Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium: Subsidia, Volume 93Peeters, 1997 |
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Página 14
... Syriac - speaking regions12 . Therefore the region of origin of this version undoubtedly was the Syriac - speaking area of Northern Mesopotamia , probably the city of Edessa13 . At the beginning of the fifth century when Rabbula ...
... Syriac - speaking regions12 . Therefore the region of origin of this version undoubtedly was the Syriac - speaking area of Northern Mesopotamia , probably the city of Edessa13 . At the beginning of the fifth century when Rabbula ...
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... Syriac - speaking regions where it became very popular . We may infer this , for instance , from a Syriac verse homily on the Finding of the Cross by Jacob of Serugh ( d.521 ) . The tenor of Jacob's homiletic version is the same as that ...
... Syriac - speaking regions where it became very popular . We may infer this , for instance , from a Syriac verse homily on the Finding of the Cross by Jacob of Serugh ( d.521 ) . The tenor of Jacob's homiletic version is the same as that ...
Página 26
... Syriac . Furthermore , in the Syriac - speaking part of the Near East there was hardly any knowledge of Latin and Latin texts only became known in Syriac by way of Greek translations . Borgehammar's supposition would make the Kyriakos ...
... Syriac . Furthermore , in the Syriac - speaking part of the Near East there was hardly any knowledge of Latin and Latin texts only became known in Syriac by way of Greek translations . Borgehammar's supposition would make the Kyriakos ...