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===c. 275 - 339=== |
===c. 275 - 339=== |
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====[[Pope Eusebius|Pope Eusebius Pamphili]]==== |
====[[Pope Eusebius|Pope Eusebius Pamphili]]==== |
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"... and from '''Aram''' the '''Arameans''', which are also called ''' |
"... and from '''Aram''' the '''Arameans''', which are also called '''Syrians'''" |
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===c. 640 - 708=== |
===c. 640 - 708=== |
Revision as of 19:49, 7 September 2020
The Aramean (Native Syrian) continuous
The timeline shows only evidence of synonyms used by ancient and modern writers to identify Syrians as Arameans.
Timeline
135 BC - 51 BC
"The people we Greeks call Syrians were called by the Syrians themselves Aramaeans"[1]
63 BC - 24 AD
"... Syrians are by the Syrians themselves called Arimaeans and Aramaeans"[2]
37 AD - 100 AD
"Aram had the Arameans (Aramites), which the Greeks called Syrians"
c. 275 - 339
"... and from Aram the Arameans, which are also called Syrians"
c. 640 - 708
"... we the Arameans, that is to say Syrians ..."
896 - 956
"Tur Abdin is the mountain where remnants of the Aramean Syrians still survive."
963
"The Syrians were formerly called Arameans ..."
1126 - 1199
"... and the Arameans who are the Syrians..."
1226 - 1286
"... You have brought me to the eloquent Aramean-Syrian nation."
References
- ^ Posidonius (Second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1 Nov. 1988). p. 955-956. ISBN 0521200628.
- ^ The geography of Strabo. London: W. Heinemann. 1917–1932. ISBN 9780674990555.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date format (link)