Stefan Szymik explores the presence of Epicurean terminology and thought in the New Testament writings. He discusses the issue of the Christian message confronting the Epicurean vision of man and the world in in the first century CE.
About the presence of Epicurean philosophical concepts in the New Testament writings
The most important Georgian battles (wars and battles) within three millennia are presented here in chronological order in a brief overview. The period covers the span from the first half of the 2nd millennium BC to the 13th century AD. It covers conflicts with other states and peoples, defence battles and campaigns of conquest as well as internal political disputes, conspiracies of the high nobility against the king, popular uprisings and social uprisings, disputes over the throne and power struggles, but also bloodless solutions to conflicts, in which diplomatic skill was used to avoid heavy fighting, or duels between kings, through which they spared their armies. This raises new questions about ancient history, such as whether there were earlier dynasties in the Georgian states before the Parnavazid dynasty and whether the Parnavazids had a dynastic history before the seizure of power by Ason.