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  2. Allogenes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allogenes

    Allogenes is a series of Gnostic texts. [1] [2] The main character in these texts is Allogenes (Greek: ἀλλογενής), which translates as 'stranger,' 'foreigner,' or 'of another race.' [3] [4] The first text discovered was Allogenes as the third tractate in Codex XI of the Nag Hammadi library. [5]

  3. List of Gnostic texts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Gnostic_texts

    Bruce Codex contains the first and second Books of Jeu and three fragments – an untitled text, an untitled hymn, and the text "On the Passage of the Soul Through the Archons of the Midst". Codex Tchacos, 4th century, contains the Gospel of Judas, the First Apocalypse of James, the Letter of Peter to Philip, and a fragment of Allogenes.

  4. Codex Tchacos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codex_Tchacos

    Codex Tchacos is an ancient Egyptian Coptic codex from approximately 300 AD, which contains early Christian gnostic texts: the Letter of Peter to Philip, the First Apocalypse of James, the Gospel of Judas, and a fragment of The Temptation of Allogenes (a different text from the previously known Nag Hammadi Library text Allogenes).

  5. Nag Hammadi library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nag_Hammadi_library

    Allogenes: 40–44: Allogenes: The title is at the end of the tractate. The account of Allogenes of a revelation received from the angel Jude, and of an ascent to heavenly beings. 47: 4: Hypsiphrone: 45–69: Hypsiph. The title is at the beginning of the text, which is very poorly preserved. The book of visions of Hypsiphrone. 48 NHC-XII 1: The ...

  6. Three Steles of Seth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Steles_of_Seth

    The Three Steles of Seth—along with Zostrianos, Allogenes, and Marsanes—uses the ascent pattern. [5] Furthermore, these four Sethian texts are grouped together because of their extensive use of terminology from Platonic philosophy. [6] [7] Thus, the original work was likely written before Plotinus's Against the Gnostics in c. 265. [8]

  7. Testimony of Truth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testimony_of_Truth

    The writing is a Coptic translation of a Greek original. [9] Authorship of the original Testimony of Truth text is estimated to the late 2nd or early 3rd century AD, near Alexandria. [10] The beginning of the text (pages 29–45) is the best preserved section, whereas the rest of the text is fragmentary. [11]

  8. Barbelo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbelo

    The text describes her thus: This is the first thought, his image; she became the womb of everything, for it is she who is prior to them all, the Mother-Father ( Anthropos ), the holy Spirit, the thrice-male, the thrice-powerful, the thrice-named androgynous one, and the eternal aeon among the invisible ones, and the first to come forth.

  9. John D. Turner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_D._Turner

    The Book of Thomas the Contender from Codex II of the Cairo Gnostic Library from Nag Hammadi (CG II,7). Missoula 1975, ISBN 0-89130-017-1. with Anne McGuire: The Nag Hammadi Library after fifty years. Proceedings of the 1995 Society of Biblical Literature commemoration. Leiden 1997, ISBN 90-04-10824-6.