The Ginza Rabba (
Classical Mandaic: ࡂࡉࡍࡆࡀ ࡓࡁࡀ, romanized: Ginzā Rbā,
lit. 'Great Treasury'), Ginza Rba, or Sidra Rabba (
Classical Mandaic: ࡎࡉࡃࡓࡀ ࡓࡁࡀ, romanized: Sidrā Rbā,
lit. 'Great Book'), and formerly the Codex Nasaraeus,[1] is the longest and the most important holy scripture of
Mandaeism.
The Ginza Raba is composed of two parts: the
Right Ginza (GR) and the
Left Ginza (GL). The GR is composed of eighteen tractates and covers a variety of themes and topics, whereas the three tractates that make up the GL are unified in their focus on the fate of the soul after death. The GL is also occasionally referred to as the Book of Adam.[1]
Language and authorship
The language used is Classical
Mandaic, a variety of
Eastern Aramaic written in the
Mandaic script (Parthian chancellory script), similar to the
Syriac script. The authorship is unknown, and dating is a matter of debate, with estimates ranging from the first to third centuries.[2][3] Determining date and authorship is complicated by the late date of the earliest manuscripts, the potentially lengthy oral transmission of Mandaean religious texts prior to their being written, and that conclusions about the dating of some tractates or one either GR or GL may not carry over for material elsewhere in the Ginza.[4]: 20
Dating
The date of Mandaean texts remains hotly contested.[5]: 14 Even within the scope of the Ginza Rabba, the GL and GR are separate compositions with separate dates, making the Ginza Rabba a composite text of diverse origins. Furthermore, the individual tractates within these collections appear to have separate origins by virtue of their distinct genre, grammar, and according to their colophon evidence.[5]: 13 The GL has its own colophon, as do the first thirteen tractates of the GR. Each from the fourteenth through eighteenth subsequent tractates have their own colophons.[5]: 36 The current form and final compilation of the Ginza as a whole must come from Islamic times as it contains numerous references to
Muhammad, the
Islamic conquests, and related.[6]
Left Ginza
In 1949, Torgny Säve-Söderbergh argued that the third-century Coptic Manichaean
Psalms of Thomas depend on the Left Ginza,[7] A recent re-evaluation suggests instead that both sources derived their shared material from a common source, perhaps
Elcesaite poetry.[8]: 76–78
In 1965, Rudolph Macuch argued for a third century date on the basis of a tradition saying
Zazai of Gawazta copied important Mandaean texts 368 years prior to the Arab conquest of Iraq c. 640, or 272.[9]: 4 [10]: 89 However, this tradition, extant from one manuscript, only refers to an unspecified year of the hijri calendar and not the point in time before 640. This means that 272 is the earliest possible date if the very first hijri year is being referenced, though later dates are not excluded. The number 368 itself may be invented.[8]: 8–14
Right Ginza
Book of Kings (GR 18)
GR 18, also known as the Book of Kings, says that "after the Persian kings there will be Arabian kings. They will reign seventy-one years."[7] Starting with
Theodor Nöldeke, historians have widely interpreted this as a reference to the Islamic-era Arab rulers, and so have dated GR 18 to the Islamic era.[5]: 24–27 Recently, Häberl has argued from the colophons and external references that GR 18s dates to the rule of Lakhmid Arab kings in the pre-Islamic period. The latter is argued to place GR 18, separately from the rest of the Ginza Rabba, in the hands of a copyist at one point named Ennoš b. Danqā who appears to have worked in the mid-7th century, implying the text is no later than ~650. The Arab kings reigning for 71 years are identified to be the Lakhmid kings starting with
Al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nu'man, installed into power in 531 by
Khosrow I (r. 531–579), to
Khosrow II who deposed
Al-Nu'man III ibn al-Mundhir in 602. To supplement this observation, Häberl points to the absence of Arabic language on or explicit references to Islam in GR 18 unlike later Mandaean texts. The final Sassanid ruler mentioned by the text is interpreted to be
Kavad II, who ruled until 628, roughly giving the date soon after which the text entered its current form. Häberl offers the following chronology for the events mentioned in GR 18, alongside the earlier chronology implied by Nöldeke's work.[5]: 2, 36–60
Event
Internal chronology
Noldeke
Häberl
Destruction of Jerusalem
AP 1
214 BC
321/322 BC
Yazdiger, son of King Bahrān
AP 594
~380 AD
271/272 AD
Arab uprisings
AP 792
~578 AD
469/470 AD
King of the Arabs dies
AP 793
~579
470/471
Arabs become lords
AP 795
~581
472/473
False Messiah triumphs
>AP 803
>589
>480/481
Beginning of Arab rule
>AP 850
>636
>527/528
End of Arab rule
>AP 921
>707
>598/599
End of the world
AP 1001
~786
678/679
Other tractates
An Islamic-era date for several tractates of the Right Ginza is evident from various references to Muhammad or Islam:
The first tractate (GR 1) refers to Muhammad by the name of "Ahmad" (a common name for Muhammad in Mandaean literature) as the son of a sorcerer named Bizbat.[6]
GR 2 claims that faith will disappear from the world after the coming of the Arab prophet Muhammad.[6]
GR 7 uses the name Yahyā for John, which is the form of the name John that appears in the
Quran.[8]: 55–56 However, Häberl has argued that the use of this name is known in pre-Islamic Arabic text and so its presence does not conclusively argue for an Islamic-era dating.[5]: 44
GR 9 speaks of how the Arab "Abdallah" (Muhammad) was given by Ruha "the book and discourse" around which he rallies servants and takes over and sacks the world.[6]
The Ginza may have been composed, at least partially, as a response to the Arab conquests, along with other pieces of Mandaean literature such as the
Mandaean Book of John, and a study of the colophons of the Ginza date the emergence of the text to the second half of the seventh century.[6][11]
The Ginza Rabba is divided into two parts – the
Right Ginza, containing 18 books, and the
Left Ginza, containing 3 books. In Mandaic studies, the Right Ginza is commonly abbreviated as GR, while the Left Ginza is commonly abbreviated as GL.[12] Alternatively, sometimes the Right Ginza is abbreviated as GY after the Mandaic Ginza Yamin, while the Left Ginza is commonly abbreviated as GS after the Mandaic Ginza Smal.[13]
Ginza Rabba codices traditionally contain the
Right Ginza on one side, and, when turned upside-down and back to front, contain the
Left Ginza (the Left Ginza is also called "The Book of the Dead"). The Right Ginza part of the Ginza Rabba contains sections dealing with theology, creation, ethics, historical, and mythical narratives; its six
colophons reveal that it was last redacted in the early Islamic Era. The Left Ginza section of Ginza Rabba deals with man's soul in the afterlife; its colophon reveals that it was redacted for the last time hundreds of years before the Islamic Era.[12][14]
There are various manuscript versions that differ from each other. The versions order chapters differently from each other, and textual content also differs.
Contents
The Ginza Rabba is a compilation of various oral teachings and written texts, most predating their editing into the two volumes. It includes literature on a wide variety of topics, including liturgy and hymns, theological texts, didactic texts, as well as both religious and secular poetry.[12]
For a comprehensive listing of summaries of each chapter in the Ginza Rabba, see the articles
Right Ginza and
Left Ginza.
Manuscript versions of the Ginza include the following. Two are held in the
Bodleian Library at Oxford, three in the
British Library in London, four in the
Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris, and others are in private ownership.[10] All extant manuscripts of the Ginza appear to derive from a few copies that were produced around 1500.[15]
Paris Ms. B (copied by Baktiar Bulbul in 1632; also called the "
Norberg version," since it was used by Norberg during the early 1800s)
Paris Ms. C (copied by Yahya Adam in 1680)
Paris Ms. D (copied by Yahya Bihram in the early 1700s)
For his 1925 German translation of the Ginza,
Lidzbarski also consulted other Ginza manuscripts that were held at
Leiden (complete) and
Munich (fragmentary).[16]
Jorunn Jacobsen Buckley has also found Ginza manuscripts that are privately held by Mandaeans in the United States. Two are in
San Diego, California, which belong to
Lamea Abbas Amara; they were originally copied by Mhatam Zihrun (Sheikh
Dakhil Aidan) in 1935, and by a copyist named Adam (Sheikh Aidan, father of
Dakhil) in 1886, respectively.[17]: 54 One is in
Flushing, New York, which belonged to
Nasser Sobbi (1924–2018) and was originally copied by Adam Zihrun in 1928. Another one is in
Lake Grove, New York and belongs to Mamoon Aldulaimi, which was originally given to him by
Sheikh Abdullah, son of
Sheikh Negm and was copied by Yahya Ram Zihrun in 1940.[10] A version of the Ginza by
Mhatam Yuhana[18] was also used by
Carlos Gelbert in his 2011 English translation of the Ginza. Another manuscript known to Gelbert is a privately owned Ginza manuscript in
Ahvaz belonging to Shaikh
Abdullah Khaffaji,[16] the grandson of
Ram Zihrun.[9]
Printed versions of the Ginza in Mandaic include:
Norberg version (Mandaic): A printed Ginza in Mandaic was published by
Matthias Norberg in 1816. Based on Code Sabéen 2 (Paris Ms. B). It was republished by
Gorgias Press in 2007.[19]
Petermann version (Mandaic): In 1867,
Julius Heinrich Petermann published Mandaic and Syriac transcriptions of the Ginza Rabba.[20] His work was based on four different Ginza manuscripts held at Paris, and relied most heavily on MS Paris A (also known as
Code Sabéen 1). Only 100 copies were printed, 13 of which Petermann kept himself.[12] A three-volume set of Petermann's work was republished by
Gorgias Press in 2007.[21][22][23][24]
Mubaraki version (Mandaic, also in Roman script): The full Ginza Rba in printed
Mandaic script, compiled primarily from the Mhatam Zihrun br rbai Adam manuscript from Iraq (copied in 1898), was first published by Majid Fandi al-Mubaraki,
Haitham Mahdi Saed (also known as Brikha Nasoraia), and Brian Mubaraki in Sydney, Australia in March 1998 during
Parwanaya.[25] Two other Ginza versions were also consulted, including one copied by
Ram Zihrun in Šuštar in 1843, and another one by Sam bar Zihrun, from the Manduia and ‛Kuma clans.[10]: 73 A Roman transliteration of the entire Ginza Rba was also published in 1998 by Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki and Brian Mubaraki.[26][27] At present, there are two published Mandaic-language editions of the Ginza published by
Mandaeans themselves. The Concordance of the Mandaean Ginza Rba was published by Brian Mubaraki and Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki in 2004.[28]
Gelbert version (Mandaic, in Arabic script; derived from the Mhatam Yuhana version): The full
Mhatam Yuhana Ginza manuscript from
Ahvaz, Iran was transcribed in
Arabic script by
Carlos Gelbert in 2021. As the fourth edition of the Gelbert's Arabic Ginza, Gelbert (2021) contains an Arabic translation side by side with the Mandaic transcription.[29]
Al-Sabti version (Mandaic): In 2022, Rbai
Rafid al-Sabti published a printed Mandaic version of the Ginza Rabba based on a comparison of 22 manuscripts.[30] The Al-Sabti Ginza contains 157 chapters, 602 pages, 111,684 words, and 560,825 letters.[31]
Translations
Notable translations and printed versions of the Ginza Rabba include:
Norberg version (Latin, 1816): From 1815 to 1816,
Matthias Norberg published a Latin translation of the Ginza Rabba, titled Codex Nasaraeus liber Adami appellatus (3 volumes). The original Mandaic text, based on MS Paris B, was also printed alongside the Latin translation.[1]
Lidzbarski version (German, 1925): In 1925,
Mark Lidzbarski published the German translation Der Ginza oder das grosse Buch der Mandäer.[32] Lidzbarski translated an edition of the Ginza by
Julius Heinrich Petermann from the 1860s, which in turn relied upon four different Ginza manuscripts held at Paris. Lidzbarski was also able to include some material from a fifth Ginza which was held at
Leiden.
Baghdad version (Arabic, abridged, 2001): An Arabic version of the Ginza Rabba, similar to that of the Al-Saadi (Drabsha) version, was first published in Baghdad in 2001.[33]
Al-Saadi (Drabsha) version (English, abridged, 2012): Under the official auspices of the Mandaean spiritual leadership, Drs. Qais Al-Saadi and Hamed Al-Saadi published an English translation of the Ginza Rabba: The Great Treasure in 2012. In 2019, the second edition was published by Drabsha in Germany. The translation, endorsed by the Mandaean
rishamasSalah Choheili (Salah Jabbar Tawos) and
Sattar Jabbar Hilo, is designed for contemporary use by the Mandaean community and is based on an Arabic translation of the Ginza Rabba that was published in Baghdad.[34][35][36] However, it has been criticized for being overly abridged and paraphrased.[37]
Gelbert version (English translation in 2011; Arabic translation in 2021): The first full
English translation of the Ginza Rba was published by
Carlos Gelbert in 2011, with the collaboration of Mark J. Lofts and other editors.[16] It is mostly based on the Mhatam Yuhana Ginza Rba from Iran (transcribed in the late 1990s and published in 2004 under the supervision of
Mhatam Yuhana, the ganzibra or head-priest of the
Mandaean Council of Ahvaz in Iran) and also on
Mark Lidzbarski's 1925 German translation of the Ginza.[38] Gelbert's 2011 edition is currently the only full-length English translation of the Ginza that contains detailed commentary, with extensive footnotes and many original Mandaic phrases transcribed in the text. An Arabic translation (fourth edition) of the Ginza was also published by Gelbert in 2021, with the book also containing the original Mandaic text transcribed in Arabic script.[29]
Häberl (2022) is a translation of the Book of Kings, the final book of the Right Ginza.[39]
In 2021 (1400 A.H.),
Salem Choheili completed a Persian translation of the Ginza Rabba.[40]
See also
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
^Drower, Ethel Stefana (1937). The Mandaeans of Iraq and Iran. Oxford At The Clarendon Press, pg. 20.
^"Sod, The Son of the Man" Page iii, S. F. Dunlap, Williams and Norgate – 1861
^Drower, Ethel Stefana (1937). The Mandaeans of Iraq and Iran. Oxford At The Clarendon Press.
^
abcdefHäberl, Charles G. (2023). The book of kings and the explanations of this world: a universal history from the Late Sasanian Empire. Translated texts for historians. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.
ISBN978-1-80085-627-1.
^
abcdeHart, Jennifer (2009). "The Influence of Islam on the Development of Mandaean Literature". In Jacobsen, Anders-Christian (ed.). The Discursive Fight Over Religious Texts in Antiquity. Aarhus University Press. pp. 178–184.
^
abcBladel, Kevin Thomas van (2017). From Sasanian Mandaeans to Ṣābians of the marshes. Leiden studies in Islam and society. Leiden Boston (Mass.): Brill.
ISBN978-90-04-33943-9.
^
abBuckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2002). The Mandaeans: ancient texts and modern people. New York: Oxford University Press.
ISBN0-19-515385-5.
OCLC65198443.
^
abcdBuckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2010). The great stem of souls: reconstructing Mandaean history. Piscataway, N.J: Gorgias Press.
ISBN978-1-59333-621-9.
^Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2006). The great stem of souls: reconstructing Mandaean history (Corrected 2. print ed.). Piscataway, NJ: Georgias Press.
ISBN978-1-59333-338-6.
^Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2006). The great stem of souls: reconstructing Mandaean history (Corrected 2. print ed.). Piscataway, NJ: Georgias Press. p. 89.
ISBN978-1-59333-338-6.
^Petermann, Julius Heinrich (2007). The great treasure or great book, commonly called "The book of Adam," the Mandaeans' work of highest authority. Vol. 1. Piscataway, New Jersey: Gorgias Press.
ISBN978-1-59333-526-7.
^Petermann, Julius Heinrich (2007). The great treasure or great book, commonly called "The book of Adam," the Mandaeans' work of highest authority. Vol. 2. Piscataway, New Jersey: Gorgias Press.
ISBN978-1-59333-527-4.
^Petermann, Julius Heinrich (2007). The great treasure or great book, commonly called "The book of Adam," the Mandaeans' work of highest authority. Vol. 3. Piscataway, New Jersey: Gorgias Press.
ISBN978-1-59333-700-1.
^Majid Fandi al-Mubaraki,
Haitham Mahdi Saaed, and Brian Mubaraki (eds.) (1998). Ginza Rabba: The Great Treasure. Northbridge, New South Wales: The Mandaean Research Centre.
ISBN0-646-35222-9.
^Al-Sabti, Rabi Rafid, ed. (24 July 2022). The Treasure of Life: The holy book of the Mandaeans (ࡂࡉࡍࡆࡀ ࡖ ࡄࡉࡉࡀ) (1 ed.). Amsterdam.
ISBN978-9090360058.
OCLC1351435847.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)
^"About the author". Living Water Books. Retrieved 5 September 2021. He has translated Lidzbarski's books from the German to two different languages: English and Arabic.
Volumes 1 and 2 and
Volume 3 of Codex Nasaraeus: liber Adami appellatus, syriace transscriptus ... latineque redditus (an 1815 edition in Syriac transcription, with Latin translation, by
Matthias Norberg)
Mandaean Network texts
Ginza Rabba (Mandaic text from the Mandaean Network)
Ginza Rabba (Mandaic text from the Mandaean Network)