Menander of Ephesus Tyrian source behind Josephus
A lost Phoenician historical work visible through Josephus.
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Epistemic status
This article describes an entity that is not directly attested as a surviving complete text. It infers Menander of Ephesus's Tyrian historical work from Josephus's citations and later source transmission.
Summary
Josephus uses Menander of Ephesus as a source for Tyrian chronology and Phoenician history. The inferred object is the lost historical work or chronicle behind those citations, not Menander as a biographical subject and not the Tyrian archives themselves.
What is being inferred
Inferpedia infers a Greek historical work by Menander that translated, summarized, or reworked Tyrian archival material and was available to Josephus or his source tradition. The title, full scope, and textual form remain uncertain.
What is attested
Source guides present fragments of Menander preserved through Josephus and explain that Josephus used Menander among external historians. The surface page signal also identifies the work as lost and known through Josephus's quotation or paraphrase.
Why infer this entity
Josephus's named use of Menander implies a prior textual authority. The fragments are tied to chronological and archival claims rather than to a generic historical memory. The source is important to Jewish history because Josephus deploys it in apologetic and chronological argument.
Evidence ledger
- Evidence from Livius summarizes Menander as one of the external authors used by Josephus and presents fragments from Josephus.
- Evidence from the Wikipedia surface signal is retained only as lead context: it explains why the raw seed was selected, but it is not treated as article-grade evidence.
Counterarguments
Josephus may quote selectively, paraphrase, or receive Menander through an intermediary. The exact title and scope of Menander's work are unclear. The Tyrian archival claim is itself mediated through Josephus's presentation.
Confidence scores
Direct attestation: 46. Existence warrant: 80. Specificity confidence: 64. Reconstruction dependence: 55. Counterevidence pressure: 28. Overall: strong inferred lost-source article with uncertain original extent.
What would change the score
The score would rise with a critical fragment edition or independent ancient witness to Menander's work. It would fall if Josephus's Menander citations prove derivative, misattributed, or too paraphrastic to support a discrete source object.