Joseph Hazzaya On Providence Text Translation And Introduction

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Joseph Hazzaya, On Providence: Text, Translation and Introduction

The East Syriac mystic Joseph Hazzaya (8th century AD) wrote On Providence in an attempt to derive universal salvation (apokatastasis) from Theodore of Mopsuestia, the highest theological authority in the East Syriac Church, and thus to defend himself from heresy accusations coming from that Church’s Primate, Catholicos Timothy I, as Nestor Kavvadas draws out in the introduction to this first edition and translation of the treatise. At the same time, in On Providence Joseph Hazzaya reacts, by way of a remodelled Elijah-Apocalypse, to a rising wave of conversions to Islam that was to change the face of his homeland Mesopotamia as well as of the entire Middle East; thus, On Providence is a valuable addition to the scanty sources on that epochal change.
Joseph Hazzaya On Providence

The East Syriac mystic Joseph Hazzaya (8th century AD) offers in his treatise On Providence, edited for the first time by Nestor Kavvadas, an apology of universal salvation (apokatastasis) and an answer, articulated through an Elijah-Apocalypse, to the Islamisation of Mesopotamia.
The Catalogue of Books of ‘Abdisho' bar Brikha

This volume presents the first modern annotated translation of ʿAbdishoʿ bar Brikha’s (d. 1318) Catalogue of Books, the earliest history of Syriac literature. Along with an English translation, which is based on Yusuf Habbi’s 1986 edition, this volume annotates the numerous works listed in the Catalogue by presenting the editions and translations of published works, the manuscripts and sources preserving unpublished works, and the works that do not survive. An extended introduction, an alphabetized listing of the numbered entries and writers, and the vocalized East Syriac text of the Catalogue are also included.