Description
About the Author
Jerry H. Bentley is the Director at the Center for World History at the University of Hawaii, Manoa and founding editor of the Journal of World History. His research interests include the cultural history of early modern Europe and the cross-cultural interactions in world history.
Reviews
"Jerry Bentley's case study ... demonstrates the seriousness and originality of Humanist scholarship. His introduction builds from the Postillae of Nicholas of Lyra a sympathetic account of late medieval biblical scholarship. The four solid chapters that follow examine the ways in which Lorenzo Valla, the editors of the Complutensian Polyglot, Erasmus, and Erasmus's critics attacked the text of the Greek New Testament. Bentley shows exactly how difficult and dangerous it was 'to set aside the medieval tradition of New Testament study and replace it with a brand of scholarship that aimed to recover or reconstruct the assumptions, values, and doctrines not of the Middle Ages, but of the earliest Christians' (p.31)."--Anthony Grafton, Speculum "This important book is more than its broad title and more specific subtile suggest. It is, of course a treatment of New Testament scholarship in the Renaissance, but in very large part it is both a description and an analysis of the beginnings of modern New Testament philological studies and especially of New Testament textural criticism."--Eldon Jay Epp, Journal of Biblical Literature
Book Information
ISBN 9780691155609
Author Jerry H. Bentley
Format Paperback
Page Count 264
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publisher Princeton University Press
Weight(grams) 312g