|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
T. H. Robinson's Paradigms and exercises in Syriac Grammar was
first published in 1915 to meet the need for 'something of an
elementary nature which should be of value to the student who takes
up Syriac for the first time'. Since then, the book has met this
need for generations of students. The fifth edition of 2002 remains
the grammar of choice for many teachers of Syriac classes as well
as for students learning by themselves. The present revision,
drawing on ten more years of university teaching experience and
students' comments, clarifies some of the grammatical explanations
and exercises. Improvements to the fonts and a larger format make
for easier reading. As before, the West Syriac script and
grammatical tradition are followed in the body of the lessons, and
appendices introduce reading in the other (estrangela and Eastern)
scripts. The book remains a plain and friendly introduction to this
important language.
For some thirty years before the First World War, the Church of
England maintained a mission of help to the Assyrian Church of the
East (popularly known as the Nestorian church) in its then
homeland, a corner of eastern Turkey and north-western Persia. The
Mission had a controversial history. At home, not everyone could
appreciate the rationale of a mission which was to aid an obscure
and heretical body and which strictly forbade any conversions from
this body to the Anglican church. In the field, the missionaries
had to do battle with xenophobic governments, with rival American
and French missions, and with the Assyrians themselves, whose
confidence proved difficult to gain. In some respects the Mission
was unsuccessful, but it had notable accomplishments, especially in
scholarship and in ecumenical diplomacy. Besides being the history
of a Victorian missionary society, the present study deals in some
detail with the history of the Assyrians in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries - both as the survival of an ancient church
with hierarchy, liturgy, and theological formulas, and as an ethnic
minority in the Middle East. Illustrations and maps enhance the
value of the book as a source for the history of the time and
place. This is the first study of the relations between the church
of England and the Church of the East, and is based on largely
unpublished documents in English and Syriac.
Thomas of Edessa flourished as a teacher at the School of Nisibis,
an important Christian intellectual centre in sixth-century Persia.
He accompanied the later patriarch Mar Aba on his travels around
the Mediterranean and followed him to Nisibis. Thomas's only
surviving writings are two lectures in Syriac ('Explanations') on
the feasts of the Nativity and Epiphany. These discourses were
later incorporated into a collection of Explanations of the Feasts
covering the whole ecclesiastical year. This volume presents an
edition of Thomas of Edessa's Syriac text of Nativity and Epiphany,
accompanied by a facing-page English translation. These discourses,
with the editors' introduction and notes, elucidate Thomas's place
in the theological development of the Church of the East. He is the
earliest author after Narsai to draw extensively upon the theology
of Theodore of Mopsuestia, but earlier Syriac traditions are also
reflected in his work, and his Christology is not yet the doctrine
characteristic of Babai and later East Syriac authors.
|
You may like...
The Northman
Alexander Skarsgard, Nicole Kidman, …
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R210
Discovery Miles 2 100
Elvis
Baz Luhrmann
Blu-ray disc
R191
R171
Discovery Miles 1 710
Atmosfire
Jan Braai
Hardcover
R590
R425
Discovery Miles 4 250
|