„Ty będziesz nazywał się Kefas” (J 1, 42). Kefas i inne aramejskie osobowe nazwy własne w greckim tekście Nowego Testamentu

dc.contributor.authorOstański, Piotr
dc.date.accessioned2024-11-15T14:10:32Z
dc.date.available2024-11-15T14:10:32Z
dc.date.issued2016
dc.description.abstractAramaic background that results from several factors: – the Aramaic language was very popular in Roman Palestine during the first century A.D.; – the Aramaic was Jesus’ mother tongue; – Jesus’ teaching was being recorded in Aramaic and then it circulated among the people; – the oldest Church consisted of Aramaic speaking communities. It is worth remembering that the New Testament authors, when working on the Greek Gospels, they were following their Aramaic language habits. The effects of them were aramaisms in the Greek texts, Aramaic sentence constructions and even Aramaic words rendered by Greek letters. The aim of this paper is to investigate Aramaic anthroponyms, i.e. personal proper names existing in the Greek text of the New Testament. Seven Aramaic personal names beginning with the syllable bar- („son of...”): Barabbas (Matt 27:16), Bariēsous (Acts 13:6), Barnabas (Acts 4:36), Barsabbas (Acts 1:23), Bartholomaios (Mk 3:18), Bartimaios (Mk 10:46) and Simōn Bariōna (Mt 16:17) were analysed; furthermore four Aramaic apostles’ nicknames: Kēphas (John 1:42), Boanērges (Mark 3:17), Thōmas (Mark 3:18) and Thaddaios (3:18), and at last one female name – Tabitha (Acts 9:36). Aramaic names and nicknames recorded in Greek script are one of clever devices that help to localize the text of the Gospel in the multilingual environment of Roman Palestine of the first century A.D. and thereby make it more reliable for a reader. Apart from Aramaic anthroponyms in the Gospels there are also many Aramaic toponyms (geographical proper names), common words and phrases. They will require further research.
dc.identifier.citationWrocławski Przegląd Teologiczny, 2016, R. 24, Nr 2, s. 7-22.
dc.identifier.issn1231-1731
dc.identifier.issn2544-6460
dc.identifier.urihttps://theo-logos.pl/handle/123456789/23694
dc.language.isopl
dc.publisherPapieski Wydział Teologiczny we Wrocławiu
dc.rightsCC-BY-SA - Uznanie autorstwa - Na tych samych warunkach
dc.subjectBiblia
dc.subjectPismo Święte
dc.subjectNowy Testament
dc.subjectjęzyk aramejski
dc.subjectgrecki Nowy Testament
dc.subjectantroponimy
dc.subjectosobowe nazwy własne
dc.subjectbiblistyka
dc.subjectBible
dc.subjectNew Testament
dc.subjectAramaic
dc.subjectGreek New Testament
dc.subjectanthroponyms
dc.subjectbiblical studies
dc.title„Ty będziesz nazywał się Kefas” (J 1, 42). Kefas i inne aramejskie osobowe nazwy własne w greckim tekście Nowego Testamentu
dc.title.alternative“You will be called Kephas” (John 1:42). Aramaic Personal Proper Names in the Greek New Testament
dc.typeArticle

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