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Chroniclers

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Bar Hebraeus
Gregory Barhebraeus or Bar Hebraeus (; 1226 – 30 July 1286), also known as Abu al-Faraj and in Latin, Abulpharagius, was the maphrian Catholicos of the East (regional primate) of the Catholicate of the East under the Syriac Orthodox Church from 1264 until his death in 1286. He is recognised as one of the most accomplished and multifaceted academics of the medieval Syriac Christian world, with important contributions to the fields of theology, philosophy, history, linguistics, medicine, and the natural sciences.
Hydatius
Hydatius, also spelled Idacius () was a late Western Roman writer and clergyman. The bishop of Aquae Flaviae in the Roman province of Gallaecia (almost certainly the modern Chaves, Portugal, in the modern district of Vila Real), he was the author of a chronicle of his own times that provides us with our best evidence for the history of Hispania in the 5th century.
Felipe Huaman Puma de Ayala
Incan scholar and noble
Bernard Desclot
chronicler from the Kingdom of Aragon
John of Biclaro
Visigoth bishop and chronicler
Balthasar Russow
Estonian chronicler and cleric (1536–1600)
Khalifa ibn Khayyat
Arab historian of Abbasid era (777-854)
Victor of Tunnuna
priest and chronicler
Abraham III of Armenia
Catholicoi of Armenia
Hovhannes Draskhanakerttsi
Catholicos of Armenia
Maitê Proença
Brazilian actress and writer
Alonso de Ovalle
Chilean Priest and historian
Blas Valera
Peruvian writer and historian
Sherira Gaon
10th century Gaon of the Academy of Pumbeditha
Amy Fay
Pianist and memoirist/chronicler (1844–1928)
Diná Silveira de Queirós
Brazilian writer
Abu l-Fath
'''Abu'l-Fath ibn Abi al-Hasan al-Samiri al-Danafi', () was a 14th-century Samaritan chronicler. His major work is Kitab al-Ta'rikh'' ().
Miguel de Olivares
Chilean historian