| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] a 1331 a-d- 1 a.c. 1 a.d. 292 aa 1 aaron 2 abandoned 4 | Frequency [« »] 312 church 309 or 303 at 292 a.d. 284 had 280 no 275 about | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances a.d. |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pref | Caesarea in Palestine about A.D. 280 to study with Pamphilus 2 Pref | Photius wrote them, about A.D. 890.~With these and other 3 1,2 | thought that what Papias (ca. A.D. 120) says of Matthew compiling 4 1,4 | of Eusebius, published in A.D. 326, for that book is in 5 1,4 | Irenaeus of Lyons, who about A.D. 185 wrote his principal 6 1,4 | scattered over the years from A.D. 100 on, so that some of 7 2,1 | religious instruction, and by A.D. 80 the collection and publication 8 2,2 | first century, perhaps about A.D. 95, something like a revolt 9 2,2 | Roman Church from about A.D. 88 to 97. Ancient writers, 10 2,2 | Dionysius of Corinth (ca. A.D. 170) down, agree in ascribing 11 2,2 | prominence in Acts, written about A.D. 60 or soon after. The Corinthians 12 2,2 | fifteen years later than A.D. 75, suggested by Lake as 13 2,2 | established until about A.D. 60, this remark may well 14 2,2 | the date of the letter as A.D. 85, or later.~The resemblances 15 2,2 | a Syrian work of about A.D. 400, and stand between the 16 2,2 | lines of Homeric length (ca. A.D. 850), lists them among the 17 2,3 | it in a manuscript dated A.D. 1056. This text he published 18 2,3 | Shepherd of Hermas, about A.D. 100 (Vision ii. 4. 3) ; 19 2,4 | Constantinople manuscript of A.D. 1056 (now at Jerusalem), 20 2,4 | located all the way from A.D. 70 to A.D. 180. A terminus 21 2,4 | the way from A.D. 70 to A.D. 180. A terminus ante quern 22 2,4 | chapters and also, about A.D. 150, when the existing “ 23 2,4 | through II:2) comes from about A.D. 70, while the rest was added 24 2,4 | century, possibly around A.D. 90. Its Jewish-Christian 25 2,4 | in his Festal Letter of A.D. 367, omits it from the New 26 2,5 | Eusebius places the date about A.D. 107-8. The exact date is 27 2,6 | Asia Minor for Rome, about A.D. 135. It is possible, however, 28 2,7 | letters, known to Eusebius in A.D. 326.~· These seven 29 2,7 | Nearly sixty years later, in A.D. 167, Polycarp suffered martyrdom 30 2,8 | views on them. But about A.D. 130 a Christian teacher, 31 2,8 | of the Bar-Cochba War of A.D. 132-35; this would date 32 2,8 | would date the Letter about A.D. 130-31, when Hadrian ordered 33 2,8 | representing Egyptian usage about A.D 300, has it at the end of 34 2,8 | Stichometry of Nicephorus” (ca. A.D. 850) puts it with the disputed 35 2,9 | schismatic leaders (ca. A.D. 100). It records the creation 36 2,9 | disappeared from history in A.D. 6; Antipas, of course, is 37 2,9 | time when the Roman church (A.D. 140-50) was first shaping 38 2,9 | points to a date between A.D. 140 and 150. Justin Martyr, 39 2,9 | probably written between A.D. 140 and 160.~ ~ 40 2,11| burned. This occurred in A.D. 166-67.~ Polycarp was eighty-six 41 2,11| the Decian persecution (A.D. 250). This last scribe declares 42 2,12| cities of Lyons and Vienne in A.D. 177 as the reign of Marcus 43 2,13| Black, king of Edessa in A.D. 13-50. Abgar wrote to Jesus 44 2,13| did not begin until about A.D. 172, with Tatian, and did 45 3 | years of the first century, A.D. 95-l00. Hermas was a Christian~ 46 3 | the Muratorian writer (ca. A.D. 200) as the brother of Pius, 47 3 | written during his episcopate, A.D. 140-55. But parts of the 48 3 | stage of the work back to A.D. 95 or 96, thus making the 49 3 | Pius, bishop of Rome in A.D. 140-55, on every account 50 3 | The Gospel of Mark, about A.D. 70, contained a striking 51 3 | Revelation of John, about A.D. 93, was the first Christian 52 3 | Jewish.~ Sometime between A.D. 125 and 150 a Greek Christian 53 3 | written probably about A.D. 100, is clearly reflected, 54 3 | the Four Gospels, toward A.D. 120. The book cannot therefore 55 3 | therefore be dated earlier than A.D. 125. On the other hand, 56 3 | probably be dated between A.D. 140 and 160, where the coming 57 3 | in III Corinthians (ca. A.D. 160-70). These literary 58 3 | quarter-century between A.D. 125 and 150.~ The Revelation 59 3 | representing Egyptian usage about A.D. 300, which closes with the 60 3 | use of it, and Eusebius (A.D. 303) reckons it among the 61 3 | Stichometry of Nicephorus (ca. A.D. 850) it follows the Revelation 62 3 | accounts of heaven and hell (A.D. 1300); and Gustave Dore' 63 3 | 270 (in the Clermont List, A.D. 300) to 300 lines (in the 64 3 | in the Nicephorus list, A.D. 850), so that this discovery 65 3 | Macarius of Magnesia, about A.D. 400 (Apocritica 4:6-7). 66 3 | century.~ Hermas, about A.D. 100, was the first Christian 67 3 | composing, for Celsus, about A.D. 177-78, in his True Account, 68 4,3 | gospels.~ As early as about A.D. 140 some of these words 69 4,3 | v. 7, 9), written about A.D. 235, says, that the Naassene 70 4,4 | in Greek, perhaps between A.D. 120 and 140. Eusebius implies 71 4,4 | Papias of Hierapolis, about A.D. izo and says that Hegesippus 72 4,4 | in writing his Memoirs, A.D. 175-85 (Church History iv. 73 4,4 | Stichometry of Nicephorus (ca. A.D. 850) lists it among the 74 4,5 | Probably in Syria, between A.D. mo and 140, some Docetist 75 4,5 | converted at Ephesus about A.D. 135, and wrote his Apology 76 4,5 | end of the second century (A.D. 191), is the first Christian 77 4,8 | writing probably about A.D. 190-210, quotes it with 78 4,9 | days of Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 161-18o), or (with Epiphanius 79 4,9 | from Maximin's persecution (A.D. 235-38).[19]~ Origen is 80 4,10| Alexandria, a few years earlier (A.D. 190-210), may have known 81 4,10| Justin in his Dialogue (ca. A.D. 155-60) describes Jesus' 82 4,10| the thirteenth century (A.D. 1275) in the Golden Legend ( 83 4,14| during the reign of Hadrian (A.D. 117-38), or his followers. 84 5,1 | Muratorian canon fragment about A.D. 200 — the “Acts of All the 85 5,2 | Smyrna or Ephesus, who about A.D. 160-70 had come to feel 86 5,2 | appeared as a prophet in A.D. 156, in Mysia, in the north-central 87 5,2 | a papyrus written about A.D. 3oo, has given us the concluding 88 5,3 | probably written between A.D. 160 and 170. Its feminist 89 5,3 | probably formed in Egypt about A.D. 300, it stands between the 90 5,3 | Stichometry ofNicephorus, about A.D. 850, it leads the list of 91 5,4 | the romantic Acts of Paul (A.D. 160-70), some Docetist, 92 5,4 | been written as early as A.D. 189, quotes some sentences 93 5,4 | have been written about A.D. 170-80. The Nicephorus list, 94 5,4 | they first existed, about A.D. 175 (the temple of Artemis 95 5,4 | 42], did not fall until A.D. 262, when the Goths destroyed 96 5,4 | chap. 36), written about A.D. 200, he speaks of Rome as 97 5,4 | reviewed this collection about A.D. 890 in his Bibliotheca ( 98 5,4 | Second Council of Nicaea, A.D. 787, as it had been appealed 99 5,5 | Gnostic, and Montanist-about A.D. 175. We have seen that this 100 5,5 | Heresies (iii. 3. 2, 3), ca. A.D. 185, that the Church of 101 5,5 | The Roman bishop Calixtus (A.D. 217-22) ruled that persons 102 5,5 | early in the third century (A.D. 200-220) to compose the 103 5,5 | who in his Apology, about A.D. 150 or soon after, mentions 104 5,5 | commentary was written in A.D. 220-30, so that the Acts 105 5,5 | would naturally fall between A.D. 200 and 220. Eusebius himself 106 5,5 | reached a peak under Stephen (A.D. 254-57), who professed to 107 5,5 | Peter to Liberius dates from A.D. 354, and its earlier portions, 108 5,5 | from Peter to Pontianus, A.D. 231-35, have been shown 109 5,5 | Calixtus-that is, between A.D. 198 and 222.~ ~ 110 5,6 | the Four Gospels, about A.D. 172, and Bardaisan, A.D. 111 5,6 | A.D. 172, and Bardaisan, A.D. 154-222, had developed some 112 5,8 | century, perhaps as late as A.D. 620, some Christian, probably 113 5,9 | written probably about A.D. z6o, but now lost; and this 114 6,1 | Stichometry ofNicephorus (ca. A.D. 850). In both these lists 115 6,1 | Ophite or Setbite type, about A.D. 250-300, quotes five of 116 6,1 | Divine Institutes 4:12 (A.D. 311). He introduces his 117 6,1 | Bardaisan (Bardeisanes), A.D. 154-222. But they were almost 118 6,2 | Corinthians, written about A.D. 95. It must either have 119 6,2 | Soter, bishop of Rome, about A.D. 165-75. He is replying to 120 6,2 | Roman Hippolytus, about A.D. 230, so that it was obviously 121 6,3 | interviews with his elders, about A.D. 120, or a little later, 122 6,3 | Papias other than Irenaeus (A.D. 181-89) and Eusebius (326)- 123 6,3 | emperor in the summer of A.D. 117. He also says that John 124 6,3 | of Side, who wrote about A.D. 430; the last one is also 125 6,3 | Georgius Hamartolus, about A.D. 842.~ Papias is quoted by 126 7,1 | Letter to the Smyrnaeans 3:2 (A.D. 110-I7) as evidence that 127 7,1 | the Gospel ofthe Hebrews (A.D. 120-30) and in Ignatius ( 128 7,1 | 120-30) and in Ignatius (A.D. 110-I7), it must have been 129 7,1 | years of the second century, A.D. I00-110. Its primitive character 130 7,1 | Valentinus and flourished between A.D. 145 and 180. Clement says 131 7,1 | Greece probably between A.D. 138 and 147, for much of 132 7,1 | the Gospel of Matthew in A.D. 41, when Matthew would, 133 7,1 | Church History (iii. 3. 2, A.D. 326) groups the Preaching 134 7,2 | Hadrian visited that city in A.D. 125 or later in 129. Eusebius, 135 7,3 | Antoninus, probably between A.D. 138 and 147, since Marcus 136 7,4 | philosophy easy, and about A.D. 140 Aristo, a man of Pella, 137 7,4 | Jerusalem to besiege it in A.D. 66-70 (Eusebius Church History 138 7,4 | rebellion against Rome (A.D. 132-35), and Eusebius mentions 139 7,4 | Discourses which Celsus, about A.D. 178, directed against Christianity. 140 7,4 | answer to it (Against Celsus, A.D. 248) quoted from it so extensively 141 7,4 | according to Epiphanius, in A.D. 128-29, so that his translation 142 7,4 | cannot be much earlier than A.D. 130-35. Taken with Aristo' 143 7,4 | Bar-Cochba War, which ended in A.D. 135, this suggests that 144 7,4 | cannot have written before A.D. 140. Jerome also says that 145 8,1 | This was probably about A.D. 135. A few years later he 146 8,1 | martyrdom in Rome between A.D. 163 and 167.~ Eusebius ( 147 8,1 | given by Photius, about A.D. 890, in his Bihliotheca ( 148 8,1 | Apology, and Methodius, about A.D. 300, in his book On the 149 8,1 | Chronography of Julius Africanus (A.D. 221) and was probably written 150 8,3 | when Justin was martyred (A.D. 163-167). Later he returned 151 8,3 | was probably there, about A.D. 167, or perhaps a decade 152 8,3 | Peshitto New Testament in A.D. 411. Tatian with his Syriac 153 8,3 | of heresy written about A.D. 453 he relates (1:20) that 154 8,4 | Pontus. He was born about A.D. 85 and grew up to be a man 155 8,4 | Paul. He went to Rome about A.D. 138 and gave money to the 156 8,4 | Antioch, who flourished about A.D. 181-90, wrote a treatise, 157 8,4 | Marcion in the same decade (A.D. 181-89) in his books Against 158 8,4 | probably at Rome, about A.D. 180-90, but now lost (Church 159 8,4 | three books, written about A.D. 200 (198-202). This was 160 8,4 | pieces?”~ Hippolytus, about A.D. 230, deals with him briefly 161 9,1 | written probably between A.D. 169 and 176, certainly by 162 9,1 | Church History iv. 26. 3), in A.D. r67-68. Polycrates of Ephesus, 163 9,1 | controversy was resumed about A.D. r9o, speaks of Melito as 164 9,1 | can trace it fell between A.D. 167 and 190.~ The new use 165 9,2 | perhaps at Alexandria, between A.D. 177 and 180. Both the work 166 9,2 | Apology. Philip of Side (ca. A.D. 430) also mentions him as 167 9,2 | things that existed only in A.D. 177-80.~ In A.D. 914 Arethas, 168 9,2 | only in A.D. 177-80.~ In A.D. 914 Arethas, the learned 169 9,2 | on Plato, not long after A.D. 180. Although this is possible, 170 9,3 | 27), which took place in A.D. 180, it must have been written 171 9,3 | Western writer who died about A.D. 325, who in his Divine Institutes 172 10,1 | Catholic Church.~ About A.D. 180 Christian leaders, hard 173 10,1 | survived the persecution of A.D. 177. Irenaeus thus knew 174 10,2 | 3), in whose episcopate, A.D. 175-89, he evidently wrote 175 10,3 | writers like John of Damascus, A.D. 675-749, but some of the 176 10,4 | thence to Rome, perhaps about A.D. 155-60, and later returning 177 10,4 | Eleutherus was bishop of Rome (A.D. 174-89), probably about 178 10,4 | 174-89), probably about A.D. 180.~ The real motive of 179 10,4 | sects. Agrippa Castor, about A.D. 135, had begun the literary 180 10,4 | bishop of Corinth (ca. A.D. 170), wrote a letter to 181 10,4 | twenty-five years before (ca. A.D. 150).~ The Memoirs have 182 10,4 | immediately by Irenaeus, A.D. 18 r-89, in his great work 183 10,4 | Christian History, written about A.D. 430 but now for the most 184 10,4 | 60] and Photius, about A.D. 890 (Bibliotheca, cod. 232), 185 11,1 | school came probably about A.D. I80 a young man named Titus 186 11,3 | to assist Pantaenus about A.D. 190, and actively taught 187 11,3 | from prison to Antioch, A.D. 211, he sent it by Clement ( 188 11,3 | to Origen not later than A.D. 217, Alexander speaks of 189 11,3 | have occurred not far from A.D. 215. Our last glimpse of 190 11,3 | Cappadocian Caesarea in A.D. 211, strengthening and building 191 11,3 | Alexandria, that is, by A.D. 202.~ The Protrepticus, 192 12,1 | its peak. He was born m (A.D. 184-85. His father was a 193 12,1 | persecution of Severus, A.D. zoz, which had driven Clement 194 12,1 | History vi. 19. 15). In A.D. 215 Caracalla's furious 195 12,1 | the school, probably about A.D. 217. About this time Origen 196 12,1 | persecution of Maximin, A.D. 235-38, may have driven 197 12,1 | Caesarea, but perhaps in Tyre, A.D. 254, at the age of sixty-nine.~ 198 12,1 | return to Alexandria, in A.D. 217, or soon after, he made 199 12,2 | notes in a hand of about A.D. 600, at the end of Esther 200 12,2 | in the seventh century (A.D. 638), for in 616-17 Paul 201 12,3 | made very early, and by A.D. 500, in the hands of Procopius 202 12,4 | translation published in Rome in A.D. 398-99 by the diligent Rufinus, 203 12,4 | Maximin then just beginning (A.D. 235). Both are fortunately 204 12,5 | generally referred to about A.D. 178, and it has long since 205 12,5 | Against Celsus was written in A.D. 246-48 and is fortunately 206 12,7 | of Rome, condemned him in A.D. 400), but no man had more 207 13,1 | West. He was born about A.D. 170 (165-75) and spent his 208 13,1 | on August 13, probably A.D. 236.~ ~ 209 13,2 | done principally between A.D. 200 and 235. The inscription 210 13,3 | in four books, written in A.D. 203-4, which is complete 211 13,4 | wrote it, or soon after A.D. 200, Hippolytus had written 212 13,4 | heresy-Epiphanius, Philastrius [A.D. 383], and the author of 213 13,4 | of John, probably about A.D. 204-5. This book is sometimes 214 13,4 | Against Artemon, written about A.D. 23o-certainly after the 215 13,5 | Antichrist, written about A.D. 200. It was written in reply 216 13,5 | her son Alexander Severus, A.D. 222-35. Only a few Greek 217 13,6 | chronicler. As early as A.D. 222-23 he had written his 218 13,6 | Pascha computus), written in A.D. 242-43 and wrongly ascribed 219 13,6 | corrected form of it. But now in A.D. 234 he wrote his Chronicle ( 220 13,6 | history from the Creation to A.D. 234, the date of its composition. 221 13,6 | had recently appeared in A.D. 22 1. Hippolytus shared 222 13,7 | written probably about A.D. 215, in the last part of 223 13,9 | on the Upper Euphrates in A.D. 195, one of his officers 224 13,9 | after the Bar-Cochba War, in A.D. 135. His name was Julius 225 13,9 | knew Origen and, as late as A.D. 240, exchanged letters with 226 13,9 | and a man of letters.~ In A.D. 221r he published his Chronography, 227 13,9 | letter is that written about A.D. 240 to Origen to show that 228 13,10| Soter, bishop of Rome from A.D. 166 to 174) ; Dionysius, 229 13,10| Dionysius, bishop of Rome, A.D. 259-68; and Dionysius the 230 13,10| bishop of Alexandria from A.D. 247 to 264, who has been 231 13,10| there and leave the city (A.D. 230), his assistant Heraclas 232 13,10| school, but a year later, A.D. 231, Heraclas became bishop 233 13,10| to Germanus, written in A.D. 259, in defense of his course 234 13,10| toleration edict of Gallienus, A.D. 260, made it possible for 235 13,10| such scenes Dionysius died, A.D. 264-65. The new bishop of 236 14,2 | born in Carthage, about A.D. 155-60, of good family, 237 14,2 | first year of Commodus, A.D. 180, when twelve Christians-seven 238 14,3 | Apologetic Writings.~ In A.D. 197-98 there was another 239 14,3 | book of this same year, A.D. 197, was his great Apology ( 240 14,3 | Severus, fourteen years later, A.D. 211, and the accession of 241 14,3 | bishop of Lyons, who died in A.D. 840, to a church there, 242 14,6 | a Christian probably by A.D. 195, perhaps a little earlier. 243 14,6 | Tertullian's death, soon after A.D. 222-23, he had left the 244 14,6 | suffered in the persecution of A.D. 202-3, is not certain; it 245 14,7 | bishop of pCarthage from A.D. 250 to 258. Jerome reports 246 14,8 | did so ably 1. Greek in A.D. 178, in his critique of 247 14,8 | senator and was consul in A.D. 143 but declined the proconsulship`' 248 14,8 | Aurelius, among others, from A.D. 143 on. The rest of the 249 14,8 | to show strength, about A.D. 150-60.~ ~ 250 14,9 | 11 and v. 1, begun about A.D. 303) and by Jerome (On Illustrious 251 14,9 | Apologeticus was written in A.D. 197 and so much resembles 252 14,9 | example, written toward A.D. zso, and also by Xystus 253 14,9 | Novatian, written between A.D. 253 and 758 and preserved 254 14,9 | written sometime between A.D. 238 and 249, when the empire 255 14,9 | Trinity was written about A.D. 245, the Octavius may be 256 14,9 | mention by Lactantius, about A.D. 303, and by Jerome has been 257 14,9 | of Cirta inscriptions of A.D. 211-17, as belonging to 258 14,10| proably at Carthage, about A.D. 210, or soon after. His 259 14,10| to his conversion, about A.D. 246. He entered into the 260 14,10| Decius became emperor in A.D. 249 and soon after issu 261 14,10| Goths m the Dobrudja in A.D. 251. There was a temporary 262 14,10| the new emperor Valerian (A.D. 253-60), whose first edict, 263 14,10| whose first edict, of A.D. 257, banished the higher 264 14,10| following day, September 14, A.D. 258, he was tried, convicted, 265 14,11| months, from December of A.D. 249 to March of 251. Even 266 14,11| Lucius as bishop of Rome in A.D. 254 and continued in that 267 14,11| enough. In the spring of A.D. 255 a council of African 268 14,12| conversion, probably in A.D. 246.~ His second treatise, 269 14,12| was probably written in A.D. 249.~ In the third treatise, 270 14,12| Carthage, that is, early in A.D. 251. The one On the Lapsed 271 14,12| returned to Carthage in A.D. 251, was probably later 272 14,12| Goths), probably late in A.D. 251 or early in 252.~ The 273 14,12| It was written early in A.D. 256.~ The tenth, On Jealousy 274 14,13| though composed as early as A.D. 359), includes also a list 275 14,13| to Victor, bishop of Rome A.D. 189-99, of whom Jerome said 276 14,13| chronological work composed early in A.D. 243 to correct Hippolytus, 277 14,13| Roman bishop Xystus II, A.D. 257-58, but most scholars 278 14,13| probably written about A.D. 400 in southern Gaul by 279 14,15| martyrdom of Fabianus, in A.D. 250, he had charge of the 280 14,15| persecution under Gallus (A.D. 251-53) or Valerian (253- 281 14,15| Valerian's persecution, A.D. 257 (Church History iv. 282 14,16| was first composed, about A.D. 359.~ As early as the time 283 14,17| for the year ***2343, or A.D. 327, Against the Heathen 284 14,18| was born not later than A.D. 250. Probably his first 285 14,18| be dated before or about A.D. 250. There is no record 286 14,18| probably occurred not far from A.D. 325.~ Jerome, in On Illustrious 287 14,19| Constamtine at Milan in A.D. 313, and these touches were 288 14,19| work Against the Heathen, A.D. 304-10.~ The Institutes 289 14,20| in prison for six years, A.D. 305-11, and was probably 290 14,20| revision of the Institutes, in A.D. 313. The book On the Deaths 291 16 | Illustrious Men 75.~ [73] A.D. Nock in American Journal 292 16 | work On Ecstasy, written in A.D. 202-3 to 204-5, and to have