Commentary on Song of Songs; Letter on the Soul; Letter on Ascesis and the Monastic Life
(١ مختصر شرح نشيد الانشاد ٢ رسالة منسوبة الى هرمس الحكيم في معاتبة النفس ٣ الرسالة الولى في الزهد والرهبنية)

Title Commentary on Song of Songs; Letter on the Soul; Letter on Ascesis and the Monastic Life
Title Original ١ مختصر شرح نشيد الانشاد ٢ رسالة منسوبة الى هرمس الحكيم في معاتبة النفس ٣ الرسالة الولى في الزهد والرهبنية
Publication Place - [publisher not identified]
Type Book
Language Arabic
Digital No
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions 1 online resource.
Library: Library of Congress
Library Asset ID 2021667193
Record ID 22057138
Sample Text This 14th-century manuscript is a collection of translations into Arabic. At the beginning is the Commentary on the Song of Songs, originally in Greek, by Gregory of Nyssa (died 394), brother of Basil the Great and, with him and Gregory of Nazianzus, one of the three so-called Cappadocian Fathers. Next comes one of the many pieces of philosophy in Arabic attributed to Hermes the Sage, A Letter on the Soul. The manuscript concludes with a letter of Isaac of Nineveh (active, end of the seventh century) on asceticism and monasticism, originally written in Syriac. Isaac's works on monasticism became very influential, not only among Syriac and Arabic readers, but also in Greek and eventually Georgian and Slavonic translations.
Tür text
View in source Library of Congress Library of Congress - Ottoman library catalog search
Library of Congress - Ottoman library catalog search Library of Congress

Commentary on Song of Songs; Letter on the Soul; Letter on Ascesis and the Monastic Life

(١ مختصر شرح نشيد الانشاد ٢ رسالة منسوبة الى هرمس الحكيم في معاتبة النفس ٣ الرسالة الولى في الزهد والرهبنية)
Publication Place - [publisher not identified]
Type Book
Language Arabic
Digital No
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions 1 online resource.
Library Library of Congress
Library Asset ID 2021667193
Record ID 22057138
Sample Text This 14th-century manuscript is a collection of translations into Arabic. At the beginning is the Commentary on the Song of Songs, originally in Greek, by Gregory of Nyssa (died 394), brother of Basil the Great and, with him and Gregory of Nazianzus, one of the three so-called Cappadocian Fathers. Next comes one of the many pieces of philosophy in Arabic attributed to Hermes the Sage, A Letter on the Soul. The manuscript concludes with a letter of Isaac of Nineveh (active, end of the seventh century) on asceticism and monasticism, originally written in Syriac. Isaac's works on monasticism became very influential, not only among Syriac and Arabic readers, but also in Greek and eventually Georgian and Slavonic translations.
Tür text
Library of Congress - Ottoman library catalog search
Library of Congress You are being redirected...

Please wait