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07-05-2007, 10:58 AM | #41 | ||||||
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In Annals 2:4 Tacitus introduces a digression on Artavasdes, an Armenian story much older than Vonones’. The Church and Brodribb’s translation speaks of Quote:
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Interestingly enough, Plutarch gives more details on both. The Loeb edition of Life of Antony 50:4 says Quote:
It still might be thought that Tacitus quoted Plutarch, not Josephus. Yet, his mentioning Artaxias and Tiberius - neither whom does Plutarch mention - is proof that Plutarch read and quoted Josephus, then Tacitus read both Josephus and Plutarch and quoted the two of them. Everything other than what is mentioned by Josephus in this story, is decoration by either Plutarch or Tacitus. |
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07-05-2007, 11:19 PM | #42 | |
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1. People named Hierocles forged Acts of Pilate to smear the Christians. 2. Josephus himself contradicts these, never mind the Christians. 3. This shows that Hierocles and his gang had no shame, and would say anything if it served their ends. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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07-06-2007, 06:33 PM | #43 | |||
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That latter argument does not persuade me. You yourself say of the actual argument in question, that which urges the reader to trust the Jew Josephus: Quote:
And here it will not be inappropriate for me to make use of the evidence of the Hebrew Josephus.......and then pseudo-Hegesippus: About which the Jews themselves bear witness, Josephus a writer of histories saying....First of all, you appear to place some weight upon the appearance of John the baptist in or near these mentions of what Josephus said about Jesus. But does not Origen do the same thing, connecting the mention of John with the mention of James and Jesus? Such a thing is too natural to be a fabulous coincidence. Indeed, modern authors do it all the time, and they require no help from Eusebius, Origen, pseudo-Hegesippus, Jerome, or any of the other fathers who do it. Second, using Josephus precisely as a Jew to witness to (or against) the Jews, which is what both Eusebius and pseudo-Hegesippus certainly do, completely cancels out your argument about the apostles. Who needs to either affirm or deny the veracity of the apostles in order to affirm the veracity of Josephus? That, and only that, is the similarity, as your own summary indicates: Quote:
Let us compare, then, numbers 3 and 4. Is this not a common trope (even one of their own has said this)? Refer to Titus 1.12, for example: One of themselves, a prophet of their own, said: Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons.And Origen also insists that Josephus told the truth against his own will, as it were, in Against Celsus 1.47: [Josephus] says, being unwillingly not far from the truth, that these things befell the Jews as vengeance for James the just, who was a brother of Jesus who is called Christ, since they killed him who was most just.This is actually closer to what pseudo-Hegesippus says than Eusebius is. For pseudo-Hegesippus, too, insists that Josephus told the truth against his will: But he spoke because of loyalty to history, because he thought it a sin to deceive, he did not believe because of stubbornness of heart and the intention of treachery.Origen too, BTW, insists that Josephus did not believe: But he himself, though not believing in Jesus as Christ....Eusebius does not do this. I think pseudo-Hegesippus is actually closer to Origen than to Eusebius in all of this. That is not to say that he was borrowing Origen, though that is of course quite possible. (But he could not have gotten the Testimonium from Origen.) My point is that these tropes are too common to prove dependence. Ben. |
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07-07-2007, 08:45 AM | #44 |
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Andrew Criddle discusses the independence of pseudo-Hegesippus and Josephus on an old thread.
I have to say that, even if pseudo-Hegesippus knows Eusebius (and I am not convinced as yet that he does), I think he knows a version of the Testimonium a little different than our received version as it is found in Eusebius. I have trouble believing, for example, that pseudo-Hegesippus found the line he was the Christ in his version of the Testimonium. Ben. |
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