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Coptic Arabic Literature: When Arabic Became the Language of Saints

2013
Copto-Arabic literature is rich and diverse, just like its authors: popes, bishops, monks, and most notably, intellectual laymen. It is a subject, of course, that cannot be covered in such a short essay, which aims mainly to give an overview and to focus on some important examples. The Arab conquest of Egypt in AD 641 was a turning point in the history
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Word Translating Image. In search of modern-language equivalents for Syriac and Coptic terminology

Folia Orientalia, 2018
In general the iconographic details recorded in the hagiographic literature are pretty meagre. Authors focus on the miraculous properties of icons. The Coptic lives of the saints may be selected as representative for the Early Christian and Byzantine hagiography.
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Popular Traditions of the Coptic Language

The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures, 1937
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PISTIS SOPHIA AND THE COPTIC LANGUAGE

The Journal of Theological Studies, 1926
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