of the Church of the East in the sixth and early seventh centuries
C.E. and an institution of learning unprecedented in antiquity.
"Fear of God and the Beginning of Wisdom" provides a history both
of the School and of the scholastic culture of the Church of the
East more generally in the late antique and early Islamic periods.
Adam H. Becker examines the ideological and intellectual
backgrounds of the school movement and reassesses the evidence for
the supposed predecessor of the School of Nisibis, the famed School
of the Persians of Edessa. Furthermore, he argues that the
East-Syrian ("Nestorian") school movement is better understood as
an integral and at times contested part of the broader spectrum of
East-Syrian monasticism. Becker examines the East-Syrian culture of
ritualized learning, which flourished at the same time and in the
same place as the famed Babylonian Rabbinic academies. Jews and
Christians in Mesopotamia developed similar institutions aimed at
inculcating an identity in young males that defined them as beings
endowed by their creator with the capacity to study. The
East-Syrian schools are the most significant contemporary
intellectual institutions immediately comparable to the Rabbinic
academies, even as they served as the conduit for the transmission
of Greek philosophical texts and ideas to Muslims in the early
'Abbasid period. Adam H. Becker teaches classics and religious
studies at New York University. He is coeditor, with Annette
Yoshiko Reed, of "The Ways that Never Parted: Jews and Christians
from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages." Divinations:
Rereading Late Ancient Religion 2006 320 pages 6 x 9 ISBN
978-0-8122-3934-8 Cloth $69.95s 45.50 ISBN 978-0-8122-0120-8 Ebook
$69.95s 45.50 World Rights Religion, History Short copy: Since the
period dealt with is a time of transition from the ancient to
Medieval world, it is particularly helpful to have a book that
shows how these two worlds were intimately linked from a cultural
point of view prior to the political separation brought about by
the Arab conquests in the seventh century."--Sebastian Brock,
Oxford University
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