Jump to content

Assyrian people

Page semi-protected
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Süryaniler)

Assyrians
Sūrāyē / Suryoye / ʾĀṯōrāyē / ʾĀšōrāyē
World distribution of the Assyrian diaspora
Total population
3.35+ million[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
Regions with significant populations
Assyrian homeland:Numbers can vary
Iraq139,623[8]
Syria200,000–877,000 (pre-Syrian civil war)[9][10][11][12]
Turkey25,000[13]
Iran7,000–17,000[14]
Assyrian diaspora:Numbers can vary
United States600,000[15][16][17]
Sweden150,000[18]
Germany70,000–100,000[19][20]
Jordan30,000–150,000[21][22]
Australia61,000 (2020 est.)[23]
Lebanon50,000[24]
Netherlands25,000–35,000[25]
Canada19,685[26]
France16,000[27]
Greece6,000[28]
Austria2,500–5,000[29][30]
Russia4,421[31]
United Kingdom3,000–4,000[32]
Georgia3,299[33][34]
Palestine1,500–5,000[35][36]
Ukraine3,143[37]
Italy3,000[38]
Armenia2,755[39]
New Zealand1,497[40]
Israel1,000[41]
Denmark700[42]
Kazakhstan350[43]
Languages
Neo-Aramaic languages
(Suret, Turoyo),
Classical Syriac (liturgical), Akkadian (in antiquity), Sumerian (in antiquity)
Religion
Predominantly Syriac Christianity
Minority: Protestantism, Islam and Judaism

Assyrians[a] are an indigenous ethnic group native to Mesopotamia, a geographical region in West Asia. Modern Assyrians descend directly from the ancient Assyrians, one of the key civilizations of Mesopotamia. While they are distinct from other Mesopotamian groups, such as the Babylonians, they share in the broader cultural heritage of the Mesopotamian region.[44][45] Modern Assyrians may culturally self-identify as Syriacs, Chaldeans, or Arameans for religious, geographic, and tribal identification.[46][47]

Assyrians speak Aramaic, specifically dialects such as Suret and Turoyo, which are among the oldest continuously spoken and written languages in the world. Aramaic was the lingua franca of West Asia for centuries and was the language spoken by Jesus. It has influenced other languages such as Hebrew and Arabic, and, through cultural and religious exchanges, it has had some influence on Mongolian and Uighur. Aramaic itself is the oldest continuously spoken and written language in the Middle East, with a history stretching back over 3,000 years.[48][49][50][51]

Chaldean Catholics praying in a Holy Qurbana in Baghdad, Iraq

Assyrians are almost exclusively Christian,[52] with most adhering to the East and West Syriac liturgical rites of Christianity.[53][54] Both rites use Classical Syriac as their liturgical language. The Assyrians were among the early converts to Christianity, along with Jews, Arameans, Armenians, Greeks, and Nabataeans.

The ancestral indigenous lands that form the Assyrian homeland are those of ancient Mesopotamia and the Zab rivers, a region currently divided between modern-day Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northwestern Iran, and northeastern Syria.[55] A majority of modern Assyrians have migrated to other regions of the world, including North America, the Levant, Australia, Europe, Russia and the Caucasus. Emigration was triggered by genocidal events throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, including the Assyrian genocide or Sayfo, as well as religious persecution by Islamic extremists.

The emergence of the Islamic State and the occupation of a significant portion of the Assyrian homeland resulted in another major wave of Assyrian displacement due to events such as the 2003 invasion of Iraq by the United States and its allies, and the Syrian civil war, which began in 2011. Of the one million or more Iraqis who have fled Iraq since the occupation, nearly 40% were indigenous Assyrians, even though Assyrians accounted for only around 3% of the pre-war Iraqi population.[56][57]

The Islamic State was driven out from the Assyrian villages in the Khabour River Valley and the areas surrounding the city of Al-Hasakah in Syria by 2015, and from the Nineveh Plains in Iraq by 2017. In 2014, the Nineveh Plain Protection Units was formed and many Assyrians joined the force to defend themselves. The organization later became part of Iraqi Armed forces and played a key role in liberating areas previously held by the Islamic State during the War in Iraq.[58] In northern Syria, Assyrian groups have been taking part both politically and militarily in the Kurdish-dominated but multiethnic Syrian Democratic Forces (see Khabour Guards and Sutoro) and Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria.

History

Pre-Christian history

Part of the Lion Hunt of Ashurbanipal, c. 645–635 BC

Assyria is the homeland of the Assyrian people, located in the ancient Near East. The earliest Neolithic sites in Assyria belonged to the Jarmo culture c. 7100 BC and Tell Hassuna, the centre of the Hassuna culture, c. 6000 BC.

The history of Assyria begins with the formation of the city of Assur, perhaps as early as the 25th century BC.[59] During the early Bronze Age period, Sargon of Akkad united all the native Semitic-speaking peoples, including the Assyrians, and the Sumerians of Mesopotamia under the Akkadian Empire (2335–2154 BC). The cities of Assur and Nineveh (modern-day Mosul), which was the oldest and largest city of the ancient Assyrian Empire,[60] together with several other towns and cities, existed as early as the 25th century BC. They appear to have been Sumerian-ruled administrative centres at this time rather than independent states. The Sumerians were eventually absorbed into the Akkadian (Assyro-Babylonian) population.[61] An Assyrian identity distinct from other neighboring groups appears to have formed during the Old Assyrian period, in the 21st or 20th century BC.[62]

A map of the Neo-Assyrian Empire under Shalmaneser III (dark green) and Esarhaddon (light green)

In the traditions of the Assyrian Church of the East, they are descended from Abraham's grandson, Dedan son of Jokshan, progenitor of the ancient Assyrians.[63] However, there is no other historical basis for this assertion. The Hebrew Bible does not directly mention it, and there is no mention in Assyrian records, which date as far back as the 25th century BC. What is known is that Ashur-uballit I overthrew the Mitanni c. 1365 BC and the Assyrians benefited from this development by taking control of the eastern portion of Mitanni territory and later annexing Hittite, Babylonian, Amorite and Hurrian territories.[64] The rise and rule of the Middle Assyrian Empire (14th to 10th century BC) spread Assyrian culture, people and identity across northern Mesopotamia.[65]

The Assyrian people, after the fall of the Neo-Assyrian Empire in 609 BC, were under the control of the Neo-Babylonian Empire and later, the Persian Empire, which consumed the entire Neo-Babylonian or "Chaldean" Empire in 539 BC. Assyrians became front line soldiers for the Persian Empire under Xerxes I, playing a significant role in the Battle of Marathon under Darius I in 490 BC.[66] However, Herodotus, whose Histories are the primary source of information about that battle, makes no mention of Assyrians in connection with it.[67]

Despite the influx of foreign elements, the presence of Assyrians is confirmed by the worship of the god Ashur. References to the name survive into the 3rd century AD.[68] The Greeks, Parthians, and Romans had a relatively low level of integration with the local population in Mesopotamia, which allowed their cultures to survive.[69] Semi-independent kingdoms influenced by Assyrian culture (Hatra, Adiabene, Osroene) and perhaps semi-autonomous Assyrian vassal states (Assur) sprung up in the east under Parthian rule, lasting until conquests by the Sasanian Empire in the region in the 3rd century AD.[70]

Language

Modern Assyrian derives from ancient Aramaic, part of the Northwest Semitic languages.[71] Around 700 BC, Aramaic slowly replaced Akkadian in Assyria, Babylonia and the Levant. Widespread bilingualism among Assyrian nationals was already present before the fall of the Empire.[70] The Akkadian language has influenced the Aramaic that the modern Assyrians speak.[72]

The Kültepe texts, which were written in Old Assyrian, preserve some loanwords from the Hittite language. Those loanwords are the earliest attestation of any Indo-European language, dated to the 20th century BC. Most of the archaeological evidence is typical of Anatolia rather than of Assyria, but using both cuneiform and the dialect is the best indication of Assyrian presence. Over 20,000 cuneiform tablets have been recovered from the site.[73][74]

From 1700 BC and onward, the Sumerian language was preserved by the ancient Babylonians and Assyrians only as a liturgical and classical language for religious, artistic, and scholarly purposes.[75]

The Akkadian language, with its main dialects of Assyrian and Babylonian, once the lingua franca of the Ancient Near East, began to decline during the Neo-Assyrian Empire around the 8th century BC, being marginalized by Old Aramaic during the reign of Tiglath-Pileser III. By the Hellenistic period, the language was largely confined to scholars and priests working in temples in Assyria and Babylonia.

Early Christian period

A map of Asōristān (226–637 AD)

From the 1st century BC, Assyria was the theatre of the protracted Roman–Persian Wars. Much of the region would become the Roman province of Assyria from 116 AD to 118 AD following the conquests of Trajan. Still, after a Parthian-inspired Assyrian rebellion, the new emperor Hadrian withdrew from the short-lived province Assyria and its neighboring provinces in 118 AD.[76] Following a successful campaign in 197–198, Severus converted the kingdom of Osroene, centred on Edessa, into a frontier Roman province.[77] Roman influence in the area came to an end under Jovian in 363, who abandoned the region after concluding a hasty peace agreement with the Sassanians.[78]

The Assyrians were Christianized in the first to third centuries in Roman Syria and Roman Assyria. The population of the Sasanian province of Asoristan was a mixed one, composed of Assyrians, Arameans in the far south and the western deserts, and Persians.[79] The Greek element in the cities, still strong during the Parthian Empire, ceased to be ethnically distinct in Sasanian times. Most of the population were Eastern Aramaic speakers.

Along with the Arameans, Armenians, Greeks, and Nabataeans, the Assyrians were among the first people to convert to Christianity and spread Eastern Christianity to the Far East despite becoming, from the 8th century, a minority religion in their homeland following the Muslim conquest of Persia.

In 410, the Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, the capital of the Sasanian Empire,[80] organised the Christians within that Empire into what became known as the Church of the East. Its head was declared to be the bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, who in the acts of the council was referred to as the Grand or Major Metropolitan and who soon afterward was called the Catholicos of the East. Later, the title of Patriarch was also used. Dioceses were organised into provinces, each of which was under the authority of a metropolitan bishop. Six such areas were instituted in 410.

Mor Mattai Monastery (Dayro d-Mor Mattai) in, Bartella, Nineveh, Iraq. It is recognized as one of the oldest Christian monasteries in existence. It is famous for its magnificent library and a considerable collection of Syriac Christian manuscripts[81]

Another council held in 424 declared that the Catholicos of the East was independent of "Western" ecclesiastical authorities (those of the Roman Empire).

Soon afterward, Christians in the Roman Empire were divided by their attitude regarding the Council of Ephesus (431), which condemned Nestorianism, and the Council of Chalcedon (451), which condemned Monophysitism. Those who for any reason refused to accept one or other of these councils were called Nestorians or Monophysites, while those who accepted both councils, held under the auspices of the Roman emperors, were called Melkites (derived from Syriac malkā, king),[82] meaning royalists.

All three groups existed among the Syriac Christians, the East Syriacs being called Nestorians and the West Syriacs being divided between the Monophysites (today the Syriac Orthodox Church, also known as Jacobites, after Jacob Baradaeus) and those who accepted both councils, primarily today's Eastern Orthodox Church, which has adopted the Byzantine Rite in Greek, but also the Maronite Church, which kept its West Syriac Rite and was not as closely aligned with Constantinople.[83]

Roman/Byzantine and Persian spheres of influence divided Syriac-speaking Christians into two groups: those who adhered to the Miaphysite Syriac Orthodox Church (the so-called Jacobite Church), or West Syrians, and those who adhered to the Church of the East, the so-called Nestorian Church. Following the split, they developed distinct dialects, mainly based on the pronunciation and written symbolization of vowels.[83] With the rise of Syriac Christianity, eastern Aramaic enjoyed a renaissance as a classical language in the 2nd to 8th centuries, and varieties of that form of Aramaic (Neo-Aramaic languages) are still spoken by a few small groups of Jacobite and Nestorian Christians in the Middle East.[84]

Theodora, who lived from April 1, 527 A.D. to June 28, 548 A.D., was a notable empress of the Byzantine Empire and the wife of Emperor Justinian I. Although her exact ethnic background is not definitively established, some sources suggest she was of Assyrian origin. She played a significant role in advocating for women's rights and social reforms. Theodora is particularly remembered for her efforts to improve the status of women, including legislation against forced prostitution and support for widows and orphans. She was a key supporter of her husband's efforts to restore and expand the Byzantine Empire from their capital, Constantinople. Additionally, Theodora worked towards alleviating the persecution of Miaphysites, although full reconciliation with this Christian sect was not achieved during her lifetime.[85][86]

Arab conquest

Assyrian Mar Toma Church near Urmia, Iran.

The Assyrians initially experienced periods of religious and cultural freedom interspersed with periods of severe religious and ethnic persecution after the 7th century Muslim conquest of Persia. Assyrians contributed to Islamic civilizations during the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates by translating works of Greek philosophers to Syriac and afterward to Arabic. They also excelled in philosophy, science (Masawaiyh,[87] Eutychius of Alexandria, and Jabril ibn Bukhtishu[88]) and theology (such as Tatian, Bardaisan, Babai the Great, Nestorius, and Thomas of Marga) and the personal physicians of the Abbasid Caliphs were often Assyrians, such as the long-serving Bukhtishu dynasty.[89] Many scholars of the House of Wisdom were of Assyrian Christian background.[90][91]

Indigenous Assyrians became second-class citizens (dhimmi) in a greater Arab Islamic state. Those who resisted Arabization and conversion to Islam were subject to severe religious, ethnic, and cultural discrimination and had certain restrictions imposed upon them.[92] Assyrians were excluded from specific duties and occupations reserved for Muslims. They did not enjoy the same political rights as Muslims, and their word was not equal to that of a Muslim in legal and civil matters. As Christians, they were subject to payment of a special tax, the jizya.[93]

They were banned from spreading their religion further or building new churches in Muslim-ruled lands, but were expected to adhere to the same laws of property, contract, and obligation as the Muslim Arabs.[93] They could not seek the conversion of a Muslim, a non-Muslim man could not marry a Muslim woman, and the child of such a marriage would be considered a Muslim. They could not own an enslaved Muslim and had to wear different clothing from Muslims to be distinguishable. In addition to the jizya tax, they were required to pay the kharaj tax on their land, which was heavier than the jizya. However, they were protected, given religious freedom, and to govern themselves according to their own laws.[94]

Assyrian Church of Our Virgin Lady in Baghdad.

As non-Islamic proselytising was punishable by death under Sharia, the Assyrians were forced into preaching in Transoxiana, Central Asia, India, Mongolia and China where they established numerous churches. The Church of the East was considered to be one of the major Christian powerhouses in the world, alongside Latin Christianity in Europe and the Byzantine Empire (Greek Orthodoxy).[95]

From the 7th century AD onwards, Mesopotamia saw a steady influx of Arabs, Kurds and other Iranian peoples,[96] and later Turkic peoples. Assyrians were increasingly marginalized, persecuted and gradually became a minority in their homeland. Conversion to Islam was a result of heavy taxation, which also resulted in decreased revenue from their rulers. As a result, the new converts migrated to Muslim garrison towns nearby.

Assyrians remained dominant in Upper Mesopotamia as late as the 14th century,[97] and the city of Assur was still occupied by Assyrians during the Islamic period until the mid-14th century when the Muslim Turco-Mongol ruler Timur conducted a religiously motivated massacre against Assyrians. After, no records of Assyrians remained in Assur according to the archaeological and numismatic record. From this point, the Assyrian population was dramatically reduced in their homeland.[98]

From the 19th century, after the rise of nationalism in the Balkans, the Ottomans started viewing Assyrians and other Christians on their eastern front as a potential threat. The Kurdish Emirs sought to consolidate their power by attacking Assyrian communities, which were already well-established there. Scholars estimate that tens of thousands of Assyrians in the Hakkari region were massacred in 1843 when Bedr Khan Beg, the emir of Bohtan, invaded their region.[99] After a later massacre in 1846, western powers forced the Ottomans into intervening in the region, and the ensuing conflict destroyed the Kurdish emirates and reasserted the Ottoman power in the area. The Assyrians were subject to the massacres of Diyarbakır soon after.[100]

Being culturally, ethnically, and linguistically distinct from their Muslim neighbors in the Middle East—the Arabs, Persians, Kurds, Turks—the Assyrians have endured much hardship throughout their recent history as a result of religious and ethnic persecution by these groups.[101]

Mongolian and Turkic rule

A map of the Aramaic language and Syriac Christianity in the Middle East and Central Asia until being largely annihilated by Tamerlane in the 14th century

After initially coming under the control of the Seljuk Empire and the Buyid dynasty, the region eventually came under the control of the Mongol Empire after the fall of Baghdad in 1258. The Mongol khans were sympathetic with Christians and did not harm them. The most prominent among them was probably Isa Kelemechi, a diplomat, astrologer, and head of the Christian affairs in Yuan China. He spent some time in Persia under the Ilkhanate.

The 14th century massacres of Timur devastated the Assyrian people. Timur's massacres and pillages of all that was Christian drastically reduced their existence. At the end of the reign of Timur, the Assyrian population had almost been eradicated in many places. Toward the end of the thirteenth century, Bar Hebraeus, the noted Assyrian scholar and hierarch, found "much quietness" in his diocese in Mesopotamia. Syria's diocese, he wrote, was "wasted."[citation needed]

The region was later controlled by the in Iran-based Turkic confederations of the Aq Qoyunlu and Kara Koyunlu. Subsequently, all Assyrians, like with the rest of the ethnicities living in the former Aq Qoyunlu territories, fell into Safavid hands from 1501 and on.[citation needed]

From Iranian Safavid to confirmed Ottoman rule

Mar Elias (Eliya), the Nestorian bishop of the Urmia plain village of Geogtapa, c. 1831

The Ottomans secured their control over Mesopotamia and Syria in the first half of the 17th century following the Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–39) and the resulting Treaty of Zuhab. Non-Muslims were organised into millets. Syriac Christians, however, were often considered one millet alongside Armenians until the 19th century, when Nestorian, Syriac Orthodox and Chaldeans gained that right as well.[102]

The Aramaic-speaking Mesopotamian Christians had long been divided between followers of the Church of the East, commonly referred to as "Nestorians", and followers of the Syriac Orthodox Church, commonly called Jacobites. The latter were organised by Marutha of Tikrit (565–649) as 17 dioceses under a "Metropolitan of the East" or "Maphrian", holding the highest rank in the Syriac Orthodox Church after that of the Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and All the East. The Maphrian resided at Tikrit until 1089, when he moved to the city of Mosul for half a century, before settling in the nearby Monastery of Mar Mattai (still belonging to the Syriac Orthodox Church) and thus not far from the residence of the Eliya line of Patriarchs of the Church of the East. From 1533, the holder of the office was known as the Maphrian of Mosul, to distinguish him from the Maphrian of the Patriarch of Tur Abdin.[103]

In 1552, a group of bishops of the Church of the East from the northern regions of Amid and Salmas, who were dissatisfied with reservation of patriarchal succession to members of a single family, even if the designated successor was little more than a child, elected as a rival patriarch the abbot of the Rabban Hormizd Monastery, Yohannan Sulaqa. This was by no means the first schism in the Church of the East. An example is the attempt to replace Timothy I (779–823) with Ephrem of Gandīsābur.[104]

By tradition, a patriarch could be ordained only by someone of archiepiscopal (metropolitan) rank, a rank to which only members of that one family were promoted. For that reason, Sulaqa travelled to Rome, where, presented as the new Patriarch elect, he entered communion with the Catholic Church and was ordained by the Pope and recognized as Patriarch. The title or description under which he was recognized as Patriarch is given variously as "Patriarch of Mosul in Eastern Syria";[105] "Patriarch of the Church of the Chaldeans of Mosul";[106] "Patriarch of the Chaldeans";[107][108][109] "Patriarch of Mosul";[110][111][112] or "Patriarch of the Eastern Assyrians", this last being the version given by Pietro Strozzi on the second-last unnumbered page before page 1 of his De Dogmatibus Chaldaeorum,[113] of which an English translation is given in Adrian Fortescue's Lesser Eastern Churches.[114][115]

Mar Shimun VIII Yohannan Sulaqa returned to northern Mesopotamia in the same year and fixed his seat in Amid. Before being imprisoned for four months and then in January 1555 put to death by the governor of Amadiya at the instigation of the rival Patriarch of Alqosh, of the Eliya line,[116] he ordained two metropolitans and three other bishops,[117] thus beginning a new ecclesiastical hierarchy: the patriarchal line known as the Shimun line. The area of influence of this patriarchate soon moved from Amid east, fixing the see, after many changes, in the isolated village of Qochanis.

A massacre of Armenians and Assyrians in the city of Adana, Ottoman Empire, April 1909

The Shimun line eventually drifted away from Rome and in 1662 adopted a profession of faith incompatible with that of Rome. Leadership of those who wished communion with Rome passed to the Archbishop of Amid Joseph I, recognized first by the Turkish civil authorities (1677) and then by Rome itself (1681). A century and a half later, in 1830, headship of the Catholics (the Chaldean Catholic Church) was conferred on Yohannan Hormizd, a member of the family that for centuries had provided the patriarchs of the legitimist "Eliya line", who had won over most of the followers of that line. Thus the patriarchal line of those who in 1553 entered communion with Rome are now patriarchs of the "traditionalist" wing of the Church of the East, that which in 1976 officially adopted the name "Assyrian Church of the East".[118][119][120][121]

In the 1840s many of the Assyrians living in the mountains of Hakkari in the south eastern corner of the Ottoman Empire were massacred by the Kurdish emirs of Hakkari and Bohtan.[122]

Another major massacre of Assyrians (and Armenians) in the Ottoman Empire occurred between 1894 and 1897 by Turkish troops and their Kurdish allies during the rule of Sultan Abdul Hamid II. The motives for these massacres were an attempt to reassert Pan-Islamism in the Ottoman Empire, resentment at the comparative wealth of the ancient indigenous Christian communities, and a fear that they would attempt to secede from the tottering Ottoman Empire. Assyrians were massacred in Diyarbakir, Hasankeyef, Sivas and other parts of Anatolia, by Sultan Abdul Hamid II. These attacks caused the death of over thousands of Assyrians and the forced "Ottomanisation" of the inhabitants of 245 villages. The Turkish troops looted the remains of the Assyrian settlements and these were later stolen and occupied by Kurds. Unarmed Assyrian women and children were raped, tortured and murdered.[123][124]

World War I and aftermath

Assyrian flag, c. 1920[125][126]
The burning of bodies of Assyrian women

The Assyrians suffered a number of religiously and ethnically motivated massacres throughout the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries,[122] culminating in the large-scale Hamidian massacres of unarmed men, women and children by Muslim Turks and Kurds in the late 19th century at the hands of the Ottoman Empire and its associated (largely Kurdish and Arab) militias, which further greatly reduced numbers, particularly in southeastern Turkey.

The most significant recent persecution against the Assyrian population was the Assyrian genocide which occurred during the First World War.[127] Between 275,000 and 300,000 Assyrians were estimated to have been slaughtered by the armies of the Ottoman Empire and their Kurdish allies, totalling up to two-thirds of the entire Assyrian population.

This led to a large-scale migration of Turkish-based Assyrian people into countries such as Syria, Iran, and Iraq (where they were to suffer further violent assaults at the hands of the Arabs and Kurds), as well as other neighbouring countries in and around the Middle East such as Armenia, Georgia and Russia.[128][129][130][131]

During World War I (Sayfo), the Assyrians suffered heavy losses due to deportations and mass killings organized by the Ottoman Turks. Several representatives of the Assyrian people participated in the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 after the war had ended. These representatives aimed to free Assyria and sought to influence the victorious powers to place it under one mandatory power. Although many felt sympathy for the Assyrians, none of their demands were implemented. The Assyrians failed in their efforts due to geographical and denominational differences among themselves, as well as the fact that the major powers, Britain and France, had their own plans for the territories where the Assyrians lived.[132]

Assyrian volunteers

Assyrian troops led by Agha Petros (saluting) with a captured Turkish banner in the foreground, 1918

In reaction to the Assyrian Genocide and lured by British and Russian promises of an independent nation, the Assyrians led by Agha Petros and Malik Khoshaba of the Bit-Tyari tribe, fought alongside the Allies against Ottoman forces known as the Assyrian volunteers or Our Smallest Ally. Despite being heavily outnumbered and outgunned the Assyrians fought successfully, scoring a number of victories over the Turks and Kurds. This situation continued until their Russian allies left the war, and Armenian resistance broke, leaving the Assyrians surrounded, isolated and cut off from lines of supply. The sizable Assyrian presence in south eastern Anatolia which had endured for over four millennia was thus reduced significantly by the end of World War I.[133][134]

Assyrian rebellion

The Assyrian rebellion was an uprising by the Assyrians in Hakkari that began on the 3rd of September 1924 and ended on the 28th of September. The Assyrians of Tyari and Tkhuma returned to their ancestral land in Hakkari in 1922, shortly after World War I without permission from the Turkish government. This led to clashes between the Assyrians and the Turkish army with their Kurdish allies that grew into a rebellion in 1924, it ended with the Assyrians being forced to retreat to Iraq.

Modern history

Assyrian refugees on a wagon moving to a newly constructed village on the Khabur River in Syria

The majority of Assyrians living in what is today modern Turkey were forced to flee to either Syria or Iraq after the Turkish victory during the Turkish War of Independence. In 1932, Assyrians refused to become part of the newly formed state of Iraq and instead demanded their recognition as a nation within a nation. The Assyrian leader Shimun XXI Eshai asked the League of Nations to recognize the right of the Assyrians to govern the area known as the "Assyrian triangle" in northern Iraq. During the French mandate period, some Assyrians, fleeing ethnic cleansings in Iraq during the Simele massacre, established numerous villages along the Khabur River during the 1930s.

The Assyrian Levies were founded by the British in 1928, with ancient Assyrian military rankings such as Rab-shakeh, Rab-talia and Tartan, being revived for the first time in millennia for this force. The Assyrians were prized by the British rulers for their fighting qualities, loyalty, bravery and discipline,[135] and were used to help the British put down insurrections among the Arabs and Kurds. During World War II, eleven Assyrian companies saw action in Palestine and another four served in Cyprus. The Parachute Company was attached to the Royal Marine Commando and were involved in fighting in Albania, Italy and Greece. The Assyrian Levies played a major role in subduing the pro-Nazi Iraqi forces at the battle of Habbaniya in 1941.

Three Assyrian Iraqi Levies, who volunteered in 1946 for service as ground crew with the Royal Air Force, look over the side of the ORBITA as it pulls into the docks at Liverpool. Left to right, they are: Sergeant Macko Shmos, Lance Corporal Adoniyo Odisho and Corporal Yoseph Odisho.

However, this cooperation with the British was viewed with suspicion by some leaders of the newly formed Kingdom of Iraq. The tension reached its peak shortly after the formal declaration of independence when hundreds of Assyrian civilians were slaughtered during the Simele massacre by the Iraqi Army in August 1933. The events lead to the expulsion of Shimun XXI Eshai the Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East to the United States where resided until his death in 1975.[136][137]

The period from the 1940s through to 1963 saw a period of respite for the Assyrians. The regime of President Abd al-Karim Qasim in particular saw the Assyrians accepted into mainstream society. Many urban Assyrians became successful businessmen, others were well represented in politics and the military, their towns and villages flourished undisturbed, and Assyrians came to excel, and be over represented in sports.

The Ba'ath Party seized power in Iraq and Syria in 1963, introducing laws aimed at suppressing the Assyrian national identity via arabization policies. The giving of traditional Assyrian names was banned and Assyrian schools, political parties, churches and literature were repressed. Assyrians were heavily pressured into identifying as Iraqi/Syrian Christians. Assyrians were not recognized as an ethnic group by the governments and they fostered divisions among Assyrians along religious lines (e.g. Assyrian Church of the East vs. Chaldean Catholic Church vs Syriac Orthodox Church).[138]

Celebration at a Syriac Orthodox monastery in Mosul, early 20th century

In response to Baathist persecution, the Assyrians of the Zowaa movement within the Assyrian Democratic Movement took up armed struggle against the Iraqi government in 1982 under the leadership of Yonadam Kanna,[139] and then joined up with the Iraqi-Kurdistan Front in the early 1990s. Yonadam Kanna in particular was a target of the Saddam Hussein Ba'ath government for many years.

The Anfal campaign of 1986–1989 in Iraq, which was intended to target Kurdish opposition, resulted in 2,000 Assyrians being murdered through its gas campaigns. Over 31 towns and villages, 25 Assyrian monasteries and churches were razed to the ground. Some Assyrians were murdered, others were deported to large cities, and their lands and homes then being appropriated by Arabs and Kurds.[140][141]

21st century

Assyrian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan, Armenia

After the 2003 Invasion of Iraq by US and its allies, the Coalition Provisional Authority disbanded the Iraqi military, security, and intelligence infrastructure of former President Saddam Hussein and began a process of "de-Baathification".[142] This process became an object of controversy, cited by some critics as the biggest American mistake made in the immediate aftermath of the Invasion of Iraq, and as one of the main causes in the deteriorating security situation throughout Iraq.[143][144]

Social unrest and chaos resulted in the unprovoked persecution of Assyrians in Iraq mostly by Islamic extremists (both Shia and Sunni) and Kurdish nationalists (ex. Dohuk Riots of 2011 aimed at Assyrians & Yazidis). In places such as Dora, a neighborhood in southwestern Baghdad, the majority of its Assyrian population has either fled abroad or to northern Iraq, or has been murdered.[145] Islamic resentment over the United States' occupation of Iraq, and incidents such as the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons and the Pope Benedict XVI Islam controversy, have resulted in Muslims attacking Assyrian communities. Since the start of the Iraq war, at least 46 churches and monasteries have been bombed.[146]

In recent years, the Assyrians in northern Iraq and northeast Syria have become the target of extreme unprovoked Islamic terrorism. As a result, Assyrians have taken up arms alongside other groups, such as the Kurds, Turcomans and Armenians, in response to unprovoked attacks by Al Qaeda, the Islamic State (ISIL), Nusra Front and other terrorist Islamic Fundamentalist groups. In 2014 Islamic terrorists of ISIL attacked Assyrian towns and villages in the Assyrian Homeland of northern Iraq, together with cities such as Mosul and Kirkuk which have large Assyrian populations. There have been reports of atrocities committed by ISIL terrorists since, including; beheadings, crucifixions, child murders, rape, forced conversions, ethnic cleansing, robbery, and extortion in the form of illegal taxes levied upon non-Muslims. Assyrians in Iraq have responded by forming armed militias to defend their territories.

In response to the Islamic State's invasion of the Assyrian homeland in 2014, many Assyrian organizations also formed their own independent fighting forces to combat ISIL and potentially retake their "ancestral lands."[147] These include the Nineveh Plain Protection Units,[148][147][149] Dwekh Nawsha,[150][151] and the Nineveh Plain Forces.[152][153] The latter two of these militias were eventually disbanded.[154]

In Syria, the Dawronoye modernization movement has influenced Assyrian identity in the region.[155] The largest proponent of the movement, the Syriac Union Party (SUP) has become a major political actor in the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria. In August 2016, the Ourhi Centre in the city of Zalin was started by the Assyrian community, to educate teachers in order to make Syriac an optional language of instruction in public schools,[156][157] which then started with the 2016/17 academic year.[158] With that academic year, states the Rojava Education Committee, "three curriculums have replaced the old one, to include teaching in three languages: Kurdish, Arabic and Assyrian."[159] Associated with the SUP is the Syriac Military Council, an Assyrian militia operating in Syria, established in January 2013 to protect and stand up for the national rights of Assyrians in Syria as well as working together with the other communities in Syria to change the current government of Bashar al-Assad.[160] However, many Assyrians and the organizations that represent them, particularly those outside of Syria, are critical of the Dawronoye movement.[161][162]

A 2018 report stated that Kurdish authorities in Syria, in conjunction with Dawronoye officials, had shut down several Assyrian schools in Northern Syria and fired their administration. This was said to be because these schooled failed to register for a license and for rejecting the new curriculum approved by the Education Authority. Closure methods ranged from officially shutting down schools to having armed men enter the schools and shut them down forcefully. An Assyrian educator named Isa Rashid was later badly beaten outside of his home for rejecting the Kurdish self-administration's curriculum.[162][161] The Assyrian Policy Institute claimed that an Assyrian reporter named Souleman Yusph was arrested by Kurdish forces for his reports on the Dawronoye-related school closures in Syria. Specifically, he had shared numerous photographs on Facebook detailing the closures.[162]

Demographics

Maunsell's map, a Pre-World War I British Ethnographical Map of the Middle East showing "Chaldeans", "Jacobites", and "Nestorians"
The Assyro-Chaldean Delegation's map of an independent Assyria, presented at the Paris Peace Conference 1919

Homeland

The Assyrian homeland includes the ancient cities of Nineveh (Mosul), Nuhadra (Dohuk), Arrapha/Beth Garmai (Kirkuk), Al Qosh, Tesqopa and Arbela (Erbil) in Iraq, Urmia in Iran, and Hakkari (a large region which comprises the modern towns of Yüksekova, Hakkâri, Çukurca, Şemdinli and Uludere), Edessa/Urhoy (Urfa), Harran, Amida (Diyarbakır) and Tur Abdin (Midyat and Kafro) in Turkey, among others.[163] Some of the cities are presently under Kurdish control and some still have an Assyrian presence, namely those in Iraq, as the Assyrian population in southeastern Turkey (such as those in Hakkari) was ethnically cleansed during the Assyrian genocide of the First World War.[55] Those who survived fled to unaffected areas of Assyrian settlement in northern Iraq, with others settling in Iraqi cities to the south. Though many also immigrated to neighbouring countries in and around the Caucasus and Middle East like Armenia, Syria, Georgia, southern Russia, Lebanon and Jordan.[164]

In ancient times, Akkadian-speaking Assyrians have existed in what is now Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Israel and Lebanon, among other modern countries, due to the sprawl of the Neo-Assyrian empire in the region.[165] Though recent settlement of Christian Assyrians in Nisabina, Qamishli, Al-Hasakah, Al-Qahtaniyah, Al Darbasiyah, Al-Malikiyah, Amuda, Tel Tamer and a few other small towns in Al-Hasakah Governorate in Syria, occurred in the early 1930s,[166] when they fled from northern Iraq after they were targeted and slaughtered during the Simele massacre.[167] The Assyrians in Syria did not have Syrian citizenship and title to their established land until late the 1940s.[168]

Sizable Assyrian populations only remain in Syria, where an estimated 400,000 Assyrians live,[169] and in Iraq, where an estimated 300,000 Assyrians live.[170] This is a decline from an estimate of 1,100,000 Assyrians in the 1980’s, following instability caused by the American invasion of Iraq in 2003.[171] In Iran and Turkey, only small populations remain, with only 20,000 Assyrians in Iran,[172][173] and a small but growing Assyrian population in Turkey, where 25,000 Assyrians live, mostly in the cities and not the ancient settlements.[174]

Worldwide population changes of the Assyrian population, showing a steep decline in areas where Assyrians lived historically, however a sharp increase in the overall population of the Assyrian diaspora.

In Tur Abdin, a traditional centre of Assyrian culture, there are only 2,500 Assyrians left.[175] Down from 50,000 in the 1960 census, but up from 1,000 in 1992. This sharp decline is due to an intense conflict between Turkey and the PKK in the 1980s. However, there are an estimated 25,000 Assyrians in all of Turkey, with most living in Istanbul.[176] Most Assyrians currently reside in the West due to the centuries of persecution by the neighboring Muslims.[177] Prior to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, in a 2013 report by a Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council official, it was estimated that 300,000 Assyrians remained in Iraq.[170]

Assyrian subgroups

There are three main Assyrian subgroups: Eastern, Western, Chaldean. These subdivisions are only partially overlapping linguistically, historically, culturally, and religiously.

With its many historic churches & monasteries, Tur Abdin is considered the spiritual centre of the Syriac Orthodox Assyrians.
A map depicting Assyrian relocation after Seyfo in 1914

Persecution

Due to their Christian faith and ethnicity, the Assyrians have been persecuted since their adoption of Christianity. During the reign of Yazdegerd I, Christians in Persia were viewed with suspicion as potential Roman subversives, resulting in persecutions while at the same time promoting Nestorian Christianity as a buffer between the Churches of Rome and Persia. Persecutions and attempts to impose Zoroastrianism continued during the reign of Yazdegerd II.[189][190]

During the eras of Mongol rule under Genghis Khan and Timur, there was indiscriminate slaughter of tens of thousands of Assyrians and destruction of the Assyrian population of northwestern Iran and central and northern Iran.[191]

More recent persecutions since the 19th century include the massacres of Badr Khan, the massacres of Diyarbakır (1895), the Adana massacre, the Assyrian genocide, the Simele massacre, and the al-Anfal campaign.

Diaspora

Assyrian world population
  more than 500,000
  100,000–500,000
  50,000–100,000
  10,000–50,000
  less than 10,000

Since the Assyrian genocide, many Assyrians have left the Middle East entirely for a more safe and comfortable life in the countries of the Western world. As a result of this, the Assyrian population in the Middle East has decreased dramatically. As of today there are more Assyrians in the diaspora than in their homeland. The largest Assyrian diaspora communities are found in Sweden (100,000),[192] Germany (100,000),[193] the United States (80,000),[194] and in Australia (46,000).[195]

By ethnic percentage, the largest Assyrian diaspora communities are located in Södertälje in Stockholm County,[196] Sweden, and in Fairfield City in Sydney, Australia, where they are the leading ethnic group in the suburbs of Fairfield, Fairfield Heights, Prairiewood and Greenfield Park.[197][198][199] There is also a sizable Assyrian community in Melbourne, Australia (Broadmeadows, Meadow Heights and Craigieburn)[200] In the United States, Assyrians are mostly found in Chicago (Niles and Skokie), Detroit (Sterling Heights, and West Bloomfield Township), Phoenix, Modesto (Stanislaus County) and Turlock.[201]

Small Assyrian communities are found in San Diego, Sacramento and Fresno in the United States, Toronto in Canada and also in London, UK (London Borough of Ealing). In Germany, pocket-sized Assyrian communities are scattered throughout Munich, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Berlin and Wiesbaden. In Paris, France, the commune of Sarcelles has a small number of Assyrians. Assyrians in the Netherlands mainly live in the east of the country, in the province of Overijssel. In Russia, small groups of Assyrians mostly reside in Krasnodar Kray and Moscow.[202]

To note, the Assyrians residing in California and Russia tend to be from Iran, whilst those in Chicago and Sydney are predominantly Iraqi Assyrians. More recently, Syrian Assyrians are growing in size in Sydney after a huge influx of new arrivals in 2016, who were granted asylum under the Federal Government's special humanitarian intake.[203][204] The Assyrians in Detroit are primarily Chaldean speakers, who also originate from Iraq.[205] Assyrians in such European countries as Sweden and Germany would usually be Turoyo-speakers or Western Assyrians,[206] and tend to be originally from Turkey.[196]

Identity and subdivisions

Assyrian flag, adopted in 1968[207]
Syriac-Aramean flag[208]
Chaldean flag, published in 1999[209]

Syriac Christians of the Middle East and diaspora employ different terms for self-identification based on conflicting beliefs in the origin and identity of their respective communities.[210] During the 19th century, English archaeologist Austen Henry Layard believed that the native Christian communities in the historical region of Assyria were descended from the ancient Assyrians,[211][212] a view that was also shared by William Ainger Wigram.[213][214] Although at the same time Horatio Southgate[215] and George Thomas Bettany[216] claimed during their travels through Mesopotamia that the Syriac Christians are the descendants of the Arameans.

Today, Assyrians and other minority ethnic groups in the Middle East, feel pressure to identify as "Arabs",[217][218] "Turks" and "Kurds".[219] In addition, Western media often makes no mention of any ethnic identity of the Christians in the region, and simply call refer to them as Christians,[169] Iraqi Christians, Iranian Christians, Christians in Syria, and Turkish Christians, a label rejected by Assyrians.

Self-designation

Below are terms commonly used by Assyrians to self-identify:.

  • Assyrian, named after their ethnicity as the descendants of the ancient Assyrian people,[220] is advocated by followers from within all Middle Eastern based East and West Syriac Rite Churches. (see Syriac Christianity)[210][221]
  • Chaldean is a term that was used for centuries by western writers and scholars as designation for the Aramaic language. It was so used by Jerome,[222] and was still the normal terminology in the nineteenth century.[223][224][225] Only in 1445 did it begin to be used to designate Aramaic speakers who had entered communion with the Catholic Church. This happened at the Council of Florence,[226] which accepted the profession of faith that Timothy, metropolitan of the Aramaic speakers in Cyprus, made in Aramaic, and which decreed that "nobody shall in future dare to call [...] Chaldeans, Nestorians".[227][228][229] Previously, when there were as yet no Catholic Aramaic speakers of Mesopotamian origin, the term "Chaldean" was applied with explicit reference to their "Nestorian" religion. Thus Jacques de Vitry wrote of them in 1220/1 that "they denied that Mary was the Mother of God and claimed that Christ existed in two persons. They consecrated leavened bread and used the 'Chaldean' (Syriac) language".[230] Until the second half of the 19th century, the term "Chaldean" continued in general use for East Syriac Christians, whether "Nestorian" or Catholic.[231][232][233][234] In 1840, upon visiting Mesopotamia, Horatio Southgate reported that local Chaldeans consider themselves to be descended from ancient Assyrians,[215] and in some later works also noted the same origin of local Jacobites.[235][236]
  • Aramean, also known as Syriac-Aramean,[237][238] named after the ancient Aramean people, is advocated by some followers from within Middle Eastern based West Syriac Rite Churches.[239][240] Furthermore, Assyrians identifying as Aramean have obtained recognition from the Israeli government.[241][242] To note, ancient Arameans were a separate ethnic group that lived concurrently with the Assyrian empire in what is now Syria and parts of Lebanon, Israel the West Bank and Gaza, Jordan, Iraq and Turkey.[243][244][245][246]

Assyrian vs. Syrian naming controversy

The proximity between Roman Syria and Mesopotamia in the 1st century AD, Alain Manesson Mallet, 1683

As early as the 8th century BC Luwian and Cilician subject rulers referred to their Assyrian overlords as Syrian, a western Indo-European corruption of the original term Assyrian. The Greeks used the terms "Syrian" and "Assyrian" interchangeably to indicate the indigenous Arameans, Assyrians and other inhabitants of the Near East, Herodotus considered "Syria" west of the Euphrates. Starting from the 2nd century BC onwards, ancient writers referred to the Seleucid ruler as the King of Syria or King of the Syrians.[247] The Seleucids designated the districts of Seleucis and Coele-Syria explicitly as Syria and ruled the Syrians as indigenous populations residing west of the Euphrates in contrast to Assyrians who had their native homeland in Mesopotamia east of the Euphrates.[248][249]

This version of the name took hold in the Hellenic lands to the west of the old Assyrian Empire, thus during Greek Seleucid rule from 323 BC the name Assyria was altered to Syria, and this term was also applied to areas west of Euphrates which had been an Assyrian colony, and from this point the Greeks applied the term without distinction between the Assyrians of Mesopotamia and Arameans of the Levant.[250][251]

The question of ethnic identity and self-designation is sometimes connected to the scholarly debate on the etymology of "Syria". The question has a long history of academic controversy, but majority mainstream opinion currently strongly favours that Syria is indeed ultimately derived from the Assyrian term Aššūrāyu.[252][253][254][255] Meanwhile, some scholars has disclaimed the theory of Syrian being derived from Assyrian as "simply naive", and detracted its importance to the naming conflict.[256]

Rudolf Macuch points out that the Eastern Neo-Aramaic press initially used the term "Syrian" (suryêta) and only much later, with the rise of nationalism, switched to "Assyrian" (atorêta).[257] According to Tsereteli, however, a Georgian equivalent of "Assyrians" appears in ancient Georgian, Armenian and Russian documents.[258] This correlates with the theory of the nations to the East of Mesopotamia knew the group as Assyrians, while to the West, beginning with Greek influence, the group was known as Syrians. Syria being a Greek corruption of Assyria. The debate appears to have been settled by the discovery of the Çineköy inscription in favour of Syria being derived from Assyria.

The Çineköy inscription is a Hieroglyphic Luwian-Phoenician bilingual, uncovered from Çineköy, Adana Province, Turkey (ancient Cilicia), dating to the 8th century BC. Originally published by Tekoglu and Lemaire (2000),[259] it was more recently the subject of a 2006 paper published in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies, in which the author, Robert Rollinger, lends support to the age-old debate of the name "Syria" being derived from "Assyria" (see Etymology of Syria).

The object on which the inscription is found is a monument belonging to Urikki, vassal king of Hiyawa (i.e., Cilicia), dating to the eighth century BC. In this monumental inscription, Urikki made reference to the relationship between his kingdom and his Assyrian overlords. The Luwian inscription reads "Sura/i" whereas the Phoenician translation reads 'ŠR or "Ashur" which, according to Rollinger (2006), "settles the problem once and for all".[260]

The modern terminological problem goes back to colonial times, but it became more acute in 1946, when with the independence of Syria, the adjective Syrian referred to an independent state. The controversy is not restricted to exonyms like English "Assyrian" vs. "Aramaean", but also applies to self-designation in Neo-Aramaic, the minority "Aramaean" faction endorses both Sūryāyē ܣܘܪܝܝܐ and Ārāmayē ܐܪܡܝܐ, while the majority "Assyrian" faction endorses Āṯūrāyē ܐܬܘܪܝܐ or Sūryāyē.[citation needed]

Culture

An Assyrian child dressed in traditional clothes

Assyrian culture is largely influenced by Christianity.[261] There are many Assyrian customs that are common in other Middle Eastern cultures. Main festivals occur during religious holidays such as Easter and Christmas. There are also secular holidays such as Kha b-Nisan (vernal equinox).[262]

People often greet and bid relatives farewell with a kiss on each cheek and by saying "ܫܠܡܐ ܥܠܝܟ" Shlama/Shlomo lokh, which means: "Peace be upon you" in Neo-Aramaic. Others are greeted with a handshake with the right hand only; according to Middle Eastern customs, the left hand is associated with evil. Similarly, shoes may not be left facing up, one may not have their feet facing anyone directly, whistling at night is thought to waken evil spirits, etc.[263] A parent will often place an eye pendant on their baby to prevent "an evil eye being cast upon it".[264] Spitting on anyone or their belongings is seen as a grave insult.[citation needed]

Assyrians are endogamous, meaning they generally marry within their own ethnic group, although exogamous marriages are not perceived as a taboo, unless the foreigner is of a different religious background, especially a Muslim.[265] Throughout history, relations between the Assyrians and Armenians have tended to be very friendly, as both groups have practised Christianity since ancient times and have suffered through persecution under Muslim rulers. Therefore, mixed marriage between Assyrians and Armenians is quite common, most notably in Iraq, Iran, and as well as in the diaspora with adjacent Armenian and Assyrian communities.[266]

Language

A map of Assyrian dialects

The Neo-Aramaic languages, which are in the Semitic branch of the Afroasiatic language family, ultimately descend from Late Old Eastern Aramaic, the lingua franca in the later phase of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which displaced the East Semitic Assyrian dialect of Akkadian and Sumerian. After being conquered by the Assyrians, many people, including the Arameans, were deported to the Assyrian heartland and elsewhere. Due to a large number of Aramaic-speaking people, the Aramaization of Assyria began. The relationship between Arameans and Assyrians grew stronger, with Aramean scribes working with Assyrian ones.[267]

Around 700 B.C., the Aramaic alphabet replaced cuneiform and became the official writing system of the Assyrian empire.[267] Aramaic was the language of commerce, trade, and communication and became the vernacular language of Assyria in classical antiquity.[244][268][246] By the 1st century AD, Akkadian was extinct, although its influence on contemporary Eastern Neo-Aramaic languages spoken by Assyrians is significant and some loaned vocabulary still survives in these languages to this day.[269][270]

To the native speaker, the language is usually called Surayt, Soureth, Suret or a similar regional variant. A wide variety of dialects exist, mainly Suret, and Surayt. All are classified as Neo-Aramaic languages and are usually written using Syriac script, a derivative of the ancient Aramaic script. Jewish varieties such as Lishanid Noshan, Lishán Didán and Lishana Deni, written in the Hebrew script, are spoken by Assyrian Jews. [271][272][273]

There is a considerable amount of mutual intelligibility between Suret dialects. Therefore, these "languages" would generally be considered to be dialects rather than separate languages. The Jewish Aramaic languages of Lishan Didan and Lishanid Noshan share a partial intelligibility with these varieties. The mutual intelligibility between Suret and Surayt/Turoyo is, depending on the dialect, limited to partial, and may be asymmetrical.[271][274][275]

Being stateless, Assyrians are typically multilingual, speaking both their native language and learning those of the societies they reside in. While many Assyrians have fled from their traditional homeland recently,[276][277] a substantial number still reside in Arabic-speaking countries speaking Arabic alongside the Neo-Aramaic languages[278][2][279] and is also spoken by many Assyrians in the diaspora. The most commonly spoken languages by Assyrians in the diaspora are English, German and Swedish. Historically many Assyrians also spoke Turkish, Armenian, Azeri, Kurdish, and Persian and a smaller number of Assyrians that remain in Iran, Turkey (Istanbul and Tur Abdin) and Armenia still do today.[280]

Many loanwords from the aforementioned languages exist in the Neo-Aramaic languages, with the Iranian languages and Turkish being the greatest influences overall. Only Turkey is reported to be experiencing a population increase of Assyrians in the four countries constituting their historical homeland, largely consisting of Assyrian refugees from Syria and a smaller number of Assyrians returning from the diaspora in Europe.[280]

Script

Assyrians predominantly use the Syriac script, which is written from right to left. It is one of the Semitic abjads directly descending from the Aramaic alphabet and shares similarities with the Phoenician, Hebrew and the Arabic alphabets.[281] It has 22 letters representing consonants, three of which can be also used to indicate vowels. The vowel sounds are supplied either by the reader's memory or by optional diacritic marks. Syriac is a cursive script where some, but not all, letters connect within a word. It was used to write the Syriac language from the 1st century AD.[282]

The oldest and classical form of the alphabet is the ʾEsṭrangēlā script.[283] Although ʾEsṭrangēlā is no longer used as the main script for writing Syriac, it has received some revival since the 10th century, and it has been added to the Unicode Standard in September, 1999. The East Syriac dialect is usually written in the Maḏnḥāyā form of the alphabet, which is often translated as "contemporary", reflecting its use in writing modern Neo-Aramaic. The West Syriac dialect is usually written in the Serṭā form of the alphabet. Most of the letters are clearly derived from ʾEsṭrangēlā, but are simplified, flowing lines.[284]

Furthermore, for practical reasons, Assyrian people sometimes use the Latin alphabet, especially in social media.

Religion

Historical divisions within Syriac Christian Churches in the Middle East

Assyrians belong to various Christian denominations, such as the Syriac Orthodox Church, which has over 1 million members around the world, the Chaldean Catholic Church, with about 600,000 members,[285] the Assyrian Church of the East, with an estimated 400,000 members,[286] and the Ancient Church of the East, with some 100,000 members. The churches that constitute the East Syriac rite include the Chaldean Catholic Church, Assyrian Church of the East, and the Ancient Church of the East, whereas the churches of the West Syriac rite are the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Syriac Catholic Church.

A small minority of Assyrians accepted the Protestant Reformation and became Reform Orthodox in the 20th century, possibly due to British influences, and are now organised in the Assyrian Evangelical Church, the Assyrian Pentecostal Church and other Protestant/Reform Orthodox Assyrian groups. While there are some atheist Assyrians, they tend to still associate with some denomination.[287]

Many members of the following churches consider themselves Assyrian. Ethnic identities are often deeply intertwined with religion, a legacy of the Ottoman Millet system. The group is traditionally characterized as adhering to various churches of Syriac Christianity and speaking Neo-Aramaic languages. It is subdivided into:

Baptism and First Communion are celebrated extensively, similar to a Brit Milah or Bar Mitzvah in Jewish communities. After a death, a gathering is held three days after burial to celebrate the ascension to heaven of the dead person, as of Jesus; after seven days another gathering commemorates their death. A close family member wears only black clothes for forty days and nights, or sometimes a year, as a sign of mourning.

During the "Seyfo" genocide,[288] there were a number of Assyrians who were forced to convert to Islam.[289][290][291] They reside in Turkey, and practice Islam but still retain their identity.[292][293] A small number of Assyrian Jews exist as well.[294]

Music

Traditional clothing may be worn for Assyrian folk dance.

Assyrian music is a combination of traditional folk music and western contemporary music genres, namely pop and soft rock, but also electronic dance music. Instruments traditionally used by Assyrians include the zurna and davula, but has expanded to include guitars, pianos, violins, synthesizers (keyboards and electronic drums), and other instruments.

Some well known Assyrian singers in modern times are Ashur Bet Sargis, Sargon Gabriel, Evin Agassi, Janan Sawa, Juliana Jendo, and Linda George. Assyrian artists that traditionally sing in other languages include Melechesh, Timz and Aril Brikha. Assyrian-Australian band Azadoota performs its songs in the Assyrian language whilst using a western style of instrumentation.

The first international Aramaic Music Festival was held in Lebanon in August 2008 for Assyrian people internationally.

Dance

Folk dance in an Assyrian party in Chicago

Assyrians have numerous traditional dances which are performed mostly for special occasions such as weddings. Assyrian dance is a blend of ancient indigenous and general Near Eastern elements. Assyrian folk dances are mainly made up of circle dances that are performed in a line, which may be straight, curved, or both. The most common form of Assyrian folk dance is khigga, which is routinely danced as the bride and groom are welcomed into the wedding reception. Most of the circle dances allow unlimited number of participants, with the exception of the Sabre Dance, which require three at most. Assyrian dances would vary from weak to strong, depending on the mood and tempo of a song.

Festivals

Assyrian festivals tend to be closely associated with their Christian faith, of which Easter is the most prominent of the celebrations. Members of the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church and Syriac Catholic Church follow the Gregorian calendar and as a result celebrate Easter on a Sunday between March 22 and April 25 inclusively.[297]

Members of the Syriac Orthodox Church and Ancient Church of the East celebrate Easter on a Sunday between April 4 and May 8 inclusively on the Gregorian calendar, March 22 and April 25 on the Julian calendar. During Lent, Assyrians are encouraged to fast for 50 days from meat and any other foods which are animal based.

Assyrians celebrate a number of festivals unique to their culture and traditions as well as religious ones:

  • Kha b-Nisan ܚܕ ܒܢܝܣܢ, the Assyrian New Year, traditionally on April 1, though usually celebrated on January 1. Assyrians usually wear traditional costumes and hold social events including parades and parties, dancing, and listening to poets telling the story of creation.[298]
  • Sauma d-Ba'utha ܒܥܘܬܐ ܕܢܝܢܘܝܐ, the Nineveh fast, is a three-day period of fasting and prayer.[299]
  • Somikka, All Saints Day, is celebrated to motivate children to fast during Lent through use of frightening costumes
  • Kalu d'Sulaqa, feast of the Bride of the Ascension, celebrates Assyrian resistance to the invasion of Assyria by Tamerlane
  • Nusardyl, commemorating the baptism of the Assyrians of Urmia by St. Thomas.[300]
  • Sharra d'Mart Maryam, usually on August 15, a festival and feast celebrating St. Mary with games, food, and celebration.[300]
  • Assyrians celebrating Mesopotamian New Year (Akitu) year 6769 (Nisan, April 1st 2019) in Nohadra (Duhok), Iraq
    Other Sharras (special festivals) include: Sharra d'Mart Shmuni, Sharra d'Mar Shimon Bar-Sabbaye, Sharra d'Mar Mari, and Shara d'Mar Zaia, Mar Bishu, Mar Sawa, Mar Sliwa, Mar Odisho, and many more. Each town or city also have their own Sharras based on the patron saints of the churches, monasteries, or other holy sites in the settlement or nearby.
  • Yoma d'Sah'deh (Day of Martyrs), commemorating the thousands massacred in the Simele massacre and the hundreds of thousands massacred in the Assyrian genocide. It is commemorated annually on August 7.

Assyrians practice unique marriage ceremonies. The rituals performed during weddings are derived from many different elements from the past 3,000 years. An Assyrian wedding traditionally lasted a week. Today, weddings in the Assyrian homeland usually last 2–3 days. In the Assyrian diaspora they last 1–2 days.

Traditional clothing

Assyrian clothing varies from village to village. Clothing is usually blue, red, green, yellow, and purple; these colors are also used as embroidery on a white piece of clothing. Decoration is lavish in Assyrian costumes, and sometimes involves jewellery. The conical hats of traditional Assyrian dress have changed little over millennia from those worn in ancient Mesopotamia, and until the 19th and early 20th centuries the ancient Mesopotamian tradition of braiding or platting of hair, beards and moustaches was still commonplace.[citation needed]

Cuisine

Typical Assyrian cuisine

Assyrian cuisine is similar to other Middle Eastern cuisines, and is rich in grains, meat, potato, cheese, bread and tomatoes. Typically, rice is served with every meal, with a stew poured over it. Tea is a popular drink, and there are several dishes of desserts, snacks, and beverages. Alcoholic drinks such as wine and wheat beer are organically produced and drunk. Assyrian cuisine is primarily identical to Iraqi/Mesopotamian cuisine, as well as being very similar to other Middle Eastern and Caucasian cuisines, as well as Greek cuisine, Levantine cuisine, Turkish cuisine, Iranian cuisine, Israeli cuisine, and Armenian cuisine, with most dishes being similar to the cuisines of the area in which those Assyrians live/originate from.[301] It is rich in grains such as barley, meat, tomato, herbs, spices, cheese, and potato as well as herbs, fermented dairy products, and pickles.[302]

Genetics

Late-20th-century DNA analysis conducted by Cavalli-Sforza, Paolo Menozzi and Alberto Piazza, "shows that Assyrians have a distinct genetic profile that distinguishes their population from any other population."[303] Genetic analyses of the Assyrians of Persia demonstrated that they were "closed" with little "intermixture" with the Muslim Persian population and that an individual Assyrian's genetic makeup is relatively close to that of the Assyrian population as a whole.[304][305] "The genetic data are compatible with historical data that religion played a major role in maintaining the Assyrian population's separate identity during the Christian era".[303]

In a 2006 study of the Y chromosome DNA of six regional Armenian populations, including, for comparison, Assyrians and Syrians, researchers found that, "the Semitic populations (Assyrians and Syrians) are very distinct from each other according to both [comparative] axes. This difference supported also by other methods of comparison points out the weak genetic affinity between the two populations with different historical destinies."[306] A 2008 study on the genetics of "old ethnic groups in Mesopotamia", including 340 subjects from seven ethnic communities ("Assyrian, Jewish, Zoroastrian, Armenian, Turkmen, the Arab peoples in Iran, Iraq, and Kuwait") found that Assyrians were homogeneous with respect to all other ethnic groups sampled in the study, regardless of religious affiliation.[307]

In a 2011 study focusing on the genetics of Marsh Arabs of Iraq, researchers identified Y chromosome haplotypes shared by Marsh Arabs, Iraqis, and Assyrians, "supporting a common local background."[308] In a 2017 study focusing on the genetics of Northern Iraqi populations, it was found that Iraqi Assyrians and Iraqi Yazidis clustered together, but away from the other Northern Iraqi populations analyzed in the study, and largely in between the West Asian and Southeastern European populations. According to the study, "contemporary Assyrians and Yazidis from northern Iraq may in fact have a stronger continuity with the original genetic stock of the Mesopotamian people, which possibly provided the basis for the ethnogenesis of various subsequent Near Eastern populations".[309]

Haplogroups

Y-DNA haplogroup J-M304 which originated from a geographical zone that includes northeastern Syria, northern Iraq and eastern Turkey from where it expanded to the rest of the Near East and North Africa[310] has been measured at 55% among Assyrians of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and diaspora; while it has been found at 11% among Assyrians of Iran.[311] the same haplogroup also have high prevalence among Iraqi Arabs which is "indicative of their indigenous nature".[310]

Haplogroup T-M184 [reported as K*] has been measured at 15.09% among Assyrians in Armenia.[312] The haplogroup is frequent in Middle Eastern Jews, Georgians, Druze and Somalians. According to a 2011 study by Lashgary et al., R1b [reported as R*(xR1a)] has been measured at 40% among Assyrians in Iran, making it major haplogroup among Iranian Assyrians.[311] Yet another DNA test comprising 48 Assyrian male subjects from Iran, the Y-DNA haplogroups J-M304, found in its greatest concentration in the Arabian peninsula, and the northern R-M269, were also frequent at 29.2% each.[313] Lashgary et al. explain the presence of haplogroup R in Iranian Assyrians as well as in other Assyrian communities (~23%) as a consequence of mixing with Armenians and assimilation/integration of different peoples carrying haplogroup R, while explain its frequency as a result of genetic drift due to small population size and endogamy due to religious barriers.[311]

Haplogroup J2 has been measured at 13.4%, which is commonly found in the Fertile Crescent, the Caucasus, Anatolia, Italy, coastal Mediterranean, and the Iranian plateau.[314][315]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ (ܣܘܪ̈ܝܐ, Sūrāyē/Sūrōyē)

References

  1. ^ United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. "Refworld – World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples – Turkey: Syriacs". Refworld. Archived from the original on 3 May 2019. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  2. ^ a b Baumer 2006.
  3. ^ Murre van den Berg 2011, p. 2304.
  4. ^ Simmons, Mary Kate (1998). Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization: yearbook. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-90-411-0223-2.
  5. ^ SIL Ethnologue estimate for the "ethnic population" associated with Neo-Aramaic Archived 2 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Assyrians return to Turkey from Europe to save their culture". Archived from the original on 11 January 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  7. ^ "Assyrians: "3,000 Years of History, Yet the Internet is Our Only Home"". www.culturalsurvival.org. 25 March 2010. Archived from the original on 20 January 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  8. ^ "Population Project". Shlama Foundation. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  9. ^ "Syria's Assyrians threatened by extremists – Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East". Al-Monitor. 28 April 2014. Archived from the original on 15 January 2020. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  10. ^ "Prior to the start of the war in Syria, it is estimated that the country was home to approximately 200,000 ethnic Assyrians" Syria: Assyrian Policy Institute Archived 31 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "The Assyrian population in Iraq, estimated at approximately 200,000, constitutes the largest remaining concentration of the ethnic group in the Middle East." Assyrian Policy Institute's Erasing the Legacy of the Khabour: Destruction of Assyrian Cultural Heritage in the Khabour Region of Syria Archived 28 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Turkey-Syria deal allows Syriacs to cross border for religious holidays "An estimated 25,000 Syriacs live in Turkey, while Syria boasts some 877,000."
  13. ^ "2018 U.S. Department of State International Religious Freedom Report: Turkey". Archived from the original on 25 April 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  14. ^ "2018 U.S. Department of State International Religious Freedom Report: Iran". Archived from the original on 18 December 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  15. ^ "Assyrian Genocide Resolution Read in Arizona Assembly". www.aina.org. Archived from the original on 7 March 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  16. ^ "Arizona HCR2006 – TrackBill". trackbill.com. Archived from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  17. ^ "HCR2006 – 542R – I Ver". www.azleg.gov. Archived from the original on 4 March 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  18. ^ Nyheter, SVT (9 May 2018). "Statministerns folkmordsbesked kan avgöra kommunvalet: "Underskatta inte frågan"". SVT Nyheter (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 9 May 2018. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  19. ^ "Diskussion zum Thema 'Aaramäische Christen' im Kapitelshaus" Borkener Zeitung (in German) (archived link, 8 October 2011)
  20. ^ 70,000 Syriac Christians according to REMID Archived 25 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine (of which 55,000 Syriac Orthodox).
  21. ^ "Assyrian and Chaldean Christians Flee Iraq to Neighboring Jordan". ChristianHeadlines.com. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  22. ^ "Brief History of Assyrians". www.aina.org. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  23. ^ "2071.0 – Census of Population and Housing: Reflecting Australia – Stories from the Census, 2016". Archived from the original on 9 July 2017.
  24. ^ "Lebanon | Assyrian Policy Institute". Assyrian Policy. Archived from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  25. ^ Miri, Adhid (27 January 2021). "Chaldeans in Europe Part V". Chaldean News. Archived from the original on 14 December 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  26. ^ "Canada Census Profile 2021". Census Profile, 2021 Census. Statistics Canada Statistique Canada. 7 May 2021. Archived from the original on 3 January 2023. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  27. ^ Wieviorka & Bataille 2007, pp. 166
  28. ^ Tzilivakis, Kathy (10 May 2003). "Iraq's Forgotten Christians Face Exclusion in Greece". Athens News. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  29. ^ "Assyrische Bevölkerung weltweit". bethnahrin. Archived from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  30. ^ Özkan, Duygu (31 March 2012). "Die christlichen Assyrer zu Wien". DiePresse. Archived from the original on 24 June 2019. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  31. ^ "Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved 31 August 2024.
  32. ^ "This figure is an estimate from the Assyrian Cultural and Advice Centre" [1] Archived 1 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine at Iraqi Assyrians in London: Beyond the 'Immigrant/Refugee' Divide; Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford, 1995 Archived 28 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ "According to the 1989 population census, there were 5,200 Assyrians in Georgia (0.1 percent); according to the 2002 census, their number dropped to 3,299, while their percentage remained the same" [2] Archived 2021-10-25 at the Wayback Machine [The Assyrians of Georgia: Ethnic Specifics Should Be Preserved in the Journal of Central Asia and the Caucasus]
  34. ^ "Georgia – ecoi.net – European Country of Origin Information Network". Archived from the original on 5 November 2014. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  35. ^ "Syriacs still going strong – Syriacs in Palestine". 28 March 2017. Archived from the original on 7 November 2022. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  36. ^ Shams, Alex (2 November 2015). "Learning the language of Jesus Christ". Roads & Kingdoms. Archived from the original on 23 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  37. ^ State statistics committee of Ukraine – National composition of population, 2001 census Archived 24 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine (Ukrainian)
  38. ^ "Brief History of Assyrians". www.aina.org. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  39. ^ "The Main Results of RA Census 2022, trilingual / Armenian Statistical Service of Republic of Armenia". www.armstat.am. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
  40. ^ "2013 Census ethnic group profiles: Assyrian". Statistics New Zealand. Archived from the original on 24 December 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  41. ^ "The ethnic origin of Christians in Israel". parshan.co.il (in Hebrew). Archived from the original on 22 January 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
  42. ^ Fenger-Grøndahl, Af Malene (1 May 2017). "Assyrer: At vi har vores eget sted, styrker min følelse af at høre til i Danmark". Kristeligt Dagblad (in Danish). Archived from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  43. ^ "Assyrian Community in Kazakhstan Survived Dark Times, Now Focuses on Education". The Astana Times. 19 December 2014. Archived from the original on 30 March 2021. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  44. ^ Kramer, Samuel Noah (1988). In the world of Sumer: an autobiography. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-2121-6. OCLC 17726815.
  45. ^ A. Leo Oppenheim (1964). Ancient Mesopotamia (PDF). The University of Chicago Press. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  46. ^ Hays, Jeffrey. "ASSYRIAN CHRISTIANS, CHALDEANS AND JACOBITES | Facts and Details". factsanddetails.com. Archived from the original on 4 October 2022. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
  47. ^ Hanish, Shak (22 March 2008). "The Chaldean Assyrian Syriac people of Iraq: an ethnic identity problem". Digest of Middle East Studies. 17 (1): 32–48. doi:10.1111/j.1949-3606.2008.tb00145.x.
  48. ^ Naby, Eden (2016), The Assyrians and Aramaic: Speaking the Oldest Living Language of the Middle East.
  49. ^ The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, Aramaic language.
  50. ^ Barr, James, WHICH LANGUAGE DID JESUS SPEAK? SOME REMARKS OF A SEMITIST, p. 29.
  51. ^ Khan, Geoffrey (2012), The Language of the Modern Assyrians: The North-Eastern Neo-Aramaic dialect group.
  52. ^ Minahan, James (2002). Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: A-C. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-313-32109-2. The Assyrians, although closely associated with their Christian religion, are divided among a number of Christian sects. The largest denominations are the Chaldean Catholic Church with about 45% of the Assyrian population, the Syriac Orthodox with 26%, the Assyrian Church of the East with 19%, the free Orthodox Church of Antioch or Syriac Catholic Church with 4%, and various Protestant sects with a combined 6%.
  53. ^ For Assyrians as a Christian people, see
  54. ^ Hanish 2015, p. 517.
  55. ^ a b Laing-Marshall 2005, p. 149-150.
  56. ^ "Assyrian Christians 'Most Vulnerable Population' in Iraq". The Christian Post. Archived from the original on 8 December 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2006.
  57. ^ "U.S. Gov't Watchdog Urges Protection for Iraq's Assyrian Christians". The Christian Post. Archived from the original on 11 December 2007. Retrieved 31 December 2007.
  58. ^ "Video: Iraqi troops liberate Christian town of Bartella from IS group". France 24. 23 October 2016. Archived from the original on 16 February 2022. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  59. ^ Georges Roux, Ancient Iraq, p. 187
  60. ^ "Nineveh". Max Mallowan. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  61. ^ Deutscher, Guy (2007). Syntactic Change in Akkadian: The Evolution of Sentential Complementation. Oxford University Press US. pp. 20–21. ISBN 978-0-19-953222-3. Archived from the original on 18 April 2023. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  62. ^ Michel, Cécile (2017). "Economy, Society, and Daily Life in the Old Assyrian Period". In E. Frahm (ed.). A Companion to Assyria. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-32524-7. p. 81
  63. ^ Genesis 25:3
  64. ^ "Ashur". World History Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 29 May 2016.
  65. ^ Düring, Bleda S. (2020). The Imperialisation of Assyria: An Archaeological Approach. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-47874-8. p. 145
  66. ^ "Artifacts show rivals Athens and Sparta," Yahoo News, December 5, 2006.
  67. ^ "The Persian Wars by Herodotus: Book 6 – ERATO". parstimes.com. Archived from the original on 13 April 2018. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  68. ^ Yana 2008, p. 30.
  69. ^ Olmatead, History of the Persian Empire, Chicago University Press, 1959, p.39
  70. ^ a b "National and Ethnic Identity in the Neo-Assyrian Empire and Assyrian Identity in Post-Empire Times" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 November 2020.
  71. ^ "The Assyrians and Aramaic: Speaking the Oldest Living Language of the Middle East". www.aina.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2023. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  72. ^ Parpola, Simo, National and Ethnic Identity in the Neo-Assyrian Empire and Assyrian Identity in Post-Empire Times.
  73. ^ E. Bilgic and S Bayram, Ankara Kultepe Tabletleri II, Turk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi, 1995, ISBN 975-16-0246-7
  74. ^ K. R. Veenhof, Ankara Kultepe Tabletleri V, Turk Tarih Kurumu, 2010, ISBN 978-975-16-2235-8
  75. ^ "Woods C. 2006 "Bilingualism, Scribal Learning, and the Death of Sumerian." In S. L. Sanders (ed) Margins of Writing, Origins of Culture: 91–120 Chicago" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
  76. ^ "Hadrian". G. W. Bowersock. Archived from the original on 29 September 2018. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  77. ^ Millar 1967, p. 211.
  78. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus The Later Roman Empire (354–378) A shameful peace concluded by Jovian 6.7 p. 303, Penguin Classics, Translated by Walter Hamilton 1986
  79. ^ Etheredge, Laura (2011). Iraq. Rosen Publishing. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-61530-304-5.
  80. ^ Seleucia-Ctesiphon is not to be confused with Seleucia Isauria (now Silifke, Turkey) within the Roman Empire, where, at the request of the Roman emperor, the Council of Seleucia was held in 359.
  81. ^ Michael Goldfarb, Ahmad's War, Ahmad's Peace (New York: Carroll & Graf, 2005).
  82. ^ "Definition of melkite". Dictionary.com. Archived from the original on 7 December 2018. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  83. ^ a b "Syriac language". Encyclopaedia Britannica. 29 January 2024.
  84. ^ "Aramaic language". Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  85. ^ Theodora the "Believing Queen:" A Study in Syriac Historiographical Tradition, Susan Ashbrook Harvey, p. 216, 217, 218.
  86. ^ "Theodora | Empress, Biography, Accomplishments, Justinian, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Archived from the original on 15 April 2023. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  87. ^ Beeston, Alfred Felix Landon (1983). Arabic literature to the end of the Umayyad period. Cambridge University Press. p. 501. ISBN 978-0-521-24015-4. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  88. ^ Contadini, Anna (2003). "A Bestiary Tale: Text and Image of the Unicorn in the Kitāb naʿt al-hayawān (British Library, or. 2784)" (PDF). Muqarnas. 20: 17–33. doi:10.1163/22118993-90000037. JSTOR 1523325. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 November 2020. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  89. ^ Brague, Rémi. "Assyrians Contributions To The Islamic Civilization". christiansofiraq.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013.
  90. ^ Hyman and Walsh Philosophy in the Middle Ages Indianapolis, 1973, p. 204' Meri, Josef W. and Jere L. Bacharach, Editors, Medieval Islamic Civilization Vol.1, A-K, Index, 2006, p. 304.
  91. ^ Brague, Rémi (2009). The Legend of the Middle Ages: Philosophical Explorations of Medieval Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. University of Chicago Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-226-07080-3.
  92. ^ Bennett, Clinton (2005). Muslims and Modernity: An Introduction to the Issues and Debates. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 162, 163. ISBN 0-8264-5481-X. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  93. ^ a b Glenn, H. Patrick (2007). Legal Traditions of the World. Oxford University Press. p. 219.
  94. ^ Joseph 2000, p. 48-49.
  95. ^ Winkler, Dietmar (2009). Hidden Treasures And Intercultural Encounters: Studies On East Syriac Christianity In China And Central Asia. LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 978-3-643-50045-8.
  96. ^ Aboona 2008, p. XI.
  97. ^ According to Georges Roux and Simo Parpola
  98. ^ "History of Ashur". Assur.de. Archived from the original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
  99. ^ Gaunt, Beṯ-Şawoce & Donef 2006, p. 32.
  100. ^ Aboona 2008, p. 105.
  101. ^ Khanbaghi, Aptin (2006). The fire, the star, and the cross: minority religions in medieval and early modern Iran. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-056-7.
  102. ^ Parry, Kenneth (15 April 2008). The Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity. John Wiley & Sons. p. 255. ISBN 978-0-470-76639-2 – via Google Books.
  103. ^ [3]Archived 22 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine "Maphrian Catholicos [Syr. Orth." in Gorgias Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Syriac Heritage
  104. ^ Fortescue, Adrian Henry Timothy Knottesford. "4. The Nestorian Church in the Past". The Lesser Eastern Churches. Archived from the original on 21 April 2023. Retrieved 11 May 2023 – via Wikisource.
  105. ^ Baumstark, Anton, ed. (2004). "Patriarcha de Mozal in Syria orientali". Oriens Christianus. Vol. IV:1. Rome and Leipzig: O. Harrassowitz. p. 277.
  106. ^ Chaldaeorum ecclesiae Musal Patriarcha (Giuseppe Simone Assemani (editor), Bibliotheca Orientalis Clementino-Vaticana (Rome 1725), vol. 3, part 1, p. 661) Archived 19 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  107. ^ Tisserant 1931, p. 228.
  108. ^ Baumer 2006, p. 248.
  109. ^ Healey 2010, p. 45.
  110. ^ Mooken 2003, p. 33.
  111. ^ Frazee 2006, p. 57.
  112. ^ Winkler 2019, p. 127.
  113. ^ Pietro Strozzi (1617). De dogmatibus chaldaeorum disputatio ad Patrem ... Adam Camerae Patriarchalis Babylonis ... ex typographia Bartholomaei Zannetti.
  114. ^ "A Chronicle Of The Carmelites In Persia (vol I)". 11 May 1939. Retrieved 11 May 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  115. ^ In his contribution "Myth vs. Reality" to JAA Studies, Vol. XIV, No. 1, 2000 p. 80 Archived 2020-07-13 at the Wayback Machine, George V. Yana (Bebla) presented as a "correction" of Strozzi's statement a quotation from an unrelated source (cf. p. xxiv) that Sulaqa was called "Patriarch of the Chaldeans".
  116. ^ Frazee 2006, p. 56.
  117. ^ Winkler 2019, p. 126-127.
  118. ^ Joseph 2000, p. 1.
  119. ^ Baum & Winkler 2003, p. 4.
  120. ^ Butts 2017, p. 604.
  121. ^ "Fred Aprim, "Assyria and Assyrians Since the 2003 US Occupation of Iraq"" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
  122. ^ a b Aboona 2008, p. 218-219.
  123. ^ Courtois 2004, p. 105-107.
  124. ^ Atman 2018, p. 215-232.
  125. ^ "The Old Assyrian Flag". Chaldeans On Line. Archived from the original on 5 January 2006. Retrieved 21 June 2019.
  126. ^ AANF. "HISTORY". AANF.org. Assyrian American National Federation. Archived from the original on 7 February 2005. Retrieved 21 June 2019.
  127. ^ Yacoub 2016.
  128. ^ The Plight of Religious Minorities: Can Religious Pluralism Survive? – Page 51 by United States Congress
  129. ^ Hovannisian, Richard (ed.). The Armenian Genocide: Wartime Radicalization Or Premeditated Continuum. p. 272.
  130. ^ Halo, Thea. Not Even My Name: A True Story. p. 131.
  131. ^ Korbani, Agnes G. The Political Dictionary of Modern Middle East.
  132. ^ Lundgren, Svante (2020), THE FAILURE OF THE ASSYRIAN LOBBIES AT THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE IN 1919.
  133. ^ Wigram, William Ainger (1920). Our Smallest Ally; Wigram, W[illiam] A[inger]; A Brief Account of the Assyrian Nation in the Great War. Introd. by General H.H. Austin. Soc. for Promoting Christian Knowledge.
  134. ^ Naayem, Shall This Nation Die?, p. 281
  135. ^ Len Dieghton, Blood Sweat and Tears
  136. ^ Zubaida, S (July 2000). "Contested nations: Iraq and the Assyrians" (PDF). Nations and Nationalism. 6 (3): 363–82. doi:10.1111/j.1354-5078.2000.00363.x. Archived (PDF) from the original on 19 February 2018. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
  137. ^ "Biography of His Holiness, The Assyrian Martyr, The Late Mar Eshai Shimun XXIII". peshitta.org. Committee of the 50th Anniversary of the Patriarchate of Mar Eshai Shimun XXIII. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
  138. ^ "Iraq: Information on treatment of Assyrian and Chaldean Christians". Refworld. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  139. ^ "زوعا". zowaa.org. Archived from the original on 3 September 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  140. ^ "The Anfal Offensives". indict.org.uk. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011.
  141. ^ Certrez; Donabed; Makko (2012). The Assyrian Heritage: Threads of Continuity and Influence. Uppsala University. pp. 288–289. ISBN 978-91-554-8303-6.
  142. ^ "Coaliton [sic] Provisional Authority Order Number 1 – De-Ba'Athification Of Iraqi Society" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  143. ^ "Mullen's Plain Talk About U.S. Mistakes in Iraq". National Public Radio. 1 August 2007. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
  144. ^ Henderson & Tucker, p. 19.
  145. ^ "Exodus of Christians hits Baghdad district". The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  146. ^ "Church Bombings in Iraq Since 2004". Aina.org. Archived from the original on 16 January 2008. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  147. ^ a b Burger, John (4 December 2014). "Christians in Iraq Forming Militia to Defend, and Possibly Retake, Ancestral Lands". Aletia.org. Archived from the original on 1 April 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  148. ^ Jeffrey, Paul (29 April 2016). "Militias of Iraqi Christians resist Islamic State amid sectarian strife". CatholicPhilly.com. Archived from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  149. ^ Nelson, Steven (6 February 2015). "Iraqi Assyrian Christians Form Anti-ISIS Militia, and You Can Legally Chip In". U.S. News & World Report. Archived from the original on 24 July 2022. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  150. ^ Henderson, Peter (30 October 2014). "Iraq's Christian paramilitaries split in IS fight". Al-Monitor. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  151. ^ "Westerners join Iraqi Christian militia to 'crusade'". World Bulletin. 18 February 2015. Archived from the original on 14 April 2019. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
  152. ^ "Inside the Christian Militias Defending the Nineveh Plains". Warisboring.com. 7 March 2015. Archived from the original on 7 September 2016. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  153. ^ "The establishment of Nineveh Plain Forces – NPF". Syriac International News Agency. 7 January 2015. Archived from the original on 16 August 2018. Retrieved 5 January 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  154. ^ Hanna, Reine (1 June 2020), Contested Control: The Future of Security in Iraq's Nineveh Plain, Assyrian Policy Institute, p. 38 & 39
  155. ^ Drott, Carl (25 May 2015). "The Revolutionaries of Bethnahrin". Warscapes.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2019. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  156. ^ "Syriac Christians revive ancient language despite war". ARA News. 19 August 2016. Archived from the original on 18 August 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  157. ^ "The Syriacs are taught their language for the first time". Hawar News Agency. 24 September 2016. Archived from the original on 24 September 2016. Retrieved 24 September 2016.
  158. ^ "Hassakeh: Syriac Language to Be Taught in PYD-controlled Schools". The Syrian Observer. 3 October 2016. Archived from the original on 14 May 2021. Retrieved 5 October 2016.
  159. ^ "Rojava administration launches new curriculum in Kurdish, Arabic and Assyrian". ARA News. 7 October 2016. Archived from the original on 7 October 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
  160. ^ Syriacs establish military council in Syria Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Hürriyet Daily News, 2 February 2013
  161. ^ a b Safi, Marlo (25 September 2018). "Closure of Syrian Schools: Another Bleak Sign for Christians in Syria". National Review. Archived from the original on 29 October 2019. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  162. ^ a b c "Kurdish Self-Administration in Syria: Release Assyrian Journalist Souleman Yusph". Assyrian Policy Institute. 30 September 2018. Archived from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  163. ^ Wigram, W.A., "The Ashiret Highlands of Hakkari (Mesopotamia)," Royal Central Asian Society Journal, 1916, Vol. III, pg. 40. – The Assyrians and their Neighbors (London, 1929)
  164. ^ Sherman (13 September 2013). The West in the World. McGraw-Hill Higher Education. ISBN 978-1-259-15705-9.
  165. ^ Bryce 2009, p. 439.
  166. ^ Betts, Robert Brenton, Christians in the Arab East (Atlanta, 1978)
  167. ^ Dodge, Bayard, "The Settlement of the Assyrians on the Khabur," Royal Central Asian Society Journal, July 1940, pp. 301–320.
  168. ^ Rowlands, J., "The Khabur Valley," Royal Central Asian Society Journal, 1947, pp. 144–149.
  169. ^ a b "Al-Monitor: Ethnic dimension of Iraqi Assyrians often ignored". 10 October 2014. Archived from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  170. ^ a b "مسؤول مسيحي: عدد المسيحيين في العراق تراجع الى ثلاثمائة الف". Archived from the original on 8 February 2020. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  171. ^ McBride, Julian (4 February 2023). "Assyrians Continue to Struggle to Survive Post-U.S. Invasion of Iraq". Geopolitics.com. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  172. ^ "Ishtar: Documenting The Crisis In The Assyrian Iranian Community". aina.org. Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved 3 October 2007.
  173. ^ United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (13 October 2010). "Iran: Last of the Assyrians". Refworld. Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  174. ^ "Cumhuriyetin ilk kilisesi açılıyor… Süryani Ruhani Lideri'nin ilk röportajı CNN Türk'te". www.hurriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). 6 October 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  175. ^ Atto 2011, p. 83.
  176. ^ "Cumhuriyetin ilk kilisesi açılıyor… Süryani Ruhani Lideri'nin ilk röportajı CNN Türk'te". www.hurriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). 6 October 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  177. ^ "Statement on Assyrians/Syriacs in Turkey/Iraq". sor.cua.edu. Archived from the original on 20 November 2008. Retrieved 6 December 2008.
  178. ^ a b Minahan 2002, p. 209
  179. ^ Vander Werff, Lyle L. (1977). Christian mission to Muslims: the record: Anglican and Reformed approaches in India and the Near East, 1800–1938. The William Carey Library series on Islamic studies. William Carey Library. pp. 366. ISBN 978-0-87808-320-6.
  180. ^ "Who are the Chaldean Christians?". BBC News. 13 March 2008. Archived from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  181. ^ Nisan 2002, p. x.
  182. ^ Travis 2010, p. 238.
  183. ^ "FACTBOX: Christians in Turkey". 22 January 2009. Archived from the original on 11 May 2023. Retrieved 11 May 2023 – via www.reuters.com.
  184. ^ The Middle East, abstracts and index, Part 1. Library Information and Research Service. Northumberland Press, 2002. Page 491.
  185. ^ Central Asia and the Caucasus: transnationalism and diaspora. Touraj Atabaki, Sanjyot Mehendale. Routledge, 2005. Page 228.
  186. ^ "Šlomo Surayt". textbook.surayt.com. Archived from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  187. ^ Üngör 2011, p. 15.
  188. ^ Gaunt et al. 2017, p. 19.
  189. ^ This History of the Medieval World by Susan Wise Bauer, pg. 85–87
  190. ^ A Short World History of Christianity by Robert Bruce Mullin, pp. 82–85
  191. ^ "Nestorian (Christian sect)". Britannica.com. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  192. ^ Demographics of Sweden Archived 2 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Swedish Language Council "Sweden has also one of the largest exile communities of Assyrian and Syriac Christians (also known as Chaldeans) with a population of around 100,000."
  193. ^ "Erzdiözese". Archived from the original on 5 March 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  194. ^ "American FactFinder – Results". Data Access and Dissemination Systems (DADS). Archived from the original on 12 February 2020. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  195. ^ Assyrian Australian Association & Ettinger House 1997, Settlement Issues of the Assyrian Community, AAA, Sydney.
  196. ^ a b Lundgren, Svante (15 May 2019). The Assyrians: Fifty Years in Swedenq. Nineveh Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-91-984101-7-4.
  197. ^ "Fairfield's Assyrian Resource Centre has secured $40,000 to fund its renovations". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  198. ^ Fairfield City Council 2003, State of the Community Report, Fairfield City Council, Wakeley.
  199. ^ Kinarah: Twentieth Anniversary of Assyrian Australian Association 1989, Assyrian Australian Association, Edensor Park.
  200. ^ Deniz, F. 2000, 'Maintenance and Transformation of Ethnic Identity: the Assyrian Case', The Assyrian Australian Academic Journal
  201. ^ Thrown to the Lions Archived 2013-08-08 at the Wayback Machine, Doug Bandow, The America Spectator
  202. ^ Peter BetBasoo. "Brief History of Assyrians". www.aina.org. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  203. ^ The facts about Syrian refugees and Fairfield Archived 21 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine by SSI News Blog, 23 February 2017
  204. ^ Fairfield struggles to cope after threefold increase in refugee arrivals Archived 6 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine by Penny Timms from ABC News, 3 January 2017
  205. ^ "Arab, Chaldean, and Middle Eastern Children and Families in the Tri-County Area." (Archive) From a Child's Perspective: Detroit Metropolitan Census 2000 Fact Sheets Series. Wayne State University. Volume 4, Issue 2, February 2004. p. 2/32. Retrieved on November 8, 2013.
  206. ^ B. Furze, P. Savy, R. Brym, J. Lie, Sociology in Today's World, 2008, p. 349
  207. ^ "Assyria". Crwflags.com. Archived from the original on 12 October 2008. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  208. ^ "Syriac-Aramaic People (Syria)". Crwflags.com. Archived from the original on 10 November 2001. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  209. ^ "CHALDEAN FLAG ... from A to Z". Chaldean Flag. Archived from the original on 29 July 2019. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  210. ^ a b Murre van den Berg 2015, p. 127.
  211. ^ Layard 1849a, p. IX-X, 38, 241.
  212. ^ Layard 1849b, p. 237.
  213. ^ Cross, Frank Leslie (2005). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3. In the 19th cent. A. H. Layard, the excavator of Nineveh, first suggested that the local *Syriac Christian communities in the region were descended from the ancient Assyrians, and the idea was later popularized by W. A. Wigram, a member of the Abp. Of Canterbury's Mission to the Church of the East (1895–1915).
  214. ^ Coakley 2011a, p. 45.
  215. ^ a b Southgate 1840, p. 179.
  216. ^ Bettany 1888, p. 491.
  217. ^ Jonathan Eric Lewis (June 2003). "Iraqi Assyrians: Barometer of Pluralism". Middle East Forum. Archived from the original on 4 July 2008. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  218. ^ "Arab American Institute Still Deliberately Claiming Assyrians Are Arabs". Aina.org. Archived from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  219. ^ "In Court, Saddam Criticizes Kurdish Treatment of Assyrians". Aina.org. Archived from the original on 14 October 2007. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  220. ^ Frahm, Eckart (2017). A companion to Assyria. Hoboken, NJ. ISBN 978-1-118-32524-7. OCLC 962025766.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  221. ^ "Eastern Churches" Archived 17 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Catholic Encyclopedia, see "Eastern Syrians" and "Western Syrians" respectively. Modern terminology within the group is Western Assyrians and Eastern Assyrians respectively, while those who reject the Assyrian identity opt for Syriac or Aramean rather than Assyrian.
  222. ^ Gallagher 2012, p. 123-141.
  223. ^ Gesenius & Prideaux-Tregelles 1859.
  224. ^ Fürst 1867.
  225. ^ Davies 1872.
  226. ^ Coakley 2011b, p. 93.
  227. ^ Fathers, Council (14 December 1431). "Council of Basel 1431–45 A.D. Council Fathers". Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  228. ^ Baum & Winkler 2003, p. 112.
  229. ^ O'Mahony 2006, p. 526-527.
  230. ^ Baum & Winkler 2003, p. 63.
  231. ^ Ainsworth 1841, p. 36.
  232. ^ Ainsworth 1842b, p. 272.
  233. ^ Layard 1849a, p. 260.
  234. ^ Simon (oratorien), Richard (3 July 1684). "Histoire critique de la creance et des coûtumes des nations du Levant". Chez Frederic Arnaud. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 8 November 2020 – via Google Books.
  235. ^ Southgate 1842, p. 249.
  236. ^ Southgate 1844, p. 80.
  237. ^ Akopian, Arman (2017). "11. Other branches of Syriac Christianity: Melkites and Maronites". Introduction to Aramean and Syriac Studies. pp. 217–222. doi:10.31826/9781463238933-014. ISBN 978-1-4632-3893-3. Archived from the original on 23 April 2021. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  238. ^ "Syriac Universal Alliance". 2003. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.694.4099.
  239. ^ Donabed & Mako 2009, p. 75.
  240. ^ Castellino, Joshua; Cavanaugh, Kathleen A. (25 April 2013). Minority Rights in the Middle East. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-967949-2. Retrieved 12 October 2019 – via Google Books.
  241. ^ אנחנו לא ערבים - אנחנו ארמים (in Hebrew). Israel HaYom. 9 August 2013. Archived from the original on 19 October 2019. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  242. ^ Aderet, Ofer (9 September 2018). "Neither Arab nor Jew: Israel's Unheard Minorities Speak Up After the Nation-state Law". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 18 October 2019. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
  243. ^ Fiey 1965, p. 141–160.
  244. ^ a b Lipiński 2000.
  245. ^ Schniedewind 2002, p. 276-287.
  246. ^ a b Gzella 2015.
  247. ^ Nigel Wilson (31 October 2013). Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece. Routledge. p. 652. ISBN 978-1-136-78800-0.
  248. ^ Andrade 2013, p. 28.
  249. ^ Andrade 2014, p. 299–317.
  250. ^ Herodotus, The Histories, VII.63, s:History of Herodotus/Book 7.
  251. ^ Joseph 1997, p. 37-43.
  252. ^ Frye 1992, p. 281–285.
  253. ^ Frye 1997, p. 30–36.
  254. ^ Rollinger 2006a, p. 72-82.
  255. ^ Rollinger 2006b, p. 283-287.
  256. ^ Heinrichs 1993, p. 106–107.
  257. ^ Macuch 1976, p. 89, 206, 233.
  258. ^ Tsereteli, Sovremennyj assirijskij jazyk, Moscow: Nauka, 1964.
  259. ^ Tekoğlu et al. 2000, p. 961-1007.
  260. ^ Rollinger 2006b, p. 283–287.
  261. ^ ASSYRIANS OF CHICAGO. "The Assyrian Academic Society" (PDF). www.aina.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  262. ^ "The Assyrian New Year". Archived from the original on 2 May 2006.
  263. ^ Chamberlain, AF. "Notes on Some Aspects of the Folk-Psychology of Night". American Journal of Psychology, 1908 – JSTOR.
  264. ^ Gansell, AR. FROM MESOPOTAMIA TO MODERN SYRIA: ETHNOARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE ADORNMENT DURING RITES. Ancient Near Eastern Art in Context. 2007 – Brill Academic Publishers.
  265. ^ Dr. Joseph Adebayo Awoyemi (14 September 2014). Pre-marital Counselling In a Multicultural Society. Lulu.com. pp. 75–. ISBN 978-1-291-83577-9.[permanent dead link]
  266. ^ The Ethnic Minorities of Armenia, Garnik Asatryan, Victoria Arakelova.
  267. ^ a b Parpola 2004, p. 9.
  268. ^ Bae 2004, p. 1–20.
  269. ^ "Akkadian Words in Modern Assyrian" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 September 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2019.
  270. ^ Kaufman, Stephen A. (1974), The Akkadian influences on Aramaic. University of Chicago Press
  271. ^ a b Avenery, Iddo, The Aramaic Dialect of the Jews of Zakho. The Israel academy of Science and Humanities 1988.
  272. ^ Khan, Geoffrey (1999). A Grammar of Neo-Aramaic: the dialect of the Jews of Arbel. Leiden: EJ Brill.
  273. ^ Maclean, Arthur John (1895). Grammar of the dialects of vernacular Syriac: as spoken by the Eastern Syrians of Kurdistan, north-west Persia, and the Plain of Mosul: with notices of the vernacular of the Jews of Azerbaijan and of Zakhu near Mosul. Cambridge University Press, London.
  274. ^ Heinrichs 1990.
  275. ^ Tezel 2003.
  276. ^ O'Brien, Abbie. "Australia's only Assyrian school is giving refugees a fresh start". SBS News. Archived from the original on 20 December 2019. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  277. ^ "The inside story of how 226 Assyrian Christians were freed from ISIS". Catholic Herald. Archived from the original on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  278. ^ "Understanding recent movements of Christians from Syria and Iraq to other countries across the Middle East and Europe" (PDF). www.aina.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  279. ^ Carl Drott (25 May 2015). "The Revolutionaries of Bethnahrin". Warscapes. Archived from the original on 10 July 2019. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  280. ^ a b "Assyrians return to Turkey from Europe to save their culture". Assyrians return to Turkey from Europe to save their culture (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 11 January 2020. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  281. ^ Briquel-Chatonnet 2019, p. 243–265.
  282. ^ "Syriac alphabet". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  283. ^ Hatch, William (1946). An album of dated Syriac manuscripts. Boston: The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, reprinted in 2002 by Gorgias Press. p. 24. ISBN 1-931956-53-7.
  284. ^ Nestle, Eberhard (1888). Syrische Grammatik mit Litteratur, Chrestomathie und Glossar. Berlin: H. Reuther's Verlagsbuchhandlung. [translated to English as Syriac grammar with bibliography, chrestomathy and glossary, by R. S. Kennedy. London: Williams & Norgate 1889. p. 5].
  285. ^ J. Martin Bailey, Betty Jane Bailey, Who Are the Christians in the Middle East? p. 163: "more than two thirds" out of "nearly a million" Christians in Iraq.
  286. ^ "Assyrian Church of the East". Adherents.com. Archived from the original on 1 October 2003. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  287. ^ Boháč, Artur (2010). "Assyrian Ethnic Identity in a Globalizing World" (PDF). In Mácha, Přemysl; Kopeček, Vincenc (eds.). Beyond Globalisation: Exploring the Limits of Globalisation in the Regional Context. Ostrava: University of Ostrava. p. 71. ISBN 978-80-7368-717-5. Although there are some atheists among Assyrians, they are usually associated with specific communities based on the adherence to a concrete religious sect.
  288. ^ Abdalla 2017, p. 92-105.
  289. ^ N. Shirinian, George (2017). Genocide in the Ottoman Empire: Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks, 1913–1923. Berghahn Books. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-78533-433-7.
  290. ^ O. Barthoma, Soner (2017). Let Them Not Return: Sayfo – The Genocide Against the Assyrian, Syriac, and Chaldean Christians in the Ottoman Empire. Berghahn Books. p. 2. ISBN 978-1-78533-499-3.
  291. ^ G. Hovannisian, Richard (2011). The Armenian Genocide: Cultural and Ethical Legacies. Transaction Publishers. p. 268. ISBN 978-1-4128-3592-3.
  292. ^ "Muslim Assyrians? Who are they?". 23 November 2016. Archived from the original on 1 August 2019. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  293. ^ "Crypto-Assyrians: Who are they?". The Armenian Weekly. 28 November 2016. Archived from the original on 3 July 2019. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
  294. ^ "שואת אחינו האשוריים | הדרך המהירה שבין תרבות ישראל לתרבות אשור | יעקב מעוז". JOKOPOST | עיתון המאמרים והבלוגים המוביל בישראל (in Hebrew). 18 July 2019. Archived from the original on 22 July 2019. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  295. ^ "Qenshrin.com: Guide to the Christian congregations in Aleppo (in Arabic)". Archived from the original on 1 March 2011.
  296. ^ Leroy, Jules; Collin, Peter (2004). Monks and Monasteries of the Near East. Gorgias Press. pp. 166–167. ISBN 978-1-59333-276-1.[permanent dead link]
  297. ^ The Date of Easter Archived 2011-08-14 at the Wayback Machine. Article from United States Naval Observatory (March 27, 2007).
  298. ^ "AUA Release March 26, 2006" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 November 2011.
  299. ^ "Three Day Fast of Nineveh". syrianorthodoxchurch.org. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
  300. ^ a b Piroyan, William; Naby, Eden (1999). "FESTIVALS ix. Assyrian". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. IX, Fasc. 6. pp. 561–563.
  301. ^ Mandel, Pam (5 December 2017). "An Ancient Empire Gets New Life — on a Food Truck". Jewish in Seattle Magazine. Archived from the original on 3 June 2019. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  302. ^ Edelstein, Sari, ed. (2011). Food, Cuisine, and Cultural Competency for Culinary, Hospitality, and Nutrition Professionals. Boston, Massachusetts: Jones & Bartlett Learning. pp. 545–552. ISBN 978-0-7637-5965-0.
  303. ^ a b "Dr. Joel J. Elias, Emeritus, University of California, The Genetics of Modern Assyrians and their Relationship to Other People of the Middle East". Archived from the original on 16 August 2000.
  304. ^ Akbari M.T.; Papiha Sunder S.; Roberts D.F.; Farhud Daryoush D. (1986). "Genetic Differentiation among Iranian Christian Communities". American Journal of Human Genetics. 38 (1): 84–98. PMC 1684716. PMID 3456196.
  305. ^ Cavalli-Sforza, Luigi Luca; Menozzi, Paolo; Piazza, Alberto (1994). The History and Geography of Human Genes. Princeton University Press. p. 243. ISBN 978-0-691-08750-4.
  306. ^ "Yepiskoposian et al., Iran and the Caucasus, Volume 10, Number 2, 2006, pp. 191–208(18), "Genetic Testing of Language Replacement Hypothesis in Southwest Asia"" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  307. ^ Banoei, M. M.; Chaleshtori, M. H.; Sanati, M. H.; Shariati, P; Houshmand, M; Majidizadeh, T; Soltani, N. J.; Golalipour, M (February 2008). "Variation of DAT1 VNTR alleles and genotypes among old ethnic groups in Mesopotamia to the Oxus region". Hum Biol. 80 (1): 73–81. doi:10.3378/1534-6617(2008)80[73:VODVAA]2.0.CO;2. PMID 18505046. S2CID 10417591. The relationship probability was lowest between Assyrians and other communities. Endogamy was found to be high for this population through determination of the heterogeneity coefficient (+0,6867), Our study supports earlier findings indicating the relatively closed nature of the Assyrian community as a whole, which as a result of their religious and cultural traditions, have had little intermixture with other populations.
  308. ^ Al-Zahery et al., BMC Evolutionary Biology 2011, 11:288, "In search of the genetic footprints of Sumerians: a survey of Y-chromosome and mtDNA variation in the Marsh Arabs of Iraq" Archived 5 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine"In the less frequent J1-M267* clade, only marginally affected by events of expansion, Marsh Arabs shared haplotypes with other Iraqi and Assyrian samples, supporting a common local background."
  309. ^ Dogan, Serkan (3 November 2017). "A glimpse at the intricate mosaic of ethnicities from Mesopotamia: Paternal lineages of the northern Iraqi Arabs, Kurds, Syriacs, Turkmens and Yazidis". PLOS ONE. 12 (11): e0187408. Bibcode:2017PLoSO..1287408D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0187408. PMC 5669434. PMID 29099847.
  310. ^ a b Dogan, Serkan (3 November 2017). "A glimpse at the intricate mosaic of ethnicities from Mesopotamia: Paternal lineages of the northern Iraqi Arabs, Kurds, Syriacs, Turkmens and Yazidis". PLOS ONE. 12 (11): e0187408. Bibcode:2017PLoSO..1287408D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0187408. PMC 5669434. PMID 29099847.
  311. ^ a b c Lashgary Z, Khodadadi A, Singh Y, Houshmand SM, Mahjoubi F, Sharma P, Singh S, Seyedin M, Srivastava A, Ataee M, Mohammadi ZS, Rezaei N, Bamezai RN, Sanati MH (2011). "Y chromosome diversity among the Iranian religious groups: a reservoir of genetic variation". Ann. Hum. Biol. 38 (3): 364–71. doi:10.3109/03014460.2010.535562. PMID 21329477. S2CID 207460555.
  312. ^ Yepiskoposian L, Khudoyan A, Harutyunian A (2006). "Genetic Testing of Language Replacement Hypothesis in Southwest Asia". Iran and the Caucasus. 10 (2): 191–208. doi:10.1163/157338406780345899. JSTOR 4030922.
  313. ^ Grugni, Viola; Battaglia, Vincenza; Hooshiar Kashani, Baharak; Parolo, Silvia; Al-Zahery, Nadia; Achilli, Alessandro; Olivieri, Anna; Gandini, Francesca; Houshmand, Massoud; Sanati, Mohammad Hossein; Torroni, Antonio; Semino, Ornella (2012). "Ancient Migratory Events in the Middle East: New Clues from the Y-Chromosome Variation of Modern Iranians". PLOS ONE. 7 (7): e41252. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...741252G. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0041252. PMC 3399854. PMID 22815981.
  314. ^ Underhill PA, Shen P, Lin AA, Jin L, Passarino G, Yang WH, Kauffman E, Bonné-Tamir B, Bertranpetit J, Francalacci P, Ibrahim M, Jenkins T, Kidd JR, Mehdi SQ, Seielstad MT, Wells RS, Piazza A, Davis RW, Feldman MW, Cavalli-Sforza LL, Oefner PJ (2000). "Y chromosome sequence variation and the history of human populations". Nature Genetics. 26 (3): 358–61. doi:10.1038/81685. PMID 11062480. S2CID 12893406.
  315. ^ Semino O, Magri C, Benuzzi G, Lin AA, Al-Zahery N, Battaglia V, Maccioni L, Triantaphyllidis C, Shen P, Oefner PJ, Zhivotovsky LA, King R, Torroni A, Cavalli-Sforza LL, Underhill PA, Santachiara-Benerecetti AS: Origin, diffusion, and differentiation of Y-chromosome haplogroups E and J: inferences on the Neolithization of Europe and later migratory events in the Mediterranean area. Am J Hum Genet 2004, 74:1023–1034.

Sources