Beth Mardutho

Summary

Beth Mardutho (full name: Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute) is an American educational institute speicalizing in Syriac studies. Founded by George Kiraz, the institute is based in Piscataway, New Jersey, U.S.

Beth Mardutho
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
Beth Mardutho Syriac Institute
Formation1996
FounderGeorge Kiraz
Founded atPiscataway, New Jersey, United States
PurposeEducation, research, archiving
Location
Official language
English
Syriac
Key people
George Kiraz
Websitebethmardutho.org

History edit

The institute was originally informally founded by George A. Kiraz as the Syriac Computing Institute (SyrCOM) in 1992. SyrCOM was officially registered in 1996. In 2009, it was renamed as Beth Mardutho[1] when Kiraz expanded the institute's activities beyond computational linguistics to include different aspects of Syriac studies.[2]

Since 2014, the institute has been offering Syriac language summer courses.[3]

Projects edit

Beth Mardutho's projects include:

  • Digital Syriac Corpus[4]
  • Qoruyo[5] (Syriac OCR and HTR project)
  • e-GEDSH[6] (online version of the Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage)

Beth Mardutho has collaborated with Princeton Theological Seminary (PTS) since 2011 to archive texts related to Syriac Christianity.[7][1] It has worked with the Internet Archive to digitize various Syriac-related texts.[8]

eBethArké, hosted by Rutgers University,[9] is a Syriac digital library started by Beth Mardutho in 2000.[10][11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Timeline | Beth Mardutho".
  2. ^ "About | Beth Mardutho".
  3. ^ "Beth Mardutho Students at the Mor Aphrem Center – Syriac Orthodox Church of Antioch". syrianorthodoxchurch.org.
  4. ^ "Digital Syriac Corpus". syriaccorpus.org.
  5. ^ "Qoruyo | Beth Mardutho".
  6. ^ "e-GEDSH". gedsh.bethmardutho.org.
  7. ^ "Search Results | Theological Commons". commons.ptsem.edu.
  8. ^ "Internet Archive". archive.org.
  9. ^ "eBethArke: The Syriac Digital Library | Digital Collections". collections.libraries.rutgers.edu.
  10. ^ Kiraz, George A. (2010-04-01). "Ebetharké: The Syriac Digital Library. First Report". Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies. 4 (1). Gorgias Press LLC: 269–272. doi:10.31826/hug-2010-040118. ISSN 1097-3702.
  11. ^ Beard, Isaiah (2017-02-13). "The eBethArké Syriac digital library: a case study". Digital Library Perspectives. 33 (1). Emerald: 40–47. doi:10.1108/dlp-07-2016-0017. ISSN 2059-5816.

External links edit

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