-
Dionysius the Areopagite, respectively. In
biblical studies, the term
pseudepigrapha can
refer to an ****orted
collection of
Jewish religious works thought...
-
Modern pseudepigrapha, or
modern apocrypha,
refer to
pseudepigrapha of
recent origin – any book
written in the
style of the
books of the
Bible or other...
- 17th-century and 18th-century
English translations of some Old
Testament Pseudepigrapha and New
Testament Apocrypha, some of
which were ****embled in the 1820s...
-
Pseudepigrapha are
falsely attributed works,
texts whose claimed author is not the true author, or a work
whose real
author attributed it to a
figure of...
-
Plutarch (/ˈpluːtɑːrk/;
Ancient Gr****: Πλούταρχος, Ploútarchos; Koinē Gr****: [ˈplúːtarkʰos]; c. AD 46 –
after AD 119) was a Gr****
Middle Platonist philosopher...
- Noah (/ˈnoʊ.ə/; Hebrew: נֹחַ, romanized: Nōaḥ, lit. 'rest' or 'consolation')
appears as the last of the
Antediluvian patriarchs in the
traditions of Abrahamic...
-
Journal for the
Study of the
Pseudepigrapha is a
quarterly peer-reviewed
academic journal that
publishes scholarship on
Jewish literature from the ****enistic-Roman...
- an
author who did not
write it. In
common usage, however, the term
pseudepigrapha is
often used by way of
distinction to
refer to
apocryphal writings...
- and
Judgment of Peter,
although scholars believe these works to be
pseudepigrapha. The New
Testament presents Peter's
original name as
Simon (/ˈsaɪmən/...
- In Gr**** mythology,
Tartarus (/ˈtɑːrtərəs/;
Ancient Gr****: Τάρταρος, romanized: Tártaros) is the deep
abyss that is used as a
dungeon of
torment and suffering...