Odes of Saint Nersess the Graceful: Annotated Translation by Matthew Sarkisian and Dr. Jesse Arlen

     

Monday, April 15, 2024 
4 p.m.
Online webinar via Zoom

St. Nersess the Graceful (Nersēs Shnorhali, 1102–1173 A.D.) Catholicos from 1166 until his death in 1173, was one of the great figures of the medieval Armenian Church. His most popular work is the prayer of twenty-four stanzas commonly known as “With Faith I Confess” (Havatov Khostovanim), which has been translated into more than thirty languages. He was also a prolific author and composer of hymns and other poetic works, many of which remain little known today. This volume presents the Armenian text and an English translation of sixty of St. Nersess’s liturgical odes (tagh), fifty-eight of which have never been previously translated into English. These profound songs of praise were composed to enhance the celebration and reflect on the mystery of the various feasts and commemorations that make up the Christian liturgical year. The translation is accompanied by an introduction and extensive annotation, which brings to light the Biblical, theological, and poetic features of these literary treasures, making them accessible to the general reader in the twenty-first century.

The event will be moderated by George Demacopoulos (Fordham University, Orthodox Christian Studies Center).

Co-sponsored by Fordham’s Orthodox Christian Studies Center, The National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, and The Krikor and Clara Zhorab Information Center

Questions? Contact:
Orthodox Christian Studies Center
orthodoxy@fordham.edu


Jesse Arlen headshot
Jesse S. Arlen is the director of the Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center at the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America in New York and a postdoctoral research fellow at the Orthodox Christian Studies Center of Fordham University. He has published a number of studies on medieval Christian spirituality and literature.
Matthew Sarkisian headshot
Matthew J. Sarkisian is a self-taught translator of Classical Armenian who lives in the Binghamton, New York area. He previously collaborated with Jesse Arlen on an annotated translation of an Armenian prayer scroll (hmayil), published in 2022 by the Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center.