In my opinion, here's what happened. Jesus of Nazareth existed as a historical individual, but, he was a crank, a religious loon. The argument for this is simple, and so, let's begin here:
Wikipedia -- List of largest cities throughout history
If you don't want to click on all of these (damn) links, I don't blame you. And, so, just take my word for things (which, if you wish, you could just easily verify on your own). (Wikipedia is a treasure trove of information, isn't it; well, at least I think so!)
Some ancient cities were big, and the ones that I am interested in were those big cities during Jesus' lifetime, namely, Alexandria in Egypt, and Rome, both at 1 million human beings. A city of 1 million people is a BIG city; just for comparison, here's the Top 10 cities in the United States:
Wikipedia -- List of United States cities by population
At #10, San Jose is just under 1M individuals.
Now, for literacy in the ancient World. I am going to copy & paste this one, as it is very informative:
Wikipedia -- Classical and post-classical literacy
Now, here's the argument:
Why? Because, Jesus of Nazareth was not worth mentioning. Those who could have mentioned his existence realized who he was, a religious nut & crank, who was not worth mentioning.
The Apostle Paul, an apocalyptist who was likely suffering from a Messiah complex, was the one who started the Christian Legend.
Wikipedia -- List of largest cities throughout history
If you don't want to click on all of these (damn) links, I don't blame you. And, so, just take my word for things (which, if you wish, you could just easily verify on your own). (Wikipedia is a treasure trove of information, isn't it; well, at least I think so!)
Some ancient cities were big, and the ones that I am interested in were those big cities during Jesus' lifetime, namely, Alexandria in Egypt, and Rome, both at 1 million human beings. A city of 1 million people is a BIG city; just for comparison, here's the Top 10 cities in the United States:
Wikipedia -- List of United States cities by population
At #10, San Jose is just under 1M individuals.
Now, for literacy in the ancient World. I am going to copy & paste this one, as it is very informative:
Quote:Until recently it was thought that the majority of people were illiterate in the classical world.[70] However, recent work challenges this perception.[71][72] Anthony DiRenzo asserts that Roman society was "a civilization based on the book and the register", and "no one, either free or slave, could afford to be illiterate".[73] Similarly Dupont points out, "The written word was all around them, in both public and private life: laws, calendars, regulations at shrines, and funeral epitaphs were engraved in stone or bronze. The Republic amassed huge archives of reports on every aspect of public life".[74] The imperial civilian administration produced masses of documentation used in judicial, fiscal and administrative matters as did the municipalities. The army kept extensive records relating to supply and duty rosters and submitted reports. Merchants, shippers, and landowners (and their personal staffs) especially of the larger enterprises must have been literate.
Wikipedia -- Classical and post-classical literacy
Now, here's the argument:
Quote:Of all the many thousands of human beings who could have mentioned, in writing, on parchment and/or stone, the existence of Jesus of Nazareth, no one did.
Why? Because, Jesus of Nazareth was not worth mentioning. Those who could have mentioned his existence realized who he was, a religious nut & crank, who was not worth mentioning.
The Apostle Paul, an apocalyptist who was likely suffering from a Messiah complex, was the one who started the Christian Legend.



