Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors

Whilst the vast majority of Christian scholarship in antiquity focusses on the historical and the theological person of Jesus, as well as Christian discipleship, it is clear that Judas scholarship is in the minority. This dissertation sets out to study and analyse literary depictions of Judas Iscari...

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Main Author: Matthews, Celia-Jayne
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59214/
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author Matthews, Celia-Jayne
author_facet Matthews, Celia-Jayne
author_sort Matthews, Celia-Jayne
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Whilst the vast majority of Christian scholarship in antiquity focusses on the historical and the theological person of Jesus, as well as Christian discipleship, it is clear that Judas scholarship is in the minority. This dissertation sets out to study and analyse literary depictions of Judas Iscariot in antiquity – here, meaning from the New Testament writings (Paul and the Gospels), and a selection of texts from the first century through to the thirteenth century CE. As well as examining how Judas is depicted in these texts, and what sort of role he plays within the overarching narrative, I will also consider how he is used by early writers in light of particular themes, such as anti-Semitism or anti-Judaism. Whilst most of these texts are by no means scholarly or academic, the literature provides a basis for understanding the role of Judas, and in turn, the Jews, within early Christian understanding. The methods used throughout this thesis are primarily historical – that is, looking at these texts from a historical perspective, analysing themes that these texts have in common, how they link together, and how anti-Judaism shows itself in these texts through the writers’ uses of Judas Iscariot. My research shows that later writers take aspects of judas found in earlier texts, such as the Gospels, and exaggerate them in order to push a political agenda against Jews and, subsequently, in favour of Christianity. Of course, this is just a small selection of texts (not inclusive of early artwork or architecture, for example) from antiquity, and should I research a similar topic in the future, to include such examples of Christian culture, and perhaps some later ones, would develop this research further and perhaps produce new or different findings.
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spelling nottingham-592142025-02-28T14:40:01Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59214/ Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors Matthews, Celia-Jayne Whilst the vast majority of Christian scholarship in antiquity focusses on the historical and the theological person of Jesus, as well as Christian discipleship, it is clear that Judas scholarship is in the minority. This dissertation sets out to study and analyse literary depictions of Judas Iscariot in antiquity – here, meaning from the New Testament writings (Paul and the Gospels), and a selection of texts from the first century through to the thirteenth century CE. As well as examining how Judas is depicted in these texts, and what sort of role he plays within the overarching narrative, I will also consider how he is used by early writers in light of particular themes, such as anti-Semitism or anti-Judaism. Whilst most of these texts are by no means scholarly or academic, the literature provides a basis for understanding the role of Judas, and in turn, the Jews, within early Christian understanding. The methods used throughout this thesis are primarily historical – that is, looking at these texts from a historical perspective, analysing themes that these texts have in common, how they link together, and how anti-Judaism shows itself in these texts through the writers’ uses of Judas Iscariot. My research shows that later writers take aspects of judas found in earlier texts, such as the Gospels, and exaggerate them in order to push a political agenda against Jews and, subsequently, in favour of Christianity. Of course, this is just a small selection of texts (not inclusive of early artwork or architecture, for example) from antiquity, and should I research a similar topic in the future, to include such examples of Christian culture, and perhaps some later ones, would develop this research further and perhaps produce new or different findings. 2019-12-10 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59214/1/4337554%20MRes%20Thesis.pdf Matthews, Celia-Jayne (2019) Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors. MA(Res) thesis, University of Nottingham. Judas Iscariot; anti-Judaism; New Testament writers
spellingShingle Judas Iscariot; anti-Judaism; New Testament writers
Matthews, Celia-Jayne
Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors
title Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors
title_full Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors
title_fullStr Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors
title_full_unstemmed Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors
title_short Using Judas: what early depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their authors
title_sort using judas: what early depictions of judas iscariot can tell us about their authors
topic Judas Iscariot; anti-Judaism; New Testament writers
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59214/