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Alma Rišaia Rba or Diwan Alma Rišaia Rabbā (Classical Mandaic: ࡀࡋࡌࡀ ࡓࡉࡔࡀࡉࡀ ࡓࡁࡀ, "The Great Supreme World" or "The Great First World") is a Mandaean religious text. The text is used for Mandaean priestly initiation ceremonies. It is written as a scroll and has numerous illustrations. Alma Rišaia Rba complements Alma Rišaia Zuṭa, or "The Smaller Supreme World", a related Mandaic text used for priestly rituals.[1]

Alma Rišaia Rba
Information
ReligionMandaeism
LanguageMandaic language

Manuscripts and translations

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An English translation of the text was published by E. S. Drower in 1963, which was based on manuscript 41 of the Drower Collection (abbreviated DC 41). The manuscript consists of 8 parts. It was copied in 1224 A.H. (1809 or 1810 A.D.).[2] The DC 41 manuscript contains an illustration with Qulasta prayer 79 in scrambled form, and the text also has a scrambled version of Qulasta prayer 82 (which is also quoted in the Book 4 of the Right Ginza).[1]

BL Add. 23,602B, Kholasta sive liturgica Sabiorum Libri Joannis Fragmenta Mendaice is a book of fragments that was probably obtained by Colonel John George Taylor. It contains fragments of Maṣbuta ḏ-Hibil Ziua and Alma Rišaia Rba.[3]

Manuscripts of Alma Rišaia Rba held in the Rbai Rafid Collection are RRC 2P and RRC 3D. There are two additional manuscripts that are privately held by Mandaeans in Australia. One of the manuscripts was copied at Suq eš-Šuyūḵ in 1244 A.H. (1828–1829 A.D.), and another manuscript was copied at Qalˤat Ṣāleḥ in 1343 A.H. (1924–1925 A.D.).[4]

Prayer sequence

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In Alma Rišaia Rba, the prescribed sequence of Qulasta prayers (numbered below according to Drower's 1959 Canonical Prayerbook) to be recited is as follows.[2]

  • 1, 3, 5, 19
  • 7
  • 33–34
  • 75–77
  • 9, 35
  • 34
  • 45–70
  • 29
  • 71–72
  • 91
  • 32–34
  • 75–77
  • 9, 35
  • 44–49
  • 3
  • 50–64, 66–69
  • 91–99
  • 71
  • 100
  • 71–72
  • 101–103
  • 63
  • 108
  • 3
  • 35
  • 9
  • 58
  • 65
  • 71
  • 170
  • 36
  • 59–60
  • 72
  • 80
  • 2, 4
  • 1, 3, 5, 19
  • 32–34
  • 75–77
  • 9
  • 35–70
  • 91
  • 96
  • 79–80
  • 33
  • 81
  • 34
  • 1
  • 75–77
  • 9
  • 35–36
  • 44–69
  • 91–99
  • 70
  • 102
  • 71–72
  • 80
  • 101–102
  • 63
  • 58 (?)
  • 3
  • 35
  • 58 (?)
  • 65 (?)
  • 76
  • 170
  • 80 (?)
  • 178

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2002). The Mandaeans: ancient texts and modern people. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515385-5. OCLC 65198443.
  2. ^ a b Drower, E. S. 1963. A Pair of Naṣoraean Commentaries: Two Priestly Documents, the Great First World and the Lesser First World. Leiden: Brill.
  3. ^ Vinklát, Marek (2020-07-06). "Two Unidentified Fragments of Mandaean Ritual Scrolls in the British Museum". Coptica, Gnostica und Mandaica. De Gruyter. pp. 188–195. doi:10.1515/9783110619904-010. ISBN 9783110619904. S2CID 241365971.
  4. ^ Morgenstern, Matthew (2013). New Manuscript Sources for the Study of Mandaic. In: V. Golinets et. al (eds.), Neue Beiträge zur Semitistik. Sechstes Treffen der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Semitistik in der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft vom 09.–11. Februar 2013 in Heidelberg. AOAT, Ugarit Verlag.
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