登陆注册
5450400000021

第21章

(1) This first book has a wrong title. It is not written against Apion, as is the first part of the second book, but against those Greeks in general who would not believe Josephus's former accounts of the very ancient state of the Jewish nation, in his 20 books of Antiquities; and particularly against Agatharelddes, Manetho, Cheremon, and Lysimachus. it is one of the most learned, excellent, and useful books of all antiquity; and upon Jerome's perusal of this and the following book, he declares that it seems to him a miraculous thing "how one that was a Hebrew, who had been from his infancy instructed in sacred learning, should be able to pronounce such a number of testimonies out of profane authors, as if he had read over all the Grecian libraries,"Epist. 8. ad Magnum; and the learned Jew, Manasseh-Ben-Israel, esteemed these two books so excellent, as to translate them into the Hebrew; this we learn from his own catalogue of his works, which I have seen. As to the time and place when and where these two books were written, the learned have not hitherto been able to determine them any further than that they were written some time after his Antiquities, or some time after A.D. 93; which indeed is too obvious at their entrance to be overlooked by even a careless peruser, they being directly intended against those that would not believe what he had advanced in those books con-the great of the Jewish nation As to the place, they all imagine that these two books were written where the former were, I mean at Rome; and I confess that I myself believed both those determinations, till I came to finish my notes upon these books, when I met with plain indications that they were written not at Rome, but in Judea, and this after the third of Trajan, or A.D.

100.

(2) Take Dr. Hudson's note here, which as it justly contradicts the common opinion that Josephus either died under Domitian, or at least wrote nothing later than his days, so does it perfectly agree to my own determination, from Justus of Tiberias, that he wrote or finished his own Life after the third of Trajan, or A.D.

100. To which Noldius also agrees, de Herod, No. 383[Epaphroditus]. "Since Florius Josephus," says Dr. Hudson, "wrote [or finished] his books of Antiquities on the thirteenth of Domitian, [A.D. 93,] and after that wrote the Memoirs of his own Life, as an appendix to the books of Antiquities, and at last his two books against Apion, and yet dedicated all those writings to Epaphroditus; he can hardly be that Epaphroditus who was formerly secretary to Nero, and was slain on the fourteenth [or fifteenth]

of Domitian, after he had been for a good while in banishment;but another Epaphroditas, a freed-man, and procurator of Trajan, as says Grotius on Luke 1:3.

(3) The preservation of Homer's Poems by memory, and not by his own writing them down, and that thence they were styled Rhapsodies, as sung by him, like ballads, by parts, and not composed and connected together in complete works, are opinions well known from the ancient commentators; though such supposal seems to myself, as well as to Fabricius Biblioth. Grace. I. p.

269, and to others, highly improbable. Nor does Josephus say there were no ancienter writings among the Greeks than Homer's Poems, but that they did not fully own any ancienter writings pretending to such antiquity, which is trite.

(4) It well deserves to be considered, that Josephus here says how all the following Greek historians looked on Herodotus as a fabulous author; and presently, sect. 14, how Manetho, the most authentic writer of the Egyptian history, greatly complains of his mistakes in the Egyptian affairs; as also that Strabo, B. XI.

p. 507, the most accurate geographer and historian, esteemed him such; that Xenophon, the much more accurate historian in the affairs of Cyrus, implies that Herodotus's account of that great man is almost entirely romantic. See the notes on Antiq. B. XI.

ch. 2. sect. 1, and Hutchinson's Prolegomena to his edition of Xenophon's, that we have already seen in the note on Antiq. B.

VIII. ch. 10. sect. 3, how very little Herodotus knew about the Jewish affairs and country, and that he greatly affected what we call the marvelous, as Monsieur Rollin has lately and justly determined; whence we are not always to depend on the authority of Herodotus, where it is unsupported by other evidence, but ought to compare the other evidence with his, and if it preponderate, to prefer it before his. I do not mean by this that Herodotus willfully related what he believed to be false, (as Cteeias seems to have done,) but that he often wanted evidence, and sometimes preferred what was marvelous to what was best attested as really true.

(5)About the days of Cyrus and Daniel.

(6) It is here well worth our observation, what the reasons are that such ancient authors as Herodotus, Josephus, and others have been read to so little purpose by many learned critics; viz. that their main aim has not been chronology or history, but philology, to know words, and not things, they not much entering oftentimes into the real contents of their authors, and judging which were the most accurate discoverers of truth, and most to be depended on in the several histories, but rather inquiring who wrote the finest style, and had the greatest elegance in their expressions;which are things of small consequence in comparison of the other.

Thus you will sometimes find great debates among the learned, whether Herodotus or Thucydides were the finest historian in the Ionic and Attic ways of writing; which signify little as to the real value of each of their histories; while it would be of much more moment to let the reader know, that as the consequence of Herodotus's history, which begins so much earlier, and reaches so much wider, than that of Thucydides, is therefore vastly greater;so is the most part of Thucydides, which belongs to his own times, and fell under his own observation, much the most certain.

同类推荐
  • 为政忠告

    为政忠告

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 途次大梁雪中奉天平

    途次大梁雪中奉天平

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 元始天尊说北方真武妙经

    元始天尊说北方真武妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 舍利忏法

    舍利忏法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 补农书

    补农书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 叶樱花

    叶樱花

    叶宇,高中的生活,是繁重的,在这个时间段遇上你,是幸运的,即使最后的分离,是为了后来更好的遇见。再见!——落樱
  • 南诏野史

    南诏野史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 一碗大肉面

    一碗大肉面

    本文讲述了主人公的一段青春记忆,游离于主流学院的‘自考’学生,混迹于学校和社会之间。财富美女、兄弟情深,有成功的喜悦、失败的无奈。希望唤醒那一代人的青春记忆!
  • 混沌雷神

    混沌雷神

    弱肉强食的元素大陆,强者为尊,各种强大的元素炫丽地绽放着。穿越到异界的景辰无权无势,不但没有获得到家族的传承,还被流放到偏僻之地,受到各种屈辱羞辱,没有攻击力强横的金元素又如何?废物身体又如何?也难以抵挡住景辰强大的心志,最终奋起而上获得雷电之能,越级打怪,夺宝把妹,成就雷神传奇,玩转整个元素大陆。
  • 情调女人·情调生活

    情调女人·情调生活

    追求生活品质、注重个人享乐,有品味地进行文化消费,这就是情调女人的情调生活,纯粹而美好。本书提品味出女性在生活、精神上为了追求生活最高品质的细节。可能在书中可以找到您生活的情调,或许您还不够满足,不仿来读本书,将会带你在书中这种前卫和时尚情调生活中遨游!维生素的作用是调节机体生理,使人保持平衡健康。如果你看了本书,正如得到了平时缺乏的维生素,使你得到纾缓、轻松。
  • 跟《毛选》学战略,向德鲁克学管理

    跟《毛选》学战略,向德鲁克学管理

    他被誉为“神州崛起的开拓者”,他被尊称为“现代管理学之父”;他是中华人民共和国的开国元勋毛泽东,他是世界级管理大师德鲁克。这部中西合璧的管理著作,将本土化管理思想和西方先进管理理念进行了糅合,让管理者能够灵活掌握这两位大师级人物的管理思想和精华。
  • 前夫,放了我

    前夫,放了我

    她是名门淑女,沈家千金。他是刚刚飞出山窝的凤凰男。打从第一次见到秦放,沈晗之就被他给迷住了!从此便开始了万劫不复的死缠烂打生涯。而后来,他们竟然真的在一起了。她用她所有的资源帮他上位,让他们的小日子越过越好。可谁曾想,当他摇身变为豪门贵公子,就开始翻脸不认人。拿哥哥逼她。拿父亲逼她!拿整个家族逼她!逼她离婚,逼她离开,逼的她声名狼藉。等到她不敢在爱的时候,他却又在她的生活里阴魂不散。秦放:我不介意你恨我还是爱我,只是,你必须留在我身边。她说:我从来不缺男伴,如果秦部长有这个兴趣,我们不妨春宵一度。一个爱与守护的故事,无关报复和伤害。可偏偏,守护的方式必须是放弃。贴个小剧场以供YY:秦放站在父亲面前,郑重的,严肃的说:“爸,我会一切如您所愿,但是,我不会允许你伤害沈晗之,不管她是嫁人了,生了别人的孩子,又或者是恨我恨的想方设法的要置我于死地。我都不允许你伤害他。”这是秦放第一次把自己的感情表露于人前,也是徐思业第一次知道,原来,在秦放的世界里,沈晗之这三个字有如此的重要。
  • 古典之殇:纪念原配的世界

    古典之殇:纪念原配的世界

    王开岭文集之自然美学卷,系作者最新文字结集,作者的注意力从自然细节开始,从那些曾经来过却正在消逝的风物开始,从那些被人类辜负的美好元素开始,从儿时的记忆和笑声开始,以独特的视角、细腻的笔触表达了自己对于自然美的无限眷念。
  • 魔禁之一方妹妹

    魔禁之一方妹妹

    铃科百合子:“一方哥哥真的不是萝莉控啊,因为,因为,,一方哥哥他算是妹控吧。”一方通行:“切!”。穿越成为一方通行妹妹百合子,在学园都市呆(fu)萌(hei)的冒险生活(说是冒险,然而是无敌流)。貌似有些魔改原作剧情,一定会有很多番外,不喜勿喷,群号:668232328注:作者百年难遇的物理渣,所以请不要为难。
  • 我在锦年时光里等你

    我在锦年时光里等你

    秦梦怜在年少的时候也曾说过,非顾辰不可。后来经过一段漫长的岁月之后深刻地明白,这个世界上并不一定要非谁不可。因为她后来遇到了一个叫纪慕云的人,他俊美出尘,却冷漠桀骜,唯独对她,倾付了所有的温柔,给了她最好的“锦年时光”。有生之年,在漫长的时光里能遇到他,是她觉得遇到过最幸运的事情,不管他是否忘了自己,也不管经历多少的困难,也要走到他的身边去。后来,有人问,锦年时光是什么?也许会有人告诉你,那是一个童话一般的地方,有甜美精致的甜点,有唯美的婚纱,喜欢听客人讲故事。如若你心中有爱或梦想,那里便是你心中最美好的锦年时光。