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12-24-2011, 06:57 PM | #11 |
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Holy shit, is that a real web site? Are we sure it's not a Landover-type parody? That can't be real.
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12-24-2011, 07:30 PM | #12 |
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Yes, Conservapedia is for real. It is part of the same Conservative movement that has given us the totally serious for real Republican presidential primary.
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12-24-2011, 08:31 PM | #13 | |
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12-25-2011, 12:10 AM | #14 |
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Neither. Judea was annexed as a Roman province (actually as part of the province of Syria) in 6 CE, but Galilee was not. Galilee stayed a tetrarchy under Antipas. It was not under Quirinius' authority and was not subject to the census and tax imposed on Judea. No one in Galilee had to move an inch or pay a cent to Quirinius.
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12-25-2011, 11:27 AM | #15 | |
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My point was supposed to be
If 6-4 BCE (during Herod's reign) then Galilee was subject to the exact same taxes as Judea, paid in some way or another to Herod the Great. Over the course of his reign Herod had reduced the kingdom's reliance on agricultural taxes in favor of tolls on goods passing through the country. However, there were regional differences regarding the types of taxes levied and their relative amounts. If 6 CE, Judea is taxed directly by Rome by poll tax (all) and produce taxes (all except for temple administered lands). Antipas would not have trade routes to tax, so agricultural taxes would have to do it. Once Judea became a Roman Province, Roman taxation is actually a rather complicated matter. I created an article on it once (early 90's) but cannot find a copy on my current computer. I might have to search a couple places where it might be archived online. DCH Quote:
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12-25-2011, 12:35 PM | #16 |
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I found the tax info I was looking for. It was written for a Compuserve Furum in the mid 1990s and reposted on Crosstalk2 around 2000-2002.
Some years ago I summarized the scattered references to Roman direct tax policies in the Revised English edition of Emil Schurer’s _The Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ_ (edited by Geza Vermes, Fergus Miller and Matthew Black, volume 1, 1973).Also It seems to me that the basic organization of the political entities active in the Roman world, including the Levant, would look something like this:Also Herod, as his reign progressed, repeatedly remitted taxes on his Jewish subjects to a level Udoh estimates was 50% lower than that paid by Greek city states under his control (which presumably paid the "normal" rate that prevailed in these sorts of entities in the Roman world). He did this by gaining control of several Mediterranean port cities, stabilizing Trachonitis by sending 3000 Idumean settlers, and Batanaea by settling some Babylonian archers. These settlers, in exchange for stabilizing the area for the benefit of trade, were given land tax concessions. Herod ended up more than recouping the loss in land taxes by imposing tolls and fees on the vastly increased level of luxury items traversing the area as part of trade.Finally (yeah!!! :innocent1 Herod, as his reign progressed, repeatedly remitted taxes on his Jewish subjects to a level Fabian Udoh estimates was 50% lower than that paid by Greek city states under his control (which presumably paid the "normal" rate that prevailed in these sorts of entities in the Roman world). He did this by gaining control of several Mediterranean port cities, stabilizing Trachonitis by sending 3000 Idumean settlers, and Batanaea by settling some Babylonian archers. These settlers, in exchange for stabilizing the area for the benefit of trade, were given land tax concessions. Herod ended up more than recouping the loss in land taxes by imposing tolls and fees on the vastly increased level of luxury items traversing the area as part of trade.DCH |
12-25-2011, 02:39 PM | #17 |
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No taxes in Galilee . . . that was purgatory, remember? and Joseph went there to give an account of himself as he was taxing religion = testing it for it's real worth and so was a tax collecter like Paul and here now had to give an account as himself is he was called to Order, by God, of course, as 'ark builder' and 'cave hewer' in faith and doubt . . . and there was no room at the in to say that he was beyond thelogogy and beyond time and so is 'beyond surrender' but while speechless still went throught he motions as shown by Zechariah. It's all there, in English this time to even the temple consternation that in Luke is edified as the fruit of religion itself.
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12-25-2011, 02:42 PM | #18 |
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Thanks for the tax information. It's interesting.
Luke does not say that Joseph moved to Judea, though, only that he went there to register for the census, then went right back to Galilee. |
12-25-2011, 04:22 PM | #19 | |
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If he went while Herod the Great was still alive, it would have to be that it afforded him some sort of advantage. Even though Herod's agricultural taxes were 1/2 that of a comparable Greek Polis (and there were several of these in Judea), if Josephus had no land, then he would have come to find artisan work. I can see that. Herod had a lot of agricultural excess to convert to cash, and this meant trading grain for goods, such as those produced by artisans, which he could export to Rome, Alexandria and Antioch for cash. No, I think Joe was there to make a stake for himself, for his family, with some cash from a lifetime of trading goods in Babylon. On the way he learned that the ancestral tract of land was available at a price. Now he figures he could acquire a stake and become a "gentleman farmer." He was as proud as hell of his ancestry, maybe too proud. If he's over there questioning the legitimacy of Herod the Great's birth and pedigree, like others in the family did, all comfy and all with the Parthians, then maybe it was no wonder why Herod went after his kid. Exile in Egypt was the price he paid. Of course, that is if he really was in exile in Egypt. Matthew starts with Jesus' birth in Judea, then exile to Egypt, then finally to Galilee, which doesn't seem to be where they came from. Luke says Joseph & Mary started out in Galilee and ended up in Judea because of a "census," in spite of the fact that no census requires him to be there if he doesn't already live there. No visit by the Magi or problems with Herod. THEN he goes back to Galilee with his parents, with no Egyptian exile. Since Luke makes up a census to explain Jesus' birth in Judea, maybe he makes up the idyllic family peasant life in Galilee. Maybe Matthew has the story right, he came from a family of royal claimants. Of course, take what you like of this story what suites you, and treat the rest with a grain of salt. I don't mind. [/end rant] DCH |
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12-25-2011, 04:55 PM | #20 |
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That's an awful lot of speculation to a question far better answered by "Luke made it up."
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