000 02224nam a2200301 a 4500
005 20260119070423.0
008 2021-12-15 14:48:46
020 _a9781602586550
041 _a0 eng
082 _a229.925
082 _bF825-M44
100 _aBovon, Francois
100 _d(1938-2013)
100 _eAuthor
245 _aThe acts of Philip
245 _bA new translation
245 _cFrancois Bovon and Christopher R. Matthews
260 _aU.S.A
260 _bBaylor University
260 _c2012
300 _a114tr.
300 _bpaperback
300 _c22cm
520 _aFrançois Bovon and Christopher Matthews utilize manuscript evidence gathered within the last half-century to provide a new translation of the apocryphal Acts of Philip. Discovered by Bovon in 1974 at the Xenophontos monastery in Greece, the manuscript is widely known as one of the most unabridged copies of the Acts yet discovered. Bovon and Matthews' new translation incorporates this witness to the Greek text, which sheds new light on the history of earliest Christianity. François Bovon and Christopher Matthews utilize manuscript evidence gathered within the last half-century to provide a new translation of the apocryphal Acts of Philip. Discovered by Bovon in 1974 at the Xenophontos monastery in Greece, the manuscript is widely known as one of the most unabridged copies of the Acts yet discovered. Bovon and Matthews' new translation incorporates this witness to the Greek text, which sheds new light on the history of earliest Christianity. François Bovon and Christopher Matthews utilize manuscript evidence gathered within the last half-century to provide a new translation of the apocryphal Acts of Philip. Discovered by Bovon in 1974 at the Xenophontos monastery in Greece, the manuscript is widely known as one of the most unabridged copies of the Acts yet discovered. Bovon and Matthews' new translation incorporates this witness to the Greek text, which sheds new light on the history of earliest Christianity.
650 _aApocryphal books -- Criticism, interpretation, etc
856 4 _uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/ImageCover/2021/12/15/_4829846176_140.jpg
_yCover Image
957 _a211001 TKH
999 _c6129
_d6129