On the other note, one of my professors is a major scholar on 1st-century Galilee. He set out to write his dissertation on Jesus as a Galilean, and so dutifully did a crawl through the archives at Tübingen, where he found a book called "Jesus the Galilean," and immediately despaired that his work had been done. And then he noticed that it had been published in 1941 in Germany. It's thesis was apparently that Glaileans were aryan, and so Jesus could not have been a Jew. Crisis averted.
no subject
On the other note, one of my professors is a major scholar on 1st-century Galilee. He set out to write his dissertation on Jesus as a Galilean, and so dutifully did a crawl through the archives at Tübingen, where he found a book called "Jesus the Galilean," and immediately despaired that his work had been done. And then he noticed that it had been published in 1941 in Germany. It's thesis was apparently that Glaileans were aryan, and so Jesus could not have been a Jew. Crisis averted.