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Was Hegesippus a Jew?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2011

W. Telfer
Affiliation:
Langton, Upper St. Ann's Road, Faversham, Kent, England

Extract

Eusebius answers the question in the affirmative, but gives this answer as an inference from facts which he shares with his readers. This is in H. E. iv. 22, when he is in fact taking leave of him. He has made important use of Hegesippus in Books ii, iii, and iv of his Historia Ecclesiastica.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1960

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References

1 The usual word is Memoirs, but this half begs the question of the nature of their contents.

2 His first citation is ἐν τῷ πέμπτῳ αὐτοῦ ὑπομνήματι

3 Eleutherus was bishop, 175–189.

4 In A.D. 132.

5 For this history, see Schlatter, A. von, Die Tage Trajans und Hadrians, Gütersloh, 1897.Google Scholar

6 See Origen, Contra Celsum, v. 59.

7 Until the death of Symeon, in Trajan's reign.

8 Dialogue, c. 80.

9 Ancoratus, a different list from Justin's.

10 H.E. iv. 22 (end).

11 Chaldaico quidem Syroque sermone.

12 Gressmann, I.c.