Difference between revisions of "Category:Enochic Studies"
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
For many centuries the Book of Enoch was considered to be "lost" in the West. But its memory remained vivid in the Church and some important portions of the ancient Greek version resurfaced in the World Chronicle written by [[George Syncellus]] at the turn of the 9th century. These Greek fragments were first published by [[Joseph Justus Scaliger]] in 1606 and discussed by [[Johannes Drusius]] in 1612. [[Jacques Goar]] translated them into Latin in 1652, when he published the ''editio princeps'' of Syncellus' Chronography. | For many centuries the Book of Enoch was considered to be "lost" in the West. But its memory remained vivid in the Church and some important portions of the ancient Greek version resurfaced in the World Chronicle written by [[George Syncellus]] at the turn of the 9th century. These Greek fragments were first published by [[Joseph Justus Scaliger]] in 1606 and discussed by [[Johannes Drusius]] in 1612. [[Jacques Goar]] translated them into Latin in 1652, when he published the ''editio princeps'' of Syncellus' Chronography. | ||
Until the end of 18th century the interest of scholars remained focused on these Greek fragments, which provided the only textual evidence for 1 Enoch. They were included in works by [[Athanasius Kircher]] (Oedipus Aegyptiacus, 1652-54), Gottfried Vockerodt, Scipione Sgambati (Archivorum veteris testamenti, 1703), and [[Johann Albert Fabricius]] (Codes pseudepigraphus Veteris Testamenti, 1713-23). In 1710 [[Pompeo Sarnelli]] authored the first commentary on the surviving portions of the Book the Watchers. The Fragments were translated into French ({[Pierre Jurien]]), German ([[Johannes Christian Nehiring]], 1719), English and Italian. [[Nicolas Antoine Boulanger]] and [[Paul-Henri Thiry d'Holbach]] used them in their dissertation on Enoch (1762). In 1820 [[Daniele Manin]] published an Italian commentary still based on the Greek of Syncellus. | Until the end of 18th century the interest of scholars remained focused on these Greek fragments, which provided the only textual evidence for 1 Enoch. They were included in works by [[Athanasius Kircher]] (Oedipus Aegyptiacus, 1652-54), Gottfried Vockerodt (De societatibus et re literaria ante diluvium, 1687), [[Scipione Sgambati]] (Archivorum veteris testamenti, 1703), and [[Johann Albert Fabricius]] (Codes pseudepigraphus Veteris Testamenti, 1713-23). In 1710 [[Pompeo Sarnelli]] authored the first commentary on the surviving portions of the Book the Watchers. The Fragments were translated into French ({[Pierre Jurien]]), German ([[Johannes Christian Nehiring]], 1719), and partly, in English and Italian. [[Nicolas Antoine Boulanger]] and [[Paul-Henri Thiry d'Holbach]] used them in their dissertation on Enoch (1762). In 1820 [[Daniele Manin]] published an Italian commentary still based on the Greek of Syncellus. | ||
'''The Rediscovery of the whole Ethiopic Text of 1 Enoch''' (1773-1892) | '''The Rediscovery of the whole Ethiopic Text of 1 Enoch''' (1773-1892) |
Revision as of 20:40, 3 February 2014
Overview Enochic Studies / Research in the Enochic Literature is a field of research in Second Temple Judaism, that specializes in the study of Enoch and the literature attributed to him (1 Enoch, 2 Enoch, and 3 Enoch).
History of research The "Lost" Book and the Fragments of Syncellus (9th-18th cent.) For many centuries the Book of Enoch was considered to be "lost" in the West. But its memory remained vivid in the Church and some important portions of the ancient Greek version resurfaced in the World Chronicle written by George Syncellus at the turn of the 9th century. These Greek fragments were first published by Joseph Justus Scaliger in 1606 and discussed by Johannes Drusius in 1612. Jacques Goar translated them into Latin in 1652, when he published the editio princeps of Syncellus' Chronography. Until the end of 18th century the interest of scholars remained focused on these Greek fragments, which provided the only textual evidence for 1 Enoch. They were included in works by Athanasius Kircher (Oedipus Aegyptiacus, 1652-54), Gottfried Vockerodt (De societatibus et re literaria ante diluvium, 1687), Scipione Sgambati (Archivorum veteris testamenti, 1703), and Johann Albert Fabricius (Codes pseudepigraphus Veteris Testamenti, 1713-23). In 1710 Pompeo Sarnelli authored the first commentary on the surviving portions of the Book the Watchers. The Fragments were translated into French ({[Pierre Jurien]]), German (Johannes Christian Nehiring, 1719), and partly, in English and Italian. Nicolas Antoine Boulanger and Paul-Henri Thiry d'Holbach used them in their dissertation on Enoch (1762). In 1820 Daniele Manin published an Italian commentary still based on the Greek of Syncellus. The Rediscovery of the whole Ethiopic Text of 1 Enoch (1773-1892) Rumors about the existence of a complete Ethiopic version of 1 Enoch had been circulating in Europe since the 16th century. In 1773 the explorer James Bruce finally reached Ethiopia and brought back in 1773 three copies of the Ethiopic version of the whole 1 Enoch. Silvestre de Salcy translated parts of them into Latin (1800), with notes in French (1800) and in German (1801). Eventually, Richard Laurence published in 1821 the first English translation of the whole 1 Enoch, followed by the editio princeps of the Ethiopic text in 1838. The Critical Study of 1 Enoch (1893-1950) At the turn of the century, new editions of the Ethiopic text (the real first critical editions by Flemming 1901, and Charles 1906) as well as new translations (Charles 1893, 1912, and 1913 [English]; Beer 1900 [German]; Flemming 1901 [German]; Martin 1906 [French]; Riessler 1928 [German]) marked the affirmation of 1 Enoch in the field of Judaic Studies. The pre-Christian date of the entire document (including the Parables) seemed to be solidly established and accepted (Gry 1909; Frey 1928) 1 Enoch in Limbo (1951-1975) In 1951 a dramatic announcement shook the world of Enochic Studies. Józef T. Milik confirmed the presence at Qumran of Aramaic fragments from all Enoch booklets except the Parables. The rediscovery of significant portions of the original text was the beginning of a new chapter in the history of research even though in the immediate it resulted into a major setback. Twenty-five years passed from that dramatic announcement to the actual publication of the Aramaic Enoch fragments. For all those years, 1 Enoch was in limbo. A few new translations appeared, one in Danish (1956), two in Hebrew (1956, 1958), and on in Modern Greek (1973). Not surprisingly, the only major study of the period was Matthew Black's edition of the Greek fragments in 1970. Waiting for the actual publication of the Aramaic texts was necessary—it was simply a matter of good sense. The Publication of the Aramaic Fragments by Milik (1976-2000) The edition of the Qumran fragments by Józef T. Milik in 1976 reopened the research on 1 Enoch. In 1978 Michael Knibb published of a new edition of the Ethiopic text, which for the first time compare it with the newly founded fragments (Knibb 1978). Three scholars led the renaissance of Enochic Studies--George W.E. Nickelsburg and James C. VanderKam in the United States and Paolo Sacchi (and his students and collaborators Sabino Chiala and Gabriele Boccaccini) in Europe. In the 1980s numerous new translations (Fusella 1981 [Italian]; Corrente/Piñero 1982 [Spanish]; Isaac 1983 [English]; Knibb (1984) [English]; Uhlig 1984 [German]; Black (1985) [English]; Caquot (1987) [French]) laid the foundation for a reevaluation of the importance of 1 Enoch within Second Temple Jewish literature. The Enoch Seminar and the Hermeneia commentaries (2001-present) The year 2001 marks a turning point in Enochic Studies. In the Summer 2001 the main American and European specialists in 1 Enoch gathered in Florence, Italy at the invitation of Gabriele Boccaccini for the first meeting of the Enoch Seminar, and in the Fall of the same year the first volume of the Hermeneia commentary was published by George W.E. Nickelsburg.
|
Categories
Texts
Chronology
Languages
Countries
|
Pages in category "Enochic Studies"
The following 172 pages are in this category, out of 172 total.
- Enochic Studies (1450s)
- Enochic Studies (1500s)
- Enochic Studies (1600s)
- Enochic Studies (1700s)
- Enochic Studies (1800s)
- Enochic Studies (1850s)
- Enochic Studies (1900s)
- Enochic Studies (1910s)
- Enochic Studies (1920s)
- Enochic Studies (1930s)
- Enochic Studies (1940s)
- Enochic Studies (1950s)
- Enochic Studies (1960s)
- Enochic Studies (1970s)
- Enochic Studies (1980s)
- Enochic Studies (1990s)
- Enochic Studies (2000s)
- Enochic Studies (2010s)
- Enochic Studies (2020s)
*
~
- George Syncellus (d. after 811), scholar
- Robert Grosseteste (M / Britain, 1175c-1253), scholar
- Menahem Recanati (M / Italy, 1250-1310), scholar
- Guglielmo Raimondo Moncada (M / Italy, 15th cent.), scholar, translator
- Johannes Reuchlin (M / Germany, 1455-1522), scholar
- Francesco Zorzi (M / Italy, 1460-1540), scholar
- Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (M / Italy, 1463-1494), scholar
- Ludovico Ariosto (M / Italy, 1474-1533), poet
- Giovanni Agostino Panteo (M / Italy, d.1535), alchemist
- Jan Matthys (M / Netherlands, 1500-1534), visionary
- Anthony Gilby (M / Britain, 1510-1585), scholar, translator
- Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (M / France, 1455-1536), scholar
- Guillaume Postel (M / France, 1510-1581), scholar
- Guglielmo Sirleto (M / Italy, 1514-1585), scholar
- John Dee (M / Britain, 1527-1608), occultist
- Mordecai Jaffe (M / Czechia, 1530-1612), scholar
- Joseph Justus Scaliger (M / Netherlands, 1540-1609), scholar
- Johannes Drusius (M / Netherlands, 1550-1616), scholar
- Edward Kelley (M / Britain, 1555-1597), occultist
- Isaac Casaubon (M / France, 1559-1614), scholar
- Nicolao Godinho (M / Portugal, 1559-1616), Portuguese scholar
- Luis de Urreta (1570-1636), Spanish scholar
- Samuel Purchas (1577-1626), scholar
- Jacques Bolduc
- Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc (M / France, 1580-1637), scholar
- Gilles de Loches
- Pierre Gassendi
- Scipione Sgambati (M / Italy, 1595-1652), scholar
- Agathange de Vendôme
- Méric Casaubon (1599-1671), scholar
- Peter Heylyn (1599-1662), scholar
- Thomas Bangius (M / Denmark, 1600-1661), scholar
- Jacques Goar (M / France, 1601-1653), scholar
- Athanasius Kircher (M / Germany, 1601/02-1680), scholar
- Christianus Schotanus (1603-1671), Dutch scholar
- Thomas Browne (1605-1682), scholar
- John Milton (M / Britain, 1608-1674), poet, playwright
- Johannes Heinrich Ursinus
- Johann Heinrich Hottinger (1620-1667), scholar
- Jane Lead (F / Britain, 1623-1704), visionary
- Hiob Ludolf (M / Germany, 1624-1704), scholar
- Johann Heinrich Heidegger (1633-1698), Swiss scholar
- August Pfeiffer (M / Germany, 1640-1698), German scholar
- Gottfried Vockerodt (1665-1727), German scholar
- ~ Joannes Ernestus Grabe (1666-1711), German-British scholar
- William Whiston (1667-1752), scholar
- Johann Albert Fabricius (M / Germany, 1668-1735), scholar
- Johann Christian Nehring (M / Germany, 1671-1736), scholar
- Pierre Jurieu (M / France, 1637-1713), scholar
- Pseudo-vetus testamentum (1707 Mölling / Schmidt), dissertation
- Agostino Antonio Giorgi (M / Italy, 1711-1797), scholar
- Nicolas Antoine Boulanger (1722-1759), scholar
- James Bruce (1730-1794), traveler
- Richard Laurence (M / Britain, 1760-1838), scholar
- Moses Stuart (M / United States, 1780-1852), scholar
- Andreas Gottlieb Hoffmann (1796-1864), German scholar
- Edward Murray (1798-1852), British scholar
- Jacques-Paul Migne (1800-1875), scholar
- Wilhelm Dindorf (1802-1883), German scholar
- Heinrich Ewald (1803-1875), scholar
- Samuel Davidson (1807-1898), scholar
- Alphonse Louis Constant (M / France, 1810-1875), occultist
- August Dillmann (1823-1894), German scholar
- ~ Theodor Zahn (1838-1933), German scholar
- Charles Taylor (1840-1908), scholar
- Oscar von Gebhardt (1844-1906), scholar
- Eberhard Nestle (1851-1913), scholar
- Johannes Flemming (1854-1914), German scholar
- S.L. MacGregor Mathers (1854-1918), occultist
- George H. Schodde (1854-1917), scholar
- Aleksandr V. Smirnov (M / Russia, 1854-1919), scholar
- Robert Henry Charles (1855-1931), scholar
- Matvei I. Sokolov (M / Russia, 1855-1906), scholar
- Montague Rhodes James (1862-1936), scholar
- Nathaniel Schmidt (M / Sweden, United States, 1862-1939), scholar
- ~ Charles Cutler Torrey (1863-1956), American scholar
- ~ F. Crawford Burkitt (1864-1935), British scholar
- Adolf Deissmann (1866-1937), scholar
- William O.E. Oesterley (1866-1950), scholar
- Heinrich Appel
- Adolphe Lods (M / France, 1867-1948), scholar
- François Martin (M / France, 1867-1928), scholar
- Ludwig Radermacher (1867-1852), scholar
- Lazarus Goldschmidt (1871-1950), scholar
- Edgar J. Goodspeed (1871-1962), scholar
- Kirsopp Lake (1872-1946), scholar
- Aleister Crowley (1875-1947), occultist
- Erik Peterson
- Alfredo Vitti
- André Vaillant (1890-1977), scholar
- Béla Hamvas (1897-1968), scholar
- Hugo Odeberg (1898-1973), scholar
- Otto E. Neugebauer (1899-1990), scholar
- Günther Zuntz (1902-1992), scholar
- Erik Konstans Teodor Sjöberg (1907-1963), scholar
- Matthew Black (1908-1994), British scholar
- Sergio Donadoni (M / Italy, 1914-2015), scholar
- Pierre Grelot (1917-2009), scholar
- Mathias Delcor (1919-1992), Spanish-French scholar
- Mario Pincherle (M / Italy, 1919-2012), arch-fi author
- Joseph A. Fitzmyer (1920-2016), American scholar
- ~ André Caquot (1923-2004), French scholar
- James Barr (1924-2006), British scholar
- Jonas C. Greenfield (1926-1995), scholar
- Marc Philonenko (1930-), scholar
- Paolo Sacchi (M / Italy, 1930), scholar
- Rochus Zuurmond (M / Netherlands, 1930-2020), scholar
- George W.E. Nickelsburg (1934-), scholar
- Ephraim Isaac (b.1936), scholar
- Michael A. Knibb (M / Britain, 1938), scholar
- Michael E. Stone (1938-), scholar
- Devorah Dimant (b.1939), scholar
- ~ Paul D. Hanson (1939-), American scholar
- James H. Charlesworth (1940-), scholar
- Maurice Casey (1942-2014), British scholar
- Gerald Schueler (1942-2013), occultist
- Margaret Barker (F / Britain, 1944), scholar
- William R.G. Loader (b.1944), scholar
- Daniel Boyarin (M / United States, 1946), scholar
- John J. Collins (1946-), scholar
- Mogens Müller (M / Denmark, 1946), scholar
- James C. VanderKam (M / United States, 1946), scholar
- István Baán (b.1948), scholar
- Helge S. Kvanvig (M / Norway, 1948), scholar
- Ida Fröhlich (F / Hungary, 1949), scholar
- ~ David R. Jackson (b.1951), Australian scholar
- Gabriele Boccaccini (b.1958), Italian-American scholar
- Andrei A. Orlov (M / Russia, United States, 1960), scholar
- Loren T. Stuckenbruck (b.1960), scholar
- Igor R. Tantlevskij (M / Russia, 1961), Russian scholar
- Giovanni Ibba (M / Italy, 1962), scholar
- Henryk Drawnel (b.1963), Polish scholar
- Michael Segal (1972-), scholar
- Annette Yoshiko Reed (F / United States, 1973), scholar
- Michaël Langlois (1976-), scholar
- Pierpaolo Bertalotto (1978-), scholar
- ~ Randal A. Argall, American scholar
- ~ Leslie Baynes, American scholar
- ~ Roger T. Beckwith, British scholar
- Andreas Bedenbender, scholar
- Robert A. Coughenour
- Charles A. Gieschen, scholar
- Grant Macaskill, scholar
- Leslie W. Walck, scholar
- James A. Waddell
Media in category "Enochic Studies"
The following 61 files are in this category, out of 61 total.
- 1713 Fabricius.jpg 326 × 500; 30 KB
- 1820 * Manin.jpg 138 × 200; 7 KB
- 1970.jpg 225 × 225; 4 KB
- 1976 * Milik.jpg 471 × 640; 17 KB
- 1978 Knibb.jpg 352 × 500; 18 KB
- 1978 Laycock.jpg 333 × 500; 37 KB
- 1979 * Suter.jpg 260 × 402; 7 KB
- 1979 Hartman.jpg 360 × 585; 28 KB
- 1979 Zamorani.jpg 424 × 592; 20 KB
- 1980.jpg 225 × 225; 4 KB
- 1980 * Stone.jpg 319 × 499; 27 KB
- 1984 * VanderKam.jpg 333 × 500; 18 KB
- 1988 Kvanvig.jpg 128 × 195; 2 KB
- 1989 Adler.jpg 683 × 920; 113 KB
- 1990.jpg 225 × 225; 4 KB
- 1990 * Sacchi.jpg 357 × 499; 22 KB
- 1993 * Tiller.jpg 317 × 474; 18 KB
- 1995 * VanderKam.jpg 328 × 499; 21 KB
- 1995 VanderKam Adler.jpg 333 × 500; 14 KB
- 1997 * Chiala.jpg 320 × 500; 28 KB
- 1997 Stuckenbruck.png 361 × 536; 40 KB
- 1998 * Boccaccini.jpg 336 × 499; 49 KB
- 2000.jpg 226 × 226; 6 KB
- 2000 Bedenbender.jpg 320 × 499; 20 KB
- 2001 * Nickelsburg.jpg 357 × 400; 14 KB
- 2002 * Boccaccini.jpg 337 × 499; 28 KB
- 2002-E * Boccaccini.jpg 1,313 × 1,841; 975 KB
- 2003 * Bautch.jpg 427 × 648; 30 KB
- 2004 Auffarth (ed).jpg 400 × 611; 234 KB
- 2004 Jackson.jpg 307 × 499; 11 KB
- 2004 Nickelsburg VanderKam.jpg 335 × 499; 26 KB
- 2004 Olson.jpg 384 × 500; 36 KB
- 2005 * Reed.jpg 375 × 500; 40 KB
- 2005-E * Boccaccini.jpg 333 × 499; 39 KB
- 2007-E * Boccaccini Collins.jpg 333 × 499; 13 KB
- 2007-E * Boccaccini.jpg 333 × 499; 40 KB
- 2009 Boccaccini (ed).jpg 333 × 499; 31 KB
- 2009 Knibb.jpg 1,904 × 2,891; 758 KB
- 2010.jpg 225 × 225; 4 KB
- 2011 * Waddell.jpg 333 × 499; 12 KB
- 2011 Walck.jpg 314 × 499; 16 KB
- 2012 * Boyarin.jpg 344 × 499; 53 KB
- 2012 * Nickelsburg VanderKam.jpg 421 × 500; 21 KB
- 2012 Arcari.jpg 333 × 499; 16 KB
- 2014-E Bock Charlesworth.jpg 314 × 499; 15 KB
- 2016-E * Stuckenbruck Boccaccini.jpg 333 × 499; 60 KB
- 2018 * Reeves Reed.jpg 331 × 499; 36 KB
- 2019 Drawnel.jpg 298 × 400; 8 KB
- 2019-E * Kulik Boccaccini.jpg 332 × 499; 17 KB
- 2020.jpg 225 × 225; 4 KB
- 2020 Arcari.jpg 329 × 499; 25 KB
- 2020 Asale.jpg 333 × 500; 40 KB
- 2020-E Gebreananaye.jpg 333 × 499; 17 KB
- 2021 Bokhorst.jpg 400 × 590; 158 KB
- 2021 Churton.jpg 400 × 599; 202 KB
- 2021 Scott.jpg 314 × 500; 34 KB
- 2022 Lafitaga.jpg 334 × 500; 19 KB
- 2022 Stewart.jpg 668 × 1,000; 28 KB
- 2023 Dugan.jpg 500 × 750; 58 KB
- 2023 VanderKam.jpg 400 × 604; 149 KB
- 2023-E * Hessayon Reed Boccaccini.jpg 1,869 × 2,846; 769 KB