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Arzt-Grabner, Peter

Peter Arzt-Grabner is Associate Professor and head of the Papyrology Research Unit at the University of Salzburg.
John S. Kloppenborg has the rank of University Professor at the University of Toronto and is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.
Christina M. Kreinecker is a Research Professor at KU Leuven and an Associate Member of ITSEE (University of Birmingham).
More Light from the Ancient East</a>

More Light from the Ancient East

The first volume of the new series “Papyri and the New Testament” introduces students, teachers, and scholars to the value of the study of papyrological documentsand their impact on the understanding of early Christ groups.Papyri, ostraca, and tablets document social, economic, political, and multilingualcircumstances of the Greco-Roman period and are one of the best sources for understandingNew Testament times.

Letters and Letter Writing</a>

Letters and Letter Writing

New Testament letters are compared with private, business, and administrative letters of Greco-Roman antiquity and analyzed against this background. More than 11,800 Greek and Latin letters – preserved on papyrus, potsherds, and tablets from Egypt, Israel, Asia Minor, North Africa, Britain, and Switzerland – have been edited so far.

More Light from the Ancient East</a>

More Light from the Ancient East

The first volume of the new series “Papyri and the New Testament” introduces students, teachers, and scholars to the value of the study of papyrological documentsand their impact on the understanding of early Christ groups.Papyri, ostraca, and tablets document social, economic, political, and multilingualcircumstances of the Greco-Roman period and are one of the best sources for understandingNew Testament times.

Letters and Letter Writing</a>

Letters and Letter Writing

New Testament letters are compared with private, business, and administrative letters of Greco-Roman antiquity and analyzed against this background. More than 11,800 Greek and Latin letters – preserved on papyrus, potsherds, and tablets from Egypt, Israel, Asia Minor, North Africa, Britain, and Switzerland – have been edited so far.