Dayr as-Suryān Collection
The project Beta maṣāḥǝft joined the efforts of preserving the cultural heritage of Dayr as-Suryān in collaboration with the Levantine Foundation that has been sponsoring manuscript conservation campaigns at the monastery for more than fifteen years, and with Prof. Stephen J. Davis and the Yale Monastic Archaeology Project dealing with the cataloguing of the Syriac, Coptic and Arabic manuscripts of the monastery.
It is well known that small groups of Ethiopian monks resided in the monasteries of Wādī al-Naṭrūn over centuries until recent time; they brought books from Ethiopia and left them behind in the communities where they stayed. The Ethiopic collection of Dayr al-Suryān represents only a tiny portion of the monastery’s manuscript holdings, but it is a piece of evidence that complements the history of Dayr al-Suryān with some interesting data.
The collection consists of 23 parchment and paper manuscripts. The oldest Ethiopic manuscript, Dayr as-Suryān Ethiopic 3, dates to the seventeenth century (ʾArgānona wəddāse, ‘The Harp of Mary’). Other manuscripts are Psalters, Gospels of John, collections of prayers, liturgical texts, religious poetry, Miracles of St Mary.
While staying at Dayr al-Suryān, Ethiopian monks kept transcribing religious texts in Ethiopic (the liturgical language of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church), Amharic and Təgrəñña (the spoken languages of Ethiopia and Eritrea) and produced a number of paper manuscripts. Additional notes scattered in the manuscripts help us to identify some of the owners. We know that in the first half of the twentieth century at least one member of the Ethiopian community probably came from the monastery of Māhbara Śəllāse (located in northwestern Ethiopia, close to the Ethiopian-Sudanese border), and another monk was from the famous monastery of Dabra Bizan, the historical centre of the ʾEwosṭatean movement (today in Eritrea). The third one came from the city of Gondar, his name was Gabra Māryām and he owned a number of books. Possibly he is identical to Gabra Māryām Ḫayla Māryām, the abbot of Dayr al-Sulṭān, an Ethiopian monastery in Jerusalem, of whom we know that he resided at Dayr al-Suryān for some years in the 1950s.
Our cordial thanks go to the monks of Dayr al-Suryān for their collaboration and hospitality, particularly to the librarian Father ʾAmūn and the head of the monastery Bishop Mattāʾus, to Prof. Stephen J. Davis who generously shared his knowledge of the collection with us, and to Ms Elizabeth Sobczynski from the Levantine Foundation for making the work possible and for help in arranging the visit.
See also mission reports