Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

James Russell To Unravel 'An Armeno-Hebrew Mystery' At NAASR

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • James Russell To Unravel 'An Armeno-Hebrew Mystery' At NAASR

    JAMES RUSSELL TO UNRAVEL 'AN ARMENO-HEBREW MYSTERY' AT NAASR

    Armenian Weekly
    Wed, Oct 26 2011

    BELMONT, Mass.-Prof. James R. Russell, Mashtots Professor of Armenian
    Studies at Harvard University, will give a lecture entitled "An
    Armeno-Hebrew Mystery: Or, a 1,000-Year-Old Armenian Text in a Cairo
    Synagogue and the Stories It Tells" on Thurs., Nov. 3 at 8 p.m., at
    the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)
    Center, 395 Concord Ave. in Belmont.

    In the waning years of the 19th century, a traveling scholar happened
    by chance on a store-room at the back of a Cairo synagogue filled to
    the ceiling with medieval manuscripts: letters, poems, sacred books,
    economic documents, etc., that could not simply be thrown away, as
    they employed the sacred Hebrew script. Like a fly trapped in amber,
    the documents of the Cairo Geniza (which literally means "treasure
    house") provide a vivid and detailed primary record of the life and
    letters of the Middle East in the centuries just after the beginning
    of the second millennium.

    Among the items preserved in the Geniza is a short Armenian word
    list, with translation into Judeo-Arabic. Since the Armenian words
    are written out in Hebrew characters, we know exactly how they were
    pronounced; and the curious selection of vocabulary invites one to
    speculate upon the occasion for which they might have been compiled.

    Both the Geniza record and Armenian sources enable us to recreate
    that context, and to enter, very briefly, a long lost world.

    Russell has been the Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at Harvard
    since 1992. His books include Bosphorus Nights: The Complete Lyric
    Poems of Bedros Tourian, Armenian and Iranian Studies, The Book of
    Flowers, An Armenian Epic: The Heroes of Kasht, Zoroastrianism in
    Armenia, and Hovhannes Tlkurantsi and the Medieval Armenian Lyric
    Tradition.

    Admission to the event is free (donations appreciated). The NAASR
    Center is located opposite the First Armenian Church and next to the
    U.S. Post Office. Ample parking is available around the building and
    in adjacent areas. The lecture will begin promptly at 8 p.m.

    For more information about the lecture, call (617) 489-1610, e-mail
    [email protected], or write to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.

Working...
X