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Friday, May 10, 2024

Gross, Babylonian Jews and Sasanian Imperialism in Late Antiquity (CUP)

NEW BOOK FROM CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS:
Babylonian Jews and Sasanian Imperialism in Late Antiquity

AUTHOR: Simcha Gross, University of Pennsylvania
DATE PUBLISHED: April 2024
AVAILABILITY: Available
FORMAT: HardbackISBN: 9781009280525

£ 100.00
Hardback

Description

From the image offered by the Babylonian Talmud, Jewish elites were deeply embedded within the Sasanian Empire (224-651 CE). The Talmud is replete with stories and discussions that feature Sasanian kings, Zoroastrian magi, fire temples, imperial administrators, Sasanian laws, Persian customs, and more quotidian details of Jewish life. Yet, in the scholarly literature on the Babylonian Talmud and the Jews of Babylonia , the Sasanian Empire has served as a backdrop to a decidedly parochial Jewish story, having little if any direct impact on Babylonian Jewish life and especially the rabbis. Babylonian Jews and Sasanian Imperialism in Late Antiquity advances a radically different understanding of Babylonian Jewish history and Sasanian rule. Building upon recent scholarship, Simcha Gross portrays a more immanent model of Sasanian rule, within and against which Jews invariably positioned and defined themselves. Babylonian Jews realized their traditions, teachings, and social position within the political, social, religious, and cultural conditions generated by Sasanian rule.

  • Challenges a pervasive historical paradigm in the study of ancient Jews that treats them as siloed and isolated from their surroundings
  • Models how to make an often opaque and rhetorically narrow religious text – the Talmud – speak to its own larger historical context
  • Explores different ways to study Jews alongside Christians and other religious communities outside the binary of contact or conflict

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