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Art, Medieval --- Christian art and symbolism --- Jacobites (Syrian Christians) --- Academic collection --- Syrian Orthodox --- Monophysites --- Syriac Christians --- Art, Christian --- Art, Ecclesiastical --- Arts in the church --- Christian symbolism --- Ecclesiastical art --- Symbolism and Christian art --- Religious art --- Symbolism --- Church decoration and ornament --- Medieval art --- Art [Medieval ] --- Iraq --- Mossoul --- Symbolism in art --- Art, Medieval - Iraq - Mosul --- Christian art and symbolism - Iraq - Mosul --- Jacobites (Syrian Christians) - Iraq - Mosul
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Maaloula, the last place in the world where the language of Christ, Aramaic, is spoken ... Nestled in the hollow of the Qalamoun mountains, the small village has never ceased to fascinate all travelers since the end of the 18th century. Indeed since that time, it has remained a sort of Orientalist "commonplace" where European scholars and missionaries thronged until the first half of the 20th century. The greatest orientalists like Theodor Nöldeke, adventurers such as Richard Burton and even Alexandre Dumas knew about the existence of Maaloula and devoted a few pages to him. Today, Maaloula has become a major tourist center which attracts no less than 150,000 annual visitors, Europeans of course but especially Iranians who come to seek in addition to the picturesque places, the illusions of a return to the sources. By crossing archives and speeches on Maaloula for almost two centuries, Frédéric Pichon brings to light, along with the Christian memory of a rural Syrian community, the multiple facets of the identity of the last "Aramaeans" in Syria.
Syriac christians --- Syriac Christians --- Group identity --- Christians --- Regions & Countries - Asia & the Middle East --- History & Archaeology --- Middle East --- Religious adherents --- Collective identity --- Community identity --- Cultural identity --- Social identity --- Identity (Psychology) --- Social psychology --- Collective memory --- Syrian Christians --- History --- History. --- Maʻlūlā (Syria) --- Historiography. --- Maʻlūlah (Syria) --- arabisme --- islam --- Mandat français --- identité --- folklorisation --- orientalisme --- sanctuaires partagés --- christianisme --- néoaraméen occidental --- anthropologie religieuse
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Syriac Christians --- Church history --- Manuscripts, Syriac --- Inscriptions, Syriac --- Arameans --- Chrétiens syriaques --- Eglise --- Manuscrits syriaques --- Inscriptions syriaques --- Araméens --- History --- History and criticism. --- History. --- Histoire --- Histoire et critique --- Syria --- Middle East --- Syrie --- Moyen-Orient --- Antiquities. --- Antiquités --- Christian Arameans --- Studies --- Studies. --- Chrétiens syriaques --- Araméens --- Antiquités --- History and criticism --- Ethnology --- Syriac inscriptions --- Syriac manuscripts --- Syriac language --- Apostolic Church --- Christianity --- Church, Apostolic --- Early Christianity --- Early church --- Primitive and early church --- Primitive Christianity --- Fathers of the church --- Great Apostasy (Mormon doctrine) --- Syrian Christians --- Christians --- 939.4 --- 091 =923 --- 939.4 Geschiedenis van Syrië --- Geschiedenis van Syrië --- 091 =923 Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Syrisch --- Handschriftenkunde. Handschriftencatalogi--Syrisch
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