Sami Aydin (ed.), Sergius of Reshaina,
Introduction to Aristotle and his Categories, Addressed to Philotheos: Syriac
Text, with Introduction, Translation, and Commentary
Yury
Arzhanov
Austrian Academy of Sciences
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
George A. Kiraz
James E. Walters
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Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
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Volume 24.2
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https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/article/hv24n2prarzhanov2
Yury Arzhanov
Sami Aydin (ed.), Sergius of Reshaina,
Introduction to Aristotle and his Categories, Addressed to Philotheos: Syriac
Text, with Introduction, Translation, and Commentary
https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/pdf/vol24/HV24N2PRArzhanov2.pdf
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute, 2021
vol 24
issue 2
pp 545-547
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies is an electronic journal dedicated to the study
of the Syriac tradition, published semi-annually (in January and July) by Beth
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Sami Aydin (ed.), Sergius of Reshaina,
Introduction to Aristotle and his Categories, Addressed to Philotheos: Syriac
Text, with Introduction, Translation, and Commentary, Aristoteles
Semitico-Latinus 24 (Leiden: Brill, 2016). Pp. xii + 328; €112.00.
Sergius of Reshʿaina (Sargis d-Reš
ʿAyna, d. 536) is a unique figure in the history of the Syriac reception of
Greek philosophy. His activity marks the beginning of the process of transition of
Greek scientific, medical, and scholarly literature, which after M. Meyerhof is
traditionally labelled as going “from Alexandria to Baghdad.” Sergius studied
philosophy in Alexandria with Ammonius Hermeiou, who greatly impacted the entire
philosophical tradition of the sixth century. Later, Sergius moved to the town of
Reshʿaina, where he became the chief physician (archiatros)
and started to translate Greek works into Syriac and to compose original works.
Sergius wrote two treatises based on Ammonius’ lectures: an
extensive Commentary on Aristotle’s Categories, addressed to
Theodore, and a short Introduction to Aristotle, addressed to
Philotheos. While the Syriac text of the former work remains unpublished, the latter
is now available in this volume. This book is a slightly revised version of the
author’s doctoral thesis, defended in 2015 at the University of Uppsala. The book’s
fifteen chapters are divides into four parts: an introductory section, an edition of
the Syriac text of Sergius’ treatise with a facing English translation, a
commentary, and a number of glossaries and indexes.
The introductory part, comprising chapters one to six, provides
an overview of Sergius’ life and legacy. Aydin stresses Sergius’ role in
transmitting philosophical materials of the school of Ammonius, which are known to
us also from the writings of Philoponus, Olympiodorus, Elias, and others.
Additionally, Sergius’ medical treatises give evidence for the cursus studiorum of the so-called iatrosophists,
and for the development of a similar curriculum in the Christian schools of the late
antique and early medieval periods. Besides biographical information, the
introductory part provides an inventory of Sergius’ writings and an overview of
terminology characteristic of Sergius. The latter overview presents Sergius as a
creator and/or a promoter of a whole corpus of philosophical terms, which influenced
later generations of Syriac and Arabic scholars.
Aydin’s comparison of two of Sergius’ works, the long Commentary on the Categories and the short Introduction to Aristotle, brings him to the conclusion that the latter
must have been written after the former, as an abridgement. This conclusion turns
the Commentary into an additional witness to the Introduction. The text of the Introduction has come down to us in a single manuscript, Berlin Petermann
I 9 (Sachau 88), dating from the 13th century (its description is provided in
chapter five). The use of the Commentary for establishing the
text of the Introduction might be limited by the absence of a
reliable critical edition of the Commentary, so that Aydin
had to refer to the two oldest codices containing it. An extra difficulty arises
from the fact that Sergius composed both treatises, so that the discrepancies
between them may go back to his own editorial work. In the section on “Editorial
Principles” (chapter six), the editor admits both limitations.
Chapter seven contains an edition of the Syriac text with a
facing English translation. In spite of the fact that Aristotle and his Categories are mentioned in the title of the published text,
Sergius’ treatise constitutes a general introduction to philosophy, rather than a
commentary on the first part of the Organon. As Aydin
assumes, the target audience of the Introduction were
teachers of philosophy. It focuses on two main topics, namely, logical categories
and natural philosophy, a combination which reflects not only Sergius’ education in
Alexandria, but most likely also the teaching practices in Syriac schools. Though
Sergius clearly stands in the tradition of Aristotelianism, the Introduction includes excurses into Platonic cosmology and the Stoic
notion of qualities, as well as a doxography on the views of “natural
philosophers.”
Chapter eight provides a commentary on the published text,
drawing on a large number of sources that may be divided into two main groups: a
corpus of writings that stand in the tradition of Ammonius’ school, and Syriac
sources that either can be ascribed to Sergius himself or that were composed under
the influence of his writings. The first group of sources allows the editor to
highlight those elements in Sergius’ text that bring him close to contemporary
Alexandrian exegesis. The second group opens the inner-Syriac perspective on the
development of the philosophical lexicon, to whose creators Sergius certainly
belongs.
In his method of rendering Greek philosophical and scholarly
terminology into Syriac, Sergius aimed to find fitting Syriac equivalents that both
reflect the Greek words and make them comprehensible for Syriac readers. Such a
method differs from later attempts by Syriac translators—who in the seventh and
early eighth centuries were mostly connected with the monastery of Qenneshre—to
create some sort of mirror-translations that closely follow the Greek originals and
employ mechanical equivalents to Greek technical terms. The comparison between the
Greek and Syriac sources provided in chapter eight is summarized in the form of
Syriac-Greek and Greek-Syriac glossaries that appear at the end of the book as
chapters ten and eleven.
To sum up, Aydin’s book not only makes available an important
source for the late ancient Alexandrian tradition, but also provides us with further
evidence for Sergius’ contribution to the history of Syriac philosophy.