西奈发现1300年历史编年史
1,300-year-old world chronicle unearthed in Sinai

原始链接: https://www.heritagedaily.com/2026/02/1300-year-old-world-chronicle-unearthed-in-sinai/156948

一份新近发现的8世纪编年史,被称为713年马龙尼特编年史,为从晚期古至今伊斯兰崛起这一动荡的过渡时期提供了宝贵的见解。这份手稿在埃及圣凯瑟琳修道院被发现,最初是用叙利亚语写成,后来被翻译成阿拉伯语,它提供了最早的幸存的基督教文献之一,记录了7世纪的阿拉伯-伊斯兰扩张和阿拉伯-拜占庭战争。 艾德里安·皮尔蒂亚通过数字化手稿发现了这份编年史,它详细记录了从亚当到作者同时代历史,其中最重要的部分集中在拜占庭-萨珊战争、伊斯兰教的兴起和早期的阿拉伯征服。值得注意的是,它显示出对广阔地理区域事件的了解,从叙利亚到巴尔干半岛。 学者们认为,这份此前未知的文本可能与后世历史学家使用的8世纪佚失文献有关,为重建早期中世纪叙利亚史学和恢复这一关键时代的重要基督教视角提供了一块关键的拼图。目前正在进行完整翻译。

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原文

A newly identified Christian world chronicle dating to the early 8th century is shedding fresh light on the political and religious upheavals that marked the transition from late antiquity to the rise of Islam.

The manuscript, originally written in Syriac and subsequently translated into Arabic, was discovered and examined by researchers from the Austrian Academy of Sciences at St. Catherine’s Monastery in Egypt.

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According to experts, the chronicle dates from around AD 712–713 and is among the earliest surviving Christian accounts of the Arab-Islamic expansion.

It chronicles prominent events of the seventh century, including the rise of Islam and the Arab-Byzantine wars, providing rare contemporary perspectives of a watershed period in Middle Eastern history.

Adrian Pirtea of the Institute for Medieval Research discovered the structure while looking at digitised manuscripts found in the Sinai collection. His first findings were recently reported in the journal Medieval Worlds.

The work survives only as an incomplete 13th-century manuscript with pages partially glued together. High-resolution digitisation by the Early Manuscripts Electronic Library and open access through the Sinai Manuscripts Digital Library allowed scholars to study the text for the first time in close detail.

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“Since my identification and initial analysis of the text, it has become increasingly clear that this is a previously unknown Christian universal chronicle,” explains Pirtea.

Now referred to as the Maronite Chronicle of 713, the anonymous author narrates human history from Adam to the theological and political debates of his own day.

The chronicle’s pages are penned by a Syriac Christian community that had once identified itself with Constantinople (but would increasingly become estranged over doctrinal issues), yet from which it receives an uncommon glimpse into the east’s reformation during the Islamic period.

Its most valuable sections concern the seventh century, covering the Byzantine–Sasanian War (602–628), the rise of Islam, the early Arab conquests, and subsequent Arab-Byzantine clashes.

The account concludes in 692–693 and demonstrates the author’s awareness of events not only in Syria and the Near East but also in the Balkans, Sicily, and Rome.

A major contribution to scholarship

Pirtea suggests the chronicle may be closely related to a now-lost eighth-century source used by later historians, providing a crucial link for reconstructing early medieval Syriac historiography.

The discovery restores a long-missing Christian perspective on the Near East during Islam’s first century. Pirtea is currently preparing a critical edition and full translation to make the chronicle accessible to scholars worldwide.

Sources : OAW

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