Sprache:
Italienisch
Erscheinungsjahr:
2024
Titel der Quelle:
Rivista Biblica
Angaben zur Quelle:
72,1 (2024) 63-91; 74: 171-203
Schlagwort(e):
Herod Agrippa
;
New Testament. Biography
;
Queens
;
Women in the New Testament
Kurzfassung:
It is hypothesized that the anonymous woman known in the gospels as the Hemorroissa can be identified with Cyprus, the wife of Mark Julius Agrippa, the one who, a few years after the death of Jesus, would become Herod Agrippa I, the last king of Judea from 41 to 44 AD. The research brings back a married Emorroissa, with a child, transgressive and courageous, but above all with the possibility of having a name, after centuries of anonymity. The work is divided into two parts: the first dedicated to the analysis of the figure of Cyprus and the second to that of the Haemorrhaged woman and the comparison of the two characters.
Kurzfassung:
The present work proposes the specific historical hypothesis according to which the anonymous woman known in the gospels as the bleeding woman (haemorrhoissa) can be identified with Cypros, the wife of Marcus Julius Agrippa, the one who, a few years after the death of Jesus, would become Herod Agrippa I, the last king of Judea from 41 to 44 AD. The research brings back a married emorroissa, with a child, transgressive and courageous, but above all with the possibility of having a name, after centuries of anonymity.
Anmerkung:
With an English abstract.
URL:
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