Range of possible dates Earlier scholarship once posited that the TPsJ dated to the first century or earlier, although this approach has been widely abandoned. The Aramaic dialect used is late and TPsJ is likely the latest of the Pentateuchal Targums. Today, a wide variety of dates have been proposed for Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, ranging from the 4th to 12th centuries, although most date it to after the Islamic conquests and the upper boundary for the date of the text is the 13th century due to its citation in material from that time, specifically its repeated reference by
Menahem Recanati (1250–1310, Papal State of
Marche) in his
Perush ʿAl ha-Torah. Earlier citations to the TPsJ are not known, and none exist in the works of
Nathan ben Jehiel of Rome, who otherwise frequently cited the Palestinian Targums. A small number of academics in recent times have continued to date the TPsJ prior to the
early Muslim conquests, including Robert Hayward, Paul V M Flesher, and
Beverly Mortensen, who place the text between the late fourth century to the early fifth century.
Terminus post quem A lower boundary for the date of TPsJ is given by references to certain external events, activities, and people. For example, TPsJ describes the six orders of the
Mishnah, and the Mishnah dates to around 200. References can also be found to the city of
Constantinople which was constructed in 324–330. Later still, the rendering of
Genesis 21:21 in the TPsJ contains a polemic reducing the status of
Ishmael and against
Khadija (called Adisha in the text), the first wife of
Muhammad, and a daughter of theirs name Fatima. As such, the current form of the targum must date to the mid-7th century at the earliest, although some argue that this material was inserted into an earlier core of the TPsJ at a later date with respect to its original composition. However, Leeor Gottlieb has retorted that this only provides evidence for the presence of a tradition acting as the common source for the Jerusalem Talmud and TPsJ Lev. 22:28. Instead, Gottlieb dates the TPsJ to the end of the 12th century in Italy on the basis of a textual relationship with a 12th-century Hebrew lexicon which Gottlieb argues has priority over it. whereas they are absent in the
Pirkei De-Rabbi Eliezer. Yet here McDowell's argument is somewhat weakened by the fact that these names probably go back all the way to the earliest parts of the Book of Enoch, dating as early as the 3rd century BCE, and are also attested in two
Dead Sea Scrolls texts. So this again seems to indicate that Targum Pseudo-Jonathan is a composite text, and it contains some materials that are very early, along with some later additions. ==References==