The Peshitta Old Testament is a translation of Hebrew biblical texts into Syriac (a dialect of Aramaic) likely dating back to the 1st or 2nd century AD. It is a vital witness for textual critics because it helps scholars understand how the Hebrew Bible was understood by ancient Semitic speakers.
Beware of "Aramaic Primacy" PDFs floating online. Some fringe websites claim the Peshitta is the original New Testament and that the Greek is a translation. This is rejected by 99% of mainstream biblical scholars (including most Aramaic experts). The Peshitta is a magnificent, ancient, and inspired translation—but it is almost certainly a translation from Greek, not the other way around. Peshitta Bible Pdf
If you want to hold the Bible that was read in the ancient churches of Persia, India, and the Middle East for over 1,500 years, the Peshitta is your text. For a practical PDF start, download Etheridge’s 19th-century translation from Archive.org (public domain) for the Gospels, and use Dukhrana for the rest. You will not just read a Bible—you will hear the echoes of the Aramaic world from which Christianity first spread east. The Peshitta Old Testament is a translation of