Ittai Gradel, Nils Arne PedersenFor PaleoJudaica posts on the Testament of Solomon and related artifactual material, see here and links. This is the first I've heard of any Solomonic ring artifacts, aside from the fictional one in the 2010 children's novel by Jonathan Stroud.The Lost Novel of King Solomon and the Demons
New Evidence on the Testament of Solomon in Antiquity
2025. 344 pages.
Parabiblica (PBib) 5€99.00
including VATcloth
available
978-3-16-200066-8Also Available As:
eBook PDF
€99.00Summary
In this study, Ittai Gradel and Nils Arne Pedersen develop a new approach to the apocryphal Testament of Solomon by combining archaeology and textual analysis. The starting point is a group of ten 3rd-century rings, each inscribed in Greek: »Solomon says: 'Watch out!'« The phrase, puzzling as an apotropaic formula, makes sense only in light of the Testament of Solomon, where the king, empowered by a divine ring, subjugates demons. In a climactic episode, Solomon orders two demons to support a massive column until the Day of Judgment - precisely with the words »Watch out!« This unique command, permanently binding the demons, explains its adoption in everyday magical practice.
The rings, securely dated, establish a 2nd-century date for the original version of the text and invite new reflections on its literary shape and development. While the preserved Testament alternates between first-person and third-person narration, the inscriptions suggest that the original form was a longer third-person narrative later abbreviated and reworked. From this basis, the authors develop a theory of its redactional history. The evidence points toward popular Christianity distinct from the patristic mainstream. Several rings display Christian iconography, one was linked to the pilgrimage site of Abu Mena, and parallels to Jewish Solomonic traditions are also apparent. Alexandria emerges as a plausible place of origin. The interdisciplinary synthesis - archaeology, history of religions, apocryphal studies, and folklore - generates fresh perspectives. The appendices enrich this contribution with translations of previously inaccessible versions of the Testament of Solomon, including one that contains a newly attested agraphon ascribed to Jesus, as well as a new edition and translation of a Syriac narrative. In this way, the authors significantly reposition the Testament of Solomon within the history of ancient religion and literature.
Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.