# Mari ibn Suleiman

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{{Short description|12th-century Nestorian Christian author}}
'''Mari ibn Suleiman''' or '''Sulaiman''' ({{langx|ar|ماري إبن سليمان}}) was a 12th-century [Nestorian Christian](/source/Nestorianism) author writing in [Arabic](/source/Arabic_language).

Nothing is known of his life. He is the author of a theological and historiographical work known as the '''Book of the Tower''' (''Kitāb al-Majdal'').
The work consists of seven parts.
The first is a general introduction, the second a theological treatise on Nestorian [Christology](/source/Christology), the third discusses [Baptism](/source/Baptism) and [Eucharist](/source/Eucharist), the fourth the [seven virtues](/source/seven_virtues) (piety, charity, prayer, fasting, pity, humility, chastity), the fifth on the "seven pillars" of [Creation](/source/Genesis_creation_narrative), [Last Judgement](/source/Last_Judgement), the [Prophecies](/source/Prophecies), the [coming of the Messiah](/source/Second_coming_of_Christ), the history of the [Eastern Church](/source/Eastern_Church), the history of [heresies](/source/heresies), and the [canon of biblical texts](/source/biblical_canon). The sixth part presents the four "moats" of the Tower, as prayer, the observation of the [Day of the Lord](/source/Day_of_the_Lord), candles and incense, and penitence.
The seventh part describes the "gardens" of the Tower, where Christians, liberated from the obligations of Mosaic law, may repose.

The main interest of the work in modern scholarship is the historiographical material in its fifth part, an important testimony of the 11th to 12th-century history of the Eastern Church. The work can be dated approximately from the fact that the history ends with patriarch [Abdisho III](/source/Abdisho_III) (r. 1139&ndash;1148), suggesting a composition in the 1140s.

In the 14th century, another author, [Amr ibn Matta](/source/Amr_ibn_Matta), imitated the work, and the two works have often been confused, even in their manuscripts.
The main manuscript for the work is Paris arab. 190 (13th century), besides Paris arab. 191 and 192 (14th century). Three further manuscripts are in the Vatican, one in London.

==References==
* H. Gismondi (ed.), ''Maris Amri et Slibae De patriarchis nestorianorum commentaria'', Rome, 1896-1899.
* Georg Graf, ''Geschichte der christlichen arabischen Literatur'', 5 vol., Biblioteca apostolica vaticana, 1944-53.
* Éphrem-Isa Yousif, ''Les chroniqueurs syriaques'', L'Harmattan, 2002.

{{Authority control}}

Category:12th-century Christian theologians
Category:12th-century deaths
Category:Church of the East writers
Category:12th-century Arabic-language writers

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Mari ibn Suleiman](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mari_ibn_Suleiman) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mari_ibn_Suleiman?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
