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Loading... The Coptic Gnostic Library: A Complete Edition of the Nag Hammadi Codices ( 5 vol set)by James M. Robinson
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The Coptic Gnostic Library continues where the Dead Sea Scrolls left off. Our main sources of information for the Gnostic religion are the so-called Nag Hammadi codices, written in Coptic. These were unearthed in 1945 near the town of Nag Hammadi in Upper Egypt. The texts literally begin where the Dead Sea Scrolls end. Their discovery is considered equally significant as the Dead Sea Scrolls themselves, bringing to light a long-hidden wealth of information and insights into early Judaism and the roots of Christianity. Furthermore, these writings clearly show that the Gnostic religion was not only a force that interacted with early Christianity and Judaism in their formative periods, but also a significant religious movement in its own right. The Coptic Gnostic Library contains all the texts of the Nag Hammadi codices, both in the original Coptic and in translation. Each text has its own introduction, and full indexes are provided. The Coptic Gnostic Library is the starting point for all research into ancient Gnosticism. It is the result of decades of dedicated research by the most distinguished international scholars in this field.The Coptic Gnostic Library is the only authoritative edition of many of the Coptic writings of the Gnostics from the first centuries AD. It was originally published by Brill in fourteen hardback volumes as part of the Nag Hammadi (and Manichaean) Studies series between 1975 and 1995, under the general editorship of James M. Robinson. Now, for the first time, it is available in paperback, at a fraction of the price of the original hardback editions.- Photomechanical paperback reprint of the original 14 hardback volumes- Complete and unabridged: 5 volumes, totaling approximately 5.000 pages- Facing Coptic texts and English translations, Introductions, Notes, and Indexes- Only available as a set No library descriptions found. |
![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)299.932Religions Other Religions By Region/Civilization Other Syncretic religions and religions of modern origin GnosticismLC ClassificationRatingAverage:![]()
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One may read across two pages from Coptic to English. If you cannot find (or afford) the [Nag Hammadi Codices] volumes ($500 each with photographs of the original manuscripts and brief introductions) these careful transcriptions copy and number each line of each page, are the product of painstaking peer-reviewed scholarship, and are an essential tool for study of the four largely Gnostic libraries found at in the mid-1940's near the village of Nag Hammadi in Egypt. (Not to be confused with the Dead Sea Scrolls which were tubular, older, Jewish, and not in any form of Egyptian.)
Brill, the publisher, occasionally puts this set on sale: if you do not go to professional conferences, ask your Coptic or Religion professor if they could help you purchase the books at a discount (you will likely have to wait until the end of the year). While you have your checkbook out, if you buy these volumes a copy of [[Walter Crum]]'s [Coptic Dictionary] and [[Walter Bauer]]'s [Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament]] are both musts, as is a good contemporary Coptic Grammar ([[Bentley Layton]]'s is a good place to start) -- and [[Gregory Sterling]]'s [Coptic Paradigms] and [[Richard Smith]]'s [Concise Coptic-English Lexicon] can't hurt either. (They are each light, short books which will carry you through the majority of your translation work ... until you hit a Greek loan word.)
Recommended for students of Coptic, scholars interested in Roman-era philosophy and religion, and specialists on Gnosticism, early Christianity, and the history of Judaism. If you just want to read these in English either Robinson's or Meyer's translation will serve.
-Kushana (