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AQUILA ('AxdXas), (1)

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Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 248 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AQUILA ('AxdXas), (1)  a Jew from Rome, who with his wife Prisca or Priscilla had settled in Corinth, where Paul stayed with them (Acts xviii . 2, 3) . They became Christians and
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fellow-workers with Paul, to whom they seem to have shown their devotion in some
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special way (Rom. xvi . 3, 4) . (2) A native of
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Pontus, celebrated for a very literal and accurate
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translation of the Old Testament into Greek . Epiphanius (De Pond. et Melia. c . 15) preserves a tradition that he was a kinsman of the emperor Hadrian, who employed him in rebuilding Jerusalem (Aelia Capitolina, q.v.), and that he was converted to
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Christianity, but, on being reproved for practising pagan
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astrology, apostatized to Judaism . He is said also to have been a
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disciple of
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Rabbi 'Aqiba (d . A.D . 132), and seems to be referred to in Jewish writings as c5+py . Aquila's version is said to have been used in place of the Septuagint in the synagogues . • The Christians generally disliked it, alleging without due grounds that it rendered the Messianic passages incorrectly, but Jerome and Origen speak in its praise .

Origen incorporated it in his

Hexapla . It was thought that this was the only copy extant, but in 1897 fragments of two codices were brought to the Cambridge University Library . These have been published—the fragments containing i Kings xx . 7-17; 2 Kings
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xxiii . 12-27 by F . C . Burkitt in 1897, those containing parts of Psalms xc.-ciii. by C . Taylor in 1899 . See F . C . Burkitt's article in the Jewish
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Encyclopaedia .

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