Joannes (509), monk
Joannes (509), called of Bêth-Rabbân
or Bêthnarsi, disciple and successor in the 6th
cent. of Jacobus the founder of the monastery
of Bêth-Haba. Jesujab, bp. of Nineveh,
stated that Joannes had been a monk 70 years
before his departure from Bêth-Haba; 30
years he had lived as a solitary, 40 with
Jacobus as a coenobite. Joannes was for
some time in the monastery of Bêth-Rabbân,
which was subject to the same abbat as
Bêth-Haba. Ebedjesu (ap. Assem. Bibl. Or.
III. i. 72) states that he wrote a commentary on
Ex., Lev., Num., Job, Jer., Ezk., and Prov.,
also certain tracts against Magi, Jews, and
heretics. He also wrote prayers for Rogation
days, a prayer on the death of Chosroes I.
(d. 579), and on a plague which befel Nisibis,
besides paracletic addresses for each order in
the church (i.e. metrical discourses read in the
office of the dead), a book of questions relating
to O. and N. T., psalms, hymns, and chants.
One of his hymns is in the Mosul Breviary,
p. 61, and in a MS. in the Brit. Mus. (Wright,
Cat. p. 135). Rosen and Forshall (Cat.
MSS. xii. 3 n.) mention another hymn of his. Cf.
also Lelong, Bibl. Sacr. ii. 794.
[C.J.B.]