Bibliography
| Title: Greeks and Barbarians in Josephus Secondary Title: Hellenism in the Land of Israel Pages: 244-262 Type: Book Section Year: 2001 Abstract: Agrippa's speech tried to persuade the people of Jerusalem not to revolt against the Romans, and it was expressed in the way of pragmatism rather than a consent to the imperial ideology. The works of Josephus are thus more complex than are often thought, and their complexity was even more obvious if one compares his works with the Hebrew and Aramaic literatures in the eastern half of the empire around the first century AD. Keywords: Greek, Greeks, Hellenism; Josephus Flavius; Eretz-Israel |
