James, brother of Jesus, visited by the author of the travel-document, 100
Janus—Peter, 63, 77, 143
Jensen, Dr. P., 142;
traces the entire Bible to the myth of Gilgamesch, 203;
on “the Jesus-saga,” 205 foll.;
his account of John the Baptist, 206 foll.;
criticism of his method, 212
Jerome, on encratite grounds, represented James, not as the brother, but as the cousin, of Jesus, 148
Jesus Barabbas, 50, 52
Jesus Ben Pandira, Mr. Robertson takes refuge in him in order to escape admitting the identity of Paul’s Jesus with Jesus of Nazareth, 143 foll.;
turns out to be identical, after all, 151 foll.; 184, 199
Jesus, his birth at winter solstice, 20 Jesus, the name, connected by Prof. Smith with the Greek word iēsomai—“I will heal,” 196
Jesus cult, its original secrecy as conjectured by Prof. W. B. Smith, 192
“Jesus, the God of the Hebrews,” in the papyrus of Wessely, 39
Jews, their Messianic hopes in early second century, 108;
their hatred and ridicule of the man Jesus, 108 foll.;
their hostility to pagan myths and art regularly ignored by Drews and Robertson, 25, 29, 73, 90, 91, 93 foll., 180, 183