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04-14-2008, 10:19 PM | #171 | |
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Also note...that these parallels are from War. But the TF is in Antiquities, so if there are parallels with the TF in Tacitus, then this suggests that the passage is not Tacitean. |
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04-15-2008, 03:07 AM | #172 | ||
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Both Tacitus and Suetonius refer to the east and that there was an opinion or a conviction in the east (T: "of many", S: "that grew prevalent"), a rather generic persuasion that is not restricted to the Jews. Both use the words profecti rerum potirentur with Iudaea T: profectique Iudaea rerum potirentur; S: Iudaea profecti rerum potirentur. Both Tacitus and Suetonius are somehow dependent and their shared material doesn't come from Josephus. The word of such a prophecy probably got carried back by many Romans and was common knowledge, then perhaps incorporated in city records. (And I'm not in any sense arguing against the likelihood that Tacitus knew Greek.) spin |
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04-15-2008, 05:40 AM | #173 | |||
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I have that passage too, of course.
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Classicists have suggested the memoirs of Vespasian, BTW. (Where did Tacitus get his list of temple prodigies?) Quote:
Suetonius mentions Josephus by name in Vespasian 5.6. Quote:
Ben. |
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