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    • Christian writer of the early Church

      • Hegesippus (Ἅγιος Ἡγήσιππος; c. 110 – c.180 AD), also known as Hegesippus the Nazarene, was a Christian writer of the early Church who, in spite of his Greek name, may have been a Jewish convert and certainly wrote against heresies of the Gnostics and of Marcion.
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  2. Hegesippus (Ἅγιος Ἡγήσιππος; c. 110 – c.180 AD), also known as Hegesippus the Nazarene, was a Christian writer of the early Church who, in spite of his Greek name, may have been a Jewish convert and certainly wrote against heresies of the Gnostics and of Marcion.

  3. The Journey to Faith. Chronicle: Hegesippuss Magnum Opus. Dedication to Apostolic Purity. Legacy of Hegesippus. A Model of Perseverance. Greek Anthology 6.124, by Hegesippus. Hegesippus, A Greek Theologan, Antiquity Unveiled, Spirit Testimony, pgs 131 133. 4th-century BCE Kandaulos – A Stew by Hegesippus of Tarentum.

  4. Hegesippus. Fragments from His Five Books of Commentaries on the Acts of the Church.-----[a.d. 170.] One of the sub-Apostolic age, a contemporary of Justin and of the martyrs of "the good Aurelius," we must yet distinguish Hegesippus from the apologists. He is the earliest of the Church's chroniclers-we can hardly call him a historian.

  5. Hegesippus (chronicler), c. 110-c. 180 [Author] To find similar items, select the checkboxes next to the characteristics you are interested in, then select the 'Find similar' button. Manuscripts from England

  6. Hegesippus. one of the earliest writers on Church History (between A.D. 150 and 180), was originally a Jew, born near the beginning of the 2nd century. He was converted to the Christian faith, and came to Rome about A.D. 168, where he died, according to the Alexandrine Chronicle, in the reign of Commodus, about A.D. 180.

  7. Hegesippus, father of church history. Hegesippus (1), commonly known as the father of church history, although his works, except a few fragments which will be found in Routh ( Rel. Sacr. i. pp. 207–219) and in Grabe ( Spicil. ii. 203–214), have perished.

  8. chronicle which dates Hegesippus’ death to the reign of Commodus. 14. Realistically then, one would assume Heggesippus to have been born no earlier than the second decade of the second century, circa 110 CE. 15. While acknowledging the complex issues regarding Eusebius’ “fidelity to the text quoted,” 16. no in depth investigation of the ...