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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 Mandaean priesthood revival  





3 Family  





4 Work as scribe  





5 See also  





6 References  














Ram Zihrun







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Ram Zihrun
ࡓࡀࡌ ࡆࡉࡄࡓࡅࡍ
TitleGanzibra
Personal
Bornlate 1700s
Died1800s
ReligionMandaeism
SpouseBibia Mudalal (Yahya Bihram's sister)
ParentSam Bihram (father)
Known forRevival of the Mandaean priesthood
Other namesRam Zihrun bar Sam Bihram
Sheikh Abdullah
OccupationMandaean priest
RelativesYahya Bihram (cousin)
Negm bar Zahroon (grandson)
Abdullah bar Negm (great-grandson)
Rafid al-Sabti (great-great-grandson)
Ardwan Al-Sabti (great-great-great-grandson)

Ram Zihrun (Classical Mandaic: ࡓࡀࡌ ࡆࡉࡄࡓࡅࡍ) was a 19th-century Mandaean priest. Although initially a learned layman (yalufa), he became known for reviving the Mandaean priesthood together with his cousin Yahya Bihram after a cholera epidemic had killed all living Mandaean priests in 1831. He is mentioned in the colophons of various Mandaean manuscripts.[1]

Ram Zihrun was also informally known by Mandaeans as Sheikh Abdullah.[2]: 183 

Early life

[edit]

Ram Zihrun was born sometime during the 18th century as the son of the Mandaean priest Sam Bihram (Classical Mandaic: ࡎࡀࡌ ࡁࡉࡄࡓࡀࡌ), and belonged to the ‘Aziz and Kupašia (Khaffagi) families.[2]

Mandaean priesthood revival

[edit]

Ram Zihrun and his younger cousin Yahya Bihram were two šgandas (priest assistants) who were the surviving sons of deceased priests during the aftermath of the 1831 cholera epidemic. Together, the two of them went on to revive the Mandaean priesthood by initiating each other as tarmida (junior priests), and later as ganzibra (high priests), in Suq eš-Šuyuk, Iraq.[2] As a result, Mandaean manuscripts mention Yahya Bihram as the son of Ram Zihrun, since the priestly initiators of priests and scribes are typically listed as "fathers" in Mandaean spiritual genealogical lineages, rather than their biological fathers. At Suq eš-Šuyuk, they also initiated 13 other yalufa (learned Mandaeans) as priests.[3]

Afterwards, Ram Zihrun served as a ganzibra in the towns of Shushtar and DezfulinKhuzestan.[3]

Ram Zihrun died sometime in the mid or late 1800s.

Family

[edit]

Ram Zihrun's wife Bibia Mudalal, who was Yahya Bihram's sister, survived the 1831 cholera epidemic. Her father came from the Kamisia and Riš Draz families.[2]: 71  She was a scribe who copied the Ginza Rabba and also a priest who was likely initiated before the 1831 cholera epidemic.[3] Bibia Mudalal was also the grandmother of Sheikh Negm (or Sheikh Nejm), who copied many manuscripts for E. S. Drower. Sheikh Negm was born in Huwaiza, Iran in 1892, lived in Khorramshahr during his early youth, and moved to Qal'at Saleh, Iraq in 1914.[2]

Ram Zihrun was also the grandfather of Sheikh Abdullah Khaffagi (or Abdullah Khaffaji) in Ahvaz.[3]

Work as scribe

[edit]

Ram Zihrun personally copied a few of the Mandaic manuscripts that are currently held in the Drower Collection (abbreviated DC), a collection of Mandaic manuscripts collected by E. S. Drower during the early 1900s. These include the DC 7 (Scroll of the Rivers), 9 (Haran Gawaita), and 22 (Ginza Rabba) manuscripts.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (1999). "Glimpses of A Life: Yahia Bihram, Mandaean priest". History of Religions. 39: 32–49. doi:10.1086/463572.
  • ^ a b c d e f Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2010). The great stem of souls: reconstructing Mandaean history. Piscataway, N.J: Gorgias Press. ISBN 978-1-59333-621-9.
  • ^ a b c d Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2002). The Mandaeans: ancient texts and modern people. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515385-5. OCLC 65198443.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ram_Zihrun&oldid=1228961071"

    Categories: 
    Mandaean priests
    18th-century births
    19th-century deaths
    People from Dhi Qar Province
    Iraqi Mandaeans
    Iraqi scribes
    Mandaean scribes
    Khaffagi family
    Ginza Rabba
    People from Khuzestan province
    People of Qajar Iran
    19th-century people from Ottoman Iraq
    Mandaic-speaking people
    Ganzibras
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Articles containing Classical Mandaic-language text
     



    This page was last edited on 14 June 2024, at 03:29 (UTC).

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