The '''''Memar Marqah''''', or '''''The teaching of Marqah''''', is a [[homiletic]] [[masekhet|tractate]] on the [[Samaritan Torah]]<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gehman |first1=Henry S. |title=Book Review: Memar Marqah. The Teaching of Marqah, edited and translated by John Macdonald. Vol. I, The Text, 177 pp.; Vol. II, The Translation, 255 pp. Beiheft zur Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft, Nr. 84. Verlag Alfred Töpelmann, Berlin, 1963 |journal=Interpretation |date=1 January 1965 |volume=19 |issue=1 |pages=120–121 |doi=10.1177/002096436501900154 |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/002096436501900154 |language=EN |issn=0020-9643|url-access=subscription }}</ref> composed in the 4th century by the sage [[Marke ben Amram ben Sared]], a contemporary of [[Baba Rabba]]. The collection, written mostly in [[Samaritan Aramaic]] and partly in [[Samaritan Hebrew]], is actually composed of six distinct works, which were compiled by later copyists into a single collection. Reference to this view can be found in the name given to it by later copyists, ''The Ark of Marqe'', which indicates that the collection originated in a chest containing a selection of his writings found in [[Damascus]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Moses |first1=A. D. A. |title=Matthew's Transfiguration Story and Jewish-Christian Controversy |date=1 January 1996 |publisher=A&C Black |isbn=978-1-85075-576-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hurUAwAAQBAJ}} "His departure is very much like an assumption or ascension story influenced by Sinai motifs and Sinai type cataclysmic happenings and language: 'All the powers descended on to [[Mount Nebo]]...the Glory drew near to him and embraced him' (Memar Marqah 5.3, p. 203). According to Memar Marqah 5.4, p. 207, 'The shining light which abode on his face is with him in his tomb'. These examples show that the Moses-transfiguration theme plays an important role in Samaritan theology."</ref> It was written in Samaritan Aramaic by the scholar, philosopher and poet Marqe in the 4th century.<ref name="Tal">{{Cite journal |title=Tibåt Mårqe: A New Edition with English Translation |journal=Religions |last=Tal |first=Abraham |issue=1 |volume=11 |pages=52 |doi=10.3390/rel11010052 |year=2020 |issn=2077-1444|doi-access=free }}</ref> The work is a collection of midrashic compositions on several parts of the Torah, expanding its presentation of events and precepts with the purpose of examining its theological, didactic, and philosophical teachings.<ref name="Tal"/> The ''Tibat Marqe'' consists of six volumes. The first five contain [[midrash]]im corresponding to the [[Torah]]. The last book has a different character and describes conversations between [[Moses]] and letters of the Torah.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tal |first1=Abraham |title=Tibåt mårqe: the ark of marqe: edition, translation, commentary |date=2019 |publisher=DE GRUYTER |location=Berlin; Boston |isbn=978-3-11-043643-3 |page=2}}</ref>
==History== The original manuscripts have not survived. The only manuscripts are late 14th-century scribe copies found with the elders of the community in [[Shechem]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Tal |first1=Abraham |title=Tibåt Mårqe: A New Edition with English Translation |journal=Religions |date=20 January 2020 |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=52 |doi=10.3390/rel11010052 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Among the most important of these are the Kahel manuscript (MS H 1 at the [[University of Turin]]), and the Shechem manuscript preserved by the family of the [[Samaritan High Priest]] Amram ben Isaac. None of the manuscripts is complete, and missing fragments in the [[Nablus]] manuscript were discovered in 1995 in the [[Pirkowitz Collection]].
==About the Author== Samaritan tradition attributes the composition to Marka, a great poet, and interprets his name as "Moses our Lord" in [[gematria]], with the letter "sh" being split into "R" and "K" due to the sanctity of the name. According to modern research, his name is derived from the Roman name Marcus. He is called by the Samaritan community "Bedu'a Da'Chakmatah" "Founder of Wisdom", probably because of the ''Tibat Marqe''. The Samaritan genealogy identifies Marka as the son of Amram ben Sared, one of the priests who were invited by [[Baba Rabba]].<ref>"And here [...] Amram ben Sared is Amram, the Tota Abo Demarka" - COWLEY, SL, pp. 128,407</ref>
==Contents== The six books that make up the Ark of Marka are: * '''Sefer Peliata''' '''(Peliata)''' - "The Book of Miracles", discusses the story of [[the Exodus]] and the [[Ten Plagues]], and the character of [[Moses]] our rabbi. * '''Al Tehumi Maa'an Eden''' - "Song of the Sea", various midrashim related to the subject of the crossing of the Red Sea and the [[Song of the Sea]]. * '''And Moses and the Levitical Priests Spoke''' - discusses at length the parasha ("[[Kitza]]" according to the Samaritan division) of that name: [[Deuteronomy 27]]:9-20, and is concerned with a [[halakha|halakhic]] discussion in its nature in the details of the following commandments In the verses of the parsha. * '''Shiratha Rabatha''' - A collection of sermons on the song of [[Haazinu]]. * '''And there died Moshe the servant of the Lord'''' - A description of the passing of [[Moses]] * '''The Twenty-Two Letters''' - A midrashic discussion of the meaning of the letters of the [[Paleo-Hebrew alphabet]].
The Marka box contains linguistic layers from different periods, indicating later additions to the text, and there are speculations about early [[Arabic]] edits made to the text. The book itself deals with fundamental issues in the perception of religion, [[resurrection]], and the [[Taheb]] and [[Day of Judgment]], issues about which there was no general agreement in Marqe's own time. The book itself begins with confession and surrender to God and skips the creation stories of the [[Biblical Patriarchs]] straight to the [[Burning Bush]].
==References== {{reflist}}
==Further reading== * Benjamin Tzedakah, ''Marqa for Every Reader: Studies in "The Box of Marqa"'', Holon: A.B. Institute. Samaritan Studies, 2008 *[[Zeev Ben Haim]] ''The Ark of Marqe - and It Is a Collection of Samaritan Midrashim'', Israeli Academy of Sciences and Humanities, 1988 *{{cite book |last1=Tal |first1=Abraham |title=Tibåt Mårqe: The Ark of Marqe Edition, Translation, Commentary |date=21 October 2019 |publisher=Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |isbn=978-3-11-043643-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-DrEDwAAQBAJ |language=en}}
==External links==
[[Category:Samaritan texts]] [[Category:Texts in Aramaic]] [[Category:Midrashim]] [[Category:4th-century texts]]