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See also: chronicle which narrates the See also: history of the war between the Greeks and Persians in 502-506, and which is one of the earliest and best See also: historical documents preserved to us in See also: Syriac
.
The See also: work owes its preservation to having been incorporated in the third See also: part of the history of pseudo-See also: Dionysius of Tell-Mahre, and may probably have had a place in the second part of the Ecclesiastical History of See also: John of
See also: Asia, from whom (as Nau has shown) pseudo-Dionysius copied all or most of the See also: matter contained in his third part
.
The chronicle in question is See also: anonymous, and Nau has shown that the note of a copyist, which was thought to assign it to the See also: monk
See also: Joshua of Zuknin near Amid, more probably refers to the compiler of the whole work in which it was incorporated
.
Anyhow the author was an eyewitness of many of the events which he describes, and must have been living at See also: Edessa during the years when it suffered so severely from the Persian War
.
His view of events is everywhere characterized by his belief in overruling See also: Providence; and as he eulogizes See also: Flavian II., the Chalcedonian patriarch of See also: Antioch, in warmer terms than those in which he praises his See also: great Monophysite contemporaries, See also: Jacob of Serugh and Philoxenus of Mabbog, he was probably an orthodox Catholic
.
The chronicle was first made known by See also: Assemani's abridged Latin version (B
.
0. i
.
260-283) and was edited in 1876 by the See also: abbe See also: Martin and (with an
See also: English See also: translation) by W
.
See also: Wright in 1882
.
After an elaborate dedication to a friend—the " See also: priest and See also: abbot " Sergius—a brief recapitulation of events from the
See also: death of Julian in 363 and a See also: fuller account of the reigns of the Persian See also: kings Peroz (457-484) and Balash (484-488), the writer enters upon his See also: main
E.g. the vicissitudes of Levitical families, other migrations into See also: Palestine, &c
.
The See also: story of See also: Joseph has probably been used as a See also: link (see See also: Luther, op. cit. pp
.
142 seq.).theme— the history of the disturbed relations between the Persian and See also: Greek Empires from the beginning of the reign of Kawad I
.
(489-531), which culminated in the great war of 502-506 . From See also: October 494 to the conclusion of See also: peace near the end of 506, the author gives an annalistic account, with careful See also: specification of See also: dates, of the main events in See also: Mesopotamia, the theatre of conflict—such as the siege and capture of Amid by the Persians (502-503), their unsuccessful siege of Edessa (503), and the abortive attempt of the Greeks to recover Amid (5o4-5o5)
.
The work was probably written a few years after the conclusion of the war
.
The See also: style is graphic and straightforward, and the author was evidently a See also: man of See also: good See also: education and of a See also: simple, honest mind
.
(N
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