No hint of Jesus' body still being there that I can see.
But three of those accounts are certainly not independent and the fourth may not be. You don't know who wrote the stories or who their sources were.
Even if there was an empty tomb, it is implausible that a dead man got up and walked away. It's much more likely that the body was moved by persons unknown or was never there are that the accounts are simply fiction.
I quite agree that the resurrection accounts are independent. Each author made up his own.
Assertion in need of some evidence.
That dead men do not come alive is not evidence enough for you?
So no commonality.... apart from the empty tomb, angels/men, women visiting the tomb and so on?
I think you'll find that I argued that there is commonality but with embellishments right up to the point in time where Mark's gospel ends.
And why did the disciples who visited the tomb think they saw angels/men, why did individuals and groups get convinced they met and spoke and sometimes ate with Jesus? Why the start of the Christian church from a bunch of previously dispirited, defeated disciples?
All later rationalisation by people who weren't there.
I think it's entirely possible that Jesus' followers, expecting him to be the Messiah rationalised his early death by claiming that he rose from the dead and ascended to heaven, particularly if they couldn't find is body for whatever reason.
Everything else is just post hoc invention.
This is all far more plausible than Jesus actually rising from the dead.
Your explanation needs to cover all the facts, not just bits. Surely you see that?
You haven't established any facts. Surely you can see that? The gospel stories are just stories of unknown provenance.
I was replying to your, "You can't claim that all these people getting martyred is evidence for your story being true when the accounts of martyrdom come from the same story you are trying to prove.
Where do you think Josephus sourced the claims of Christian martyrs? If he didn't see them himself, he probably read them in a book or he heard them from Christians who read them in a book.
Dionysius, according to Wikipedia, lived around 171 AD, so that would be about 110 years after Peter and Paul were martyred (if they were martyred). Do you have any good reason to think he was wrong, bearing in mind he was living in the same city and headed up the church there?
You're the one who brought him up. It is for you to establish the credibility of his claim. In fact, you need to establish that Peter and Paul were executed for their beliefs and not for any other reason.
And actually, yes, I do have good reason for believing he was wrong we have an almost contemporary source (he was seven when the alleged events happened) who claims that the Christians in Rome were executed for allegedly starting the Great Fire.
If they knew that the resurrection was all a hoax, why would they have stuck around there and get killed or suffer all the previous stuff they suffered, details of Paul's suffering being available in his writings and Acts?
This is ancient Rome. They couldn't just hop on a plane and leave the country. We have no eye witness account of their trials or death. For all we know, the trial transcript could have gone like:
Peter: "I admit it was all a hoax"
Nero: "I don't care, I need you to die for the Great Fire so I don't get the blame".
Paul is interesting. He clearly believed Jesus rose from the dead without ever seeing the empty tomb or having dinner with Jesus before or after the crucifixion. Paul started believing based on a vision or hallucination. That blows your argument out of the water.