Aramaic, the language of the Arameans.
Aramaic is a language spoken in the Levant and Mesopotamia, (Aramaic "Aram Beth-Nahreen" or "Aram-Naharaim"), from perhaps 700 BC until the present day. It is a member of the Semitic languages group.
Today Aramaic is spoken among about 500,000 native speakers[1] (with varying degrees of fluency) in scattered communities across the Fertile Crescent. There are 15,000 speakers in three Syrian villages in the Qalamoun Mountains north of Damascus (Ma'aloula, Bakh`a, Jubb`adin), but most speakers live in the area often termed Kurdistan in English, from Lake Urmia to Hakkari - and even in the USA by Assyrian (also known as Chaldo-Assyrians, Syriacs, Maronites) immigrants from this area. A few live in Mesopotamia proper (called in Aramaic Bethnahrin).
Aramaic is used in many Jewish holy texts. Some of the later parts of the Hebrew Bible, most of the Gemara section of the Talmud, and the Zohar are written in Aramaic. The Parts of the Bible that are in Aramaic: Daniel 2:4b-7:28, Ezra 4:8-6:18;7:12-26 and Jeremiah 10:11.
Aramaic is divided into two groups: Western and Eastern.
Many linguists are currently working on modern spoken Aramaic, such as Geoffrey Khan, Yona Sabar, and Otto Jastrow. A professor at the University of California, Los Angeles is currently working on a dictionary of modern spoken Aramaic.
See also Aramaic alphabet.
See also Aramaic names.
Aramaic was the language of the area once known as Aram-Naharaim or Aram of the two rivers from whence derives the Biblical tradition that the Aramaeans were descendants of two Nahors, (Abram's grandfather and Abram's brother Nahor1>Terah>Nahor2>Kemuel>Aram->Aramaeans). They are regarded by Hebrews as one of their closest relative nations and with them share the title "Children of Eber" from Genesis 10:21. In Deuteronomy 26:5 Jews are taught to remember that Jacob was practically Aramaean with a grandmother, mother and wives from Naharaim. They are descendants of Shem, from whom the Aramaic word She-maa-yaa (Semitic) is derived, but Aram of the two Nahors, though a descendant of Shem, is not to be confused with Aram the son of Shem.