Paul's Large Letters: Paul's Autographic Subscription in the Light of Ancient Epistolary Conventions
Paul's Large Letters: Paul's Autographic Subscription in the Light of Ancient Epistolary Conventions

Paul's Large Letters: Paul's Autographic Subscription in the Light of Ancient Epistolary Conventions

in Library of New Testament Studies

by Steve Reece

Pages 256
Publisher T&T Clark
Published 2016
ISBN-13 9780567669063
At the end of several of his letters the apostle Paul claims to be penning a summary and farewell greeting in his own hand: 1 Corinthians, Galatians, Philemon, cf. Colossians, 2 Thessalonians. Paul's claims raise some interesting questions about his letter-writing practices. Did he write any complete letters himself, or did he always dictate to a scribe? How much did his scribes contribute to the composition of his letters? Did Paul make the effort to proofread and correct what he had dictated? What was the purpose of Paul's autographic subscriptions? What was Paul's purpose in calling attention to their autographic nature? Why did Paul write in large letters in the subscription of his letter to the Galatians? Why did he call attention to this peculiarity of his handwriting?

A good source of answers to these questions can be found among the primary documents that have survived from around the time of Paul, a large number of which have been discovered over the past two centuries and in fact continue to be discovered to this day. From around the time of Paul there are extant several dozen letters from the caves and refuges in the desert of eastern Judaea (in Hebrew, Aramaic, Nabataean, Greek, and Latin), several hundred from the remains of a Roman military camp in Vindolanda in northern England (in Latin), and several thousand from the sands of Middle and Upper Egypt (in Greek, Latin, and Egyptian Demotic). Reece has examined almost all these documents, many of them unpublished and rarely read, with special attention to their handwriting styles, in order to shed some light on these technical aspects of Paul's letter-writing conventions.

  • Table of contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Abbreviations
  • Part I: Paul's Autographic Subscriptions
    • Chapter 1: Introduction
    • Chapter 2: The Laboriousness of Letter Writing in Antiquity
    • Chapter 3: The Greek Literary Letter-Writing Tradition
    • Chapter 4: The Latin Literary Letter-Writing Tradition
    • Chapter 5: The Jewish Literary Letter-Writing Tradition
    • Chapter 6: Paul's Letter Writing in the Light of Contemporary Epistolary Conventions
    • Chapter 7: The Function of Autographic Subscriptions in Ancient Letters
  • Part II: Paul's Large Letters
    • Chapter 8: "With What Large Letters" in Galatians 6.11
    • Chapter 9: Letters in Various Languages Excavated in Eastern Judaea
    • Chapter 10: Latin Letters Excavated in Northern England
    • Chapter 11: Greek Letters Excavated in Middle and Upper Egypt
    • Chapter 12: Some Conclusions and Remaining Questions
  • Appendix I: Various Translations of Galatians 6.11
  • Appendix II: Various Commentaries on Galatians 6.11
  • Appendix III: Calculations of the Total Number of Published Documentary Letters From Antiquity
  • Appendix IV: Demographic Survey of Those Who Write Subscriptions on Documentary Letters in Large Hands
  • Appendix V: Evidence of Shorthand Writing in Antiquity
  • Illustrations
  • Bibliography
  • Indexes

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