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Old 09-10-2013, 11:43 AM   #31
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Eusebius claims that Serapion reported that he walked into a Gnostic library and “borrowed” a copy of the Gospel of Peter. See HE Book 6, Chapter XII. Serapion and His Extant Works
Not that I can see:

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Chapter XII. Serapion and His Extant Works.

1 It is probable that others have preserved other memorials of Serapion's67 literary industry,68 but there have reached us only those addressed to a certain Domninus, who, in the time of persecution, fell away from faith in Christ to the Jewish will-worship;69 and those addressed to Pontius and Caricus,70 ecclesiastical men, and other letters to different persons, and still another work composed by him on the so-called Gospel of Peter.71

2 He wrote this last to refute the falsehoods which that Gospel contained, on account of some in the parish of Rhossus72 who had been led astray by it into heterodox notions. It may be well to give some brief extracts from his work, showing his opinion of the book. He writes as follows:

3 "For we, brethren, receive both Peter and the other apostles as Christ; but we reject intelligently the writings falsely ascribed to them, knowing that such were not handed down to us.

4 When I visited you I supposed that all of you held the true faith, and as I had not read the Gospel which they put forward under the name of Peter, I said, If This is the Only Thing Which Occasions Dispute Among You, Let It Be Read. But now having learned, from what has been told me, that their mind was involved in some heresy, I will hasten to come to you again.

5 Therefore, brethren, expect me shortly. But you will learn, brethren, from what has been written to you, that we perceived the nature of the heresy of Marcianus,73 and that, not understanding, what he was saying, he contradicted himself.

6 For having obtained this Gospel from others who had studied it diligently, namely, from the successors of those who first used it, whom we call Docet74 (for most of their opinions are connected with the teaching of that school75 ) we have been able to read it through, and we find many things in accordance with the true doctrine of the Saviour, but some things added to that doctrine, which we have pointed out for you farther on." So much in regard to Serapion.
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Old 09-10-2013, 11:44 AM   #32
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Roger, I should have known better with mountainman. Thanks for that. But back to the topic at hand.

But were all Christian despised? Remember Irenaeus's statement in AH 4.30.1 - 4 and the parallel in the Philosophumena, Dio Cassius and Eusebius 5.27. They weren't despised at the time of Commodus nor through the Severan period. Yes Alexandrian and Egyptian Christians were persecuted but not the Roman Church.

How were books accepted into the library? Were they purchased or donated by citizens and could they be refused?
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Old 09-10-2013, 11:44 AM   #33
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I am specifically claiming that from Commodus to Diocletian, Christian books were almost certainly in the libraries of Rome.
You are welcome to your opinion, of course.
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Old 09-10-2013, 11:49 AM   #34
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There is also this statement at the end of the Martyrdom of Polycarp:

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Gaius transcribed these things from the papers of Irenaeus. a disciple of Polycarp; he also lived in the same city as Irenaeus. And I, Socrates, have written these things in Corinth from the copies made by Gaius.
The implication in the Moscow manuscript is that these things were kept in Rome. But where?
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Old 09-10-2013, 11:51 AM   #35
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You are welcome to your opinion, of course.
But if the Roman Church was favored in this period (Eusebius, Irenaeus, Philosophumena etc) especially in the age of Commodus and if the desire was there on the part of Irenaeus et al to preach their message to the better members of society what logical reason can there be to Christian writings not being present in the public libraries if no policy of discrimination can be demonstrated in that period. I am not saying I can prove it yet. It is just an open question with no answer. At least as far as I can see.
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Old 09-10-2013, 11:53 AM   #36
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I think Irenaeus would have frowned on the idea of a 'secret collection' of books for the Christian church. Either the Christians had an open library for people to read as they wanted or they were in the public libraries, but they weren't kept hidden and secret like the heretics.
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Old 09-10-2013, 11:56 AM   #37
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Bart Ehrman speaks about Pionius bringing the text of the Martyrdom of Polycarp 'out of hibernation' but from where? What library?

http://books.google.com/books?id=-pT...%3A%22&f=false
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Old 09-10-2013, 12:04 PM   #38
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From this article:
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Galen’s text (Peri Alupias) therefore strengthens our picture of the interaction of Rome’s library system with Alexandria’s and suggests that in at least some of its holdings it had come to supplant its Egyptian forerunner. If we date the acquisition of these prestigious texts to the Augustan period, as some of the following library holdings suggest we might, then we can see Augustus’ library foundation as an ambitious attempt to make Rome comparable to Alexandria as a centre of Classical learning http://www.academia.edu/565335/Galen...e_Peri_Alupias
and again:

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As it happens, two of these collections were alreadyknown to us by name, but not the fact that they were kept on the Palatine. Lucianmentions Callinus and Atticus twice in a polemical treatise on book-collecting, each timeas if their names are bywords for the production of especially fine books.48 The obviousinference is that Galen’s Καλλίνια and Ἀττικιανὰ refer to the same collections, and thathe is using their famous names to establish quickly the scale of the losses caused by the fire. These holdings of the Palatine library had therefore acquired proverbial status asthe acme of book production by the second century A.D., an indication of both theimportance and the fame of the library’s holdings — by Galen’s time, if not before, the Palatine’s empty shelves had indeed been filled with priceless books, a munus Apollinedignum.
Moreover Christian books could have come through a backdoor as it were of a private collection donated or appropriated to the public library:

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Even if we decide that we cannot identify the men after whom these book collections arenamed, Galen’s description of the lost books has some interesting implications. Thereference to named book collections suggests that the imperial Palatine libraries grew byacquiring large ready-made collections from private individuals, most probably in theearly years of the Augustan library. The value of book collections qua collections wasappreciated by Roman bibliophiles, as the story of Aristotle’s book collection or thePhilodemus collection in the Villa of the Papyri show: both retained at least a core of material that had been collected and then kept together for well over a century.56 Galen’s testimony suggests that the Palatine library’s founders and users similarlyrecognized the intrinsic value of important book collections and preserved them in sucha way that they were recognizable to readers two centuries later. Galen’s ability to referto these books as if they formed single collections known to his correspondent andwider readership suggests that they were shelved together, or at least labelled as havingbelonged to their respective eponymous compilers, and his praise shows that they hadretained their reputation for excellence. The fact that Galen assumes that these itemsfrom the library had a proverbial reputation indicates a level of familiarity with at leastsome of their ‘treasures’ among the reading public.
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Old 09-10-2013, 12:11 PM   #39
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Sam,

Stephan was perhaps a little abrupt, since he is chasing a particular idea. But your questions are reasonable, if off-topic. However Stephan is right, that you need to do a little research on these subjects, because writing essays in reply is not what any of us are here to do.

Here's a couple of pointers.

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Originally Posted by watersbeak View Post
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Could Christian Books Be Found in Public Libraries in the Late Second Century?
Wouldn't they first have to be written? How do we know that any texts which we might today call "Christian", i.e. gospels for example, existed in the "late second century". Are you referring to Tatian's Diatessaron? What is our oldest extant manuscript of Diatessaron, or reference to this manuscript? Do we have a patristic author describing Diatessaron, to confirm its existence before the fourth century?

Who would be the author of such "Christian books"? Who would define "Christian"? Did the concept of "christianity" exist before the fourth century?
We do not date works based on the earliest extant copy. The earliest copy of most classical texts is 9th century. Ancient works do refer to each other, and later writers to them, so we get a clear idea of who is what. Eusebius' Church History in particular lists and quotes large numbers of early works, many of them lost. (The Syriac version of this exists in a 6th century copy that I have handled myself, I should add). Papyrus fragments exist of all sorts of things. I believe papyrus gospel copies are known from ca. 200 AD on.

Now I don't really think you are asking us to define Christianity to you? or I hope not. The concept of Christianity is found in the New Testament. Christ taught his apostles and other followers; the apostles' teaching to others defines "Christian" (heretics are obliged to fake texts under their names); the churches that they founded referenced this fact, and the memory of their teaching, to keep a clear idea of what they did and did not believe (hence lists of bishops, to show that the teaching was the same). Remember that John the apostle lived to 100 AD; and his disciple Polycarp was teaching in Rome in 155 AD; and Irenaeus, who knew Polycarp, was writing ca. 180 AD. There were doubtless many other such links.

Now you will find English translations of almost all the Christian literature until 325 AD here, and selections of material thereafter.

The founders of Christianity and their associates wrote the collection of books now known as the New Testament, and anything that had any real claim to belong to that circle ended up in that list, and circulated among the churches that they founded. Their successors are called the "apostolic fathers" and form a collection of late first / early second century literature. Notable among these are Ignatius and Polycarp.

We have ten authors from the second century. By 150 AD we move into the era of the apologists, and Justin Martyr is the man of the hour. Our knowledge of Christian literature in this period is distorted by an accident in the 10th century, where a bunch of early apologetic literature was collected for Arethas of Caesarea. Other forms of literature were not so lucky. Ca. 180 AD we have Irenaeus -- there is a papyrus fragment of his Adversus Haereses from the same date in existence, remarkably -- and then ca. 193 we have Tertullian. In the 3rd century we have a great deal of literature, notably Cyprian.

Quote:
Other than Rome, where else would one expect to find public libraries? Would such libraries possess texts written in Greek?
The idea of a "public library" in the modern sense is an anachronism. Such institutions did not exist in the ancient world.

Collections of books belonging to the state might exist anywhere. Athens had public official copies of the works of the dramatists, which were stolen by a ruse by Ptolemy and placed in the library of Alexandria.

Remember also that temples were repositories of objects of value, and that priests might have libraries.

Access to these collections would depend entirely on who you were, and on local policy. Think of them as private libraries which were made accessible more generally.

Quote:
We know that the library at Herculaneum had Greek manuscripts on one half, and Latin manuscripts on the other half. I was under the impression that this was not, however, a "public" library. Perhaps I am uninformed on this point.
It was a private library.

Quote:
Where were the Hebrew manuscripts stored, i.e. in which "public" library? What about Coptic, Aramaic, Syriac, Turkish, Persian manuscripts?
Hebrew texts were owned by Jews. Greek translations of them were in the library of Alexandria.

Coptic did not exist until the 3rd century AD (there was Old Coptic). Turkish did not exist until modern times. Persian literature of antiquity was often oral; the Avestan texts were not written down until the 4th century, possibly in response to the Christian bible and the Christianisation of the Roman empire in the same period. Syriac and Aramaic texts probably were held in places like Edessa; parts of the Syriac/Aramaic world.

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Weren't the libraries, outside of Rome, largely in the hands of private wealthy patrons, i.e. not "public", at all.
Yes. And inside Rome as well. When Fronto makes use of the library at the Domus Tiberiana, this is an imperial residence, rather neglected, and he finds that he can borrow books by bribing the freedmen in charge.

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Where were the manuscripts attributed to Mani stored?
You are thinking of the age of printing, I see. In the modern age books are produced in quantities by publishers/printers, and sent to shops and stored in libraries for public access. None of these things are true in the age of hand-copying. A writer might read his work to friends, and produce a final draft, which slaves then copied. These copies might be sent to friends. They might be "released" for sale, by copying by bunches of slaves, as Cicero's works were. But there was no copyright. Anyone who got a copy could make more, by getting his own slave to make one.

The works of Mani were circulated in the usual way, from the 3rd century, by copying of individual copies.

Quote:
What about those of Zoroaster, Buddha, and other authors from the Silk Route?
I can see why Stephan got impatient, you know? These are wildly large questions. Zoroaster left no manuscripts. His teaching was oral. It was written down, as I said above, in Sassanid Persian times. Most of it is lost; the Moslems destroyed the "Grand Avesta" that was in every fire temple.

I know nothing about Buddhist mss; sorry.

Works travelled along the Silk Road in the middle ages by the same process as they went anywhere else. People made copies by hand, and then people took those copies elsewhere.

I hope this helps. But please; don't ask us to write essays on the entire history of knowledge, particularly in a somewhat truculent way. People get annoyed. Smaller questions, please, and one at a time.

I'm sure that someone will disagree with more or less every statement in what I have just written. I have not written with footnotes to every sentence, however; instead I have presumed that the query is honest and tried to give a brief, honest reply.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 09-10-2013, 12:15 PM   #40
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I think you did a good job answering these leading questions which were put forward by a participant who already 'knows' where he wants the evidence to go and will be unhappy that your answers contradict his presuppositions.
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