This volume includes three metrical memre about the book of Ecclesiastes, each written by three authors: Eprhem the Syrian, Jacob of Serug, and John of Mosul.
The present volume commemorates the visit of Moran Mor Ignatius Zakka I Iwas to Heidelberg in 1996 by presenting the German translation of four essays delivered during that historic meeting at the Ecumenical Institute of Ruprecht-Karls University.
The Syriac translation of Sebastian Brock's The Teaching of the Syrian Fathers on Prayer, an anthology of writings from the Syriac tradition that focus on prayer and the spiritual life.
The present volume includes a poetic bibliographic narrative about Gregory Bar Hebraeus, the thirteenth century Syriac author whose various works are among the most important of the later Syriac tradition.
The Lamp of the Sanctuary is a work of systematic theology by Gregory Bar Hebraeus, the thirteenth century polymath, that deals with various topics in Christian thought.
The present volume is an unprecedented collection of the songs and hymns of the Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch, gathered and edited from seven manuscripts.
This volume presents the liturgies and prayers for the weekly practice of the divine hours according to the rite of the Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch.
This volume contains the Syriac text of the anonymous historical work known as the "Chronicle of 1234," an important historical work originating from Edessa.
Syriac Christianity is largely unfamiliar among Christians of the Western traditions. The present volume seeks to rectify this unfamiliarity by providing two brief introductory essays to the Syriac traditions.
The first hand account of the atrocities suffered by the Christians of Tur Abdin from 1914-1918 by A. Naman Karabash and translated into German by George Toro and Amill Gorgis.
Daniel of Salah’s Commentary on the Psalms was one of the foundational exegetical and theological works of the developing Syriac miaphysite tradition. The present volume presents the Syriac text of Daniel’s commentary in vocalized Serto script.
The Barn of Mysteries is the commentary on the Old and New Testaments compiled by Gregory Bar Hebraeus in the thirteenth century that draws on the rich exegetical tradition of previous Syriac authors.