- Mark
Lidzbarski (born
Abraham Mordechai Lidzbarski, Płock,
Russian Empire, 7
January 1868 – Göttingen, 13
November 1928) was a
Polish philologist, Semiticist...
- movement, by way of
Samuel Fales Dunlap's works.
Lidzbarski version (German, 1925): In 1925, Mark
Lidzbarski published the
German translation Ginzā: Der Schatz...
-
versions are
those of E. S.
Drower (1959
English translation) and Mark
Lidzbarski (1905
German translation). Eric
Segelberg (1958)
contains a
detailed study...
- Górzno-Lidzbark
Landscape Park (Górznieńsko-
Lidzbarski Park Krajobrazowy) is a
protected area (Landscape Park) in north-central Poland,
established in...
- the
ancient Mandaean/Israelite tradition.: 108
Scholars such as Mark
Lidzbarski,
Rudolf Macúch,
Ethel S. Drower,
Jorunn J. Buckley, and Şinasi Gündüz...
-
Catholic Church (1876) by Pope Pius IX. Mark
Lidzbarski (1868–1928) – (born
Abraham Mordechai Lidzbarski to a
Hasidic Eastern Jewish family in Russian...
- and transl. by Mark
Lidzbarski,
Quellen der
Religionsgeschichte vol. 13, Göttingen 1925, p. 183. Ginza, ed. and transl. by
Lidzbarski, p. 185–186. Kurt...
-
basis of
cognates in
other Aramaic dialects,
semiticists such as Mark
Lidzbarski and
Rudolf Macúch have
translated the term manda, from
which Mandaiia...
- However,
scholars specializing in
Mandaeism such as Kurt Rudolph, Mark
Lidzbarski,
Rudolf Macúch,
Ethel S. Drower,
James F. McGrath,
Charles G. Häberl,...
-
Carlos (2011).
Ginza Rba. Sydney:
Living Water Books. ISBN 9780958034630.
Lidzbarski, Mark (1925). Ginza: Der
Schatz oder Das große Buch der Mandäer. Göttingen:...