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  2. Joseph Huzaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Huzaya

    Bar Hebraeus also records that Joseph wrote a work on homographs, which may have been the first in the history of the Syriac language. Since the Syriac alphabet is purely consonantal, homographs are words with the same consonants but different vowels and different meanings. According to the Nestorian manuscripts and the work of the Nestorian ...

  3. Chronicle of Seert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronicle_of_Seert

    It cannot have been written earlier than the ninth century, as at one point in the text the author quotes the Nestorian patriarch Ishoʿ Bar Nun (823-4). Some scholars believe that the Chronicle is the work of the ninth-century author Ishoʿdnah of Basra, who is known to have written a three-volume ecclesiastical history. Others put the date of ...

  4. Syriac language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syriac_language

    An 11th-century Syriac manuscript. In the English language, the term "Syriac" is used as a linguonym (language name) designating a specific variant of the Aramaic language in relation to its regional origin in northeastern parts of Ancient Syria, around Edessa, which lay outside of the provincial borders of Roman Syria.

  5. Church of the East - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_the_East

    The Church of the East (Classical Syriac: ܥܕܬܐ ܕܡܕܢܚܐ ʿĒḏtā d-Maḏenḥā) or the East Syriac Church, [13] also called the Church of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, [14] the Persian Church, the Assyrian Church, the Babylonian Church [12] [15] [16] or the Nestorian Church, [note 2] is one of three major branches of Eastern Nicene ...

  6. Garshuni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garshuni

    The Syriac alphabet has three principal varieties: Estrangelâ (the Classical Syriac script), Madnhâyâ (the Eastern Syriac script, often called "Assyrian" or "Nestorian"), Sertâ (the Western Syriac script, often called "Jacobite" or "Maronite"). The Syriac alphabet is extended by use of diacritics to write Arabic Garshuni.

  7. Syriac Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syriac_Christianity

    Syriac Christianity (Syriac: ܡܫܝܚܝܘܬܐ ܣܘܪܝܝܬܐ, Mšiḥoyuṯo Suryoyto or Mšiḥāyūṯā Suryāytā) is a branch of Eastern Christianity of which formative theological writings and traditional liturgies are expressed in the Classical Syriac language, a variation of the old Aramaic language.

  8. East Syriac Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Syriac_Rite

    The East Syriac Rite, or East Syrian Rite (also called the Edessan Rite, Assyrian Rite, Persian Rite, Chaldean Rite, Nestorian Rite, Babylonian Rite or Syro-Oriental Rite), is an Eastern Christian liturgical rite that employs the Divine Liturgy of Saints Addai and Mari and utilizes the East Syriac dialect as its liturgical language.

  9. Adam (monk) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_(monk)

    Adam (Syriac: ܐܕܡ Adam), also known by his Chinese name Jingjing (Chinese: 景淨; pinyin: Jǐngjìng; Wade–Giles: Ching 3-ching 4), was an 8th-century Syriac Christian monk and scholar in China. He composed the text on the Nestorian Stele, which described the history of the Church of the East in China from 635 to 781. [1]