well I was talking about wikipedia there

it may not be a solid source in itself, but at least it gives you links to follow
So follow them to solid scholarship.
where else? anywhere else.
Name the contemporary historians active in Jerusalem who might have written about Jesus.
Which other prophets?
have little things written about them all over the place
Where? For a supposedly skeptical and critical person, you are extremely vague.
romans loved to take note of all sorts of little things; censuses, taxes, criminal records, when they execute someone.
Are you seriously claiming that we have records of every execution carried out by the Romans? What historians of the Roman Empire share this confidence on your part?
also matthew didnt write matthew, mark didnt write mark, luke didnt write luke and john didnt write john. its all hear-say from decades after everyone around was dead.
That’s overly confident. Again, you make sweeping statements with no support.
Matthew almost certainly didn’t write Matthew in its present form, I agree, though it’s possible that one of the sources used by the First Gospel was written by or associated with Matthew. Most scholars date Matthew to some time after A. D. 70, possibly the 80s or even 90s. However, it should be noted that one reason for this is the assumption that the detailed prediction of the fall of Jerusalem couldn’t have been written before the event happened. I tend to agree, because of the differences between Matthew and Mark on this point (best explained in my opinion by the fact that Matthew was writing after the event had occurred, while Mark wasn’t). But obviously a Christian isn’t going to start with the assumption that genuine prediction can’t occur.
Mark may have been written before A.D. 70. I think it was, but I take a more conservative view than many. Your claim that “Mark didn’t write Mark” is unfounded. There’s no way to know for sure one way or the other. But the traditional claim that Mark wrote his Gospel in Rome based on the recollections of Peter does not contradict any evidence of which I am aware. If you know of some, share it.
I think the most reasonable opinion is that Luke did indeed write Luke. Most scholars put Luke very late in the first century, admittedly. I agree that Luke was almost certainly written some time after Matthew and Mark, so probably no earlier than about 80. However, that does not exclude Lucan authorship. If Luke traveled with Paul in the 50s, he could have been born as late as A.D. 30.
Finally, John was almost certainly written at the very end of the first century–some would say early 2nd. However, we have a papyrus fragment of the Gospel from about 120, and one would assume that it must have been in circulation for a while before that. So a date too long after 100 is not plausible. Chronologically, it’s not impossible possible that the Apostle John might have written the Gospel if he lived a very long time (which tradition says he did), but this does seem unlikely. It’s a lot more likely that it was written by his disciples.
Therefore, your claim that the Gospels were written decades after the eyewitnesses were dead does not quite fit John, let alone the other Gospels. Someone who was about Jesus’ age (i.e., born at the very end of the first century B.C.) could quite possibly have lived to read (and thus, logically, to write) any of the Synoptics. This assumes a long life for the person in question and/or a relatively early date for Matthew and Luke, but these things are not impossible. (I hope I don’t have to point out that the human life
span was pretty much as long then as it is now, although life
expectancy was much less.)
Richard Bauckham (
Jesus and the Eyewitnesses) has argued that there is good reason to believe that the Gospels are based on eyewitness testimony by people who survived to the time when the Gospels were being written. He points out that the standard scholarly dates for the Gospels match the time when the eyewitnesses would have been dying off. I’m not yet sure that I accept Bauckham’s argument, but he is a serious scholar and his argument cannot just be dismissed.
Edwin