The life of flavius josephus, against apion, and an extract concerning hades
(2010)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States]: Neeland Media LLC , 2010
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781420905779 (electronic bk.) MWT11907406, 1420905775 (electronic bk.) 11907406
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Within this collection of Josephus' shorter works, the life and thoughts of this first-century Jewish historian and Roman citizen unfold in an informative, methodical way. The autobiography, The Life, is a text originally thought to have been an appendix to his most well-known work, Antiquities of the Jews, for Josephus felt the need to justify his cooperation with the Romans as a Jew just after the First Jewish-Roman War. In the two-volume Against Apion, Josephus defends Judaism as both an ancient religion and a philosophy, particularly in contrast to the more recent customs of the Greeks, or Greco-Romans. He addresses both negative contentions by the Greek writer Apion and myths of Manetho. Finally, Josephus' Discourse to the Greeks includes his thoughts on the afterlife in opposition to the prevailing Greek views of his day. An insightful and observant writer, Josephus's unique position as a Jew in the Roman world of the first century provides a surprising perspective to a time generally studied through the lens of Christianity

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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