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Old 01-12-2013, 09:08 AM   #21
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Pete - there's a wealth of information in the article I linked to. Can you access it?
Thanks. It is quite lengthy. I will check it.

There appears to be another non canonical text - "Vita Abercii" - that is highly related to this inscription (or vice verse) that does not have an English translation freely available on the net.

Quote:
Originally Posted by WIKI
The Life, as a matter of fact, includes a transcription of the epitaph.

From the pdf, another translation of line 16:

Quote:

16 having good wine/Christ-wine, [95] giving it mixed, with bread.


[95] The word play here on “useful” and “Christ” is an old Christian pun going back at least in literary sources to Paul’s letter to Philemon 11. The synonymy is confirmed by the spelling in many of the famous “Christians for Christians” burial inscriptions in Asia Minor, in which the spelling Χρηστιανο ς is more common than Χριστιανο ς (see Gary J. Johnson, Early-Christian Epitaphs from Anatolia [Texts and Translations 35; Early Christian Literature Series 8; Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1995] 46 n.5 and many examples [including the plate on p. xiii).
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Old 01-12-2013, 07:06 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by stephan huller View Post
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I have studied the book.
Is 'study' new Australian slang for 'selectively referencing' a book?

Quote mined. :constern01:
I made a list of all so-called Christian and/or Chrestian inscriptions claimed to be earlier than Constantine the Great Bullshit Artist.

Do you have a problem with this approach?

Have either of you two skeptics read Elsa Gibson's book?
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Old 01-12-2013, 07:13 PM   #23
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There appears to be another non canonical text - "Vita Abercii" - that is highly related to this inscription (or vice verse) that does not have an English translation freely available on the net.

Part of this is presented at the appendix.

The Life of Abercius appears to be classified as another late 4th century non canonical text.





The big question is did the epitaph come from the text or vice verse.




De Rossi's record as a fabricator does not augur well here.



Quote:
From the pdf, another translation of line 16:

Quote:

16 having good wine/Christ-wine, [95] giving it mixed, with bread.


[95] The word play here on “useful” and “Christ” is an old Christian pun going back at least in literary sources to Paul’s letter to Philemon 11. The synonymy is confirmed by the spelling in many of the famous “Christians for Christians” burial inscriptions in Asia Minor, in which the spelling Χρηστιανο ς is more common than Χριστιανο ς (see Gary J. Johnson, Early-Christian Epitaphs from Anatolia [Texts and Translations 35; Early Christian Literature Series 8; Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1995] 46 n.5 and many examples [including the plate on p. xiii).

Chrestian reference in Abercius?

Christians are not mentioned, just the Good Shepherd.

As mentioned in the footnote above, many of the earliest CLAIMED Christian inscriptions in Gibson's book and other sources state "Chrestians" and not "Christians".

Here someone is trying to interpret "good wine" as "chrestos wine" and then inferring the "Christos wine". It doesn't work that way IMO.

Nice try though. Ten out of ten for looking closely with the Christian glasses firmly on.
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Old 01-13-2013, 03:32 PM   #24
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Pete - there's a wealth of information in the article I linked to. Can you access it?

The article states that the present evidence for this inscription is a Vatican Museum reconstruction.


The papal archaeologist de Rossi was involved c.1888.

It's like what Yale later did for the Dura-Europos "house-church" murals.

De Rossi called it the "Queen of Early Christian Inscriptions".

It stinks of fabrication.

But that does not seem to trouble some people here.
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Old 01-13-2013, 05:30 PM   #25
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Originally Posted by Toto
It would take some research to track down the reasoning of the scholars who have decided that this is clearly Christian - I imagine that the combined references to shepherd, fish, Virgin, queen, wine, bread, all add up.


See Page 25.


The reasoning of the scholars who have decided that this is clearly Christian started with De Rossi.




Quote:

The Abercius epigram is most striking for its use of an abundance of verbal imagery:

Christ as good shepherd (line 3),

shepherding the flock on the plains and hills (line 4),

Christ having large, pure eyes (line 4),

holy books or letters (line 6),

the resplendant queen with gold robes and golden sandals he saw in Rome (lines 7-8),

the people with shining seal (line 9),

the plains of Syria to the Euphates river (lines 10-11),

the apostle Paul (line 11-12, with an obscure descriptive term),

fish from the fountain (line 13),

the holy virgin (line 14),

the friends eating fish and bread and drinking wine (lines 13-16).

Abundant parallels to these images in early Christian art, especially in Roman catacombs, have been pointed out since de Rossi and others in the earliest period after its discovery sought to demonstrate that Abercius was a Christian, and I agree with their arguments.
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Old 01-13-2013, 05:39 PM   #26
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Default Timeline draft for discovery of the Abercius inscription

It sounds like Ramsay found the inscription in two parts.
The first contained the first and last lines.
The second contained the middle.
How serendipitous.



TIMELINE for the discovery of the Queen of Christian Inscriptions - the Abercius Inscription


1882:

Inscribed slab dated 216 CE found by English traveller, W. Ramsay, at Kelendres, near Synnada, in Phrygia Salutaris (Asia Minor)
The inscription in question recalled the memory of a certain Alexander, son of Anthony.
On comparison it was found that the inscription in memory of Alexander corresponded, almost word for word,
with the first and last verses of the epitaph of the Bishop of Hieropolis; all the middle part was missing.
Called the epitaph of Alexander (now in the Istanbul Archaological Museum).
No actual photograph of this inscription has been published; we do have two different line drawings/reconstructions of it.



1882: ?

De Rossi and Duchesne at once recognized in it phrases similar to those in the epitaph of Abercius.
The text of the inscription was available in the "Life of Abercius" authored in the late 4th century.


1883:

Mr. Ramsay, on a second visit to the site of Hieropolis, discovered two new fragments covered with inscriptions,
built into the masonry of the public baths. These fragments, which are now in the Vatican Christian Museum, filled out the
middle part of the stele inscribed with the epitaph of Abercius.


Ramsay was able to find Abercius’ inscription because he first found the hot springs that the vita Abercii says
spontaneously erupted by the intervention of the saint.


1888:

De Rossi's report: argument for the unified inscription having been inscribed on only one side of the stone,
appeals to the analogy of the disposition of the inscription on the epitaph of Alexander.
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Old 01-13-2013, 11:18 PM   #27
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Quote:
12. Having Paul as a companion, everywhere faith led the way
Quote:
the apostle Paul (line 11-12, with an obscure descriptive term)
The Inscription of Abercius is dated to 216 CE, the Paul mentioned as a companion could hardly be that Paul that Christianity firmly places in the 1st century CE.

Παῦλος 'Paulos' was a very common Greek name. It is a real stretch to imagine that this line is speaking of the 1st century 'apostle' Paul as being his companion.
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Old 01-15-2013, 01:38 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by Catholic Encyclopaedia

The interpretation of this inscription has stimulated ingenious efforts and very animated controversies. In 1894 G. Ficker, supported by O. Hirschfeld, strove to prove that Abercius was a priest of Cybele. In 1895 A. Harnack offered an explanation which was sufficiently obscure, making Abercius the representative of an ill-defined religious syncretism arbitrarily combined in such a fashion as to explain all portions of the inscription which were otherwise inexplicable. In 1896, Dieterich made Abercius a priest of Attis.

These plausible theories have been refuted by several learned archaeologists, especially by De Rossi, Duchesne, and Cumont. Nor is there any further need to enter into the questions raised in one quarter or another; the following conclusions are indisputably historical.
Also Harnack on the Inscription of Abercius
F. C. Conybeare

The Classical Review
Vol. 9, No. 6 (Jul., 1895), pp. 295-297
Quote:

The author of the Greek Acts of Abercius copied from the stone into his narrative sometime in the 4th century ....

Harnack refers to the 4th century text as "The Acts of Abercius".

Other references like to call it the "Life of Abercius".

Anyone know the story?



Ramsay's original report entitled The Tale of Saint Abercius - W. M. Ramsay
Pages 339-353

makes an interesting read.
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Old 01-15-2013, 04:38 PM   #29
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These plausible theories have been refuted by several learned archaeologists, especially by De Rossi, Duchesne, and Cumont.
Nor is there any further need to enter into the questions raised in one quarter or another; the following conclusions are indisputably historical.
Don'cha just love how they just toss that 'indisputably historical' assertion out there? Especially about something that had been and still is a subject of dispute?

'Nor is there any further need to enter into the questions raised in one quarter or another;'

Cut off all discussion so their assertions cannot be questioned or disputed in their cloistered little religious academic kingdom.
After all they already consulted their Urim and Thummim for their final decision, so it cannot be permitted to be questioned.

De Rossi, Giovanni Battista (Carlo), 1822-1894; Roman Catholic archaeologist

Duchesne, Louis Marie Olivier, 1843-1922, French Roman Catholic ecclesiastic

Cumont, Franz-Valéry-Marie, 1868–1947, Belgium, archaeologist

Regarding Cumant, E. D. Francis who posthumously published Cumont's contribution to a final report on the 'Mithraeum at Dura-Europos' in an English translation with notes under the title “The Dura Mithraeum” Had this to say;
Quote:
“Cumont sometimes pressed his conclusions beyond the available evidence, and what many epigoni have on occasion taken to represent an unassailable judgement may rest on little more than an imaginative interpretation of unusually problematic data.....
(Source)

Admittedly this comment dealt with Cumont's work at Dura Europos, but was an observation made by one most intimately familiar with Cumont's working methodology.
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Old 01-15-2013, 05:56 PM   #30
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The Acts of Abercius in which the text of the inscription appears is regarded as a 4th century non canonical act. We may have been too hasty to call these non canonical acts pulp fiction.

Ramsay discovers the first and last lines of the Alexander inscription which De Rossi and other Christian Priests suddenly recognise as the first and last lines in the inscription of Abercius mentioned in a 4th century pulp fiction manuscript.

A year later, guided by the fact that Saint Abercius had caused hot springs to flow out of the ground near where he was to be buried, the same English traveller Ramsay suddenly finds another inscription that miraculously contained the missing middle lines. He finds it in the wall of a bath house.

When he wrote his report entitled " The Tale of Saint Abercius" (See JSTOR article above) it is interesting to note his very last sentence. He mentions that the papal archaeologist de Rossi has found another startlingly wonderful inscription. One good turn deserves another in the inscription publishing industry run by the Pope. Big bucks. Moochos Kudos.

I wonder whether Ramsay knew where to look?

The Queen of all Early Christian inscriptions is looking a little suss.

Huller is quiet.
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