Doctrine of Addai
The Doctrine of Addai is a Syriac Christian text, written in the late 4th or early 5th century CE. It recounts the legend of the Image of Edessa as well as the legendary works of Addai and his disciple Mari in Mesopotamia.
Content
The document details how Addai went to Edessa and cured King Abgar — fulfilling the promise made to Abgar by Jesus. After the royal family had been healed and Addai preached for Abgar, the royal family and many of the citizens of Edessa became Christians. Abgar asked Addai to build a church in Edessa. Many people came to the church in order to pray and listen to reading daily from the Old Testament and the Ditonron - a reading that William Cureton purported was the Diatessaron of Tatian. Addai died in 45 AD just prior to Abgar, meaning that he was in Edessa for approximately ten or eleven years.History
In his Ecclesiastical History, Eusebius of Caesarea provides the earliest reference to this text in which he describes an exchange between Jesus Christ and Abgar V in the "language of the Syrians." The Doctrine of Addai itself originated in Edessa, though its author is unknown. It was circulated far and wide, reaching as far as Spain.Purpose
regards the development of tradition of Thaddaeus' activity in Edessa as part of an effort to build the authority of the orthodox or Palutian faction in Syria against the Manicheans and gnostics, who had an older and stronger presence in the area and traced their lineage to Thomas the Apostle. He considers the Palutian faction to have come to Edessa around and only become significant in the fourth century.Manuscripts
- ms Saint-Petersburg, National Library of Russia Saltykov-Shchedrine, N.S. Syr. 4, f. 1v33
- ms London, British Library, Add. 14654, f. 33r-v + Add. 14644, f. 1-9v + Add. 14535, f. 1r + Add. 12155, f. 53v + Add. 17193, f. 36v-37
- ms Alqosh, Église paroissiale chaldéenne, cod. 87 ?
- ms London, British Library, Add. 12161, f. 1v
- ms London, British Library, Add. 14612, f. 165r
- ms London, British Library, Add. 14644, f. 1-9v
- ms Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, syr. 62, f. 102v-108
- ms Birmingham, Selly Oak College Library, Coll. Mingana, Syr. 405, f. 1
- ms Jerusalem, Couvent syrien orthodoxe Saint-Marc, cod. 153, p. 241-259
- Pseudo-Abdias
- Nicephorus
Published editions
Modern translations
English
- Note: This includes a reprint of the Syriac edition of
- Lollar, Jacob A.. . Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-6667-5208-3.
Other
- This also contains an Ethiopian version.
- Dutch: Jan Willem Drijvers, Helena Augusta, waarheid en legende, pp: 153–157, Note: partielle
- Russian: Elena Nikitična Meščerskaja, Legenda ob Avgare — rannesirijskij literaturnyj pamjatnik: , pp: 185–203
- Armenian: A Carrière, La légende d'Abgar dans l'Histoire d'Arménie de Moïse de Khoren, pp: 357–414
- Ethiopic: Getatchew Haile, " The Legend of Abgar in Ethiopic Tradition," Orientalia christiana periodica vol. 55, pp: 375–410