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Judas Iscariot

2010
Clodagh Weldon
exaly   +2 more sources

The Mediaeval Legend of Judas Iscariot

PMLA, 1916
The legendary Life of Judas the Betrayer, based, it is usually said, on the Greek myth of Œdipus, is found in almost every language and country of mediæval Europe. It was written down in Latin as early as the twelfth century. By the end of the thirteenth century it was turned into the vernacular in lands as far apart as Wales, Catalonia, and Bohemia ...
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Judas Iscariot and Abba Saqqara

Journal of Biblical Literature, 1978
L'A. part des hypotheses sur la signification du surnom Iscariot faites par C. C. Torrey en 1943 (arameen ishqarya=hypocrite), Harald Ingholt en 1953 (arameen isqara=tete rouge). Il estime qu'il faut en effet chercher un mot arameen, issu de la racine saqor=couleur rouge.
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Who Was Judas Iscariot?

2006
Abstract In my courses on the New Testament I teach two different approaches to the early Christian Gospels. One involves looking at these books as pieces of literature, seeing how they portray Jesus. Each of our surviving accounts of Jesus’ life has a distinctive message, unique to the views of its author.
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The English Ballad of Judas Iscariot

PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 1916
Unusual interest attaches to the ballad of Judas, not only because the manuscript in which it is found antedates by two centuries the manuscript of any other English popular ballad, but also because the story it tells is very nearly unique. The manuscript, Trinity College, Cambridge, B. 14.
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