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07-01-2012, 07:30 PM | #1 | |
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The Reference to Marcion in John Malalas
I had never come across this before. I don't think most Marcionophiles know about this one.
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I notice that John Malalas makes many reference to the Manichaeans. Places 'Cerdo' in the third century. |
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07-01-2012, 07:38 PM | #2 | |
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Another interesting reference in Book 10:
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07-01-2012, 07:46 PM | #3 | |
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More:
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07-02-2012, 12:01 AM | #4 | |
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John Malalas
For those who never heard of John Malalas :
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07-02-2012, 06:41 AM | #5 | ||
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1. I assume that Stephan, authority on anything having relationship with Alexandria, believes that Cerdo was an early second century bishop of that fine town. 2. Cerdo obviously cannot be both an early second century bishop, and someone influenced, even slightly, by Mani, a mid-third century Persian. 3. I am certain, from reading several references to the writings of the early third century cleric, Clement of Alexandria, that Stephan understands the impossibility of accuracy in this text, which he cites, ostensibly by Malalas. 4. Why is this obscure bit of fluff posted here? n.b. the link does not work, for those of us who have disabled propaganda generating web devices. :huh: |
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07-02-2012, 02:10 PM | #6 |
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Interesting -- thank you Stephan.
The Byzantine chroniclers usually tried to write World Chronicles, starting with Creation, and running down to their own times. For periods before their own days they relied on older material. Not all of those sources are now extant, so writers like Malalas can be useful sources. For the period from Creation up to 325 AD, they relied on Eusebius' Chronicle, sometimes at second hand, supplemented from the bible plus whatever apocryphal literature they had to hand. This material gets increasingly distorted as the period progresses. You can get an idea of just how much, by looking at the opening sections of Agapius (in the 10th century, working in Arabic). The Byzantine chroniclers should have been able to disentangle what happened when, since Eusebius did specify this in his tables of dates and events. Unfortunately that work did not survive in Greek, indicating that it fell out of circulation in favour of narrative text rather than tabular data. All the best, Roger Pearse |
07-02-2012, 02:32 PM | #7 |
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clement does say marcion was active in Hadrian's time (Strom 7.106). he is actually using clement
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07-02-2012, 03:15 PM | #8 | ||||
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The “ chronographia” would be the ancient equivalent of The Simpsons and modern scholars like them because <edit> Quote:
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07-02-2012, 11:19 PM | #9 |
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In post 1 there is a reporting of Manichaeanism in the rule of Hadrian and in post 2 the presence of Manes in the rule of Domitian. Mani appears c.240 CE. What's happening?
Also how is Marcion related to Mani (or Marcionism to Manichaeanism) (or vice verse)? |
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