The three bilingual Greek–Old Nubian psalms published in this paper have been preserved to us in form of ink inscriptions on the walls of the annexes abutting the monastery on Kom H in Dongola from the west, the capital of the Nubian Christian Kingdom of Makuria. DP 2 (no. 1) is found in the Southwest Annex, DP 3 (no. 2) and DP 4 (no. 3) in the Northwest Annex
The messianic interpretation of the psalms in a number of Antiochene and East Syriac psalm commentar...
The fifth paper in the series brings the focus onto the inscriptions accompanying the famous wall pa...
Old Nubian is the modern designation for a literary language attested in texts from the Nubian kingd...
The present paper analyses two Old Nubian inscriptions found at a church in Akasha West in 1969. The...
The aim of this article is to make some observations concerning the use of the Greek language in Chr...
This study revisits the longest known text in Old Nubian to date, the pseudo- Chrysostomian “Sermon ...
Although archaeological evidence shows that Christianity existed in Nubia before the official missio...
This paper presents a group of nine fragmentarily preserved dipinti from the Temple of Thuthmose III...
The third paper of this series shifts focus to a special category of artistic and epigraphic product...
The discovery of a complete codex in Coptic at the Nubian monastery of Qasr el Wizz has attracted th...
Center in Egypt on the site of Gebel Adda and now kept in the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto.1 Here...
The study of Christian popular piety in Nubia is very difficult, because after the old Christian com...
The messianic interpretation of the psalms in a number of Antiochene and East Syriac psalm commentar...
This paper presents a discussion of quotations from the Psalms that are shared in the writings of Sh...
The Apocryphon of John is one of forty nine works1 contained in a Gnostic library recovered in 1945 ...
The messianic interpretation of the psalms in a number of Antiochene and East Syriac psalm commentar...
The fifth paper in the series brings the focus onto the inscriptions accompanying the famous wall pa...
Old Nubian is the modern designation for a literary language attested in texts from the Nubian kingd...
The present paper analyses two Old Nubian inscriptions found at a church in Akasha West in 1969. The...
The aim of this article is to make some observations concerning the use of the Greek language in Chr...
This study revisits the longest known text in Old Nubian to date, the pseudo- Chrysostomian “Sermon ...
Although archaeological evidence shows that Christianity existed in Nubia before the official missio...
This paper presents a group of nine fragmentarily preserved dipinti from the Temple of Thuthmose III...
The third paper of this series shifts focus to a special category of artistic and epigraphic product...
The discovery of a complete codex in Coptic at the Nubian monastery of Qasr el Wizz has attracted th...
Center in Egypt on the site of Gebel Adda and now kept in the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto.1 Here...
The study of Christian popular piety in Nubia is very difficult, because after the old Christian com...
The messianic interpretation of the psalms in a number of Antiochene and East Syriac psalm commentar...
This paper presents a discussion of quotations from the Psalms that are shared in the writings of Sh...
The Apocryphon of John is one of forty nine works1 contained in a Gnostic library recovered in 1945 ...
The messianic interpretation of the psalms in a number of Antiochene and East Syriac psalm commentar...
The fifth paper in the series brings the focus onto the inscriptions accompanying the famous wall pa...
Old Nubian is the modern designation for a literary language attested in texts from the Nubian kingd...