Definition of Septoagint
Septuagint, a version, and the oldest of any known to us, of the
Hebrew Scriptures in Greek, executed at Alexandria, in Egypt, by
different translators at different periods, commencing with 280 B.C.; it
is known as the Alexandria version, while the name Septuagint, or LXX.,
was given to it on the ground of the tradition that it was the work of
70, or rather 72, Jews, who had, it is alleged, been Drought from
Palestine for the purpose, and were fabled, according to one tradition,
to have executed the whole in as many days, and, according to another, to
have each done the whole apart from the rest, with the result that the
version of each was found to correspond word for word with that of all
the others; it began with the translation of the Pentateuch and was
continued from that time till 130 B.C. by the translation of the rest,
the whole being in reality the achievement of several independent
workmen, who executed their parts, some with greater some with less
ability and success; it is often literal to a painful degree, and it
swarms with such pronounced Hebraisms, that a pure Greek would often fail
to understand it. It was the version current everywhere at the time of
the planting of the Christian Church, and the numerous quotations in the
New Testament from the Old are, with few exceptions, quotations from it.
- Wikipedia
Sep"tu*a*gint (?), n. [From L.
septuaginta seventy.] A Greek version of the Old
Testament; -- so called because it was believed to be the work of
seventy (or rather of seventy-two) translators.
&fist; The causes which produced it [the Septuagint], the number
and names of the translators, the times at which different portions
were translated, are all uncertain. The only point in which all agree
is that Alexandria was the birthplace of the version. On one other
point there is a near agreement, namely, as to time, that the version
was made, or at least commenced, in the time of the early Ptolemies,
in the first half of the third century b.c. Dr. W. Smith (Bib.
Dict.)
Septuagint chronology, the chronology founded
upon the dates of the Septuagint, which makes 1500 years more from the
creation to Abraham than the Hebrew Bible.
Sep"tu*a*gint (?), n. [From L.
septuaginta seventy.] A Greek version of the Old
Testament; -- so called because it was believed to be the work of
seventy (or rather of seventy-two) translators.
&fist; The causes which produced it [the Septuagint], the number
and names of the translators, the times at which different portions
were translated, are all uncertain. The only point in which all agree
is that Alexandria was the birthplace of the version. On one other
point there is a near agreement, namely, as to time, that the version
was made, or at least commenced, in the time of the early Ptolemies,
in the first half of the third century b.c. Dr. W. Smith (Bib.
Dict.)
Septuagint chronology, the chronology founded
upon the dates of the Septuagint, which makes 1500 years more from the
creation to Abraham than the Hebrew Bible.
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
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