Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.
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Saturday, August 04, 2018
Volunteering at Tell es-Safi
Moses, Sargon, and what people are saying about Deuteronomy
The Impact of Sargon & Enheduanna on Land Rights in Deuteronomy Preliminary ReportThis article is presented as a rather technical study involving Sumerian epic. But it opens with a quite accessible discussion of the current scholarly state of the question about the Book of Deuteronomy.
Continuing work in my long-ago Deuteronomy and City Life (1983) and my recent Social World of Deuteronomy: a new feminist commentary (2015) and Land Rights of Women in Deuteronomy (2017), here I propose that Birth Stories of Moses parallel Birth Stories of Sargon to compare the way land rights were distributed in Akkad by Sargon and the woman Enheduanna with the way Moses and the women in Deuteronomy distributed land rights in ancient Israel. This paradigm suggests that the intention of Deuteronomy is to describe a utopia, where ownership, administrative and use rights are responsibly distributed as instructions on the maqom sanctuary (12: 2-28), tithing (14:22–29), pilgrimaging (16:1–17) and unresolved killings (19:1–13) reflect.
See Also: Land Rights of Women in Deuteronomy
By Don C. Benjamin
School of Historical, Philosophical & Religious Studies
Arizona State University
July 2018
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On defacing statues and nullifying idols
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Interview with Judith Lieu
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Friday, August 03, 2018
Elman obituary
I don’t know whether he left his mark on the fields of meteorology or bookselling, but once he got rolling in Jewish Studies, nothing was safe. Yaakov was intellectually insatiable. He had intensively studied, and contributed to, essentially all of Jewish studies, from Assyriology (in which he did his MA at Columbia, and on which he published a few papers in JANES in the ’70s) through biblical studies, the Dead Sea Scrolls (on which he wrote a few papers, including important studies of MMT), especially of course rabbinics — his book and other articles on the Tosefta, his many “conventionally” significant articles on midrash halakha, the Yerushalmi, and the Bavli from the ’90s, and then his epoch-making studies of the Middle Persian background of the Bavli over the past two decades — but continuing on to medieval intellectual history with a series of articles on Nahmanides, and into the modern period, in studies of R. Zadok of Lublin, the Netziv, Benno Jacob, and his own teacher, Rav Hutner. (The relationship with the latter was never a formal one, but a deeply intimate and formative one for Yaakov.)HT reader Ellen Birnbaum.
Background here and here.
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Berlin on Ruth
Depending on whether you’re using a Jewish or Christian version, the Book of Ruth is placed between Judges and Samuel or between the Song of Songs and Lamentations. But wherever it appears in your Bible, you will want to find it and study it again after you read “Ruth—Big Theme, Little Book,” originally published in the August 1996 issue of Bible Review. In this article, Adele Berlin argues that Ruth illuminates the main theme of the Hebrew Bible: the continuity of God’s people in their land.—Ed.
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An Iranian etymology for a BA word
Cross-file under Philology and Aramaic Watch.
Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.
Psalms of Solomon 13
Psalm of Solomon is another example of two-ways theology. There is a sharp contrast between the righteous (δίκαιος) and the sinner (ἁμαρτωλός). In this psalm, the difference between these two types of people is that the Lord has mercy on the righteous, devout person who fear him (13:12). The title of this psalm is a comfort or encouragement (παράκλησις) for the righteous. By properly understanding suffering the righteous person acknowledges they have been protected by the mercy of the Lord.Another installment in Phil Long's current summer series on the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. Past posts in the series, including many on the Psalms of Solomon, have been noted here and links.
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Thursday, August 02, 2018
Proposal for another Masada movie
Cannes regular Shira Geffen, whose debut feature Jellyfish won the festival’s Camera d’Or for first films in 2007, has launched financing on her third feature A Responsible Adult, a coming-of-age tale set against the backdrop of Israel’s mythical Masada plateau.The plot is set in the present, but ...
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Geffen has also intertwined Masada’s historical connotations – as the site of the famous siege of Masada in which Jewish rebels resisted Roman soldiers before committing suicide rather than be captured – into the screenplay.That, of course, could mean just about anything. We'll see if the proposal attracts supporters.
Other Masada films (miniseries) have been discussed here and links.
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Nephilim Magazine
I asked the editors of Nephilim Magazine via Twitter why they chose the name, and they provided another good reason for it. “According to legend,” replied the editors, “the Nephilim are the beings that taught mankind art, science, and magic.” That’s quite appropriate for a magazine featuring contemporary art and photography!
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Biblical Studies Carnival 149
To her list of women bloggers add Liv Ingeborg Lied at Religion - Manuscripts - Media Culture. Professor Lied hasn't posted since late 2017, but there's a lot in her archive. Also, the Second Temple Early Career Academy (STECA) Blog is directed by Professor Charlotte Hempel. Her blogging team includes, among others, Dr. Marieke Dhont, Dr. Jessica M. Keady, and Dr. Elisa Uusimäki.
Also, Phil Long is "borderline desperate" for volunteers to edit carnivals late this year. Drop him a note if you're interested.
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A tribute to Yaakov Elman
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Wednesday, August 01, 2018
Review of König and Woolf (eds.), Authority and Expertise in Ancient Scientific Culture
Jason König and Greg Woolf, eds. Authority and Expertise in Ancient Scientific Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017Excerpt:
While the ancient texts examined in this volume are marginal to the classical canon, the chapters are exemplary in their accessible presentation of the material for non-specialist audiences, and individual chapters could fruitfully be included in advanced undergraduate or graduate syllabi. As a whole, the volume provides compelling evidence that various, interrelated “techniques of self-authorisation” were employed across (what the modern reader might categorize as) different scientific and technical genres, as a means not only for professionals to establish their credentials, but also for non-professionals to situate themselves in the social and political networks of the late Republic and the Roman Empire.This book was edited by two of my St. Andrews colleagues in Classics and a number of other colleagues contributed to it.
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Rashi - apologist or polemicist?
Moses promises that if Israel forsakes the covenant, God will destroy them permanently (Deut 4:25-26). Drawing on a midrash, Rashi explains that God exiled Israel early to avoid having to wipe them out; thus, God never actualized this threat. Considering Rashi’s responses to Christian ideas in other biblical texts, Rashi’s comment on Deut 4:25 may well be an apologetic effort to prove that God’s covenant with the Jews remains intact.The essay also involves Talmudic exegesis of this passage, with gematria, alongside Daniel 9.
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Psalms of Solomon 12
James and Paul both stand within the same stream of Second Temple Jewish wisdom literature as Psalms of Solomon 12 by contrasting a life of wisdom (quiet, peaceful, respectful) with the slanderous unthinking speech of the lawless ones.Another installment in Phil Long's current summer series on the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. Past posts in the series, including many on the Psalms of Solomon, have been noted here and links.
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New TC articles
Myself, I think the work is glorious. I concede that it could involve more money.
The issue also includes several book reviews, including one of Lundhaug and Lied (eds.), Snapshots, on which more here and links
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Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Entertainment center excavated at ancient pottery workshop
I suspect many readers had the same immediate response as mine. What the heck is mancala? It is a game.
Third-century Roman potters were, apparently, early adopters of the elusive work-life balance. At the central Israel town of Gedera, an Israel Antiquities Authority team has uncovered an impressive 20-bath spa and robust game room alongside evidence of 600 years of a massive ceramic industry.Nowadays you can even play mancala online.
Boards for still-popular games are etched into large stone benches at the 3rd century CE site. Among the game boards, the IAA archaeologists identified mancala, an ancient one- or two-player game using a board and seeds or marbles that is still an international bestseller.
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The Talmud on the priestly right to eat sacrificial meat
By the time the Talmud was compiled, in the first centuries CE, these sacrifices were a thing of the distant past; they lapsed after the destruction of the Temple in 70. Yet the rabbis continued to pay a great deal of attention to priestly rites and privileges: Who is entitled to eat terumah, how tithes are properly separated, and of course how animals are to be sacrificed in the Temple.
Chapter Twelve of Zevachim, which Daf Yomi readers read last week, focuses on the right of priests to consume sacred meat. ...
Earlier Daf Yomi columns are noted here and links.
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Mandeism, Manicheism, and Aramaic
Cross-file under Aramaic Watch, Mandean (Mandaean) Watch, and Manichean (Manichaean) Watch.
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Psalms of Solomon 11
Psalm of Solomon 11 seems to be solid evidence that a biblically literate Second Temple Jewish listener would hear echoes of Isaiah 40-55. This is a call to Jewish captives in far distant lands to return to Zion at the end of the Exile. Although it cannot be said Jesus is using Psalm of Solomon 11, he certainly stands within the same traditional as this psalmist as he interprets Isaiah 40-55 (and his messianic role as the one calling Israel to gather around himself).Another installment in Phil Long's current summer series on the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. Past posts in the series, including many on the Psalms of Solomon, have been noted here and links.
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Monday, July 30, 2018
The god Bethel
For many past PaleoJudaica posts on Elephantine and the Elephantine Aramaic papyri, start here and follow the links. And for past posts on Papyrus Amherst 63 see here and links.
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Prof. Yaakov Elman (1943-2018)
H-Judaic is deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Prof. Yaakov Elman (1943-2018), Herbert S. and Naomi Denenberg Chair in Talmudic Studies at Yeshiva University. Prof. Elman founded the field now known as Talmudo-Iranica, which seeks to understand the Babylonian Talmud in its Middle-Persian context.A Festschrift for Professor Elman was published in 2012, noted here and here.
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May his memory be for a blessing.
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Video: removal of third Lod mosaic
Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.
IOSCS 50th anniversary celebration
In any case, the society is on the verge of crossing a significant milestone when it reaches its 50th anniversary later this year. Since the first official meeting of the IOSCS occurred at the national meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature in 1968, it is fitting that the celebration will occur at the same event this year in Denver at the 2018 AAR/SBL conference.IOSCS stands for The International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies.
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Sunday, July 29, 2018
A third Lod mosaic has been excavated
Much like the other eye-widening mosaics found in Lod, this new floor depicts realistic and fantastical animals and designs, but no human figures.The original Lod mosaic traveled around the world in exhibitions and returned to Israel in 2017. For it, start here and follow the links. The second one (see here and here). Now the site has produced a third one at the villa of the same rich merchant.
“Thankfully, the main central panel of the mosaic was preserved. The figures, many similar to the figures in the earlier mosaics, comprise fish and winged creatures. A fairly similar mosaic was found in the past in Jerusalem, on the Mount Zion slopes.
The Lod mosaics, however, do not depict any human figures that are present in the Mount Zion mosaic,” said [dig director Amir] Gorzalczany, who believes both sites’ mosaics may have been produced by the same artist, or working from similar designs. “This type of mosaic is better known in the Western part of the Roman Empire.
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Apostolic reliquary found in Bethsaida?
A reliquary that once could have held the remains of the apostles Philip, Andrew and Peter, has been discovered in the ruins of what may be the ancient Israeli city of Bethsaida, a top archaeologist has said.Maybe, although it requires a chain of inferences to get us from the stone box, which is a real thing, to its use to hold remains of apostles. For starters, the identification of el-Araj as Bethsaida is debated. The alternative site is et-Tell. More on that debate here and links.
Professor Mordechai Aviam of the Kinneret Academic College revealed that a 661-pound basalt block, with three smooth compartments on top, was found in the biblical town, also known as el-Araj, according to Haaretz.
"We suggest, cautiously, that this could be the reliquary of Peter, Philip and Andrew. This could have been the reliquary of the Church of the Apostle," he said.
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The Silwan royal steward's tomb inscription
This seems to be a re-post from October of 2016. That post, however, is now deleted, so I have noted this one to replace it.
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Apocryphal Saint Jerome and Church Slavonic
Prof. Julia Verkholantsev, Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Pennsylvania, discussed how St. Jerome — a scholar who came from Dalmatia and lived from the mid 300s to the early 400s — became mistakenly known as the creator of the Slavonic language in a talk Thursday.This tradition is new to me. The actual inventors of the Slavonic script were Saints Cyril and Methodius in the ninth century. More on them and their work is here and links. Their work led to the conversion of the Slavs and the preservation of much interesting literature, including some important Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, in Old Church Slavonic. I keep up with Old Church Slavonic news for that reason.
In the mid-13th century, people started to think that St. Jerome had translated liturgical texts into Slavonic, Verkholantsev explained. However, St. Jerome did not create the Slavonic language.
“Among the Christian saints, St. Jerome has always occupied a special place as a translator and exegete of the Bible whose labors brought the faithful closer to God,” she said. “A native of Dalmatia, Jerome became recognized for allegedly translating the liturgical books of the Croatian clergy in Dalmatian monasteries into Church Slavonic and for having supplied them with their special Slavic letters.”
Verkholantsev said historical and archeological evidence has shown that the Slavs did not come to Dalmatia until the 6th century, which was after Jerome’s life. This means Jerome “could have no connection, either to Slavs or to their writing,” she said.
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For more on the real Saint Jerome and his translation work, see here and here and links.
This story is from March of 2017, but for some reason it only just showed up in my searches.
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