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Géza Vermes

 
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Géza Vermes (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈɡeːzɒ ˈvɛr̪mɛʃ], born 22 June 1924) is a Jewish Hungarian scholar and writer on religious history, particularly Jewish and Christian. He is a noted authority on the Dead Sea Scrolls and other ancient works in Aramaic, and on the life and religion of Jesus. Some describe him as the greatest Jesus scholar of his time,[1] Vermes' written work on Jesus focuses principally on Jesus the Jew, as seen in the broader context of the narrative scope of Jewish history and theology, while questioning the basis of some Christian teachings on Jesus.[2]

Contents

Biography

He was born in Makó, Hungary, in 1924 to Jewish parents. All three were baptised as Roman Catholics when he was seven. His mother and journalist father died in the Holocaust. After the Second World War, he became a priest, studied first in Budapest and then at the College St Albert and the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, where he read Oriental history and languages and in 1953 obtained a doctorate in theology with a dissertation on the historical framework of the Dead Sea Scrolls. He left the Catholic Church in 1957; and, reasserting his Jewish identity, came to Britain and took up a teaching post at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. He married Pamela Hobson in 1958. In 1965 he joined the Faculty of Oriental Studies at Oxford University, rising to become the first professor of Jewish Studies before his retirement in 1991. After the death of his first wife in 1993, he married Margaret Unarska in 1996. He has a son studying biochemistry at Somerville College.

Academic career

Vermes was one of the first scholars to examine the Dead Sea Scrolls after their discovery in 1947, and is the author of the standard translation into English of the Dead Sea Scrolls: The Dead Sea Scrolls in English, 1962, re-issued in London by Penguin Classics, as The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English, 2004, ISBN 0-14-044952-3.

He is now Professor Emeritus of Jewish Studies and Emeritus Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford but continues to teach at the Oriental Institute in Oxford. He has edited the Journal of Jewish Studies[3] since 1971, and since 1991 he has been director of the Oxford Forum for Qumran Research at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies.

Professor Vermes is a Fellow of the British Academy; a Fellow of the European Academy of Arts, Sciences and Humanities; holder of an Oxford D. Litt. (1988) and of honorary doctorates from the University of Edinburgh (1989), University of Durham (1990) and University of Sheffield (1994). He was awarded the Wilhelm Bacher Memorial Medal by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1996).

Selected publications

For more details see his autobiography, Providential Accidents, London, SCM Press, 1998 ISBN 0-334-02722-5; Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham MD, 1998 ISBN 0-8476-9340-6.

References

  1. ^ Crace, John (March 18, 2008). "Geza Vermes: Questions arising". The Guardian. http://education.guardian.co.uk/academicexperts/story/0,,2266141,00.html. Retrieved on 2008-03-19. ; G. Richard Wheatcroft review of The Authentic Gospel of Jesus. For a dissenting view, see Wilson, Andrew N. (March 19, 2008). "Jesus is ill-served by this literary detective". The Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/anwilson/3556252/Jesus-is-ill-served-by-this-literary-detective.html. Retrieved on 2008-12-16. 
  2. ^ Harrington, Daniel J. (March 24, 2008). "No Evidence? The Resurrection by Geza Vermes". America. http://www.americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=10691. Retrieved on 2008-12-19. 
  3. ^ JJS Online.

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