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Sisters of Sinai: How Two Lady Adventurers Found the Hidden Gospels (2009)

by Janet Soskice

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3942468,759 (4.17)121
In 1892, two sisters, identical twins from Scotland, made one of one of most important scriptural discoveries of modern times. Combing the library of St. Catherine's Monastery at Mount Sinai, they found a neglected palimpsest: one of the earliest known copies of the Gospels, a version in ancient Syriac, the language spoken by Jesus. This is the account of how two middle-aged ladies without university degrees uncovered and translated this text, bringing a treasure to world attention. This quintessentially Victorian adventure is partly a physical journey: when Westerners generally feared to tread in the region, the sisters Smith traversed the Middle East. It is also a journey of the mind: in an era when new discoveries in science and archaeology were rewriting the accepted understanding of the Bible's origins as well as those of humankind, a great contribution to knowledge was made by two whose only natural advantage was an astonishing gift for languages--From publisher description.… (more)
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Showing 1-5 of 25 (next | show all)
This book was exciting to me! Two sister, already in middle age, traveled by camel across the Sinai desert to discover forgotten manuscripts and influenced male dominated scholarship. I knew about the 19th century discoveries that demonstrated that the scriptures of the Old and New Testaments had changed and evolved but I did not know about Agnes Lewis and Margaret Gibson.

Agnes and Margaret were twins. Born in the 1840s at a time when women and girls could go to school but the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge didn't award degrees to women. They were mostly educated at home and mastered a good number of modern and ancient languages. Their skill with languages served them well both in traveling in remote and primitive places and in understanding and interpreting the ancient manuscripts that they sought. In the library of St. Catherine's Monastery Agnes found a forgotten and neglected manuscript that she recognized as a palimpsest, a manuscript written over an earlier writing. Before the invention of paper most books were written on velum, made from layers of calf skin. It was expensive and often reused by scraping off the older writing. The older writing was sometimes visible and possible to decipher. The document that Agnes found contained the four Gospels of the New Testament underneath a collection of the lives of women saints.

Their discoveries aroused great interest but also jealousy and opposition from the male dominated scholarly world. Margaret and Agnes both became well regarded in the academic world. While Oxford and Cambridge still wouldn't award degrees to women many other universities awarded honorary doctorates to both sister. The sisters made many expeditions to Egypt, the Sinai and other Middle Eastern sites. They also helped recover some stolen manuscripts. After their travels were over they continued to study, transcribe and translate manuscripts in Cambridge.

The author of The Sisters of Sinai is Janet Soskice. She is a professor at Cambridge University where women now can be awarded degrees.

( )
  MMc009 | Jan 30, 2022 |
Well crafted biography of two doughty Victorian (twin) sisters who travelled widely in the Middle East, researching and searching for early biblical texts. Fortunate to be wealthy through inheritance, Agnes Lewis and Margaret Gibson (both nee Smith) nevertheless taught themselves several modern and dead languages to facilitate their research - paying little heed to Victorian convention and overcoming the odds to make a lasting mark on their chosen field. Impeccable research by Janet Soskice makes this an enthralling read. ( )
  DramMan | Jan 22, 2022 |
Read for the second time in February, 2017, for an article I'm researching. Still charming, and obviously of greater interest now that I've spent a few years working with manuscripts.

[first reviewed on 2/13/10] I loved this book...what a fun read! I admit I probably would not have been quite so tickled by it if the heroines had not been Scottish Presbyterians...! Nonetheless, an absorbing synthesis of travel narrative and insight into the world of late nineteenth century biblical scholarship. I generally have little use for modern historical-critical and philological study, but I didn't have any trouble staying interested, and I don't think one would have to be very knowledgeable about the field or the period to really enjoy the book. ( )
  LudieGrace | Aug 10, 2020 |
Really captivating! What an amazing pair! Very well told. Excellent research. I always appreciate good notes and bibliography. The author drew on the diaries of these ladies. I was sorry to not find them in the bibliography. I'm sure they would be fascinating reading. I guess they are unpublished or I'm somehow missing them. ( )
  njcur | Jun 30, 2020 |
Well done, and reads more like a novel than the true story it actually is. Filled with adventure and the exploits of two wealthy, eccentric, and spunky twins who defied nineteenth-century norms and made six trips to Egypt in a quest to find some of the oldest manuscripts of the four gospels. Especially gifted in languages, the twins learned Syriac especially for this purpose (and had already studied French, Italian, Arabic, and modern Greek), and found the manuscript in St. Catherine's monastery. ( )
  Jennifer708 | Mar 21, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 25 (next | show all)
Herself a professor of philosophical theology at Cambridge, Soskice deftly positions the twins’ story in the wider and more profound context of ideas and discoveries of their age. With great clarity, she steadily and captivatingly unwinds the complicated threads of her narrative, explicating formidable scholarship while keeping the twins at the fore...

....For its evocation of the character, as well as the characters, of the era, “Sisters of Sinai” is a bracing and moving book, not only a story of adventure, but also a reminder of the ardor, hardship and energy invested in the pursuit of knowledge in that endlessly inquiring and industrious Victorian age.
 
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Nec Tamen Consumebatur

Yet it was not consumed.

Exodus 3:2
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On 13 April 1893, the London Daily News brought an extraordinary story - fresh from its Berlin correspondent.
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In 1892, two sisters, identical twins from Scotland, made one of one of most important scriptural discoveries of modern times. Combing the library of St. Catherine's Monastery at Mount Sinai, they found a neglected palimpsest: one of the earliest known copies of the Gospels, a version in ancient Syriac, the language spoken by Jesus. This is the account of how two middle-aged ladies without university degrees uncovered and translated this text, bringing a treasure to world attention. This quintessentially Victorian adventure is partly a physical journey: when Westerners generally feared to tread in the region, the sisters Smith traversed the Middle East. It is also a journey of the mind: in an era when new discoveries in science and archaeology were rewriting the accepted understanding of the Bible's origins as well as those of humankind, a great contribution to knowledge was made by two whose only natural advantage was an astonishing gift for languages--From publisher description.

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From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com: In early 1892, twin sisters Margaret and Agnes Smith, unschooled in paleography but possessed of keenly rebellious spirits, traveled from England to St. Catherine's Church, at the foot of Egypt's Mt. Sinai. There, in a "dimly lit little room below the prior's quarters," they discovered "an unpromising brick of parchment," its surfaces coated with dust. Despite the state of this "grimy codex," Agnes, the older of the sisters, was convinced that she had made a great discovery, and after 40 days of study she emerged with proof. As scholar Janet Soskice reveals in her luminous new study, "The Sisters of Sinai," Margaret and Agnes had nosed out nothing less than the earliest known copies of the Gospels -- an account written in Syriac, the language likely spoken by Jesus himself. At the time, Soskice writes, "the Bible remained an unquestioned compendium of truth, its immutable word conveyed supernaturally through the generations." And yet this codex -- so different in content from the modern edition of the Gospels -- indicated that Scripture was actually the product of years of careful revisions. The Bible, in other words, had evolved. Of course, since Agnes and Margaret were only amateurs -- and female amateurs at that -- they needed experts to validate their find. Once recruited, those experts attempted to take the bulk of the credit, and soon the twins found themselves engaged in a series of very public rows. But neither woman ever backed down, and by the mid-1890s both were deservedly famous, honored by academics and laymen alike. "The Sisters of Sinai" is by turns a rattling adventure yarn -- thick with roving Bedouin and ancient tombs -- and a testament to the power of perseverance. In the end, Soskice writes, "it was the Smiths' fierce commitment to the truth that most impresses."
Copyright 2009, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
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