To this: More evidence that supports the fact that Jesus the Christ is pure myth and fable. For being considered the most influential person in all of history, it is strange that of the 29 first century historians who existed at the time of Jesus, none of them mention Jesus at all... A learned friend responds: 1. Philo Judaeus A philosopher, not a historian. 2. Apollonius of Tyana Virtually no writings survive 3. Valerius Maximus Not a historian - wrote a manual on "historical tales for rhetoricians" based largely on Roman history 4. Marcus Manilius Not a historian - a poet and astrologer 5. Velleius Paterculus A historian, but dead before the crucifixion (19 BC - 31 AD) 6. Quintus Curtius Rufus Only surviving work is an autobiography of Alexander the Great. Oddly, Jesus doesn't appear. 7. Pomponius Mela Not a historian - a geographer 8. Lucius Annaeus Seneca Not a historian - a very bright man, but not a historian 9. Petronius Arbiter Not a historian - a satirist 10. C. Musonius Rufus Not a historian -- a philosopher, none of whose works now exist. 11. Aulus Persius Flaccus Not a historian - a poet and satirist 12. Marcus Annaeus Lucanus Only surviving historical work concerns the Roman Civil War. Oddly, does not mention Jesus 13. Hero(n) of Alexandria Not a historian - a mathematician and engineer 14. Geminus Not a historian - a mathematician and astronomer 15. Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella Not a historian -- a writer on agriculture. 16. Cleomedes Not a historian - an astronomer 17. Phaedrus Not a historian - a writer of fables in imitation of Aesop 18. Dioscorides Not a historian - a physician and pharmacologist 19. Plutarch of Chaeronea A historian whose only extant works in this field focus on Alexander, Pliny and Herodotus. Oddly, does not mention Jesus 20.Justus of Tiberias A historian whose work is lost and is anyway described by Photius as very brief and largely fictitious. 21. Pliny the Elder (Gaius Plinius Secundus) His history is lost; the surviving work is a National History, discussing drugs etc. 22. Dio Chrysostom (Cocceianus Dio) Regarded as a historian by his contemporaries but no historical works survive 23. Marcus Fabius Quintilianus Only extant work is a textbook on rhetoric 24. Publius Papinius Publius Papinius **Statius**, you mean? A poet, not a historian. 25. Dio of Prusa Same person as Dio Chrysostom!!! 26. Silius Italicus Not a historian - a poet. Only surviving work an epic based on the Punic wars 27. Sextus Julius Frontinus Not a historian - a soldier and administrator 28. Marcus Valerius Martialus Not a historian - read his "Epigrams". 29. Hierocles of Alexandria Writing in the 5th Century AD by which time Christianity was the official religion of the Empire!!! You see? You'll accept any old piffle if it fits in with your prejudices. The original poster trawls anti-Christian websites and just accepts everything he reads entirely uncritically - he can't accept that there is a difference between 'fact' and his prejudices. Such people are very, very disreputable. Atheism does not benefit from trying to misrepresent the past, and it injures the unwary.
top of page