This page indexes the individual year in television pages. Each year is annotated with a significant event as a reference point.
1900s – 1920s – 1930s – 1940s – 1950s – 1960s – 1970s – 1980s – 1990s – 2000s – 2010s
(This table follows the canon of the Greek Orthodox Church as specified at the 1672 Synod of Jerusalem, see Development of the Old Testament canon for details. The various Christian canons - Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox - differ significantly, both in the books regarded as biblical and in the order in which they are presented)
Title | Author according to traditional thought |
Author according to modern scholarly thought | |
---|---|---|---|
Genesis Γένεσις Génesis, "birth", "origin" בְּרֵאשִׁית Bereishit, "In the beginning" |
Moses: A few early authors, notably Josephus and Philo, believed that Moses wrote the entire Torah, including the account of his own death; later Talmudic scholars felt it more likely that this section at least was written by another. The problem of Genesis, to which Moses was not an eyewitness, also gave rise to alternative theories, expressed in the Oral Torah and the midrashim. |
Documentary hypothesis: Various unnamed editors combining originally complete and independent documents;
[1] Supplementary hypothesis: Various anonymous authors making additions (supplements) to a base text | |
Exodus ἔξοδος Exodos, "departure" שמות Shemot "names" | |||
Leviticus Λευιτικός Leuitikos, "relating to the Levites" ויקרא Vayikra, "And He called" | |||
Numbers במדבר Bəmidbar, "In the desert" | |||
Deuteronomy Δευτερονόμιον Deuteronómion, "second law" דְּבָרִים Devarim, "things"/"words" | |||
Joshua ספר יהושע Sefer Y'hoshua |
Joshua with a portion by Phinehas or Eleazar | Deuteronomist using material from the Yahwist and Elohist | |
Judges ספר שופטים Sefer Shoftim |
Samuel | Deuteronomist | |
1 Samuel ספר שמואל Sefer Sh'muel |
Samuel, Gad, and Nathan | Deuteronomist or a combination of a Jerusalem source, republican source, the court history of David, the sanctuaries source, the monarchial source, and the material of various editors who combined these sources | |
2 Samuel ספר שמואל Sefer Sh'muel | |||
1 Kings ספר מלכים Sefer Melakhim |
Jeremiah [2] | Deuteronomist | |
2 Kings ספר מלכים Sefer Melakhim | |||
1 Chronicles דברי הימים Divrei Hayyamim |
Ezra | The Chronicler, writing between 450 and 435 BC, after the Babylonian captivity | |
2 Chronicles דברי הימים Divrei Hayyamim | |||
Ezra ספר עֶזְרָא Sefer ʻEzrâ | |||
Nehemiah נְחֶמְיָה Nəḥemyāh |
Nehemiah using some material by Ezra | ||
Tobit טובי Tobih, "my good" |
Unknown | A writer in the second century BC | |
Judith יְהוּדִית Yəhûḏîṯ |
Eliakim, the high priest of the story | Unknown | |
Esther אֶסְתֵּר ʼEstēr |
The Great Assembly using material from Mordecai | An author writing between 460 and 331 BC | |
1 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
A devout Jew from the Holy Land. | A Jewish author, writing around 100 BC | |
2 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
Based on the writing of Jason of Cyrene | An author writing in the second or first century BC | |
3 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
Unknown | An Alexandrian Jew writing in Greek in the first century BC or first century AD | |
4 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
Josephus | An Alexandrian Jew writing in the first century BC or first century AD | |
Job אִיוֹב ʾIyov |
Unknown. Possibly Job, Moses, Solomon, or Elihu | A writer in the 4th century BC | |
Psalms Ψαλμοί Psalmoi, "songs sung to a harp" תְהִלִּים Th'hilliym, "praises" |
Mainly David and also Asaph, sons of Korah, Moses, Heman the Ezrahite, Ethan the Ezrahite and Solomon | Various authors recording oral tradition. Portions from 1000 BC to 200 BC. | |
Proverbs מִשְלֵי Mishlay |
Solomon, Agur son of Jakeh, Lemuel and other wise men | An editor compiling from various sources well after the time of Solomon | |
Ecclesiastes Ἐκκλησιαστής Ekklēsiastēs, "church" קֹהֶלֶת Kohelet, "speaker" |
Solomon | A Hebrew poet of the 3rd or 2nd century BC using the life of Solomon as a vista for the Hebrews' pursuit of wisdom. An unknown author in Hellenistic period from two older oral sources (Eccl1:1-6:9 which claims to be Solomon, Eccl6:10-12:8 with the theme of non-knowing) | |
Song of Solomon שיר השירים Shir ha-Shirim |
An anonymous poet [3] | ||
Ruth מגילת רות Məgiləs Rus |
Samuel | A later author, writing after the time of David | |
Wisdom חכמת שלמה |
Solomon | An Alexandrian Jew writing during the Jewish Hellenistic period | |
Sirach Σιραχ Sirakh ספר בן סירא |
Ben Sira | Ben Sira | |
Isaiah יְשַׁעְיָהוּ Yəšạʻyā́hû |
Isaiah | Three main authors and an extensive editing process. Is1-39 "Historical Isaiah" with multiple layers of editing. Is40-55 Exilic & Is56-66 post-exilic. | |
Jeremiah יִרְמְיָה Yirmĭyahu |
Jeremiah | Baruch ben Neriah. [4] Chapters 1-6 and 10-23 seem to derive from Jeremiah himself, as dictated to Baruch. [5] | |
Lamentations אֵיכָה Eikhah, "How" |
Disputed and perhaps based on the older Mesopotamian genre of the "city lament", of which the Lament for Ur is among the oldest and best-known | ||
Letter of Jeremiah איגרת ירמיהו Aigrt Yirmĭyahu |
A Hellenistic Jew living in Alexandria | ||
Baruch בָּרוּךְ Bārûḵ |
Baruch ben Neriah | An author writing during or shortly after the period of the Maccabees | |
Ezekiel יְחֶזְקֵאל Y'khizqel |
Ezekiel | Disputed, with varying degrees of attribution to Ezekiel | |
Daniel דָּנִיֵּאל Dāniyyêl |
Daniel | An editor in the fourth century BC to mid- second century BC | |
Hosea הוֹשֵׁעַ Hôšēăʻ |
Hosea | Unknown | |
Joel יואל Joel |
Joel | Unknown | |
Amos עמוס Amos |
Amos | Unknown | |
Obadiah עובדיה Ovadyah, "servant of YHWH" |
Obadiah | Likely a story traveler | |
Jonah יוֹנָה Yônā |
Jonah | A post-exilic (after 530 BC) author writing under the name of the eighth-century prophet | |
Micah מִיכָה Mikah |
Micah | The first three chapters by Micah and the remainder by a later writer | |
Nahum נַחוּם Naḥūm |
Nahum | Unknown | |
Habakkuk חֲבַקּוּק Ḥăḇaqqûq |
Habakkuk | An unknown author around 850 BC | |
Zephaniah צְפַנְיָה Ṣəp̄anyā |
Zephaniah | Disputed; possibly a writer after the time period indicated by the text | |
Haggai חַגַּי Ḥaggay |
Haggai | Various Jewish authors | |
Zechariah זְכַרְיָה Zəḵaryā |
Zechariah | Zechariah (chapters 1-8); the later, designated Deutero-Zechariah, were possibly written by disciples of Zechariah | |
Malachi מַלְאָכִי Malʼāḵî |
Malachi or Ezra | Possibly the author(s) of Deutero-Zechariah |
Title | Author according to traditional thought |
Author according to modern scholarly thought | |
---|---|---|---|
Gospel According to Matthew κατὰ Ματθαῖον εὐαγγέλιον kata Matthaion euangelion |
Matthew the Evangelist is said by the early 2nd century writer Papias of Hierapolis to have written a "Sayings of Jesus" in Aramaic. The Gospel is not a sayings collection and shows clear signs of having been composed in Greek, but it is accepted by tradition as the document referred to by Papias. Dated c. AD 80-100. | An anonymous author who borrowed from both Mark and a source called Q | |
Gospel According to Mark κατὰ Μᾶρκον εὐαγγέλιον kata Markon euangelion |
Mark the Evangelist, otherwise known as John Mark, a cousin of Barnabas the companion of Paul and later himself a companion of Paul. According to the 4th century writer Eusebius of Caesarea, who claims to be quoting a lost work by the Papias of Hierapolis, Mark was asked to write his account by the Christians of Rome, and recorded the preaching of the apostle Peter. (The First Epistle of Peter, dated around AD 100, mentions Mark as a companion of Peter). Usually dated no earlier than AD 70. | An unknown author; likely an early Christian writer. | |
Gospel According to Luke κατὰ Λουκᾶν εὐαγγέλιον kata Loukan euangelion |
Luke the Evangelist, the companion and contemporary of Paul. The earliest representation of Luke as the author of this Gospel (and of Acts) comes from the Muratorian fragment, a catalogue of the New Testament from c. AD 180. The Gospel itself is usually dated AD 70-100. | An anonymous author who borrowed from both Mark and Q | |
Gospel According to John κατὰ Ἰωάννην εὐαγγέλιον kata Iōannēn euangelion |
John the Evangelist. The Church father Iranaeus reported c. AD 180 that the Evangelist was John the Apostle, but there is no earlier record of the tradition that the two were identical. The first evidence of the existence of the Gospel dates from the mid-2nd century. | An anonymous author with no direct connection to the historical Jesus. John 21 finished after death of primary author by follower(s) | |
Acts of the Apostles Πράξεις των Αποστόλων Práxeis tōn Apostólōn |
Luke the Evangelist | The author of Luke | |
Epistle to the Romans Επιστολή προς Ρωμαίους Epistolē pros Galates |
Paul of Tarsus | Paul of Tarsus | |
First Epistle to the Corinthians Α' Επιστολή προς Κορινθίους 1 Epistolē pros Korinthious | |||
Second Epistle to the Corinthians Β' Επιστολή προς Κορινθίους 2 Epistolē pros Korinthious | |||
Epistle to the Galatians Επιστολή προς Γαλάτες Epistolē pros Galates | |||
Epistle to the Ephesians Επιστολή προς Εφεσίους Epistolē pros Ephesious |
Paul of Tarsus or edited dictations from Paul | ||
Epistle to the Philippians Επιστολή προς Φιλιππησίους Epistolē pros Philippēsious |
Paul of Tarsus | ||
Epistle to the Colossians Επιστολή προς Κολοσσαείς Epistolē pros Kolossaeis |
Disputed; perhaps Paul coauthoring with Timothy | ||
First Epistle to the Thessalonians Α' Επιστολή προς Θεσσαλονικείς 1 Epistolē pros Thessalonikeis |
Paul of Tarsus | ||
Second Epistle to the Thessalonians Β' Επιστολή προς Θεσσαλονικείς 2 Epistolē pros Thessalonikeis |
An associate or disciple after his death, representing what they believed was his message [6] | ||
First Epistle to Timothy Α' Επιστολή προς Τιμόθεο 1 Epistolē pros Timotheo |
Perhaps someone associated with Paul, writing at a later date | ||
Second Epistle to Timothy Β' Επιστολή προς Τιμόθεο 2 Epistolē pros Timotheo |
Perhaps someone associated with Paul, writing after his death | ||
Epistle to Titus Επιστολή προς Τίτο Epistolē pros Tito |
Perhaps someone associated with Paul, writing after his death | ||
Epistle to Philemon Επιστολή προς Φιλήμονα Epistolē pros Philēmona |
Paul of Tarsus | ||
Epistle to the Hebrews |
Paul of Tarsus or possibly Luke the Evangelist, Clement of Rome or Barnabas | An unknown author, but almost certainly not Paul [7] | |
Epistle of James |
James the Just | A writer in the late first or early second centuries, after the death of James the Just | |
First Epistle of Peter |
Peter | An author, perhaps Silas, proficient with Greek writing | |
Second Epistle of Peter |
Certainly not Peter [8] | ||
First Epistle of John | John the Evangelist | An unknown author with no direct connection to the historical Jesus Same as Gospel of John. | |
Second Epistle of John | An unknown author with no direct connection to Jesus. Final editor of John 21. | ||
Third Epistle of John | |||
Epistle of Jude | Jude the Apostle or Jude, brother of Jesus | A pseudonymous work written between the end of the first century and the first quarter of the 2nd century | |
Book of the Revelation of John Ἀποκάλυψις Ἰωάννου Apokalypsis Iōannou |
John the Apostle or John the Elder [5] | Perhaps John of Patmos |
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This page indexes the individual year in television pages. Each year is annotated with a significant event as a reference point.
1900s – 1920s – 1930s – 1940s – 1950s – 1960s – 1970s – 1980s – 1990s – 2000s – 2010s
(This table follows the canon of the Greek Orthodox Church as specified at the 1672 Synod of Jerusalem, see Development of the Old Testament canon for details. The various Christian canons - Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox - differ significantly, both in the books regarded as biblical and in the order in which they are presented)
Title | Author according to traditional thought |
Author according to modern scholarly thought | |
---|---|---|---|
Genesis Γένεσις Génesis, "birth", "origin" בְּרֵאשִׁית Bereishit, "In the beginning" |
Moses: A few early authors, notably Josephus and Philo, believed that Moses wrote the entire Torah, including the account of his own death; later Talmudic scholars felt it more likely that this section at least was written by another. The problem of Genesis, to which Moses was not an eyewitness, also gave rise to alternative theories, expressed in the Oral Torah and the midrashim. |
Documentary hypothesis: Various unnamed editors combining originally complete and independent documents;
[1] Supplementary hypothesis: Various anonymous authors making additions (supplements) to a base text | |
Exodus ἔξοδος Exodos, "departure" שמות Shemot "names" | |||
Leviticus Λευιτικός Leuitikos, "relating to the Levites" ויקרא Vayikra, "And He called" | |||
Numbers במדבר Bəmidbar, "In the desert" | |||
Deuteronomy Δευτερονόμιον Deuteronómion, "second law" דְּבָרִים Devarim, "things"/"words" | |||
Joshua ספר יהושע Sefer Y'hoshua |
Joshua with a portion by Phinehas or Eleazar | Deuteronomist using material from the Yahwist and Elohist | |
Judges ספר שופטים Sefer Shoftim |
Samuel | Deuteronomist | |
1 Samuel ספר שמואל Sefer Sh'muel |
Samuel, Gad, and Nathan | Deuteronomist or a combination of a Jerusalem source, republican source, the court history of David, the sanctuaries source, the monarchial source, and the material of various editors who combined these sources | |
2 Samuel ספר שמואל Sefer Sh'muel | |||
1 Kings ספר מלכים Sefer Melakhim |
Jeremiah [2] | Deuteronomist | |
2 Kings ספר מלכים Sefer Melakhim | |||
1 Chronicles דברי הימים Divrei Hayyamim |
Ezra | The Chronicler, writing between 450 and 435 BC, after the Babylonian captivity | |
2 Chronicles דברי הימים Divrei Hayyamim | |||
Ezra ספר עֶזְרָא Sefer ʻEzrâ | |||
Nehemiah נְחֶמְיָה Nəḥemyāh |
Nehemiah using some material by Ezra | ||
Tobit טובי Tobih, "my good" |
Unknown | A writer in the second century BC | |
Judith יְהוּדִית Yəhûḏîṯ |
Eliakim, the high priest of the story | Unknown | |
Esther אֶסְתֵּר ʼEstēr |
The Great Assembly using material from Mordecai | An author writing between 460 and 331 BC | |
1 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
A devout Jew from the Holy Land. | A Jewish author, writing around 100 BC | |
2 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
Based on the writing of Jason of Cyrene | An author writing in the second or first century BC | |
3 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
Unknown | An Alexandrian Jew writing in Greek in the first century BC or first century AD | |
4 Maccabees מכבים Makabim |
Josephus | An Alexandrian Jew writing in the first century BC or first century AD | |
Job אִיוֹב ʾIyov |
Unknown. Possibly Job, Moses, Solomon, or Elihu | A writer in the 4th century BC | |
Psalms Ψαλμοί Psalmoi, "songs sung to a harp" תְהִלִּים Th'hilliym, "praises" |
Mainly David and also Asaph, sons of Korah, Moses, Heman the Ezrahite, Ethan the Ezrahite and Solomon | Various authors recording oral tradition. Portions from 1000 BC to 200 BC. | |
Proverbs מִשְלֵי Mishlay |
Solomon, Agur son of Jakeh, Lemuel and other wise men | An editor compiling from various sources well after the time of Solomon | |
Ecclesiastes Ἐκκλησιαστής Ekklēsiastēs, "church" קֹהֶלֶת Kohelet, "speaker" |
Solomon | A Hebrew poet of the 3rd or 2nd century BC using the life of Solomon as a vista for the Hebrews' pursuit of wisdom. An unknown author in Hellenistic period from two older oral sources (Eccl1:1-6:9 which claims to be Solomon, Eccl6:10-12:8 with the theme of non-knowing) | |
Song of Solomon שיר השירים Shir ha-Shirim |
An anonymous poet [3] | ||
Ruth מגילת רות Məgiləs Rus |
Samuel | A later author, writing after the time of David | |
Wisdom חכמת שלמה |
Solomon | An Alexandrian Jew writing during the Jewish Hellenistic period | |
Sirach Σιραχ Sirakh ספר בן סירא |
Ben Sira | Ben Sira | |
Isaiah יְשַׁעְיָהוּ Yəšạʻyā́hû |
Isaiah | Three main authors and an extensive editing process. Is1-39 "Historical Isaiah" with multiple layers of editing. Is40-55 Exilic & Is56-66 post-exilic. | |
Jeremiah יִרְמְיָה Yirmĭyahu |
Jeremiah | Baruch ben Neriah. [4] Chapters 1-6 and 10-23 seem to derive from Jeremiah himself, as dictated to Baruch. [5] | |
Lamentations אֵיכָה Eikhah, "How" |
Disputed and perhaps based on the older Mesopotamian genre of the "city lament", of which the Lament for Ur is among the oldest and best-known | ||
Letter of Jeremiah איגרת ירמיהו Aigrt Yirmĭyahu |
A Hellenistic Jew living in Alexandria | ||
Baruch בָּרוּךְ Bārûḵ |
Baruch ben Neriah | An author writing during or shortly after the period of the Maccabees | |
Ezekiel יְחֶזְקֵאל Y'khizqel |
Ezekiel | Disputed, with varying degrees of attribution to Ezekiel | |
Daniel דָּנִיֵּאל Dāniyyêl |
Daniel | An editor in the fourth century BC to mid- second century BC | |
Hosea הוֹשֵׁעַ Hôšēăʻ |
Hosea | Unknown | |
Joel יואל Joel |
Joel | Unknown | |
Amos עמוס Amos |
Amos | Unknown | |
Obadiah עובדיה Ovadyah, "servant of YHWH" |
Obadiah | Likely a story traveler | |
Jonah יוֹנָה Yônā |
Jonah | A post-exilic (after 530 BC) author writing under the name of the eighth-century prophet | |
Micah מִיכָה Mikah |
Micah | The first three chapters by Micah and the remainder by a later writer | |
Nahum נַחוּם Naḥūm |
Nahum | Unknown | |
Habakkuk חֲבַקּוּק Ḥăḇaqqûq |
Habakkuk | An unknown author around 850 BC | |
Zephaniah צְפַנְיָה Ṣəp̄anyā |
Zephaniah | Disputed; possibly a writer after the time period indicated by the text | |
Haggai חַגַּי Ḥaggay |
Haggai | Various Jewish authors | |
Zechariah זְכַרְיָה Zəḵaryā |
Zechariah | Zechariah (chapters 1-8); the later, designated Deutero-Zechariah, were possibly written by disciples of Zechariah | |
Malachi מַלְאָכִי Malʼāḵî |
Malachi or Ezra | Possibly the author(s) of Deutero-Zechariah |
Title | Author according to traditional thought |
Author according to modern scholarly thought | |
---|---|---|---|
Gospel According to Matthew κατὰ Ματθαῖον εὐαγγέλιον kata Matthaion euangelion |
Matthew the Evangelist is said by the early 2nd century writer Papias of Hierapolis to have written a "Sayings of Jesus" in Aramaic. The Gospel is not a sayings collection and shows clear signs of having been composed in Greek, but it is accepted by tradition as the document referred to by Papias. Dated c. AD 80-100. | An anonymous author who borrowed from both Mark and a source called Q | |
Gospel According to Mark κατὰ Μᾶρκον εὐαγγέλιον kata Markon euangelion |
Mark the Evangelist, otherwise known as John Mark, a cousin of Barnabas the companion of Paul and later himself a companion of Paul. According to the 4th century writer Eusebius of Caesarea, who claims to be quoting a lost work by the Papias of Hierapolis, Mark was asked to write his account by the Christians of Rome, and recorded the preaching of the apostle Peter. (The First Epistle of Peter, dated around AD 100, mentions Mark as a companion of Peter). Usually dated no earlier than AD 70. | An unknown author; likely an early Christian writer. | |
Gospel According to Luke κατὰ Λουκᾶν εὐαγγέλιον kata Loukan euangelion |
Luke the Evangelist, the companion and contemporary of Paul. The earliest representation of Luke as the author of this Gospel (and of Acts) comes from the Muratorian fragment, a catalogue of the New Testament from c. AD 180. The Gospel itself is usually dated AD 70-100. | An anonymous author who borrowed from both Mark and Q | |
Gospel According to John κατὰ Ἰωάννην εὐαγγέλιον kata Iōannēn euangelion |
John the Evangelist. The Church father Iranaeus reported c. AD 180 that the Evangelist was John the Apostle, but there is no earlier record of the tradition that the two were identical. The first evidence of the existence of the Gospel dates from the mid-2nd century. | An anonymous author with no direct connection to the historical Jesus. John 21 finished after death of primary author by follower(s) | |
Acts of the Apostles Πράξεις των Αποστόλων Práxeis tōn Apostólōn |
Luke the Evangelist | The author of Luke | |
Epistle to the Romans Επιστολή προς Ρωμαίους Epistolē pros Galates |
Paul of Tarsus | Paul of Tarsus | |
First Epistle to the Corinthians Α' Επιστολή προς Κορινθίους 1 Epistolē pros Korinthious | |||
Second Epistle to the Corinthians Β' Επιστολή προς Κορινθίους 2 Epistolē pros Korinthious | |||
Epistle to the Galatians Επιστολή προς Γαλάτες Epistolē pros Galates | |||
Epistle to the Ephesians Επιστολή προς Εφεσίους Epistolē pros Ephesious |
Paul of Tarsus or edited dictations from Paul | ||
Epistle to the Philippians Επιστολή προς Φιλιππησίους Epistolē pros Philippēsious |
Paul of Tarsus | ||
Epistle to the Colossians Επιστολή προς Κολοσσαείς Epistolē pros Kolossaeis |
Disputed; perhaps Paul coauthoring with Timothy | ||
First Epistle to the Thessalonians Α' Επιστολή προς Θεσσαλονικείς 1 Epistolē pros Thessalonikeis |
Paul of Tarsus | ||
Second Epistle to the Thessalonians Β' Επιστολή προς Θεσσαλονικείς 2 Epistolē pros Thessalonikeis |
An associate or disciple after his death, representing what they believed was his message [6] | ||
First Epistle to Timothy Α' Επιστολή προς Τιμόθεο 1 Epistolē pros Timotheo |
Perhaps someone associated with Paul, writing at a later date | ||
Second Epistle to Timothy Β' Επιστολή προς Τιμόθεο 2 Epistolē pros Timotheo |
Perhaps someone associated with Paul, writing after his death | ||
Epistle to Titus Επιστολή προς Τίτο Epistolē pros Tito |
Perhaps someone associated with Paul, writing after his death | ||
Epistle to Philemon Επιστολή προς Φιλήμονα Epistolē pros Philēmona |
Paul of Tarsus | ||
Epistle to the Hebrews |
Paul of Tarsus or possibly Luke the Evangelist, Clement of Rome or Barnabas | An unknown author, but almost certainly not Paul [7] | |
Epistle of James |
James the Just | A writer in the late first or early second centuries, after the death of James the Just | |
First Epistle of Peter |
Peter | An author, perhaps Silas, proficient with Greek writing | |
Second Epistle of Peter |
Certainly not Peter [8] | ||
First Epistle of John | John the Evangelist | An unknown author with no direct connection to the historical Jesus Same as Gospel of John. | |
Second Epistle of John | An unknown author with no direct connection to Jesus. Final editor of John 21. | ||
Third Epistle of John | |||
Epistle of Jude | Jude the Apostle or Jude, brother of Jesus | A pseudonymous work written between the end of the first century and the first quarter of the 2nd century | |
Book of the Revelation of John Ἀποκάλυψις Ἰωάννου Apokalypsis Iōannou |
John the Apostle or John the Elder [5] | Perhaps John of Patmos |
{{
cite book}}
: |pages=
has extra text (
help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)