Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
09-12-2007, 06:29 AM | #31 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 3,397
|
In other words, he guessed...
|
09-12-2007, 06:52 AM | #32 |
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
|
Arnaldo Momigliano on Eusebius'
incompetence as a chronographer: "At the beginning of the fourth century Christian chronology had already passed its creative stage. What Eusebius did was to correct and to improve the work of his predecessors, among whom he relied especially on Julius Africanus (14). He corrected details which seemed to him wrong even to the extent of reducing the priority of the Biblical heroes over the pagan ones. Moses, a contemporary of Ogyges according to Julius Africanus, was made a contemporary of Kekrops with a loss of 300 years. |
09-12-2007, 09:01 AM | #33 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
|
Quote:
'Church History' Book 6.20, " There flourished many learned men in the Church at that time, whose letters to each other have been preserved and easily accessible. They have been kept in the library of Aelia established by Alexander, who at that time presided over that church. We have been able to gather from that library material for our present work. Eusebius made refences to many writers in Church History, including Josephus, Philo, Irenaeus, Origen, Plutarch, Africanus, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, Justin, Hegesippus, Ignatius, Papias, Quadratus, Polycarp, Dionysius, Theophilus, Philip, Melito and many other writers whose writings may be non-extant. And Eusebius had the ability to visit the extant historical sites, structures, churches, geographical locations and meet with people who played a prominent role in relation to the history of Chucrh. To try to portray Eusebius, one most distinguished Church Father, as naive and working from vague documents is completely out of character. |
|
09-12-2007, 09:19 AM | #34 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Arizona
Posts: 1,808
|
Quote:
Actually Herodotus is the poster boy for credulous ancient historians. He repeats whatever he is told from the Egyptians building the pyramids with armies of slaves ( slavery was not big in AE until relatively modern times) or Xerxes' armies consisting of 2+ million men for the invasion of Greece ( the tail of the column would have starved to death passing through lands devastated by the front of the column!) Much of what is written should be classified as folklore not "history" and certainly not history in the modern sense. Is such writing valuable? Yes, but only in the sense that there is nothing else and it should all be taken cum grano salis. |
|
09-12-2007, 10:09 AM | #35 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Birmingham UK
Posts: 4,876
|
Quote:
HIs statements as to when something happened (eg the martyrdom of Ignatius) are less reliable than his claim that it did happen. Andrew Criddle |
|
09-12-2007, 05:25 PM | #36 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
A historian is as good as his times and his sources. We have difficulties with Herodotus because he collected a great deal of hearsay and tradition, though when he was dealing with what was from his own time he becomes much more reliable for he went out and got the information himself. Thucydides stuck to what he knew and gave us the material of history. We listen to Polybius because we know that he was writing about things that he himself could get direct information about. There is an important historiographical tradition here. Herodotus had the right idea but he was close to the beginning of the process -- they were just inventing the trade. Eusebius doesn't belong to this tradition (though Ammianus Marcellinus tends to). He is going beyond his competence, but he does belong to another tradition, one which goes back to Diodorus and Livy, who attempted to give the full story, relying on the sources that came before them and thus becoming victims to those sources. The material that they provide is a minefield: they have no way of knowing what they are on. They take their sources by faith and anyone who uses their material is liable to needing a similar quantity of faith in their often unnamed sources. I know who Eusebius was from his vast amount of writings and where he was coming from, and thus I know somewhat how to deal with what he says about his own times, but how can you evaluate his sources for earlier times? You seem to think that an Ignatius got martyred. How did you come to that conclusion? Hopefully, Eusebius was not your principal source on the issue, but other independent materials would surely provide you with historical information and in so doing confirm Eusebius's source. What might those sources be? There certainly was an Ignatius industry in the church: spurious materials were churned out, letters considered authentic somehow have been expanded or contracted. How do you separate the fat from the friction? And how does Eusebius fit into this Ignatius industry? I am not picking on Eusebius here. It is a matter of good methodology. How can someone extract history from, for example, the Historia Augusta? We need quality control and I can't see any when using Eusebius as so many would. spin |
|
09-12-2007, 10:02 PM | #37 | ||
Contributor
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
|
Quote:
It appears to me to be deliberate, Eusebius apparently could not account for Jesus in history and probably fabricated the birth of Jesus. |
||
09-12-2007, 10:37 PM | #38 | ||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
Quote:
spin |
||
09-13-2007, 12:59 AM | #39 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
|
Quote:
The risk is that we practise an anachronism. We're accustomed to presuming that dates come first; that we know the rough sequence of events, we have all these numerals, and then we fit the events to the table of years. So there could be a presumption that if Eusebius wrongly dates an event that somehow says that the event did not happen, or whatever. But in reality, and unlike everyone after him, he had no table of years, and the events were what he started with. All the best, |
||
09-13-2007, 02:44 AM | #40 | ||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
Quote:
spin |
||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|