https://rogueclassicism.com/2016/06/24/returning-to-the-gospel-of-jesus-wife-reflections-and-implications-i/
As readers of rogueclassicism are probably already aware, a couple of weeks ago Ariel Sabar wrote a lengthy piece in the Atlantic documenting his successful search for the owner of the so-called Gospel of Jesus Wife, who we now know is a certain Walter Fritz. It’s a sequel to an earlier piece he wrote for the Smithsonian Magazine back when the story was just breaking and overlaps to a large extent with some of the work Owen Jarus has been doing for Live Science over the past couple of years. It also overlaps with some of my own research, which I never actually had the opportunity to blog at the time (and which was largely covered by Owen Jarus’ pieces). Because of Sabar’s investigative journalism, the questions about the authenticity of the fragment currently loom larger than ever. At the same time, however, the investigative journalism approach tends to focus on the ‘telling of the story’ as much as the information involved, and important things might get lost along the way. The present post is an attempt to bring together as much as possible into one post everything that can be known about the GJW; a second post will consider the implications of this episode for scholars in Classics (soon-to-be-open museums) who are dealing with ‘new’ papyrus finds.
At the outset, I encourage people to set aside an hour or so to read the investigative journalism pieces in order; the Owen Jarus pieces are important because much of what Sabar reveals was already revealed by Jarus in one form or another:
- The Inside Story of a Controversial New Text About Jesus (Sabar in the Smithsonian ~ September 28, 2012; updated on June 20, 2016; abbreviated as AS1 in the timeline below)
- ‘Gospel of Jesus’s Wife’: Doubts Raised About Ancient Text (Owen Jarus in Live Science ~ April 22, 2014); first investigation into the owner.
- Origins of ‘Gospel of Jesus’s Wife’ Begin to Emerge (Owen Jarus in Live Science ~ August 24, 2015)
- ‘Gospel of Jesus’s Wife’: Records Hint at Improbable Journey of Controversial Papyrus (Owen Jarus in Live Science ~ October 5, 2015)
- The Unbelievable Tale of Jesus’s Wife (Sabar in the July/August issue of the Atlantic; abbreviated as AS2 in the timeline below)
As hinted at above, I’m going to try and organize this in a timeline, which makes the series of events and assorted reactions a bit easier to follow. The timeline is interspersed with notes and observations along the way. An additional abbreviation to note is (KK), which is information gleaned from Karen King’s various accounts, but primarily:
- King, Karen L. 2014. ““Jesus said to them, ‘My wife . . .’”: A New Coptic Papyrus Fragment.” Harvard Theological Review 107, no.2: 131-159 (online here)
It’s worth putting a link to Harvard’s collection of materials which include images (in theory; they don’t come up) and the scientific test reports (which may or may not download for you):
We’ll begin with Dr King’s account in Harvard Theological Review of how the GJW came to her:
The current owner of the papyrus states that he acquired the papyrus in 1999. Upon request for information about provenance, the owner provided me with a photocopy of a contract for the sale of “6 Coptic papyrus fragments, one believed to be a Gospel” from Hans-Ulrich Laukamp, dated November 12, 1999, and signed by both parties.A handwritten comment on the contract states: “Seller surrenders photocopies of correspondence in German. Papyri were acquired in 1963 by the seller in Potsdam (East Germany).” The current owner said that he received the six papyri in an envelope, and himself conserved them between plates of plexiglass/lucite. The owner also sent me scanned copies of two photocopies.
… a footnote provides some additional information:
The second document is a photocopy of a typed and signed letter addressed to H. U. Laukamp dated July 15, 1982, from Prof. Dr. Peter Munro (Freie Universität, Ägyptologisches Seminar, Berlin), stating that a colleague, Professor Fecht, has identified one of Mr. Laukamp’s papyri as having nine lines of writing and measuring approximately 110 x 80 mm, and containing text from the Gospel of John.
… and away we go!
Annotated Timeline:
1961: Laukamp swims to Berlin (AS2)
1963: Laukamp acquires papyri in Potsdam (KK)
- so almost immediately there is a question: If Laukamp escaped East Germany in 1961, is he likely to have gone back in 1963 to ‘acquire’ the papyri?
1982 (July 15): Correspondence from Peter Munro from Gerhard Fecht to Laukamp identifying one of his papyri as being a fragment of the Gospel of John (KK)
1988-1992 or 1993: Walter Fritz is an MA student at the Free University of Berlin (Freie Universität Berlin) (AS2)
1989:Jürgen Osing new department chair at the Free University; apparently one tough cookie (AS2)
1991: Fritz publishes an article in Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur, which apparently is still influential, but wasn’t very original(AS2)
1991 (October): Fritz hired as head of the Stasi Museum (AS2)
1992 (“Spring”): Fritz is dismissed (AS2)
- It’s worth quoting AS on this one:
In March 1992, five months into the job, the museum’s board members ordered him to shape up. They were concerned, among other things, about valuables—paintings, Nazi military medals, Stasi memorabilia—that had gone missing from the building’s storage during Fritz’s tenure. Drieselmann confronted him about his job performance in the spring of 1992. Not long after, Fritz disappeared, leaving behind a resignation letter.
- Folks may or may not be aware of the extent to which the East German police (the Stasi) were involved in confiscation/theft of art and antiquities and their subsequent resale on a scale which appears to have rivalled the Nazis. This is a story which we will be hearing a lot more of in the coming years, but here’s some reference material for background:
- East Germany’s Blood Art: No Justice for Victims of Regime’s Treasure Hunt (Spiegel, July 24, 2014)
- A Son Seeks Art Looted by the East Germans (New York Times, November 27, 2014)
- New York Times Stasi Article Re-Visited (Art Antiques Design, October 1, 2015)
- I am not sure if the Stasi had any papyrus among its confiscations, but it might be an avenue worth investigating …
1990s (“1992-1995”): Fritz meets Laukamp; various stories(AS2)
- not sure the ‘met at a von Daniken’ lecture is really necessary; I’m sure this is something which could be checked out …
1993 (at the latest): Fritz in Florida (AS2)
1995: Laukamp and Herzsprung running ACMB (AS2)
1996: Nefer Art’s website is up (my own research)
- In April of 2014 I came across Nefer Art’s website mentioned on a pageadvertising various Florida photography businesses after following various online sources which referred to this Walter Fritz fellow. Nefer Art was ostensibly a photography business, but their webpage seemed to indicate other things were going on. I was particularly struck, by an image (without a label or comment) on one of the pages:
- In July sent this image to assorted papyrologists for comment, by which time the photography site had been taken down (perhaps as a result of Owen Jarus’2014 Live Science piece?), but this image had been up from at least 2011 to November of 2013 (but it was still in the Wayback Machine in the ‘Art’ section). My query clearly circulated around. Most saw the reference to Hecate and below there is a reference to Phoebe. None of those who responded had ever seen it before and didn’t think it was authentic. In the most recent wave of reaction to Sabar’s Atlantic piece, Christian Askeland brings up the above and gives pretty much the common opinion (More on the Gospel of Jesus’ Wife and Walter Fritz). The drawing is pretty ‘simplistic’ and it really doesn’t have any affinities with any known illustrated papyri and the diacritics on the Greek are potentially anachronistic. In passing we might mention the apparent ‘fascinum’ approaching the nude female, which might suggest someone was looking at items from Pompeii, but that’s speculation.
- What isn’t mentioned in the various sites now mentioning this piece is the page it comes from has a copyright date 1996-2012, which might provide a terminus ante quem of sorts.
- Besides this little papyrus scrap, what also interested me about this was the name ‘Nefer Art’. Readers might recall that Frieda Nussberger-Tchacos (of Gospel of Judas fame) had a gallery named Gallery Nefer and obviously had been selling papyri therefrom. There seems to be a Gospel of Judas connection in here somewhere (possibly coincidental)
1997: Laukamp in Florida (AS2)
1997: Walter Fritz purchases papyri from Laukamp (AS1)
- not sure if the 1997 date is a typo in the article, something misheard by Sabar in an interview with King, or just some mistake along the way; the papyrus wasn’t sold until two years later according to the contract
1999: (November 12): Laukamp sells papyri to Fritz (AS2)(KK)
1999 (December): Laukamp’s wife dies in Germany (with Laukamp at her side); four days later, the American branch of ACMB is registered in Venice, Florida with Walter Fritz as one of the signatories (AS2)
- when I was checking out the address of ACMB in Florida it appeared it was little more than an office; there do not seem to be ‘machine facilities’ in a building full of medical services and the like