Results 71 to 80 of about 292 (131)
Attitudes towards the Use of Medicine in Jewish Literature from the Third and Second Centuries BCE [PDF]
This dissertation examines the attitudes towards the use of medicine in Jewish traditions of the third and second centuries BCE. More specifically, I examine the references to medicine and healing found in the books of 1 Enoch (particularly in the Book ...
CHRYSOVERGI, MARIA
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Description of two badly damaged Ethiopic Manuscripts donated by the Völkerkundemuseum Hamburg to the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Preußischer ...
Six, Veronika
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From the Rising of the Sun : The O Collection at Uppsala University Library
Some of the most sacred, oldest, and most precious manuscripts at Uppsala University Library are written in Arabic, Sanskrit, Pali, Ottoman Turkish, Persian, Tibetan, Hebrew, Aramaic, and Ethiopic.
Lundin, Emil
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Ancient Ethiopic Manuscript Recognition Using Deep Learning Artificial Neural Network
The recognition of handwritten documents, which aims at transforming written text into machine encoded text, is considered as one of the most challenging problems in the area of pattern recognition and an open research area.
Endalamaw, Siranesh Getu
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A Historical Handwritten Dataset for Ethiopic OCR with Baseline Models and Human-Level Performance
This paper introduces a new OCR dataset for historical handwritten Ethiopic script, characterized by a unique syllabic writing system, low-resource availability, and complex orthographic diacritics.
Tegegne, Tesfa, +6 more
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The hitherto unpublished and unresearched Homily on Christ’s Baptism (EMML 7028, f. 6v-20r, dated 1397/8) contains, apart from the predictable Christian theological content, some remarks on Islam.
Krawczuk, Marcin
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In this study the manuscript transmission, dissemination and reception of Gerald of Wales’ Topographia Hibernica (TH) and William of Rubruck’s Itinerarium ad partes Orientales (Itinerary) in England c.1185-1500 have been explored.
David, Sumithra J.
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Ms Ethiopic 4 of the Collection of the India Office: A strayed Manuscript of Gadla Lālibalā
In all likelihood it was the German missionary Johann Ludwig Krapf who commissioned a manuscript with hagiographic texts about King Lālibalā in the first decade of the nineteenth century, in Šawā. This manuscript was eventually used by August Dillmann for his Lexicon linguae aethiopicae published in 1865.
openaire +4 more sources
The physician in ancient Israel: his status and function. [PDF]
Allan N.
europepmc +1 more source

