Forty Days on the Holy Mountain the Mountain, the Monks, the Mission

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Forty Days on the Holy Mountain the Mountain, the Monks, the Mission Forty Days on the Holy Mountain the Mountain, the Monks, the Mission Dale Albert Johnson Dedication To the Seeds of Hope team members the Honorable Dale Ramerman, Eric Johnson Ret. USAF, Greg Rhodes, businessman and son of an Episcopal priest, the Rev. Jonathan Weldan, Episcopal priest, Alice Kapka, educator. and to Rabban Jaoqim Unval, Abbot of Mor Awgin Monastery Special mention to Ron Medcalf for behind the scenes support 3 Copyright © 2016 by Dale A. Johnson All rights reserved. This book, or no parts thereof, may be reproduced in any form without express written permission Library of congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Dale A. Johnson Forty Days on the Holy Mountain ISBN 978-1-329-49349-0 Manufactured in the United States of America Parts of this book were previously published 2004 under the title Monks of Mt. Izla by New Sinai Press. 4 Forty Days on the Holy Mountain the Monks, the Mountain, the Mission Preface……………………..6 The Mountain………….…..13 The Monastery .........26 How Did They Live..........41 The Monks A Cloud of Witnesses.......51 St. Awgin ……………….…..63 St. Habib...…………………..69 St. Abraham of the High Mountain…..…93 St. Shalito…………………………….…….100 St. Malke……………………………….......111 St. Aho………………………………....…..116 St. Hananyo………………………….....…155 St. John the Arab………………….....…... 158 St. Yoreth…….. ………………………...... 165 St. Salloro…………………………………176 St. Yonan ………………………………..181 Mariam of Qidum……………………...…189 Jacob of Salah……………………..……….204 Babai the Great……………………...…….224 Sts. Samuel and Simeon………………….232 Severos Sebkhot …………..257 The Mission: Seeds of Hope: the project………..263 The Message ……….271 5 Appendix I: Factfinding Report……284 References Consulted ……….294 Books by the author: …..297 General Map ………….302 Seeds of Hope Nineveh team 6 7 Preface There are three moments that created this book. First was a dream. I had been teaching and doing research on the Silk Road in far western China, studying the expansion of Aramaic Christians from the Middle East to the heartland of China. I awoke from the dream responding to the beheading of Christians by ISIS with a certainty that I must return to S.E. Turkey where I had spent so many years serving indigenous Christians who still speak a dialect of Aramaic akin to the language of Jesus. Second was the cry of a woman I heard during an investigatory trip I took into northern Iraq, Kurdistan, where I interviewed 2000 families early in 2015. The experience forged a long-term plan to assist the people fleeing ISIS and perhaps help prevent the extinction of Christianity in the Middle East. Third, was the decision to return to the Holy Mountain of Mount Izla for a period of 40 days and nights. Why? I do not know except I felt this inner calling. The time was right. The dream, the cry, and the decision! Now I find myself on a mountain following the footsteps of Moses, Mar Awgin and many others in search of an encounter with the Divine. Here on this mountain I am in the presence of thousands of saints, a cloud of witnesses, who lived here in quiet prayer and service to humanity and their God, Note: The transliteration of some words vary depending on use of western or eastern dialects of Syriac/Aramaic. For example “Mor” is western whereas “Mar”is eastern, 8 the same with Izlo/Izla. There is only one vowel change. In general I use the eastern form except for specific Syriac Orthodox terms. I have chosen to use the title “Mar” which means “saint” instead of the spelling “Mor” in the title for the monastery of Mar Awgin. While this may disappoint my Syriac Orthodox friends I choose to stay with the East Syriac form of the spelling because the monastery was for most of its existence an Assyrian Church of the East institution even though now it has reverted to the West Syriacs (Syriac Othodox). Monasticism of the Christian form, especially cenobitic monasticism helped to develop world culture. According to my teacher, Arthur Voobus, Christian monasticism started on or near the Holy Mountain near Nisibis. It was a wild solitary form. Males did not live in community. They lived solitary lives at the edge of civilization. In this case it was Nisibis. Monasticism seems rd to have existed on this mountain around the 3 century or perhaps even earlier. It could be that these men and a few women were victims of war. They were exposed to violence and the psychological damage drove them into isolation. The Persian/Roman wars were waged on the northern Syrian plains. Nisibis was the recipient of armies from both sides. Centered in a vast agricultural region its residents were able to supply food to the armies. At other times it was a victim to the shifting battle lines. The city also was the refuge to the injured solders and the war 9 weary. When the Eastern Roman Emperor Julien died on the battlefield not too far from Mar Awgin in 363 AD it was the end of Roman occupation of the region. The Persians moved in and pushed the local population sympathetic to the Romans to the West. Saint Ephrem moved from Nisibis to Edessa a couple hundred kilometers directly west. The border sifted westward. Mount Izla now belonged to the Sassanid Empire. Mar Awgin and his brothers stayed on the Holy Mountain preferring not to side with the Romans who had been their oppressors in Egypt. Not until the Crusades 700 years later would the Romans try to regain a foothold on the region. One of the most interesting historical puzzles is the question of the relationship between Saint Awgin and Saint Ephrem. The Bishop of Nisibis was Jacob and we read nothing about Jacob and Awgin meeting together or Ephrem and Awgin. If Awgin arrived on Mount Izla in 350 AD and lived there until 363 when Ephrem and Jacob lived in Nisibis then where is there a mention of these men meeting? After all they were less than ten miles apart. You can see the monastery from Nisibis. I am looking at Nisibis from the window of my cell as I write these words. Did Bishop Jacob of Nisibis ever visit Mor Awgin Monastery? Did Ephrem ever set foot on the monastery grounds? Either the records of this connection are lost or are yet to be discovered. I suspect that if we were to ever find anything ab out this connection it would be in the hymns of Ephrem. On the other hand these men were separated by language, 10 empires, authority, and culture. Awgin spoke Coptic and Ephrem and Jacob spoke Syriac. Awgin traveled extensively whereas Ephrem and Jacob did not. This limited the time of contact within the 13 years when it was possible for them to be in contact. Also, Jacob was not the bishop of Awgin. More than likely Awgin saw himself under the authority of a Coptic bishop or Patriarch. As mentioned above they lived in a border region where the Persian and Roman empires collided. They sympathized with different sides. There are many reasons to conclude why did not meet or if they did it was merely cordial and in passing. Nisibis, after all, was the border between the Persian and Roman Empires. Just as today it is the border between Turkey and Syria (Nusybene and Qamishli) although in a different direction. I am sure there are people in Nisibis who have never been on the Syrian side of the border although only a miles or two away. The same would be true of people from Qamishli who have never been across to the Turkish side. Although only a few miles apart, these populations are separated by culture, language, and nations. It is not hard to imagine that the same would be true of the days of Ephrem and Awgin. Although a few miles apart they too were separated by culture, language and empires. There is mention of Saint Awgin along with Jacob and Ephrem in a Fanqitho in the Easter Week sections. But these are not historical records and are only evidence of a cultural memory. The Fanquitho is a book of long festal prayers for various seasons. I once stood in the Church of Saint Jacob in Nisibis. It was 11 thrilling to stand on the very stones where Ephrem stood and conducted his choirs teaching the people his new hymns. I believe Ephrem to be the greatest writer of Christian hymns in all of history. Monasticism began to experience a period of peace and stability after Saint Awgin. Monks from Egypt were able to travel to Mount Izla under the security of the Persians. The fame of Mar Awgin drew people throughout the Empire and beyond. Conversely, the monks of Mar Awgin were able to travel eastward along the Silk Road and spread the benefits of monasticism and Christianity under the relative th th veil of Persian security from the 4 to 5 century. Some have argued that the history of Saint Awgin was distorted to benefit the Nestorian claim on the monasteries of the region. And because of this underlying motive the history of the founding of the monastery should be viewed with suspicion. While there may have been a sectarian motive behind to establishment of the early date of Saint Awgin monastery the early date still may be true. The Egyptian monks were not Nestorian. Later monks were Nestorian and wanted to perhaps weave a claim into the fabric of their history but the founding of the monastery had nothing to do with their perception of it. Saint Awgin may have founded the monastery in 350 AD and only later was this credited to a Nestorian purpose for the benefit of people centuries later.
Recommended publications
  • The Evidence of Late Antique Syriac Hagiography Di Brouria Bitton-Ashkelony
    From Sacred Travel to Monastic Career: The Evidence of Late Antique Syriac Hagiography di Brouria Bitton-Ashkelony In one of the dramatic moments in the conversion of Rabbula – a prominent figure in the Church of Edessa in the first half of the fifth century – Acacius bishop of Aleppo and Eusebius bishop of Edessa led him to the monastery of Marcian and Abraham, two local holy recluses belonging to the Syriac ecclesiastical landscape1. There Rabbula declared his desire to convert to Christianity and to shut himself away, like them. But before entering this new way of life he expressed one desire: To go to Jerusalem and see the holy place and be baptized in the Jordan where Christ was baptized as a model for us2. Rabbula then «entered Jerusalem, prayed in front of Golgotha…, entered the tomb of the Lord and the cave where he was born, and went up to the place of the Ascension… From there he went down to the Jordan; at once he petitioned the priests and recited before them the creed, and they anointed him and baptized him»3. As soon as he was baptized he went back to his city, where he assumed a social position, and appeared as the patron of the poor4. Later on he launched his episcopate career and served as the bishop of Edessa in 411-412 and again in 435- 436, emerging as an opponent of Nestorius and supporter of Cyril of Alexandria. This account narrated in the Life of Rabbula, composed around 440, close to the hero’s own time, offers an intriguing close-up of the social and intellectual elite’s conversion against the background of Edessa’s Hellenic culture at the end of the fourth century and beginning of the fifth5.
    [Show full text]
  • Migrants & City-Making
    MIGRANTS & CITY-MAKING This page intentionally left blank MIGRANTS & CITY-MAKING Dispossession, Displacement, and Urban Regeneration Ayşe Çağlar and Nina Glick Schiller Duke University Press • Durham and London • 2018 © 2018 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper ∞ Typeset in Minion and Trade Gothic type by BW&A Books, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Çaglar, Ayse, author. | Schiller, Nina Glick, author. Title: Migrants and city-making : multiscalar perspectives on dispossession / Ayse Çaglar and Nina Glick Schiller. Description: Durham : Duke University Press, 2018. | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: lccn 2018004045 (print) | lccn 2018008084 (ebook) | isbn 9780822372011 (ebook) | isbn 9780822370444 (hardcover : alk. paper) | isbn 9780822370567 (pbk. : alk. paper) Subjects: lcsh : Emigration and immigration—Social aspects. | Immigrants—Turkey—Mardin. | Immigrants— New Hampshire—Manchester. | Immigrants—Germany— Halle an der Saale. | City planning—Turkey—Mardin. | City planning—New Hampshire—Manchester. | City planning—Germany—Halle an der Saale. Classification: lcc jv6225 (ebook) | lcc jv6225 .S564 2018 (print) | ddc 305.9/06912091732—dc23 lc record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018004045 Cover art: Multimedia Center, Halle Saale. Photo: Alexander Schieberle, www.alexschieberle.de To our mothers and fathers, Sitare and Adnan Şimşek and Evelyn and Morris Barnett, who understood the importance of having daughters who
    [Show full text]
  • Nl 6 1999-2000
    & ST. SHENOUDA COPTIC NEWSLETTER SUBSCRIBER'S EDITION Quarterly Newsletter Published by the St. Shenouda Center for Coptic Studies 1494 S. Robertson Blvd., Ste. 204, LA, CA 90035 Tel: (310) 271-8329 Fax: (310) 558-1863 Mailing Address: 1701 So. Wooster St. Los Angeles, CA 90035, U.S.A. October, 1999 Volume 6(N.S. 3), No. 1 In This Issue: The Second St. Shenouda Conference of Coptic Studies (4) by Hany N. Takla ............1 Conference Abstracts (2) by Hany N. Takla ...................................................................7 The 7th International Congress of Coptic Studies by Dr. J. van der Vliet......................10 A Tribute to Professor Paul van Moorsel by Dr. Mat Immerzeel ...................................12 News by Hany N. Takla ..................................................................................................14 The Second St. Shenouda Conference of Coptic StudiesNewsletter (August 13 - 14, 1999 - Los Angeles, California) (4) (by Hany N. Takla) Introduction: For a second time in as many years, scholar, Bishop Samuel of Shibin al-Qanatar, the Society held its annual Conference of Coptic Egypt. Notably present was Prof. James Robinson, Studies. This time it was held at, its probable the retired director of the Claremont Institute for permanent future site, the Campus of the CopticChristianity and Antiquity (ICA). University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Several of the presenters came from different parts As planned, this gathering brought together several of the United States: Prof. Boulos Ayad Ayad, segments of the population that had the common Boulder Co; Dr. Bastiaan Van Elderen, Grand interest of Coptic Studies. This mixture of the Haven MI; Dr. Fawzy Estafanous, Cleveland OH; young and old, the amateurs and professionals, and Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural Educational Social
    CULTURAL EDUCATIONAL SOCIAL Established 1964 Publication of the Assyrian Foundation of America Volume 43, Number 4, 2019 Books Contents 4 The Lazarists and Daughters of 21 A Son’s Loving Tribute... ComprendreComprendre le M leoyen- Moyen-OrientOrient ClaireClaire Weibel Weibel Yacoub Yacoub La France et les CollectionCollection dirigée dirigée par J.-P. par ChagnollaudJ.-P. Chagnollaud Jonathon Malek QUELLEQUELLE CITOYENNETÉ CITOYENNETÉ LA LAFRANCE FRANCE ET ETLES LES ASSYRO-CHALDÉENS ASSYRO-CHALDÉENS Charity among the Assyro-Chaldeans DANSDANS LES LESCAMPS CAMPS DE RÉFUGIÉSDE RÉFUGIÉS ? ? Qu’enQu’en dit ditla pressela presse ? ? ParmiParmi les Chrétiens les Chrétiens d’Orient, d’Orient, les Arméniens les Arméniens sont sontdevenus devenus familiers familiers Abdulmesih BarAbraham, MSc. Assyro-Chaldéens Les palestiniensLes palestiniens au Liban au Liban aux médiasaux médias et à l’opinionet à l’opinion publique publique française. française. Mais Mais qu’en qu’en est-il est-il des des LALA FRANCEFRANCE Assyro-ChaldéensAssyro-Chaldéens ? Les ?connaît-on Les connaît-on vraiment vraiment ? Sont-ils ? Sont-ils les oubliés les oubliés de de Claire Yacoub Weibel la grandela grande histoire histoire ? ? Claire Yacoub Weibel ETET LES LES ASSYRO-CHALDÉENS ASSYRO-CHALDÉENS Il est unIl est fait un que fait la que presse la presse française, française, toutes toutes tendances tendances confondues, confondues, a parléa parlédes Assyro-Chaldéens,des Assyro-Chaldéens, ces Syro-Mésopotamiens,ces Syro-Mésopotamiens, chrétiens chrétiens 22 Letter from the Assyrian depuisdepuis deux deuxmille milleans. ans. e e Qu’en dit la presse ? Qu’en dit la presse? Dès leDès xix le xixsiècle, siècle, elle répercuteelle répercute abondamment abondamment les récitsles récits des des Qu’en dit la presse ? explorateursexplorateurs et les et événements,les événements, souvent souvent tragiques, tragiques, qui quitouchent touchent les Assyro-Chaldéensles Assyro-Chaldéens aux confinsaux confins des empiresdes empires ottoman ottoman et persan.et persan.
    [Show full text]
  • Christian Historical Imagination in Late Antique Iraq
    OXFORD EARLY CHRISTIAN STUDIES General Editors Gillian Clark Andrew Louth THE OXFORD EARLY CHRISTIAN STUDIES series includes scholarly volumes on the thought and history of the early Christian centuries. Covering a wide range of Greek, Latin, and Oriental sources, the books are of interest to theologians, ancient historians, and specialists in the classical and Jewish worlds. Titles in the series include: Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and the Transformation of Divine Simplicity Andrew Radde-Gallwitz (2009) The Asceticism of Isaac of Nineveh Patrik Hagman (2010) Palladius of Helenopolis The Origenist Advocate Demetrios S. Katos (2011) Origen and Scripture The Contours of the Exegetical Life Peter Martens (2012) Activity and Participation in Late Antique and Early Christian Thought Torstein Theodor Tollefsen (2012) Irenaeus of Lyons and the Theology of the Holy Spirit Anthony Briggman (2012) Apophasis and Pseudonymity in Dionysius the Areopagite “No Longer I” Charles M. Stang (2012) Memory in Augustine’s Theological Anthropology Paige E. Hochschild (2012) Orosius and the Rhetoric of History Peter Van Nuffelen (2012) Drama of the Divine Economy Creator and Creation in Early Christian Theology and Piety Paul M. Blowers (2012) Embodiment and Virtue in Gregory of Nyssa Hans Boersma (2013) The Chronicle of Seert Christian Historical Imagination in Late Antique Iraq PHILIP WOOD 1 3 Great Clarendon Street, Oxford, OX2 6DP, United Kingdom Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries # Philip Wood 2013 The moral rights of the author have been asserted First Edition published in 2013 Impression: 1 All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • The Syrian Orthodox Church and Its Ancient Aramaic Heritage, I-Iii (Rome, 2001)
    Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies 5:1, 63-112 © 2002 by Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute SOME BASIC ANNOTATION TO THE HIDDEN PEARL: THE SYRIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH AND ITS ANCIENT ARAMAIC HERITAGE, I-III (ROME, 2001) SEBASTIAN P. BROCK UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD [1] The three volumes, entitled The Hidden Pearl. The Syrian Orthodox Church and its Ancient Aramaic Heritage, published by TransWorld Film Italia in 2001, were commisioned to accompany three documentaries. The connecting thread throughout the three millennia that are covered is the Aramaic language with its various dialects, though the emphasis is always on the users of the language, rather than the language itself. Since the documentaries were commissioned by the Syrian Orthodox community, part of the third volume focuses on developments specific to them, but elsewhere the aim has been to be inclusive, not only of the other Syriac Churches, but also of other communities using Aramaic, both in the past and, to some extent at least, in the present. [2] The volumes were written with a non-specialist audience in mind and so there are no footnotes; since, however, some of the inscriptions and manuscripts etc. which are referred to may not always be readily identifiable to scholars, the opportunity has been taken to benefit from the hospitality of Hugoye in order to provide some basic annotation, in addition to the section “For Further Reading” at the end of each volume. Needless to say, in providing this annotation no attempt has been made to provide a proper 63 64 Sebastian P. Brock bibliography to all the different topics covered; rather, the aim is simply to provide specific references for some of the more obscure items.
    [Show full text]
  • The Lives of the Saints
    '"Ill lljl ill! i j IIKI'IIIII '".'\;\\\ ','".. I i! li! millis i '"'''lllllllllllll II Hill P II j ill liiilH. CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Cornell University Library BR 1710.B25 1898 v.7 Lives of the saints. 3 1924 026 082 598 The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924026082598 *— * THE 3Utoe* of tt)e Saints; REV. S. BARING-GOULD SIXTEEN VOLUMES VOLUME THE SEVENTH *- -* . l£ . : |£ THE Itoes of tfje faints BY THE REV. S. BARING-GOULD, M.A. New Edition in 16 Volumes Revised with Introduction and Additional Lives of English Martyrs, Cornish and Welsh Saints, and a full Index to the Entire Work ILLUSTRATED BY OVER 400 ENGRAVINGS VOLUME THE SEVENTH KttljJ— PARTI LONDON JOHN C. NIMMO &° ' 1 NEW YORK : LONGMANS, GREEN, CO. MDCCCXCVIII *• — ;— * Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co. At the Eallantyne Press *- -* CONTENTS' PAGE S. Athanasius, Deac. 127 SS. Aaron and Julius . I SS. AudaxandAnatholia 203 S. Adeodatus . .357 „ Agilulf . 211 SS. Alexanderandcomp. 207 S. Amalberga . , . 262 S. Bertha . 107 SS. AnatholiaandAudax 203 ,, Bonaventura 327 S. Anatolius,B. of Con- stantinople . 95 „ Anatolius, B.ofLao- dicea . 92 „ Andrew of Crete 106 S. Canute 264 Carileff. 12 „ Andrew of Rinn . 302 „ ... SS. Antiochus and SS. Castus and Secun- dinus Cyriac . 351 .... 3 Nicostra- S. Apollonius . 165 „ Claudius, SS. Apostles, The Sepa- tus, and others . 167 comp. ration of the . 347 „ Copres and 207 S. Cyndeus . 277 S. Apronia . .357 SS. Aquila and Pris- „ Cyril 205 Cyrus of Carthage .
    [Show full text]
  • February 11 2018[1].Pages
    Saint Rafka Maronite Catholics of the East in the Upstate! 1215 S. Highway 14, Greer, SC 29650 864.469.9119 saintrafka.org [email protected] Saint Rafka Maronite Church is a Catholic Parish of the Antiochene Syriac Maronite Church, Eparchy of Saint Maron of Brooklyn, NY, Most Rev. Gregory John Mansour, Bishop, 109 Remsen Street, Brooklyn, NY, 11201, 718.237.9913. [email protected] Rev. Bartholomew Leon, Administrator, February 11, 2018 [email protected] Pastor’s Advisory Council Ramiz Askar, Marlene Saad Secretary Richard Sleiman, Chairman Sunday of the Miracle at Cana Paul Sleiman, Linda Wickett, Entrance into Great Lent Jack Yacu Finance Committee A great banquet requires great planning. Anyone who George Azan, Joseph Chebeir, Chairman hosts guests knows the anxiety of arranging a perfect Tony Sleiman, Paula Howard-Casby party. In today’s reading from Gospel, Jesus saves the hosting couple from utter embarrassment at their own Administration wedding when they run out of wine – the main drink of Richard, Wickett, Financial Secretary the day. In His mercy, Christ performs His first miracle by turning six huge jars of water into wine – and not Joseph Chebeir, Scott Herr, just any wine, but the best vintage. While it might seem Administrative Assistants to the Pastor strange that we commemorate a party before the start of the fasting of Lent it is no accident. The following Sundays of the Lent all commemorate the merciful acts of our Lord, the Lover of Mankind, on those whom He takes pity (such as the Leper next week, Mark 1:35-43). Each merciful act of Christ in healing the sick and suffering reveals to humanity that He is the Divine Physician Who has come to heal our souls and bodies.
    [Show full text]
  • PLAY GUIDE Inside
    McGuire Proscenium Stage / Jan 11 – Feb 16, 2020 Noura by HEATHER RAFFO directed by TAIBI MAGAR PLAY GUIDE Inside THE PLAY Synopsis, Setting and Characters • 4 Responses to Noura • 5 THE PLAYWRIGHT About Heather Raffo •7 In Her Own Words • 8 After the Door Slams: An Interview With Heather Raffo •9 CULTURAL CONTEXT The Long Sweep of History: A Selected Timeline of the Land That Is Now Iraq • 12 What’s What: A Selected Glossary of Terms in Noura • 19 Iraq: Ripped From the Headlines • 22 Chaldean Christians • 24 Meet Cultural Consultant Shaymaa Hasan • 25 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION For Further Reading and Understanding • 27 Guthrie Theater Play Guide Copyright 2020 DRAMATURG Carla Steen GRAPHIC DESIGNER Akemi Graves CONTRIBUTORS Shaymaa Hasan, Daisuke Kawachi, Heather Raffo, Carla Steen Guthrie Theater, 818 South 2nd Street, Minneapolis, MN 55415 EDITOR Johanna Buch ADMINISTRATION 612.225.6000 All rights reserved. With the exception of classroom use by BOX OFFICE 612.377.2224 or 1.877.44.STAGE (toll-free) teachers and individual personal use, no part of this Play Guide may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic guthrietheater.org • Joseph Haj, artistic director or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by an information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Some materials published herein are written especially for our Guide. Others are reprinted by permission of their publishers. The Guthrie creates transformative theater experiences that ignite the imagination, The Guthrie Theater receives support from the National stir the heart, open the mind and build community through the illumination of our Endowment for the Arts.
    [Show full text]
  • Syrian Orthodox from the Mosul Area Snelders, B
    Identity and Christian-Muslim interaction : medieval art of the Syrian Orthodox from the Mosul area Snelders, B. Citation Snelders, B. (2010, September 1). Identity and Christian-Muslim interaction : medieval art of the Syrian Orthodox from the Mosul area. Peeters, Leuven. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/1887/15917 Version: Not Applicable (or Unknown) Licence agreement concerning inclusion of doctoral thesis in the License: Institutional Repository of the University of Leiden Downloaded from: https://hdl.handle.net/1887/15917 Note: To cite this publication please use the final published version (if applicable). 2. The Syrian Orthodox in their Historical and Artistic Settings 2.1 Northern Mesopotamia and Mosul The blossoming of ‘Syrian Orthodox art’ during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries is mainly attested for Northern Mesopotamia. At the time, Northern Mesopotamia was commonly known as the Jazira (Arabic for ‘island’), a geographic entity encompassing roughly the territory which is located between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, and lies north of Baghdad and south of Lake Van. 1 In ecclesiastical terms, this region is called Athur (Assyria). 2 Early Islamic historians and geographers distinguished three different districts: Diyar Mudar, Diyar Bakr, and Diyar Rabi cah. Today, these districts correspond more or less to eastern Syria, south-eastern Turkey, and northern Iraq, respectively. Mosul was the capital of the Diyar Rabi cah district, which ‘extended north from Takrit along both banks of the Tigris to the tributary Ba caynatha river a few kilometres north of Jazirat ibn cUmar (modern Cizre) and westwards along the southern slopes of the Tur cAbdin as far as the western limits of the Khabur Basin’.
    [Show full text]
  • Aelius Gallus at Cleopatris (Suez) . and on the Red Sea Philip Mayerson
    Aelius Gallus at Cleopatris (Suez) and on the Red Sea Mayerson, Philip Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies; Spring 1995; 36, 1; ProQuest pg. 17 Aelius Gallus at Cleopatris (Suez) . and on the Red Sea Philip Mayerson HE MILITARY EXPEDITION of Aelius Gallus to Arabia in 26/25 B.C. 1 has attracted considerable scholarly comment T on his campaign regarding its chronology, the political and economic reasons behind it, the identification of Arabian sites mentioned in the sources, Gallus' misadventures caused by the duplicity of his Nabataean guide Syllaeus or by his own miscalculations, and his inglorious retreat to Egypt. Arabia has been the focal point of interest, understandably so since little was known of Rome's relationship with this exotic region at the end of, or prior to, the first century B.C. The mounting of the amphibious operation at Cleopatris, on the other hand, has been generally ignored, perhaps because Strabo 16.4.23 is its only source, whereas Pliny the Elder (HN 6.160ff), Josephus (AJ 15.317), Cassius Dio (53.29.3-8), and the Res Gestae Divi Augusti (5.26) supplement Strabo's account of Gallus' campaign in Arabia (16.4.23f). Be that as it may, the early phase of the expedition bears upon the factors that led to Gallus' failure in Arabia. It also raises questions regarding the historicity of certain details in Strab(,)'s acc9unt, Strabo tells us that Gallus "built not less than eighty boats, biremes and triremes and light boats, at Cleopatris, which is near the old canal (1tP0C; 'tn 1taA.al~ OlOOPUYl) that extends from the Nile (to the Gulf of Suez)." When Gallus realized that Syllaeus had deceived him into thinking he was to be opposed by an Arabian navy, "he built.
    [Show full text]
  • The Legend of Shirin in Syriac Sources. a Warning Against Caesaropapism?
    ORIENTALIA CHRISTIANA CRACOVIENSIA 2 (2010) Jan W. Żelazny Pontifical University of John Paul II in Kraków The legend of Shirin in Syriac sources. A warning against caesaropapism? Why was Syriac Christianity not an imperial Church? Why did it not enter into a relationship with the authorities? This can be explained by pointing to the political situation of that community. I think that one of the reasons was bad experiences from the time of Chosroes II. The Story of Chosroes II The life of Chosroes II Parviz is a story of rise and fall. Although Chosroes II became later a symbol of the power of Persia and its ancient independence, he encountered numerous difficulties from the very moment he ascended the throne. Chosroes II took power in circumstances that today remain obscure – as it was frequently the case at the Persian court – and was raised to the throne by a coup. The rebel was inspired by an attempt of his father, Hormizd IV, to oust one of the generals, Bahram Cobin, which provoked a powerful reaction among the Persian aristocracy. The question concerning Chosroes II’s involvement in the conspiracy still remains unanswered; however, Chosroes II was raised to the throne by the same magnates who had rebelled against his father. Soon after, Hormizd IV died in prison in ambiguous circumstances. The Arabic historian, al-Tabari, claimed that Chosroes was oblivious of the rebellion. However, al-Tabari works were written several centuries later, at a time when the legend of the shah was already deeply rooted in the consciousness of the people.
    [Show full text]