- antiquity,
Syriac Christians referred to a
region in
northeast Arabia as Beth
Qatraye, or the "region of the Qataris". This
region encomp****ed a
territory that...
-
Eastern Arabia was
divided into two main
ecclesiastical regions: Beth
Qatraye (northeastern Arabia) and Beth
Mazunaye (southeastern Arabia). Christianity...
- Beth
Qatraye had
stopped attending synods;
although Christianity persisted in the
region until the late 9th century. The
dioceses of Beth
Qatraye did not...
-
latter part of the
Christian era,
Qatar comprised a
region known as 'Beth
Qatraye' (Syriac for "house of the Qataris"). The
region was not
limited to Qatar;...
- St.
Ephrem the Syrian, on
January 28. He was born in the
region of Beth
Qatraye in
Eastern Arabia, a
mixed Syriac and
Arabic speaking region encomp****ing...
- by
setting the
standard for
further research in the sub-field of Beth
Qatraye studies. Huehnergard, J., "What is Aramaic?." Aram 7 (1995): 281 Thompson...
- by
setting the
standard for
further research in the sub-field of Beth
Qatraye studies.
Healey 2012, p. 637–652.
Healey 2012, p. 637, 649. Akbulut, Olgun...
- some churches, was born in Beth
Qatraye.
Other notable Christian scholars dating to this
period who
hailed from Beth
Qatraye include Dadisho Qatraya, Gabriel...
- [citation needed]
Several dioceses in Fars and
northern Arabia (Syriac: Beth
Qatraye, ܒܝܬ ܩܛܪܝܐ)
existed by the
beginning of the
fifth century, but they were...
- by
setting the
standard for
further research in the sub-field of Beth
Qatraye studies. Tempus,
Aspekt und Modalität im Reichsaramäischen (in German)...