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Old 04-07-2008, 11:36 PM   #11
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I personally own coins in his name that were minted during his lifetime or soon after his death.

The nonexistence of Alexander would make it hard to explain how Persian sigloi were suddenly replaced by tetradrachms with ALEXANDROY BASILEWS written on them. It'd also be difficult to explain why those coins were suddenly minted in Egypt (until 305 when Ptolemy took the title of king and put his own name on the coins) and Babylon where previously coins had rarely been used at all.

I'm not a MJer but I think that comparing the respective historicity of Alexander the Great (a king and major military leader of his time) and Jesus (one of many obscure preachers in Roman Judaea) is preposterous. The former completely changed the face of the mediterranean world during his lifetime. Before 336 BCE, there was a huge and powerful Persian empire. After 323 BCE, this empire was replaced by a Macedonian empire that quickly broke into several hellenistic kingdoms. And Alexander was the son (and a general in the army) of a famous king who vassalized all of continental Greece (we still have contemporary testimonies). Erase Alexander and you have A LOT to explain away.

On the other hand, Jesus had close to zero impact on his neck of the wood, let alone the ancient mediterranean world, during his lifetime.
Pssst! Don't tell that lazy testudines Gamera, who couldn't open a book to find out, but there were also contemporary writers who mentioned Alexander: Demosthenes (who wrote a speech: "On the Accession of Alexander"), Dinarchus and Aeschines (a well-known toady to Macedon).


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Old 04-07-2008, 11:58 PM   #12
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Hi all,

Also the
Astronomical Diaries of Esagila,
a contemporary work
which mentions Alexander by name.

http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexande...ander_t40.html


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Old 04-08-2008, 12:37 AM   #13
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Firstly, we do have coins from Alexander, but that is not quite the issue, unless we are claiming that only people who issued coins existed -- and who did they issue them *for*, in that case!?!

If we look at the literary sources... what do they say?

Our best source is Arrian, who is writing some centuries later but using Ptolemy's memoires.

This is quite normal in ancient history. In modern history we have so much material that an arbitrary rule is laid down of only using material which is contemporary. But if we did that in ancient history we'd have nothing. Of course once we could have done this -- if we'd lived ca. 200 AD. The difference today is 2000 years of losses of literature, of course -- 99% of ancient literature is lost.

For instance our only literary source for what happened in Britain after the death of Theodosius the Great in 396 -- the expulsion of Roman officials by the magnates -- is Zosimus. He is writing in Greek in Constantinople in the early 6th century, 150 years later. In his day the Western empire doesn't even exist! But we wouldn't throw that precious gleam of light away.

In short, we must compare like with like, judge these things by equivalent standards. Ask what sort of literary sources can be expected for an obscure figure living in Judaea in the first century AD, by comparison with similar marginal figures. Nothing, would actually be a good answer; the odd scrap would be fortunate.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 04-08-2008, 01:19 AM   #14
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Firstly, we do have coins from Alexander, but that is not quite the issue, unless we are claiming that only people who issued coins existed -- and who did they issue them *for*, in that case!?!
Umm, it's not just coins, Roger Pearse, but you already know this, so your statement is merely rhetoric, isn't it?

History is based on evidence. Coins are good evidence. So are inscriptions. So are statues and reliefs. So is contemporary epigraphy. Further down the line after solid foundations are laid by the hard evidence, so are contemporary accounts, which often put the superstructure on the foundations. Things start to get shaky in the evidence department after that. It involves what is already known and how later material elucidates what is already known.


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Old 04-08-2008, 09:09 AM   #15
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Ask what sort of literary sources can be expected for an obscure figure living in Judaea in the first century AD,
An "obscure figure" who CAME BACK FROM THE DEAD? One imagines that such would have been big news in the first century even without the obvious political angle; the Romans executed someone and GOD brought him back to life! It is simply inconceivable that there would not have been comment on that and it was your Christian pals who oversaw what was retained and what was destroyed so one finds it hard to believe that they would not have retained accounts of such a "miracle."

Unless, of course, the whole miracle business was later chrome attached to the story.
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Old 04-08-2008, 10:41 AM   #16
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I've posted something like this before in threads about Alexander but here goes again.

Yes we have rock-solid contemporary evidence of the existence of Alexander the Great, however a large amount of what we think we know about Alexander (eg that he killed Cleitus in a drunken quarrel) is based on much later sources.

IF we limit our claims about Alexander to those that certainly go back to contemporary records we are left with surprisingly little we can say. Much less than comes in most modern books about him.

For example, most modern accounts of Alexander seek to explain his later life in terms of his childhood, a childhood for which we are heavily dependent on Plutarch who is a late writer whose sources here are unclear.

Andrew Criddle
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Old 04-08-2008, 11:18 AM   #17
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Ask what sort of literary sources can be expected for an obscure figure living in Judaea in the first century AD, by comparison with similar marginal figures.
Is this the obscure figure whose birth caused Herod to start killing babies, and people to cross countries to see him?

Or a different obscure figure?
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Old 04-08-2008, 11:24 AM   #18
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In contrast, no one who knew Jesus wrote anything that we have any record of. NT theologians have been reduced to claiming that there must have been a period of over 50 years when stories about Jesus were recounted, and this oral legacy was finally written down - but was still accurate, praise the Lord!
Don't forget that the oral legacy about Jerusalem disappeared after 70 AD so that there was no way somebody could have been told after 70 AD that there had been a pool at Bethsaida, and then written a book mentioning it.

I wonder why oral legacies were sometimes so fragile.
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Old 04-08-2008, 11:36 AM   #19
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a poster with whom I am currently having a discussion about the historical record for Jesus has made the point that there are no contemporary accounts regarding Alex. the Great either..

I have tried to google this and so far she seems to be correct...does anyone know of such accounts?

and if not accounts perhaps some artifacts that confirm Alex's existence?

and if this seems to be the incorrect fora, please accept my apology and please direct it to the correct destination.. thanks!
It is of little consequence whether there are extant contemporary accounts of Alexander the Great, provided that whenever historians write about Persia and Macedonia of 4 BCE, they mention Alexander the Great. However, when historians, contemporary or not, write about 1st century Judaea, they never mention Jesus, the ascended one.
I believe the oldest mss that mention Alexander are from about 1000 CE, though there may have been a few earlier ones: that is, we only have texts that are about 1300 years after his death. That's very problematic, since heaven only knows what interpolations were involved.

In contrast, the oldest NT ms we have, P52, is within a 100 years or so of Jesus' purported death, with many mss within the 200 horizon. That's remarkable in antiquity.

Now, I think Alexander existed, despite the bad mss record. And I also think Jesus existed. The point is, when in comes to the age and quality of the texts that place these persons in history, the NT mss win hands down.
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Old 04-08-2008, 11:43 AM   #20
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Hi all,

Also the
Astronomical Diaries of Esagila,
a contemporary work
which mentions Alexander by name.

http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexande...ander_t40.html


Iasion
I don't see the ms history on the link. I suspect (though I could be wrong) that the copy we have of this text comes from 1000 CE or later.

[My bad -- I see this is a cuneform tablet. Very interesting. But I note that in the scholarly edition "Alexander" is in brackets (or at least "exander" is). Is this an interpolation? Also this an odd text -- never mentioning Darius, citing omens of his fall, and calling Alexander "king of the world" It's almost as if the Greeks had written it and not the Chaldeans.]
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