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The Acts of Mar Mari the Apostle
Amir Harrak
ISBN
9781589830936
Volume
WGRW 11
Status
Available
Price
$22.00
Publication Date
August 2005
Paperback

$22.00

The Syriac Acts of Mar Mari the Apostle discusses the introduction of Christianity into Upper Syria, Mesopotamia, and Persia at the end of or slightly after the apostolic age by Mar Mari. The Acts continues the Teaching of Addai (Thaddaeus in Eusebius of Caesarea), one of the seventy disciples of Jesus, who dispatched Mari from Edessa to the east. The Acts traces Mari’s itinerary and preaching in Mesopotamia until his arrival in Babylonia, where he founded the first church near the Hellenistic city of Seleucia on the Tigris. By the early fifth century, the birthplace of Christianity in Babylonia became the patriarchal seat of the Church of the East, whose ecclesiastical jurisdiction and cultural influence extended during the early medieval period as far as China. This volume contains the Acts of Mar Mari in Syriac and a relevant account from Kitab al-Majdal in Arabic, both translated for the first time into English. This annotated translation of the Acts of Mar Mari offers specialists and lay people alike a major source dealing with the early history of Christianity in the Middle East.

Amir Harrak is Associate Professor of Aramaic and Syriac at the University of Toronto and author of Assyria and Hanigalbat: A Historical Reconstruction of Bilateral Relations from the Middle of the Fourteenth to the end of the Twelfth Centuries B.C. (Olms).

“The present edition and translation of the Acts of Mar Mari the Apostle makes available to a growing numbers of students an accessible and reliable guide to the tradition that traces the expansion of Christianity eastward from Edessa. As such, it will take its place alongside the classic edition of the Teaching of Addai by George Howard. The Syriac text of the Acts will be put to good use in Syriac reading groups. The English translation, the only one of its kind, will be welcomed by those who cannot read the text in original language and will be especially useful for courses in the history and literature of Syriac-speaking Christianity.”
—Joseph P. Amar, Review of Biblical Literature