St. Paul's Ephesus: Texts and ArchaeologyLiturgical Press, 2008 - 289 страница In this new volume, renowned scholar Jerome Murphy-O'Connor does for Ephesus what he did for Corinth in his award-winning St. Paul's Corinth. He combs the works of twenty-six ancient authors for information about ancient Ephesus, from its beginnings to the end of the biblical era. Readers can now picture for themselves this second of the two major centers of Paul's missionary work, with its houses, shops, and monuments, and above al the world-renowned temple of Artemis. After presenting the textual and archaeological evidence, Murphy-O'Connor leads the reader on a walk through St. Paul's Ephesus and describes the history of Paul's years in the city. Although Ephesus has been a ruin for many hundreds of years, readers of this book will find themselves transported back to the days of its flourishing. Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, OP, has been a professor of New Testament at the Ecole Biblique of Jerusalem since 1967. He has lectured throughout the world and is the author of numerous books, including the popular Oxford Press archaeological guidebook The Holy Land; and Paul the Letter-Writer, St. Paul's Corinth, and Jesus and Paul: Parallel Lives, all published by Liturgical Press. |
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... became the home of the evangelist who produced the final ver- sion of the Fourth Gospel . Ephesus , in consequence , has a claim on the attention of anyone interested in the origins of Christianity or in the life of one of the most ...
... became the founder of Ephesus , and for this reason , it is said , the royal seat of the Ionians was established there . And till now the descendants of his family are called kings ; and they have certain honours , I mean the privilege ...
... became part of the Persian empire , and there remained with minor inter- ruptions until Alexander the Great defeated the Persians in 334 B.C.E. at the battle of the river Granicus ( modern Kocabas ) in northwestern Asia Minor ...
... became " the temple " in Ephesus . Its popularity attracted immense crowds of visitors and it was natural for the inhabitants to move to where the business was . The same thing has occurred elsewhere . In the Holy Land , for example ...
... became subject to the Attalids of Pergamum when Antiochus III the Great ( 223-187 B.C.E. ) was defeated at the battle of Magnesia near Sipylum ( modern Manisa ) in 190 B.C.E. He had wintered in Ephesus in 196 B.C.E. , and of him ...
Садржај
5 | |
38 | |
Athenaeus | 47 |
Cicero | 54 |
Dio Cassius | 61 |
Herodotus | 67 |
Ignatius of Antioch | 74 |
Exemption from Military Service Extended | 80 |
Tacitus | 134 |
Achilles Tatius | 149 |
Acts of Paul | 156 |
Callimachus | 166 |
Xenophon of Ephesus | 177 |
The Center of Ephesus in 50 C E | 183 |
Pauls Ministry in Ephesus | 201 |
Notes | 246 |
Livy | 86 |
Luke | 92 |
Pliny the Elder | 104 |
Pliny the Younger | 120 |
Seneca | 130 |
Bibliography | 262 |
Subject Index | 269 |
Classical Author Index | 280 |
New Testament Index | 286 |