scholarly journals McKechnie, Paul (2019). Christianizing Asia Minor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press / Mitchell, Stephen & Pilhofer, Philipp (eds.). (2019). Early Christianity in Asia Minor and Cyprus. From the Margins to the Mainstream. Leiden & Boston: Brill

Author(s):  
Christian Marek
2020 ◽  
pp. 0142064X2096265
Author(s):  
Jonah Bissell

The provenance of the Infancy Gospel of Thomas (IGT) remains an open question to scholars of early Christianity. Egypt, Palestine, Syria and Asia Minor have been proffered as the most likely settings of origin (with the latter two favored especially in recent years). The educational scenes in IGT may provide helpful hints of the text’s original setting. Paul Foster, however, in comparing the details of such scenes with depictions of education in literary sources, concludes that they offer no features suggestive of a particular setting of origin. However, comparison of such scenes with material depictions of ancient education may provide more geographical precision. A reexamination of the text’s educational scenes vis-à-vis material-cultural evidence suggests that Egypt should be reconsidered as a viable setting of origin for IGT.


1992 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel H. Williams

Few historians of early Christianity would dissent from the view that Hilary of Poitiers was the west's most able and articulate anti-Arian apologist of the 360s. In the course of this bishop's exile in Asia Minor (356–360) and return to the west, there is evidence of a substantial literary activity, most of which was circulated soon after his death and survives to the present day. Works such as his letters to the emperor Constantius II, expecially the so-called In Constantium, his collected dossier against Valens and Ursacius, and his theological treatises De synodis and De trinitate, attained for this once obscure bishop from Gaul a position of preeminence in the minds of the next generation of anti-Arians.


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