Kirsopp Lake
English New Testament scholar, historian, and professor (1872–1946) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kirsopp Lake (7 April 1872 – 10 November 1946) was an English New Testament scholar, Church historian, Greek palaeographer, and Winn Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Harvard Divinity School.
Kirsopp Lake | |
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Born | (1872-04-07)7 April 1872 Southampton, England |
Died | 10 November 1946(1946-11-10) (aged 74) |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | Lincoln College, Oxford |
Spouses |
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Awards | Burkitt Medal for Biblical Studies from the British Academy |
Scientific career | |
Fields | New Testament, history of Christianity, textual criticism |
Institutions | Leiden University Harvard University |
Academic advisors | F. C. Conybeare J. Rendel Harris |
Notable students | Adriaan de Buck Erwin R. Goodenough James Luther Adams |
He had an uncommon breadth of interests. His main lines of research were the history of early Christianity, textual criticism of the New Testament, and Greek palaeography, in which fields he published definitive monographs. He also studied the historical figure of Jesus and wrote about theology and archaeology (especially in his later life). He edited and translated a two-volume anthology of ancient Christian literature and the first five books of Eusebius' Church History for the Loeb Classical Library.
He is best known for his massive five-volume work The Beginnings of Christianity—an edition, translation, commentary, and study of the Acts of the Apostles—that he conceived and edited with F. J. Foakes-Jackson, and for the ten-volume series of Dated Greek Manuscripts to the year 1200—edited with his second wife, Silva New, one of the leading repertoires of facsimiles of Greek manuscripts. He also published works about Italian monasteries, the textual tradition of the New Testament, and the Caesarean text of the Gospel of Mark.