Thallus was an early historian who wrote in Koine Greek. He wrote a three-volume history of the Mediterranean world from before the Trojan War to the 167th Olympiad, c. 112-109 BC. Most of his work, like the vast majority of ancient literature, has been lost, although some of his writings were quoted by Sextus Julius Africanus in his History of the World.
The works are considered important by some Christians because they believe them to confirm the historicity of Jesus and provide non-Christian validation of the Gospel accounts: a reference to a historical eclipse, attributed to Thallus, has been taken as a mention of the darkness described in the Synoptic gospels account of the death of Jesus, although an eclipse could not have taken place during Passover when this took place. A common view in modern scholarship is that the Crucifixion darkness is a literary creation rather than a historical event.
2015 views · 3 hrs ago | Tag Type:
Name
Videos on 'THALLUS' (4)
11:01
733 views · 28 mins ago |
6 years ago
1 of 4
733
1570024722
1769354904
Secular Christian history is Unreliable. Josephus, Pliny, Tacitus, Seutonius, Thallus, Lucian & Celsus' prove nothing! - TruthSurge
000661
1
4:40
269 views · 2 days ago |
6 years ago
2 of 4
269
1570025421
1769215420
Pliny (110 AD), Tacitus, Seutonius, Thallus, Lucian & Celsus are cited as evidence for Jesus' existence - TruthSurge
000280
2
2:40
524 views · 3 hrs ago |
6 years ago
3 of 4
524
1570025438
1769344689
Thallus, quoted by Africanus, then Eusebius (d. 340 AD) confirmed Earthquake at Jesus' Crucifixion - TruthSurge
000160
3
26:02
586 views · 1 day ago |
6 years ago
4 of 4
586
1571486082
1769258914
Tacitus (56-120 AD), Suetonius (69-126), Pliny (61-113), Lucian (120-192) & Thallus do NOT prove an Historical Jesus ever Existed in 33 AD - Godless Engineer
001562
4
The above search results may not be entirely accurate or suitable. All video search results are automatically generated using a string matching technique. This requires finding strings and/or phrases that match a pattern approximately, rather than exactly.
Search again?.
TEXT SEARCH | VIDEO • NEWS • ARTICLE