ThALES: Thesaurus Antiquorum Lectionariorum Ecclesiae Synagogaeque
ThALES: Thesaurus Antiquorum Lectionariorum Ecclesiae Synagogaeque
Welcome to the ThALES lectionary database! Please subscribe as user. There are brief introductory films about how to use it on youtube.
Currently the database contains
34 lectionaries with at least one witness of most
Jewish and Christian liturgical families (i.e. Roman, Gallican,
Mozarabic, Bohairic, Jerusalem (Armenian), Ashkenazi, Sephardic,
Yemenite, Saadia Gaon, Mishnah...);
4015 liturgical events;
13075 readings;
Users have at their disposition:
- a very rich search machine (simple or advanced interface) to
search for single readings or combinations of readings, or for
liturgical events according to a very wide range of parameters.
- a tool to automatically create a synopsis of two or more related lectionaries.
- a tool to automatically reconstruct one or several liturgical
calendars for a given year and calendar (e.g. Julian, Jewish, Armenian,
Coptic, Islamic) to compare data from different liturgical families.
You can see some sample queries and screenshots here.
If you do not see your favorite lectionary, it is quite easy to add
it and then to profit from the possibility to compare it with others via
the synopsis and the calendar reconstruction tools. The back office has
a very rich and powerful interface for complex queries. Don't hesitate
to write to us if you wish to join the project or if you would like to
suggest new features or corrections.
We are currently working on a tool that will automatically convert
versifications of one Bible to another (i.e. Peshitta to LXX).
In Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, few people knew how to read or
write. The common person usually became familiar with texts by hearing
them recited or by seeing them represented artistically in liturgical,
theatrical and ritual performances. Lectionaries – broadly understood as texts of different genres which inform the liturgical performance of one or more biblical passages –
are the key link between the Bible and people, between intellectuals
and the uneducated, between theory and praxis and, therefore, between
the fields of literary and ritual studies. As such,
lectionaries are important not only for scholars of Eastern and Western
liturgies, but also for exegetes of the Old and New Testaments as well
as for historians researching Jewish – Christian relations. In short,
they are essential for any scholar attempting to understand Christianity
and Judaism as living religions both in the past and present. This
database is a deliberate attempt to bring to the fore the dimensions of
liturgical performance and ritual in the study of early Christianity and
Judaism, where texts continue to be perceived as falling primarily
under the elitist domains of philology, dogma and literature.
Scholarly Aims
Our aim is to assemble the vast data contained in all ancient
lectionaries, both Jewish and Christian, and make them easily accessible
for and conveniently searchable by scholars interested in liturgy, the Wirkungsgeschichte
of biblical texts, as well as by historians. We truly believe that
publishing materials on the web is the most convenient way to provide
free and immediate access to those important texts which form the basis
for much of human culture. Publicizing these materials electronically
allows anyone with internet access to utilize these texts and enables
these materials to reach a broader audience.
Why Is This Database Important and to Whom?
This database will enable biblical scholars to quickly research the ritual Sitz im Leben of scriptural chapters or verses, which is critical for studying the impact of the Bible (the Wirkungsgeschichte). In addition, liturgical experts will be able to compare different reading traditions more easily and comprehensively. Historians as well as patristic and rabbinic scholars
can utilize the database for a variety of purposes, such as finding the
chronological and liturgical context of a homily or evaluating whether a
biblical pericope might have an impact during a particular season of
the year. With the help of the database, scholars will also be able to
compare the prevalence of a text within the database to the number of
extant exegetical treatises, along with carrying out many other
statistical queries.
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