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09-23-2013, 01:46 PM | #41 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Diatessaron of Tatian has always been a hard nut to crack. What survives to this day under that name is an Arabic and a medieval Dutch translation, and some citations from later authors (such as Victor of Capua) and fragments such as the Dura leaf.
However, if you have read the introductory notes to Mr. Hope Hogg's translation of the Arabic Diatessaron, you'll already be aware that tracing its development and even establishing its original language has proved to be exceptionally difficult, because sources seem to differ between themselves so dramatically. As critics had argued for quite a while about whether the Diatessaron was composed in Greek or Syriac (Syrian Aramaic) it is no wonder that the 1933 discovery of a Greek fragment that could be dated to the sack of Dura in 256 CE (and hence "early") would get special attention. Below is the table of the events and people present at Jesus' crucifixion as found in the Dura fragment and in several other Diatessaronic witnesses:
Are you interested in this because of its possible relationship to the supposed development of the Christian gospels? DCH |
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09-23-2013, 01:49 PM | #42 |
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Thanks DCH.
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09-23-2013, 02:25 PM | #43 | ||
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Yup, thanks David, well written, as always.
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Dura Europos was NOT UNDISTURBED for 1600 years as claimed by Clark Hopkins. It is inconceivable that the group of heroic Roman Legionaires, who died defending this furthest Roman outpost from "civilization", would have been ignored by their grandchildren, passing only a couple of kilometers to the east, en route to "punish" the very same enemy who had vanquished their grandfathers. It is unimaginable that Julian's soldiers, raised for four decades in the belief that Christianity was the official state religion, would have NOT stopped, to explore the fallen outpost. Julian's soldiers painted the walls of the house near the Jewish Synagogue. They are the ones who dropped the Diatessaron fragment, if that is what it is. Please stop acting as though Dura Europos had been buried to the hubcaps by a single century of blowing sand. Ten, or fifteen centuries, ok, yes, that's enough sand to bury the city. One century, no way, Jose. What do folks here imagine happened, after the city fell to the invading Mesopotamians? Does one suppose they all just left everything, undisturbed, and went home to Sunday brunch at the cafe? The soldiers may have fought to the death, but the civilians would have been enslaved, and compelled, on pain of death of their loved ones, to reveal where the loot had been buried. The whole city would have been excavated, searching for the gold, jewels, and silks, that the townsmen had buried, with a view of retrieval AFTER the Babylonians had been repulsed. The naked city, completely exposed, would have only been abandoned after a thorough looting, which would have demanded excavation of the defenses erected by the soldiers. Julian's forces would have found a wind swept city, filled with a foot of sand and debris, not 12 feet of sand and debris, as described by the first French excavators, in the 1920's. It is absurd, and childish, to imagine that any document found in Dura Europos had been placed there in the mid second century, but not in the mid third century, when Julian's army passed by. Anyone who doubts this, is welcome to search the internet for both British, Turkish, and USA explorations to reveal battlefield remnants from the first world war, or the Civil War in USA. Even today, trips to Normandy, to pay homage to those who perished, represent regular attractions, filled with tourists from countries far and wide. Paying respect to fallen battlefield heroes is not a practice limited to Roman Legionaires, but there can be little doubt, that they engaged in the practice of honoring fallen comrades. Why else, would Julian have halted his rush to Babylon? How did waiting a week benefit his troops? It simply gave the enemy an extra week to prepare defenses. NO. Julian himself, stopped the procession towards the Babylonian capital, to honor his predecessor, a teenager who died in battle fighting the same enemy. |
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09-23-2013, 03:02 PM | #44 |
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All people from West Africa do not have the same accent.
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09-23-2013, 03:45 PM | #45 |
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slaves developed their distinctive accents from where they were enslaved not where they were from
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09-23-2013, 04:21 PM | #46 |
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09-23-2013, 04:32 PM | #47 |
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But the slaveowners were indiscriminate about the cultural purity of their slave population
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09-23-2013, 04:59 PM | #48 | |||
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Only 2 years ago, in this archived thread, you were sure that radical Muslim Palestinians with a grudge against the Jewish settlers who would take over their land in a few decades had been hired to plant the evidence in Dura. Quote:
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09-23-2013, 08:06 PM | #49 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Some questions: Where is the 3rd line about going "to see the crucified"? Also I have noted in the 1st column above (in red) just *some* of the emendations that do not exist in the evidence. 1) Zebedee .... the name of "Zebedee" does not appear.... What appears is [Zebed]ee ..... [Ζεβεδ]αι̣ο̣υ 2) Jesus (nomina sacra form) 3) Jews 4) Kingdom There are others. For example: 5) The name of the city of "Judea" does not appear .... what appears is [Jude]a .... [Ιουδαι]ας FYI here is what I have as these emendations: (Cant get the table to work)
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09-23-2013, 08:30 PM | #50 | ||
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One does not need any dramatic imagination to place Emperor Julian and the entire Roman army (containing many 4th century Christians) in and around the city of Dura Europos in early April of the year 363 CE. See the sources: Ammianus (23.5.1-15) and Zosimus (3.14.2)
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