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THOMAS OF MARGA

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 865 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS OF MARGA  , a Nestorian bishop and author of an important monastic
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history in
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Syriac, who flourished in the 9th century A.D . He was born early in the century, probably of Persian parents, in the region of Salakh to the north-east of
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Mosul . As a young man he became in 832 a monk of the famous Nestorian monastery of Beth 'Abbe, which was situated at the confluence of the
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Great Zab with one of its tributaries, about 25 M. due east of Mosul . A few years later he was acting as secretary to Abraham, who had been abbot of Beth 'Abbe, and was catholicus (patriarch) of the
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Nestorians from 837 to 850 . At some date during these 13 years Thomas was promoted by Abraham to be bishop of Marga, a diocese in the same
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district as Beth 'Abhe, and afterwards he was further advanced to be a metropolitan of Beth Garmai, a district farther to the south-east in the mountains which border the Tigris basin . It was during the period of his
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life at Beth 'Abhe and his bishopric that he composed The
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Book of
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Governors, which is in the main a history of his own monastery, but includes lives of
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holy men in other parts of Mesopotamia and the regions east of the Tigris . The
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work was probably planned in imitation of the famous Paradise of Palladius, the history of
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Egyptian monasticism which had become well known to Syriac-speaking Christians in the version of 'Anan-Isho' (6th century) . The Book of Governors has been edited with an
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English
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translation and a copious introduction by E . W . Budge (2 vols.,
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London, 1893), who claims that " it occupies a unique position in Syriac literature, and it fully deserves the veneration with which it has been and is still regarded by all classes of Nestorians to whom it is known." It gives a detailed history of the great monastery cf Beth 'Abhe during its three centuries of existence down to the author's time . It is full of interesting narratives of saintly men told in a naive and candid spirit, and it throws much
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light on the history of
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Christianity in the Persian dominions . There is a later edition by P .

Bedjan (

Paris, 1901) . (N .

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