Difference between revisions of "John of Dara"

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JOHN OF DARA: Jacobite bishop of Dara, in Mesopotamia, in the first half of the ninth century. He was a contemporary of Dionysius of Telmera (d. 845), who dedicated to him his great chronicle. Four of his works are known: (1) "On the Resurrection of the Bodies," in four books: (2) "On the Heavenly and Ecclesiastical Hierarchy," two books, based on the pseudo-Dionysius Areopagita (cf. Frothingham, Stephen bar Sudaili, Leyden, 1886, p. 66): (3) "On the Priesthood," four books (fragments in Overbeck, Opera Ephraemi Syri, Oxford, 1865, pp. 409-413, and Monumenta Syriaca, i., Innsbruck, 1889, pp. 105-110; of . notice by Zingerle in TQ, 1867-68); (4) a book on the soul (extracts in Codex Vaticanus Syriacus 147). There is also an anaphora.
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E. NESTLE.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY: J. S. Assemani, Bibliotheca orientalis, ii. 118, 219, 347, Rome, 1719-28; G. Bickell, Conspectus rei Syrorum literariae, p. 42, 1871; W. Wright, Short Hist. of Syriac Literature, London, 1894; R. Duval, Litterature syriaque, Paris, 1899: DCB, iii. 389.
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=== Bibliography ===
 
=== Bibliography ===
  
 
Le "De oblatione" de Jean de Dara, Ed. Jean Sader, CSCO vol. 308-309.  Scriptores Syri t. 132-133. Louvain:Secretariat du CorpusSCO (1970). 2 vols, Syriac, French.
 
Le "De oblatione" de Jean de Dara, Ed. Jean Sader, CSCO vol. 308-309.  Scriptores Syri t. 132-133. Louvain:Secretariat du CorpusSCO (1970). 2 vols, Syriac, French.
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[i]Details from [http://www.ccel.org/s/schaff/encyc/encyc06/htm/iii.lvii.lxvii.htm Schaff][/i]

Revision as of 12:52, 3 October 2005

JOHN OF DARA: Jacobite bishop of Dara, in Mesopotamia, in the first half of the ninth century. He was a contemporary of Dionysius of Telmera (d. 845), who dedicated to him his great chronicle. Four of his works are known: (1) "On the Resurrection of the Bodies," in four books: (2) "On the Heavenly and Ecclesiastical Hierarchy," two books, based on the pseudo-Dionysius Areopagita (cf. Frothingham, Stephen bar Sudaili, Leyden, 1886, p. 66): (3) "On the Priesthood," four books (fragments in Overbeck, Opera Ephraemi Syri, Oxford, 1865, pp. 409-413, and Monumenta Syriaca, i., Innsbruck, 1889, pp. 105-110; of . notice by Zingerle in TQ, 1867-68); (4) a book on the soul (extracts in Codex Vaticanus Syriacus 147). There is also an anaphora.

E. NESTLE.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: J. S. Assemani, Bibliotheca orientalis, ii. 118, 219, 347, Rome, 1719-28; G. Bickell, Conspectus rei Syrorum literariae, p. 42, 1871; W. Wright, Short Hist. of Syriac Literature, London, 1894; R. Duval, Litterature syriaque, Paris, 1899: DCB, iii. 389.

Bibliography

Le "De oblatione" de Jean de Dara, Ed. Jean Sader, CSCO vol. 308-309. Scriptores Syri t. 132-133. Louvain:Secretariat du CorpusSCO (1970). 2 vols, Syriac, French.

[i]Details from Schaff[/i]