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06-29-2007, 12:33 AM | #11 | |
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06-29-2007, 05:23 PM | #12 | |
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It poses a question, though. Is Josephus here used by Luke as a model of a purely literary description, or is there anything else? Could it possibly be a marker or something to attract attention of those non-Rabbinical Jews - as Josephus himself - that were partisan of the Romans, and on that account an invitation to re-read the TF? |
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06-30-2007, 07:06 AM | #13 |
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Definitiion of the term "Witness"
Hi. S.C.,
Could you clarify your use of the term "witness"? Generally we think of witnesses as providing supporting evidence for something. Is this what you are implying here? Warmly, Philosopher Jay |
06-30-2007, 07:59 AM | #14 | |
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Stephen |
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06-30-2007, 08:32 AM | #15 | |
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If these quotations are long, or of importance, they tend to be known as the 'indirect tradition' of the text. (The extant more or less complete manuscripts are the 'direct tradition' of a text). Often we have but one manuscript, often late, of some ancient text. In this case the indirect tradition can sometimes correct copyist errors or fill gaps. Porphyry, De abstinentia (On abstinence from animal food) is an example of this and I have compiled some notes on his tradition here. All the manuscripts are late and have suffered damage. The long quotations from it in Eusebius Praeparatio Evangelica reflect a text with fewer mistakes in it, and so can be used to patch holes. In this case I was seeking all the direct quotations of the TF passage that exist in later writers. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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06-30-2007, 10:28 AM | #16 | ||
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Thanks
Hi Stephen and Roger,
Thank you both for the clarification. Also thanks to Stephen for bringing all this material together into one place. What strikes me about the list is how small it is. After Eusebius, we have: 4. Gregory, bishop of Nyssa, about 380 C.E. 5. Isodorus Hispanlensis (circa 570-636) 6. Scripta Anonyma Adversus Judaeos ? 7. Œcumenius, Bishop of Trikka (now Trikkala) in Thessaly about 990 8 and 9. Georgius Monachus AKA George Hamartolus (Greek Γεώργιος Ἁμαρτωλός) a monk at Constantinople under Michael III (842-867) 10. Suda Lexicon (a work of a 10th century Greek lexicographer) 11. Constantine VII (905-959) Byzantine Emperor 12. Symeon Logothetes (10th century) 13. Georgius Cedrenus Georgios Kedrenos (fl. 11th century) 14. Oannes Zonaras, (flourished 12th century) We have just 2 or posibly 3 quotes over the next 500 years after Eusebius, and then 7 or 8 quotes from within the Byzantine Empire over the next 300 years. Given the importance of the Testimonium, this suggests that very few copies of Josephus was available. It seems possible that only one or two copies were in existence through the 12th century. It would be interesting to compare this list to the number of authors who quote other passages from Josephus and do not quote the Testimonium. This would give us an idea of how many copies of Josephus may have been in circulation during these years. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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06-30-2007, 11:10 AM | #17 |
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Far more compelling is the fact that there are none before Eusebius.
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06-30-2007, 12:46 PM | #18 | ||||
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Glad to help.
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We know from current manuscript copies that the TF was transmitted independently; there are manuscripts in which it is the only portion of Josephus copied. So it is unsafe to presume that knowledge of the TF = knowledge of books 1-20 of Antiquities. It may have figured in collections of testimonia. Complete copies of Antiquities must always have been uncommon, given its size. Like other long works it was transmitted in decades. Thus knowledge of part of Antiquities is not evidence of knowledge of the TF. In fact to the best of my knowledge only two authors before Eusebius show any knowledge of the second decade, in which it is located: Julius Africanus, and Origen. I would guess that perhaps a single uncial copy of each decade reached the 9th century, and each was then copied into minuscule. (Lucky for us that both were; Diodorus was less fortunate) All subsequent manuscript copies would be derived from those. How many existed at any given point might be a moot point. Someone speculated that only one copy of Pausanias existed for most of antiquity. Quote:
All the best, Roger Pearse |
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06-30-2007, 01:17 PM | #19 | |
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1. Gregory, century IV. 2. Pseudo-Hegesippus, century IV. 3. Jerome, century V. 4. Sozomen, century V. 5. Isidorus, century V. 6. Scripta anonyma adversus Iudaeos, century V or VI. 7. The Religious Dialogue, century V or VI. (If you stated or implied somewhere a reason why you were excluding some of these texts, I apologize; I missed it.) Ben. |
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06-30-2007, 01:23 PM | #20 | |
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Eusebius tends to be the first mention now known to us of all sorts of things, extant or not, because of way that he wrote his works. Nearly all of them contain long extracts from other texts. This indeed makes them extremely valuable, when the other text is lost or (as remarked above under "testimonia") not in very good shape. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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