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Hugoye - Journal of Syriac Studies (volume 15)

2012


General Editor George Anton Kiraz
Widely regarded as a premier journal dedicated to the study of Syriac, Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies was established in 1998 as a venue devoted exclusively to the discipline. An organ of Beth Mardutho, the Syriac Institute, the journal appears semi-annually and will be printed in annual editions. A peer-reviewed journal, Hugoye is a respected academic source for up-to-date information about the state of Syriac studies and for discovering what is going on in the field. Contributors include some of the most respected names in the world of Syriac today.
Publisher: Gorgias Press LLC
Availability: In stock
SKU (ISBN): 978-1-4632-0219-4
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Publication Status: In Print
Interior Color: Black with Color Inserts
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Page Count: 430
Languages: English
ISBN: 978-1-4632-0219-4
$75.00
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Widely regarded as a premier journal dedicated to the study of Syriac, Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies was established in 1998 as a venue devoted exclusively to the discipline. An organ of Beth Mardutho, the Syriac Institute, the journal appears semi-annually and will be printed in annual editions. A peer-reviewed journal, Hugoye is a respected academic source for up-to-date information about the state of Syriac studies and for discovering what is going on in the field. Contributors include some of the most respected names in the world of Syriac today.

Widely regarded as a premier journal dedicated to the study of Syriac, Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies was established in 1998 as a venue devoted exclusively to the discipline. An organ of Beth Mardutho, the Syriac Institute, the journal appears semi-annually and will be printed in annual editions. A peer-reviewed journal, Hugoye is a respected academic source for up-to-date information about the state of Syriac studies and for discovering what is going on in the field. Contributors include some of the most respected names in the world of Syriac today.

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ContributorBiography

GeorgeKiraz

George A. Kiraz is the founder and director of Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute, the Editor-in-Chief of Gorgias Press, and a Senior Research Associate at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He earned an M.St. degree in Syriac Studies from the University of Oxford (1991) and an M.Phil. and a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge (1992, 1996). He has published extensively in the fields of computational linguistics, Syriac studies, and the digital humanities. His latest books include The Syriac Orthodox in North America (1895–1995): A Short History (2019) and Syriac-English New Testament (2020).

George is an ordained Deacon of the rank of Ewangeloyo (Gospler) in the Syriac Orthodox Church where he also serves on several Patriarchal, Synodal, and local committees. He lives in Piscataway, NJ, with his wife Christine and their children, Tabetha Gabriella, Sebastian Kenoro, and Lucian Nurono.

  • Table of Contents - Hugoye 15.1 (page 5)
  • Table of Contents - Hugoye 15.2 (page 6)
  • Hugoye 15.1 (page 7)
    • Introduction (page 9)
      • Libraries in the Syriac Tradition a Special Volume (page 9)
    • Papers (page 13)
      • Ktabe Mpassqe: Dismembered and Reconstituted Syriac and Christian Palestinian Aramaic Manuscripts: Some Examples, Ancient and Modern (page 13)
        • Dismembered Manuscripts (page 14)
        • Reconstituted Manuscripts: 1, in Antiquity (page 19)
        • Reconstituted Manuscripts: 2, in Modern Times (page 22)
      • A Tentative Check List of Dated Syriac Manuscripts up to 1300 (page 27)
        • Abbreviations (page 29)
        • Annotation (page 42)
        • Preliminary Observations (page 49)
        • Some Notable Trends (page 53)
      • Syriac in Library Catalogues (page 55)
        • Abstract (page 55)
        • Romanization (page 57)
        • Access Points (page 61)
        • Manuscripts (page 66)
        • Searching for Books in Syriac (page 68)
      • Corpora, Elibraries And Databases: Locating Syriac Studies in the 21st Century (page 71)
        • Abstract (page 71)
        • Libraries and eLibraries (page 72)
        • Databases and Their Uses (page 76)
        • Corpora (page 79)
        • Conclusion (page 81)
        • Appendix (page 82)
      • A Guide to Manuscripts of the Peshitta New Testament (page 85)
        • Abstract (page 85)
        • A. Textual Criticism and Peshitta New Testament (page 88)
          • 1. Textus Receptus - Recensio Textus: The Gospels (page 88)
          • 2. History as Criticism: The Corpus of Pauline Epistles (page 93)
        • B. The Guide to the Textual Character of Manuscripts (page 99)
          • 1. The Identification of the Textual Character (page 100)
          • 2. Approximate Dating of Manuscripts (page 102)
          • 3. Summary (page 104)
          • Bibliography (page 105)
        • Appendices (page 107)
          • 1. The List of Manuscripts (page 108)
          • 2. The List of Variants (page 111)
          • 3. The Variant Table (Test Units, Selected Mss) (page 161)
          • 4. The Textual Profiles (page 169)
    • Bibliographies (page 171)
      • 2003 (page 171)
      • 2005 (page 171)
      • 2007 (page 171)
      • 2008 (page 171)
      • 2009 (page 172)
      • 2010 (page 172)
      • 2011 (page 173)
    • Book Reviews (page 179)
      • Timotheos I., Ostsyrischer Patriarch: Disputation mit dem Kalifen al-Mahdi, Textedition (page 179)
      • The Asceticism of Isaac of Nineveh. (page 183)
      • Eusèbe démèse, Commentaire de la Genèse. Texte Arménien de lédition de Venise (1980), Fragments Grecs et Syriaques, Avec Traductions. (page 188)
      • Semitic Studies in Victorian Britain. A Portrait of William Wright and his World Through his Letters. (page 192)
      • Deyrul-Zafaran Manuscripts. (page 197)
        • Introduction (page 197)
        • Part One: Title and Indexes (page 199)
        • Part Two: A Good Source of Information (page 203)
        • Conclusion (page 208)
    • Reports (page 211)
      • Beth Mardutho Summer 2011 Internship Report (page 211)
      • A Report on the Workshop Manuscripts from Eastern Christian TraditionsŽ At the SBL Annual Meeting in San Francisco, Nov 2011 (page 213)
      • The International Syriac Language Project (ISLP) 2011 Conference Report (page 216)
      • Papers and Workshops Presented at the 16th International Conference on Patristic Studies (page 234)
      • Sixth North American Syriac Symposium: Syriac Encounters (page 238)
  • Hugoye 15.2 (page 293)
    • Papers (page 295)
      • Syriac Manuscripts in India, Syriac Manuscripts From India (page 295)
        • Abstract (page 295)
        • The Fate of the Oldest Manuscripts (page 297)
        • The Development of Several Traditions (page 301)
        • Bibliography (page 303)
      • The Christian Library from Turfan: SYR HT 41-42-43 An Early Exemplar of the Hudra (page 307)
        • Abstract (page 307)
        • The Syriac Liturgical Fragments from Turfan: The Findings of Sachau and Engberding (page 313)
        • Transliteration and Translation of SYR HT 41-42-43 (B-7) (page 319)
        • Comments on the Production of SYR HT 41-42-43: (page 349)
        • Concluding Comments (page 352)
      • Remarks on Recent Cataloging Efforts Among Syriac Manuscripts Preserved at the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (page 359)
        • Abstract (page 359)
        • Introduction (page 360)
        • Some General Remarks on Current Cataloging Work (page 360)
        • Some Specific Texts and Authors (page 362)
    • Review Essay (page 381)
      • Hunayn Ibn Ishaqs Questions on Medicine for StudentsŽ. Transcription and Translation of the Oldest Extant Syriac Version (Vat. Syr. 192). (page 381)
    • Book Reviews (page 407)
      • East Syriac Christianity in Mongol-Yuan China. (page 407)
      • Christian-Muslim Relations. A Bibliographic History. Volume 1 (600-900) (page 414)
      • rumuz masiiyya fi suriyya al-qadima (page 420)
      • Theodorets People: Social Networks and Religious Conflict in Late Roman Syria. (page 422)
      • Annotated Bibliography of Ephrem the Syrian (page 425)
    • Conference Reports (page 429)
      • North American Patristics Society, Chicago, IL, May 24-26, 2012 (page 429)
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