Friday, November 22, 2024

An Iron Age Israelite palace in Jordan?

ARCHAEOLOGY AND ICONOGRAPHY: Archaeologists Identify Possible Ancient Israelite Palace in Jordan. Decorated stone blocks unearthed at Mahanaim may be leftover of Israelite rule over the area where the bible sets the story of Jacob wrestling with God (Ariel David, Haaretz).
Stone blocks decorated with scenes of lions and banquets, found strewn upon a hilltop archaeological site in Jordan, may have once been part of an ancient Israelite palace built some 2,800 years ago, two leading Israeli scholars conclude in a new study.

The incised ashlar blocks unearthed at the biblical site of Mahanaim, just east of modern Dayr Allah in Jordan, are likely remains from the time when the Kingdom of Israel ruled over part of this region, the researchers say.

[...]

The open-access underlying article is in the journal Tel Aviv:
Finkelstein, I., & Ornan, T. (2024). An Israelite Residency at Mahanaim in Transjordan? Tel Aviv, 51(2), 217–237. https://doi.org/10.1080/03344355.2024.2385148

Abstract

In this article we deal with the site of Tall adh-Dhahab al-Gharbi in the valley of the az-Zarqa River, the biblical Jabbok, in Jordan. We discuss a group of incised ashlar blocks found there, probably dating to the first half of the 8th century BCE. We suggest that the blocks originated from an official building, a residency or a gate complex, not yet excavated, and propose thematic similarities with visual imagery from Kuntillet ʿAjrud. We then show that this site can be securely identified with biblical Mahanaim and point to several biblical verses that may hint at the existence of a North Israelite residency there.

For the epigraphic and iconographic discoveries at Kuntillet ʿAjrud, see here and many links, plus here and here.

Also, the nearby town of Dayr Allah, mentioned above, is the site of Tel Deir 'Alla (Deir Alla), where the Northwest Semitic Balaam inscription was excavated. It dates to around the same time as this palace. I don't know if that is signficant, but it seems worth mentioning. More on it here, with many links. And for an intriguing corpus of alphabetic Northwest Semitic cuneiform inscriptions from the same site, see here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Prof. Tawny Holm awarded NEH grant

ARAMAIC WATCH: National humanities group awards grants to four Liberal Arts-affiliated projects. Hemingway Letters Project, Matson Museum, Tawny Holm and Elizabeth Kadetsky to benefit from National Endowment for the Humanities funding (Josh McAuliffe, Penn State).

Congratulations to all the award recipients, but notably to Professor Tawny Holm:

Holm and her colleague, University of Notre Dame faculty member Dan Machiela, received a $50,000 Collaborative Research grant for their project, "The Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls at the Crossroads of Empire: Negotiating Jewish Life under Foreign Rule,” which is focused on how the Aramaic texts among the Dead Sea Scrolls interpret and reinterpret Jewish experiences under foreign rule during the first millennium BCE.
Follow the link for additional details

I have noted Professor Holm's work on the ancient Demotic Aramaic-Canaanite Papyrus Amherst 63 here, here, and here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Miss Lebanon goes Phoenician

PHOENICIAN SARTORIAL WATCH: Miss Lebanon Nada Koussa Wows Miss Universe With A Traditional Lebanese Dress Celebrating Phoenician Heritage (Natalie Haddad, The 961).
At the Miss Universe preliminaries, Miss Lebanon Nada Koussa captivated the audience with a jaw-dropping display of heritage and elegance in a striking traditional Lebanese costume designed by the talented Joe Challita.

The stunning ensemble was an homage to Lebanon’s rich Phoenician legacy, bringing to life the ancient story of Tyrian purple – a color that once symbolized royalty and power.

The costume itself is inspired by (apparently 19th century) "traditional Lebanese dress wear," not ancient Phoenician attire, about which latter we know next to nothing. But it's made in honor of Tyrian purple, so I give Miss Lebanon and the dress designer, Joe Challita, full credit for effort.

Tyrian purple and the Israelite telekhet dye were both made from the murex snail. For many PaleoJudaica posts, see here and links.

Also, congratulations to Miss Denmark on winning this year's Miss Universe competition.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Thursday, November 21, 2024

SBL 2024 etc.

SAFE TRAVELS to all those heading for, or already at, the Society Biblical of Literature annual meeting in San Diego and the various associated meetings there and elsewhere.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Alphabetic inscriptions from 2,400 BCE?

NORTHWEST SEMITIC EPIGRAPHY: Oldest known alphabet unearthed in ancient Syrian city (Johns Hopkins University via Phys.Org).
What appears to be evidence of the oldest alphabetic writing in human history is etched onto finger-length, clay cylinders excavated from a tomb in Syria by a team of Johns Hopkins University researchers.

The writing, which is dated to around 2400 BCE, precedes other known alphabetic scripts by roughly 500 years, upending what archaeologists know about where alphabets came from, how they are shared across societies, and what that could mean for early urban civilizations.

[...]

The discovery of alphabetic writing in the third millennium BCE would be a major and unanticipated development. I am very interested in what Northest Semitic epigraphers make of the objects.

The discoverer, Johns Hopkins Professor Glenn Schwartz, will be giving a paper on the objects today at the ASOR annnual meeting in Boston.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Review of Sanzo, Ritual boundaries

BRYN MAYR CLASSICAL REVIEW: Ritual boundaries: magic and differentiation in late antique Christianity.
Joseph E. Sanzo, Ritual boundaries: magic and differentiation in late antique Christianity. Christianity in late antiquity. Oakland: University of California Press, 2023. Pp. 188. ISBN 9780520399181.

Review by
Daniel Vaucher, University of Fribourg. daniel.vaucher@unifr.ch

Of particular interest to PaleoJudaica:
In chapter 2, Sanzo examines the language of the amulets regarding the demarcation between Jews and Christians. Again, Sanzo fights against modern terminology that likes to resort to categories such as “syncretism” or “blurred boundaries”. What do we make of Christian amulets with supposedly non-Christian elements (e.g. the terms Iao Sabaoth, Adonai, Horus etc.)? Have the manufacturers of such objects not taken care of denominational issues, or have they adopted foreign terms in order to increase ritual efficacy through foreign-sounding names?
For a related podcast by the author, see here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

More war in Palmyra

PALMYRA WATCH: Israeli strikes on Syria's Palmyra kill 36, state media say (David Gritten, BBC News). The number of casualties is updated at the end of the article:
The SOHR initially reported that 41 people were killed, but later said the death toll had risen to 68.

It identified them as 42 Syrian members of Iran-backed militias, and 22 foreign members, mostly from Nujaba, and four Lebanese members of Hezbollah.

The number varies in the reports. Still the fog of war.

The strikes were in the area of the modern city, not the ancient ruins. The Arab News reports this:

The director general of Antiquities and Museums in Syria, Nazir Awad, told AFP the city’s temples “did not suffer any direct damage” during the latest strikes.

“We need to conduct a survey on the ground to confirm these observations,” he added.

It is sad to see war coming to Palmyra yet again.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

A first-century synagogue in Russia? (updated and bumped)

ARCHAEOLOGY: Archaeologists reveal what they discovered in first century Russian Jewish quarter. Researchers find the oldest synagogue outside of Israel that stood for about 500 years; The ancient neighborhood in southwest Russia includes an irrigation system and residential structures (Itamar Eichner, Ynet News).
[An ancient "table" excavated in the building] bears the ancient Greek inscription for synagogue and has been named one of the world's oldest synagogues and the oldest synagogue outside Israel by experts. ...

The archaeologists initially thought they had discovered an ancient Christian church, but as they dug deeper they discovered objects with Jewish symbols. Among other things, the remains of three remarkable marble menorahs and a stone lid of a charity box were uncovered. The building, with a total area of ​​140 square meters, included two rooms: a prayer hall, with three rows of benches, a platform, and a small room. The second room was probably used for meals and community meetings.

Next to the synagogue was a winery, where kosher wine was made, and a building where food for community meals was stored. There was also a garden behind the building which probably served as the mikveh. The archaeologists also located clay barrels for irrigation, residential buildings, and a water supply system. Copper coins were discovered in excavations on the floor of the synagogue. Some of them were placed near the platform and the benches. Additional coins were found near the lid of the charity donation box. A total of 58 copper coins were found at the site.

Regarding the inscription, The Greek Reporter has more in World’s Oldest Synagogue Outside Israel Discovered in Russia (Abdul Moeed):
One tablet features the Greek word “synagein,” which means synagogue, leading experts to recognize it as one of the oldest synagogues ever discovered and the oldest outside Israel.
The Greek word synagein (συναγειν) is an infinitive meaning "to gather together, assemble." It does not mean "synagogue." It could fit into a Jewish, Christian, or other context. That said, the material culture assemblage does sound Jewish, the menorahs especially.

What are these "tables" or "tablets?" A decorated stone table of comparable date was excavated several years ago near Beit El. But we also know of inscribed stone plaques or tablets that may have been associated with synagogues. The Samaritan decalogue is one example. There is also the Kursi inscription and an inscribed plaque excavated in Turkey. But all of these are from late antiquity, so later than this object. Either "table" or "tablet" seems possible with current information. A photo would be nice.

We look forward to hearing more about this important site in Phanagoria.

UPDATE (20 November): The above was originally posted yesterday. Now I see that I already noted this story back in August. Follow the link for lots more information about the synagogue and the excavation. Notably, the Newsweek article solves the mystery of the tables/tablets: they seem to be "fragments of marble stelae—upright stone slabs bearing inscriptions or illustrations." And the Haaretz article gives details about the quite solid epigraphic evidence for the building being a synagogue.

Also, Popular Archaeology has published a new press release on the site: World’s Oldest Synagogue Found to Be Part of Ancient Jewish Quarter (Volnoe Delo Foundation).

It reports some new details, including the following:

Several Jewish manumissions dating back to the 1st and 2nd centuries AD were also discovered in the Jewish quarter. These documents granted freedom to slaves on the condition that they continue serving at the synagogue. This missionary work allowed the Jewish community to ensure safety during times of persecution against Jews
The August Haaretz article referred briefly to one such document, but it seems there are more now. The discovery of Jewish texts of a date comparable to the Dead Sea Scrolls, if that is substantiated, is a major event. I do want to know more about them and how they have been dated. The climate of Phanagoria isn't likely to preserve leather or papyrus documents. Are these stone inscriptions displayed in the synagogue? (Sounds like it.) How are they dated? What is their stratigraphic context? And, not least, what exactly do they say?

In any case, as above, this site is a remarkable discovery.

Please excuse the earlier post slipping my mind. Increasingly I find that PaleoJudaica serves as my backup memory.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

More on that Samaritan Decalogue for sale

EPIGRAPHIC AUCTION: Ten Commandments tablet, up for auction at Sotheby’s, to come with disclaimer. 1,500-year-old Samaritan version of text to be sold with notification that Israel only permitted it to be removed from country on condition it is put on public display (JTA and ToI).

We already knew about this condition for any sale. But, reportedly, the object has not been on display since the 2016 sale.

Although the Daily Mail named a current owner, this JTA/ToI article, like the others I have seen, says that the owner remains anonymous. This claim is advanced in the name of Steven Fine, so I take it quite seriously.

As I've said, the object belongs in a museum. The Sotheby's representative agrees and is trying to place it with one. I hope she succeeds.

Background here, with links to posts about the previous sale in 2016.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Shokri-Foumeshi, Mani’s Living Gospel and the Ewangelyōnīg Hymns (Brepols)

BIBLIOGRAPHIA IRANICA: Mani’s Living Gospel and the Ewangelyōnīg Hymns.

Notice of a New Book:

Shokri-Foumeshi, Mohammad (ed.). 2025. Mani’s Living Gospel and the Ewangelyōnīg Hymns. Edition, Reconstruction and Commentary with a Codicological and Textual Approach Based on Manichaean Turfan Fragments in the Berlin Collection (Corpus Fontium Manichaeorum. Series Iranica 3). Turnhout: Brepols.

Follow the link for the TOC and a link to the Brepols page. Cross-file under Manichean (Manichaean) Watch.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

DSS anniversary exhibit at the Ronald Reagan Library

EXHIBITION: Dead Sea Scrolls on Loan to Ronald Reagan Library (Hana Levi Julian, The Jewish Press).
For the first time in over a decade, the Dead Sea Scrolls will be on loan from Israel and on display for guests to enjoy at the Ronald Reagan Library in Los Angeles from Nov. 22, 2024 – Sept. 2, 2025. ...

The exhibit will honor the 75th anniversary of the finding of the Dead Sea Scrolls, considered to be one of the most significant archaeological discoveries of the 20th century.

In addition to eight Dead Sea Scrolls (including the large Psalms scroll from Cave 11), the exhibition includes the Magdala Stone, the Sea of Galilee Boat or Jesus Boat, and other important artifacts.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Itamar Gruenwald (1937-2024)

SAD NEWS: Passing of Prof. Itamar Gruenwald (1937-2024).
H-Judaic is saddened to learn of the passing of Prof. Ithamar Gruenwald (1937-2024), emeritus professor of Jewish Philosophy and Religious Thought at Tel Aviv University.

Prof. Gruenwald, a highly influential scholar in Israel, focused on the transitions from biblical to rabbinic thought and on to ancient Jewish mysticism; more recently he studied Jewish ritual behavior. Gideon Bohak explains the significance of his scholarship in "Ithamar Gruenwald -- From Apocalypticism to Mysticism, From Jewish Studies to Religious Studies," in MYTH, RITUAL & MYSTICISM, the festschrift in Prof. Gruenwald's honor edited by Bohak along with Ron Magolin and Ishay Rosen-Zvi (2014).

[...]

My own work has been influenced a good deal by Prof. Gruenwald's work, especially on Merkavah mysticism and the Hekhalot literature.

May his memory be for a blessing.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Monday, November 18, 2024

The Coptic Magical Formularies Project

THE COPTIC MAGICAL PAPYRI BLOG: 2024 Review: The Beginning of the Coptic Magical Formularies Project.
Looking forward…

The Coptic Magical Papyri project ended last year, but we are happy to announce that it will continue in a new form. The Coptic Magical Formularies project has been funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) for three years, from 2024 to 2027, with the research to be carried out by Korshi Dosoo, former leader of the Coptic Magical Texts project, and Markéta Preininger, formerly doctoral and then postdoctoral researcher on the same project.

This project will focus on the production of a second volume of the Papyri Copticae Magicae, the series whose first volume appeared last year. ...

We were aware that this new project has been funded. It's good to have more information in this post.

PaleoJudaica has followed the Coptic Magical Papyri Project since its inception. There are lots of posts in the archive. I look forward to following the work of the new project and to the publication of lots more Coptic magical texts.

Cross-file under (of course) Coptic Watch.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Oracc: The Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus

THE AWOL BLOG: Oracc: The Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus Projects List.
Oracc is a collaborative effort to develop a complete corpus of cuneiform whose rich annotation and open licensing support the next generation of scholarly research. Created by Steve Tinney, Oracc is steered by Jamie Novotny, Eleanor Robson, Tinney, and Niek Veldhuis.
My goodness! This site may not contain all the cuneiform everywhere (yet!), but if cuneiform is your thing, there's certainly enough to keep you busy for a long time.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Malandra, The Bundahišn

BIBLIOGRAPHIA IRANICA: The Bundahišn. Notice of a New Book:
Malandra, William W. 2024. The Bundahišn. Translated with Commentary (Monograph Series 68). Leesburg VA: The Journal of Indo-European Studies.
Several years ago I noted another BI post highlighting another English translation of the Bundahišn, by Domenico Agostini and Samuel Thrope. See that link for more information on this important compendium of ancient Zoroastrian traditions.

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Sunday, November 17, 2024

Buzi& Orlandi (eds.), The Coptic Codices of the Museo Egizio, Turin

THE AWOL BLOG: The Coptic Codices of the Museo Egizio, Turin. Open access. Edited by Paola Buzi e Tito Orlandi and published in 2023 by Studi del Museo Egizio. Follow the link for the description.

Cross-file under Coptic Watch.

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Saturday, November 16, 2024

... Essays Celebrating 50 Years of the Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
From the Battlefield of Books: Essays Celebrating 50 Years of the Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit

Cambridge Genizah Studies Series, Volume 16

Series: Cambridge Genizah Studies, Volume: 99/16
Études sur le judaïsme médiéval, Volume: 99/16

Volume Editors: Nick Posegay, Magdalen M. Connolly, and Ben Outhwaite

This collection of essays celebrates 50 years since the founding of the Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit at Cambridge University Library. Three generations of scholars contributed their research and memories from their time at the GRU, stretching back to 1974. Their work comprises 18 articles on medieval Jewish History, Hebrew and Arabic manuscripts, archival history, and the story of the Cairo Genizah collections at the University of Cambridge. Together, they demonstrate the achievements of GRU alumni in advancing the field of Genizah Studies for more than five decades.

Copyright Year: 2025

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-71233-1
Publication: 14 Oct 2024

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-71232-4
Publication: 17 Oct 2024
EUR €120.00

For another Cambridge Geniza Unit anniversary volume, see here.

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Friday, November 15, 2024

Fifth-century Solomon amulet excavated at Hadrianopolis

APOTROPAIC ICONOGRAPHY: 1500-year-old Stunning Pendant Amulet Depicting the Prophet Solomon Spearing the Devil on Horseback Found in Türkiye (Leman Altuntaş, Arkeonews). HT Archeologica.
Çelikbaş noted that the inscription on the pendant reads “Our Lord has overcome evil” and said: “Why was this pendant, this amulet, found here? In fact, it has to do with the military character of Hadrianopolis. We have previously identified evidence of a cavalry unit here through archaeological finds. Solomon is also known as the commander of armies. We understand that he was also considered as a protective figure for the Roman and Byzantine cavalry at Hadrianopolis.”

Çelikbaş said: “The front depicts the Prophet Solomon and mentions God’s triumph over evil, while the back bears the names of our four holy angels: Azrael, Gabriel, Michael, and Israfil. This is also very significant. No similar artifact has been found in Anatolian archaeology to date. Only one comparable example in terms of depiction has been found in Jerusalem. The appearance of two similar artifacts over such great distances indicates that this area was an important religious center in antiquity. Based on the fonts of the inscriptions and stratigraphic data from our studies, we date the artifact to the fifth century A.D.”

The photos (see also the video) are not great, but it looks to me as though the translation of the front inscription is very free.

The inscription is in Greek. Starting after the hole on the left side, I see ΘΕΟΣΟΝΙΚΟΝΤΔ. There may also be a couple of letters before the hole, but I would need a better photo to be sure. I see two words with an article between, θεοϛ o νικον and then two letters (ΤΔ) that don't make sense as a word. Perhaps an abbreviation? Given the image on the front and the attempted translation in the article, I'm going to speculate that they stand for τον διαβολον. If we allow for some flexible spelling, the whole inscription would thus say "(?) God is the one conquering t(he) d(evil)." That's the best I can do with the information at hand.

Unfortunately, there is no photo of the back of the object, which bears the angel names.

The article doesn't address the question of its social provenance. Knowing nothing about fifth century Hadrianopolis, I would not rule out either a Jewish or a Christian origin. The wording sounds more Christian to me.

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Two-year Rabbinics job at HUC-JIR

H-JUDAIC: FEATURED JOB: Two-Year Visiting Assistant Professor in Jewish Textual Tradition, Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, Los Angeles.
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, Los Angeles Campus, invites applications for a two-year non-tenure track position in Jewish Textual Traditions, to begin on July 1, 2025.

QUALIFICATIONS:

We seek candidates with a PhD in Rabbinics or a related field who can teach students how to read and explicate classical Jewish texts in their original language. The successful candidate will be able to teach courses in Talmud and medieval codes and will participate in creating and teaching a new course in Jewish Textual Interpretation. Broad knowledge of the Jewish tradition and its texts, as well as proficiency in Hebrew and rabbinic Aramaic, is essential.

We are seeking candidates who are interested in joining a diverse faculty and who possess a commitment to high-quality teaching and a drive to contribute to their academic field, HUC-JIR, and the broader Jewish world through scholarship, teaching, and service.

Follow the link for further particulars and application instructions. The application deadline is 2 January 2025.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Book launch for The Illustrated Cairo Genizah

THE GENIZA FRAGMENTS BLOG: Launching 'The Illustrated Cairo Genizah' in Cambridge (Melonie Schmierer-Lee).
Yesterday evening, Nick Posegay and I stood in Heffers Bookshop before a supportive crowd of family, friends, and Genizah enthusiasts to speak about and officially launch 'The Illustrated Cairo Genizah'. The book marks the Genizah Research Unit's 50th anniversary, and celebrates the increasing public interest in the Genizah collection. ...
I noted the book as forthcoming here. It's good to see that it's now out.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

AJR is 10!

CONGRATULATIONS TO AJR: Ancient Jew Review: The First Ten Years (Andrew Jacobs).
As I look back over ten years of AJR, I marvel at the lightning that Krista, Simcha, and Nathan captured in a bottle. They succeeded in creating an intellectual commons that remains thoughtful and accessible, reliable yet innovative. That the editors have succeeded in the precarious climate of higher education in the U.S. is even more remarkable, but we should not lose sight of that precarity. Two of the founding editors are full-time faculty (Krista has recently been tenured); the third, however, has left the academy. The website continues to run on the donated labor of its editors and writers, a volunteer community of the mind.
Wow, has it really been ten years?

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Review of Arzt-Grabner, Letters and letter writing

BRYN MAYR CLASSICAL REVIEW: Letters and letter writing.
Peter Arzt-Grabner, Letters and letter writing. Papyri and the New Testament, 2. Leiden: Brill, 2023. Pp. xxx, 455. ISBN 9783506790484.

Review by
Ezra la Roi, Ghent University. ezra.laroi@ugent.be

One of the key insights obtained by Adolf Deissmann around the turn of the twentieth century was that the papyri from Egypt show significant similarities with the New Testament, for example in representing what is usually referred to as “common Greek”[1]. In this book, Peter Arzt-Grabner shows us not only how far the similarities go between letters on Egyptian papyri and the epistles in the New Testament, but also where they differ.

[...]

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Connected cosmologies?

DR. ANNA ANGELINI: Celestial Ties: Are Biblical, Greek, and Mesopotamian Cosmologies Connected? (TheTorah.com).
Is there a common conception behind the lights of the Priestly redactors, the flaming wheels of the Ionian philosophers, and the lamps of the Mesopotamian commentators?
Maybe. But maybe not. The Mesopotamian, Israelite, and Greek sages were very smart people. Each group may have come up with a lot of their own cosmology just by looking up at the sky and drawing inferences. Not everything is influence.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Open-access Festschriften etc. from ISAC

THE AWOL BLOG: Festschriften and Gedenkschriften published by the Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures. Lots of important open-access volumes, honoring Biggs, Esse, Golb, Gragg, Güterbock, Huehnergard, Jacobsen, Oppenheim, Pardee, and many others, published from the 1960s to the present.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Ancient Samaritan Decalogue for sale

WHAT, AGAIN? The Oldest Stone Tablet Carved With the Ten Commandments Is Up for Sale. The single-lot sale is estimated to fetch at least $1 million (Adam Schrader, Artnet News).
The oldest stone tablet depicting the Ten Commandments of Jewish and Christian faiths will be auctioned, more than a hundred years after it was first discovered.

The marble tablet, which weighs 115 pounds and measures about two feet in height, will go on display at Sotheby’s New York beginning December 5. It will then hit the block in a single-lot sale on December 18, with an estimate of $1–2 million.

[...]

As the article notes, this same artifact was sold in 2016 for $850,000. This article says that the buyer is unknown, but this Daily Mail article (which also has more photos) names a buyer.

As always, I very much encourage the new buyer to donate it to a museum.

Background on the tablet, its discovery, and its previous sales is here (cf. here) and links. Cross-file under Samaritan Watch and Hebrew Epigraphy.

UPDATE (20 November): I have deleted the quote from the Daily Mail. Click through to their article if you want to know what they say. As far as I can tell (see here), the current owner remains anonymous.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Trees in the Hebrew Bible

DR. ADRIANE LEVEEN: And They Spoke of Trees (TheTorah.com).
The cedar and cypress, among other trees, occupy a prominent place in the Bible—representing life, sustenance, and wisdom. The prophets draw on their deep knowledge of trees to convey messages of hope and destruction.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Review of Coşkun & Wenghofer (eds.), Seleukid ideology: creation, reception and response

BRYN MAYR CLASSICAL REVIEW: Seleukid ideology: creation, reception and response.
Altay Coşkun, Richard Wenghofer, Seleukid ideology: creation, reception and response. Seleukid perspectives, 1. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2023. Pp. 390. ISBN 9783515134781.

Review by
Marco Ferrario, University of Trento / Universität Augsburg. marco.ferrarrio@unitn.it / marco.ferrario@uni-a.de

Seleukid Ideology heralds a new series devoted to studying several aspects of the Empire’s history. It grew from a monthly Seleukid Lecture Series, an informal network of established scholars and upcoming researchers, and it represents another welcome outcome of the Seleukid Study Days, several proceedings of which have already been published in the last few years.

[...]

Lots of interesting-looking articles in this volume, notably:
12. Benjamin E. Scolnic, Śar Wars—How a Judaean Author in the 160’s BCE Transformed a Ptolemaic View of Hellenistic History into a Theology for His Time
13. Eran Almagor, “To All Parts of the Kingdom”: The Book of Esther as a Seleukid Text.
15. Altay Coşkun, The Efficacy of Ideological Discourse: Loyalty to the Seleukid Dynasty in Babylonia, Judaea, and Asia Minor
For additional PaleoJudaica posts on the Seleukid (Seleucid) dynasty and its importance for the Bible and Second Temple Judaism, start here and follow the links.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Review of Schniedewind, Who Really Wrote the Bible

BOOK REVIEW: ‘Who Really Wrote the Bible’ by William M. Schniedewind review. Who Really Wrote the Bible: The Story of the Scribes by William M. Schniedewind asks what authorship meant to the hidden hands behind the Old Testament (Alec Ryrie, History Today 74, vol. 11).
His scope is exclusively the Hebrew Bible, the ‘Old Testament’. There are also questions about the authorship of the New Testament, but that was written in Greek and Schniedewind sees ‘authorship’, in the modern sense, as a Greek idea that was a latecomer to Jewish culture. Almost none of the books of the Hebrew Bible claim to have an author, simply because that’s not how books were written in ancient Hebrew. They were the product of scribal communities, not individuals.
Cross-file under New Book (Princeton University Press, 2024).

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The Mazzarón II has been raised

PHOENICIAN WATCH: The Mazzaron Phoenician Boat is successfully raised from seabed. The keel of the shipwreck is the last of the 22 sections to be recovered after two months of painstaking work (Murcia Today).

For some years I have been following the planning for and raising of the Mazarrón II shipwreck in Murcia, Spain. The excavation work is finally done.

The ship is now to be reassembled and restored at nearby Cartagena. It remains to be decided whether it will go on permanent public display there or at Mazzarón.

Background here and links. Note the variable spellings Mazzarón (Mazzaron) and Mazarrón (Mazarron).

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Sifting Project presents analysis of its First Temple-era pottery

THE TEMPLE MOUNT SIFTING PROJECT BLOG: MILESTONE ACHIEVEMENT IN OUR RESEARCH: QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF FIRST TEMPLE PERIOD POTTERY.
Last Thursday, we reached a significant milestone in our research and publication process. At the annual New Studies in the Archaeology of Jerusalem and its Region conference, organized by the Israel Antiquities Authority, the Hebrew University, and Tel Aviv University, we presented key findings from the quantitative analysis of pottery from the mid-late First Temple Period (Iron Age IIB-C). Our study focuses on comparing these artifacts with finds from other Jerusalem sites, particularly the Ophel area.

[...]

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Monday, November 11, 2024

Labahn, Lamentations: A Commentary Based on the Text in Codex Vaticanus (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
Lamentations

A Commentary Based on the Text in Codex Vaticanus

Series: Septuagint Commentary Series

Author: Antje Labahn

This commentary on Greek Lamentations is based on the Codex Vaticanus, and includes an introduction, Greek text and English translation. LamLXX presents a new interpretation of the past, creating its own conceptual idea about loss and destruction, grief and suffering. In varied vivid images, metaphors and pictures, LamLXX retells past experiences as present life, invoking conditions reminiscent of Exodus. Hope is reduced to a limited amount, suffering seems endless. Only through prophet Jeremiah’s mediation, a new perspective for future life appears at the horizon. Contemporary readers, or readers of any period, may find therein representations of their own experiences in life.

Copyright Year: 2024

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-70168-7
Publication: 02 Oct 2024
EUR €110.00

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-69958-8
Publication: 04 Oct 2024
EUR €110.00

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Sunday, November 10, 2024

Luther, Hiob in Qumran (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
Hiob in Qumran

Der Beitrag der Hiobhandschriften aus Qumran zur Text- und Literargeschichte des Hiobbuchs

Series:
Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah, Volume: 148

Author: Rebekka Luther

The six manuscripts from Ḥirbet Qumran (2Q15, 4Q99, 4Q100, 4Q101, 4Q157, 11Q10) are the oldest textual witnesses of the Hebrew Book of Job, which received its final redaction during the 3rd century BCE. But their different characteristics and fragmentary condition make it hard to draw a picture on what these textual witnesses actually testify to. This study combines Text- and Literarkritik while considering their individual features. The results unveil a history of reception of the image of Job, which goes hand in hand with an ongoing production and reworking of the text.

In dieser Studie werden die sechs fragmentarischen Hiobmanuskripte aus Ḥirbet Qumran in text- und literarkritischen Einzelanalysen untersucht. Die Ergebnisse geben Einblick in die früheste Rezeptionsgeschichte und zeigen, welche Themen nach dem Abschluss der Großkomposition im 3. Jh. v. Chr. die weisheitliche Debatte um das Schicksal Hiobs prägten.

Copyright Year: 2025

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-70886-0
Publication: 02 Oct 2024
EUR €125.00

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-70881-5
Publication: 10 Oct 2024
EUR €125.00

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Saturday, November 09, 2024

Glinter, Menachem Mendel Schneerson (Yale)

NEW BOOK FROM YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS:
Menachem Mendel Schneerson

Becoming the Messiah

by Ezra Glinter

Series: Jewish Lives

320 Pages, 5.75 x 8.25 in, 13 b-w illus.

Hardcover
9780300222623
Published: Tuesday, 29 Oct 2024
$28.00

eBook
9780300280371
Published: Tuesday, 29 Oct 2024
$28.00

Description

The life and thought of Menachem Mendel Schneerson, one of the most influential—and controversial—rabbis in modern Judaism

“Accessible, informed, and balanced. . . . The author manages to tread on fragile ground with aplomb. . . . An exceptional tool for understanding.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

The Chabad-Lubavitch movement, one of the world’s best-known Hasidic groups, is driven by the belief that we are on the verge of the messianic age. The man most recognized for the movement’s success is the seventh and last Lubavitcher rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994), believed by many of his followers to be the Messiah.

While hope of redemption has sustained the Jewish people through exile and persecution, it has also upended Jewish society with its apocalyptic and anarchic tendencies. So it is not surprising that Schneerson’s messianic fervor made him one of the most controversial rabbinic leaders of the twentieth century. How did he go from being an ordinary rabbi’s son in the Russian Empire to achieving status as a mystical sage? How did he revitalize a centuries-old Hasidic movement, construct an outreach empire of unprecedented scope, and earn the admiration and condemnation of political, communal, and religious leaders in America and abroad?

Ezra Glinter’s deeply researched account is the first biography of Schneerson to combine a nonpartisan view of his life, work, and impact with an insider’s understanding of the ideology that drove him and that continues to inspire the Chabad-Lubavitch movement today.

For many PaleoJudaica posts on the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, and the messianic tradition around him, start here and follow the links.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Friday, November 08, 2024

Bronze bulls and other goodies excavated at MBA Tel Shimron

BOVINE ICONOGRAPHY: Giant Trove of Canaanite Cultic Artifacts Found in Northern Israel. Atop Tel Shimron, archaeologists reveal enigmatic monumental 'white' structure from Canaanite era and its storage for used religious artifacts, and animal bones (Ariel David, Haaretz).
Archaeologists digging at Tel Shimron in northern Israel are revealing a monumental structure from which they have recovered a vast cache of rare cultic objects used some 3,800 years ago by the ancient Canaanites.

Burnt animal bones, precious imported ceramics and two bull statuettes representing Canaanite deities are just the most spectacular finds that emerged from a huge dump of religious artifacts located at the top of the recently-discovered monument.

[...]

On those bull statuettes, found in what the archaeologists think is a "favissa," a room for storing retired religious ritual objects:
At this point one could be reminded of the old joke about archaeologists interpreting everything they can't explain as signs of cultic activity. But there are good reasons to believe the ancient trove found at Shimron is not just a random dump of Middle Bronze domestic garbage.

The types of pottery vessels are typical of what is found in temples, rather than in domestic contexts, Master says. Initial analysis of the animal bones also shows that many burned at very high temperatures that would have destroyed any meat on them, suggesting they were not for domestic consumption, he adds.

And then of course there is the matter of the two bronze bull figurines that emerged from the favissa.

These are generally interpreted as cultic representations of El – the head of the Canaanite pantheon – or of the storm god Baal.

There are photos in the article.

Metal bulls naturally make one think of the "golden calf" found in the Exodus tradition (Exodus 32) and the two such objects reportedly used in Jeroboam I's cultic apparatus (1 Kings 13).

These two new metal bulls join the slightly later silver filigreed bronze bull excavated at Ashkelon (link to photo here) and the 2,500-year-old bronze bull excavated in Greece a few years ago. Those links also discuss the golden calf supposedly found in Gozo, Malta, in the eighteenth century. There was also the golden calf seized by Turkish authories in 2017, which I suspect is of pretty recent origin.

Follow the links above for discussion of how these excavated metal bulls could relate to the biblical golden calf traditions. And keep following the links from there for more on the biblical traditions.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Review of Fontanille, The Yehud coinage

BRYN MAYR CLASSICAL REVIEW: The Yehud coinage: a study and die classification of the provincial silver coinage of Judah.
Haim Gitler, Catharine Lorber, Jean-Philippe Fontanille, The Yehud coinage: a study and die classification of the provincial silver coinage of Judah. Numismatic studies and researches, 12. Jerusalem: The Israel Numismatic Society, 2023. Pp. xii, 532. ISBN 9789655982299.

Review by
David Hendin, American Numismatic Society. dhendin@numismatics.org

This comprehensive 532-page volume, weighing over 3 kilograms, is dedicated to the smallest coins ever minted in the Southern Levant—the Yehud coins, most of which weigh less than half a gram. The book explores the historical, numismatic, and archaeological contexts of these minuscule coins in meticulous detail. The small silver Yehud coins were the first coins struck in the ancient land of Judah by local officials.

[...]

Cross-file under Numismatics.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

More on some contested Canaanite/Hebrew inscription claims

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Too Good to Be True? Not Necessarily So! Rollston ignores context of “sensational” inscriptions (Pieter Gert van der Veen).
In his recent Biblical Archaeology Review article, “Too Good to Be True? Reckoning with Sensational Inscriptions,” epigrapher Christopher Rollston takes to task several recent studies of apparent paleo-Hebrew and proto-Canaanite inscriptions and criticizes some of his fellow epigraphers (myself included) for reading too much into these badly damaged and/or questionable texts. Although I agree with some of his points, with others I clearly cannot. Below I consider two of the texts discussed by Rollston in his article.

[...]

The main substantive points involve the fishing weight intepretation.

I don't think anyone was ignoring the archaeological context of the lapidary inscription fragment, which was in a fill containing eighth century potsherds, but not a solid stratum. The reason for caution is that there is so little of the fragment.

The lapidary inscription fragments (see links below for specifics) which have undoubted letters on them are probably the remains of official (royal?) inscriptions from around Hezekiah's era. I wouldn't be more specific than that.

For PaleoJudaica posts on the Mount Ebal curse tablet/fishing weight, including my own preliminary assessment, see here and links. For posts on the supposed Hezekiah inscription fragments, as well as some others that Prof. Galil believes he has deciphered, see here, here, and here and links.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Thursday, November 07, 2024

Review of Arzt-Grabner et al. (eds.), More light from the ancient East

BRYN MAYR CLASSICAL REVIEW: More light from the ancient East: understanding the New Testament through papyri.
Peter Arzt-Grabner, John S. Kloppenborg, Christina M. Kreinecker, Gregg Schwendner, More light from the ancient East: understanding the New Testament through papyri. Papyri and the New Testament, 1. Leiden: Brill, 2023. Pp. xl, 237. ISBN 9783506790415.

Review by
Lajos Berkes, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin. lajos.berkes@hu-berlin.de

... The volume is well produced, and typos and infelicities are rare. Overall, this is a readable book which provides a good introduction to papyrology for scholars who are interested in what papyri can contribute to understanding the NT. One of its strengths are the translations of selected papyri at the end of each chapter, which, thanks to the detailed explanations, succeed in showcasing how they are relevant for the book’s topic. ...

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Lu, The Transformation of Tĕhôm (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
The Transformation of Tĕhôm

From Deified Power to Demonized Abyss

Series: Biblical Interpretation Series, Volume: 224

Author: Rosanna Lu

Tehom, the Hebrew Bible’s primeval deep, is a powerful concept often overlooked outside of creation and conflict contexts. Primeval waters mark the boundary between life and death in the Hebrew Bible and the ancient Near East, representing the duality of both deliverance and judgment. This book examines all contexts of Tehom to explain its conceptual forms and use as a proper noun. Comparative methodology combined with affect and spatial theories provide new ways to understand how religious communities repurposed Tehom. These interpretations of Tehom empower resilience in times of suffering and oppression.

Copyright Year: 2025

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-70803-7
Publication: 07 Oct 2024
EUR €120.00

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-70877-8
Publication: 17 Oct 2024
EUR €120.00

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Wednesday, November 06, 2024

Tutty, The Monks of the Nag Hammadi Codices (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
The Monks of the Nag Hammadi Codices

Contextualising a Fourth-Century Monastic Community

Series:
Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies, Volume: 107

Author: Paula Tutty

This work tells the story of a community of fourth-century monks living in Egypt. The letters they wrote and received were found within the covers of works that changed our understanding of early religious thought - the Nag Hammadi Codices. This book seeks to contextualise the letters and answer questions about monastic life. Significantly, new evidence is presented that links the letters directly to the authors and creators of the codices in which they were discovered.

Copyright Year: 2025

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-69908-3
Publication: 02 Oct 2024
EUR €130.00

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-69574-0
Publication: 10 Oct 2024
EUR €130.00

Cross-file under Coptic Watch.

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Melilah: Manchester Journal of Jewish Studies

THE AWOL BLOG: Open Access Journal: Melilah: Manchester Journal of Jewish Studies.

It's been quite a while since I mentioned this journal, so this is a good opportunity to do so again. It deals with Judaism from all periods, but antiquity is well represented.

Unfortunately, it looks like there has not been a new volume since 2019.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Häberlein, Speaking to Job in Greek (De Gruyter)

NEW BOOK FROM DE GRUYTER:
Speaking to Job in Greek
Text, Translation Technique, Literary and Theological Profile of OG Job 38:1-42:6

Maximilian Häberlein
Volume 560 in the series Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft
https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111399003

Institutional price £110.00

eBook
Published: September 23, 2024
ISBN: 9783111399003

Hardcover
Published: September 23, 2024
ISBN: 9783111397443

About this book

This study investigates the Old Greek translation of Job regarding its text, Vorlage, translation technique, literary contexts, and theological profile.
To situate OG Job within its ancient contexts, both the strategies employed by the translators and the literary profile of the translated text have to be taken into account. Thus, an approach is employed encompassing a thick description of translational strategies; and a reading of the translated text in its own right. This framework is applied in an investigation of God’s answer to Job in OG Job 38:1-42:6. The results show that the translators worked from a Vorlage similar to, but not fully identical with MT, and produced a coherent, stylized text. The transformations undertaken, including double translations, intertextual renderings, minuses, small-scale rewritings and paraphrases, can be situated in an environment influenced by Greek educational and philological practices, but are also deeply indebted to Jewish scribal traditions. While not introducing sweeping theological changes, the translation nevertheless shows a tendency to emphasize divine sovereignty. The study thus contributes to a deeper understanding of this important witness to the book of Job an Jewish literature in the Hellenistic period.

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Late-antique Coptic Psalms fragments for sale

VARIANT READINGS: Additional Items from the Schøyen Collection on Sale (Brent Nongbri).

Brent reports that three Coptic parchment folios with material from the Book of Psalms are being advertised for sale on a rare book dealer's website. The sale site dates them all to the first half of the fifth century. Two look like they are from the same codex. The third less so, but it's hard to be sure.

Follow the link for more from Brent, including on the question of provenance.

As usual with these things, if these manuscripts must be sold, I encourage the buyer to donate them to a museum. Or, failing that, at least to make them available freely for scholars to study.

For more on the sale of the Crosby-Schøyen codex, mentioned in the post, see here links. For the sale and fate of the Codex Sinaiticus Rescriptus, sold at the same auction, see here and links.

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The Critical Edition of the Hebrew Psalter Project

TEXTUAL CRITICISM: Welcome to the Critical Edition of the Hebrew Psalter Project The first eclectic and digital critical edition of the first 50 Psalms.
This Virtual Manuscript Room digital workspace will support the three-year NEH-funded project “‘I Shall No Longer Want’ (Psalm 23:1): The Critical Edition of the Hebrew Psalter” (CEHP) to produce the first full eclectic and digital critical edition of the Hebrew Psalms 1-50, as well as the printed volume for Psalms 1-50 for the Hebrew Bible: A Critical Edition series. The project is co-directed by Prof. Brent Strawn and Dr. Drew Longacre at Duke University/Divinity School.

[...]

Follow the link for additional details. The project also has a blog: Critical Edition of the Hebrew Psalter.

HT Drew Longacre.

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Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Is the "Passover" Papyrus really about a Zoroastrian rite?

ELEPHANTINE WATCH: New Study of 'Passover Letter' May Change What We Know About the Birth of Judaism. The 2,400-year-old papyrus from Elephantine, touted as the earliest evidence for Pesach, may in fact reference Zoroastrian-influenced rituals, Israeli scholar concludes (Ariel David, Haaretz).
The so-called 'Passover Letter' is a tattered papyrus written in Aramaic during the Persian period. It is thought by scholars to contain the first extrabiblical reference to the rituals of Pesach, thus proving that this festival was already well established more than 2,400 years ago.

Not so, says a new study by an Israeli researcher, which calls into question a century of scholarship on the seminal document and claims the text has little or nothing to do with Passover as we know it. Instead, the letter was most likely discussing Zoroastrian-inspired rituals that were commonly observed by Jews in the Persian Empire, says Dr. Gad Barnea, a lecturer in Jewish history and biblical studies at Haifa University.

[...]

The underlying article is published in the open-access Shaked Festschrift, to which I linked here. Gad Barnea has also published the full volume, including this article, at his Academia.edu site.

For PaleoJudaica posts on the Aramaic "Passover" Papyrus from Elephantine, which doesn't actually mention Passover in its surviving text, see here and here and follow the many links. For another argument that the papyrus did not mention Passover at all, see here.

Dr. Barnea's argument involves technical aspects of ancient Zoroastrian worship outside my expertise, so I take no position on it. But I have made a case here that Passover as we know it was known, and perhaps well-known, in Judea no later than the third century BCE and quite possibly as early as the late seventh century BCE.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

A Josephus apocryphon on Hades

ROGER PEARSE: Pseudo-Josephus, “A Discourse to the Greeks concerning Hades” – an investigation AND More on Pseudo-Josephus, “Discourse to the Greeks on Hades.”

The discussion is technical, but Roger includes a link to a translation of the text. It is worth reading as a late-antique, clearly Christian, treatise on Hades addressed to "the Greeks." It looks like attribution to Josephus is a transmission error rather than the intent of the author (who may have been Hippolytus).

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Tony Burke's Regensburg Year: October

THE APOCRYPHICITY BLOG: My Regensburg Year Part 3: October 2024.

Tony Burke is on research sabbatical for the 2024-25 academic year at the University of Regensburg in Germany. This is his most recent update. With the latest on Thecla and on the dormition of Mary tradition.

For earlier posts in this series, see here and links. For more on Tony's work and related matters, see here and here.

Cross-file under New Testament Apocrypha Watch.

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Monday, November 04, 2024

A cat kneaded an unfired pot 1,200 years ago in Jerusalem

FELINE-EMBELLISHED MATERIAL CULTURE: Archaeologists Find First-ever Evidence of a Cat Kneading, in Jerusalem. Combing through excavation material from Mount Zion in Jerusalem, lab director Gretchen Cotter noticed something unusual on an Abbasid-era clay jug (Ruth Schuster, Haaretz).
It is the claw marks that whisper of the ancient cat's contentment. It didn't just walk on the raw jar, which is absolutely a thing a cat would do. If it had just been strolling on the jug – first, cats have retractable claws in their front feet and do not stroll about with their front claws extended. There would not be any claw marks. Second, we wouldn't see the imprint of its foreleg.

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Biblical Studies Carnival 221

ZWINGLIUS REDIVIVUS: The ‘Thank Heaven October is Over’ Biblical Studies Carnival (Jim West).

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Carr, Essays on the Study of the Pentateuch (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK: David M. Carr. From Sources to Scrolls and Beyond. Essays on the Study of the Pentateuch. Forschungen zum Alten Testament (FAT) 177. €159.00 including VAT. cloth available 978-3-16-163223-5. Also Available As: eBook PDF €159.00).
This volume collects thirteen essays by David M. Carr which join the study of the formation of the Pentateuch with research on other topics, from material history to animal studies. It begins with a detailed history of the last half-century of scholarship on the formation of the Pentateuch along with more general essays on the rationale for such study and on other methodological issues in Pentateuchal research. Two subsequent sections collect essays on intertextuality and on the material history of the five-scroll Pentateuchal collection. The volume concludes with essays linking such research with other areas, e.g. the question of the »author« in literary studies and questions about relations between humans and other animals in animal studies. Each chapter is prefaced with an introduction providing background on the context and problems addressed in the essay.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Sunday, November 03, 2024

Kratz, »Väterliche Gesetze« und das Gesetz des Mose (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK: Reinhard Gregor Kratz. »Väterliche Gesetze« und das Gesetz des Mose. Die Rolle der Tora im judäischen Aufstand gegen Antiochos IV. [»Ancestral Laws« and the Law of Moses. The Role of the Torah in the Judean Revolt against Antiochos IV.] 2024. XII, 284 pages. Tria Corda (TrC) 16. Published in German. €34.00 including VAT. sewn paper available 978-3-16-162741-5. Also Available As: eBook PDF €34.00.
Reinhard Gregor Kratz addresses the question of the role the Torah played in the Maccabean revolt against Antiochos IV in the second century BCE and how the Law of Moses relates to the »ancestral laws« mentioned in Seleucid and Jewish sources.

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Saturday, November 02, 2024

Jews and Christians in the First and Second Centuries (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
Jews and Christians in the First and Second Centuries: Mapping the Second Century

Series:
Compendia Rerum Iudaicarum ad Novum Testamentum, Volume: 18

Volume Editors: Matthijs Dulk, den, Joshua Schwartz, Peter J. Tomson, and Joseph Verheyden

The second century is a crucial period for the formation of both Judaism and Christianity, but remains in important ways terra incognita. This volume brings together specialists in Jewish studies and Christian studies, two closely related disciplines that nonetheless continue to operate in relative isolation. Taking into consideration the full panoply of Jewish and Christian identities, the volume proposes fresh ways to map the interrelated histories of Jews and Christians. Contributions by leading scholars offer new insights into this period informed by a rich variety of perspectives, including theoretical, literary, thematic and material approaches.

Copyright Year: 2025

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-70440-4
Publication: 16 Sep 2024
EUR €199.00

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-70439-8
Publication: 12 Sep 2024
EUR €199.00

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Friday, November 01, 2024

Review of Manekin-Bamberger, Seder Mazikin

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW: Seder Mazikin: Law and Magic in Late Antique Jewish Society (Sarit Kattan Gribetz).
Avigail Manekin-Bamberger, Seder Mazikin: Law and Magic in Late Antique Jewish Society (Jerusalem: Yad Izhak Ben Zvi, 2024). [Hebrew]

... Seder Mazikin is meticulously researched and generously written, such that both experts in the field and those who are just getting started will learn a tremendous amount about the [Babylonian Aramaic incantation] bowls, their legal dimensions, and their relationship to rabbinic sources. The book takes seriously the technical aspects of the bowls while drawing far-ranging conclusions about the social, intellectual, and material world in which they were produced....

Unmentioned in the review is that the more recently published incantation bowls (after Montgomery's publication) are mostly (entirely?) unprovenanced. Is it possible to forge one convincingly? It would be very difficult, but it would become easier as more of them are published. I discuss the issue further here.

I haven't read the book, but based on this review, I think I would agree with its conclusions. I wrote about the incantation bowls in my book Descenders to the Chariot (Brill 2001) and discussed the social background of their composers as non-rabbinic scribes on pp. 245-50. And I propose a specific connection with the Sar Torah hekhalot practitioners on pp. 276-77.

There are many PaleoJudaica posts on the Babylonian Aramaic incantation bowls. Start here and keep following the links, and see also here, here, here, here, here, and here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

BHD on the raising of the Mazzarón II

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Phoenician Ship Raised from the Seafloor. Archaeologists lift nearly complete vessel from Spanish waters (Nathan Steinmeyer).
A team of specialists from the University of Valencia is hard at work lifting a nearly complete Phoenician shipwreck from the seafloor off the Spanish coast of Murcia. While the ship, dubbed Mazarrón 2, has been protected by sand for more than two millennia, recent changes in coastal currents have torn away much of that protective blanket, posing an existential threat to this incredible archaeological wonder.

[...]

For some years I have been following the planning for and current ongoing raising of the Mazarrón II shipwreck in Murcia, Spain. It's good to see the project receiving some wider attention from the Biblical Archaeological Society.

Background here and links. Note the variable spellings Mazarrón (Mazarron) and Mazzarón (Mazzaron).

Cross-file under Phoenician Watch.

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Professor Ben Outhwaite

THE GENIZA FRAGMENTS BLOG: New Professor of Genizah Studies (Melonie Schmierer-Lee).
We are delighted to announce that Ben Outhwaite, Head of the Genizah Research Unit since 2006, has today [1 October 2024] become Professor Outhwaite – Professor of Genizah Studies. ...
Congratulations to Professor Outhwaite!

The website of the Cambridge University Library Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit is here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

dy Carlos Araújo, Peacemaking through Blood in Colossians (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK: Diego dy Carlos Araújo. Peacemaking through Blood in Colossians. An Analysis of the Imagery in Its Graeco-Roman and Jewish Context. 2024. XIV, 216 pages. Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe (WUNT II) 615. €84.00 including VAT. sewn paper available 978-3-16-161873-4. Also Available As: eBook PDF €84.00.
The imagery of »peacemaking through Christ's blood« in Colossians 1.20b evokes conceptual frames from both the Graeco-Roman and Jewish thought worlds. To grasp the full significance of the imagery, it is necessary to explore which frames could have been activated by the writer's metaphors. In this work, Diego dy Carlos Araújo applies insights from frame semantics and conceptual metaphor to investigate the multiple frames possibly evoked in the minds of the implied readers by the metaphorical expressions εἰρηνοποιήσας διὰ τοῦ αἵματος τοῦ σταυροῦ αὐτοῦ in this passage. Colossians' own version of the message challenges the cultural and theological expectations of the audience concerning peacemaking through blood. The impact of its Christological configuration lies precisely in the incongruity between its message and the frames with which the hearers were familiar.

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Thursday, October 31, 2024

Albright shrugged?

INSTITUTE OF HISTORY, ARCHAEOLOGY, AND EDUCATION BLOG: Albright Shrugged: The Haupt/Albright Relationship (Peter Feinman).
All things considered, therefore, Johns Hopkins under German-born and -educated Paul Haupt, expert in the Gilgamesh epic, was the best place at this particular point in time for student Albright to arm himself with some of the tools of the trade and weapons of war he needed to achieve his goal of illuminating religion through science. On that subject, “[founding JHU President] Gilman believed that research in Semitic languages would significantly aid in the reconciliation of science and religion by clarifying sacred texts.” He was an orientalist who served for many years as the President of the American Oriental Society. Both this organization and “reconciliation” of science and religion would prove to be important in the scholarship of Albright.
I noted the first three posts in this series on Willam Foxwell Albright (the twentieth century's "dean of biblical archaeologists"), with background, here and links.

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Nabatean coinage went its own way

NABATEAN NUMISMATICS: Nabataean kings’ coins defy Roman influence, show 'unique' independence (Saeb Rawashdeh, Jordan Times).
AMMAN – The Roman style was popular among the ruling elites in the client states of the Roman Republic and later the Roman Empire. However, on their coinage, the Nabataean rulers did not broadcast the Roman imperial imagery, unlike the Herods where the Roman elements are obvious.

[...]

The article also includes information on some of the Nabatean kings.

For more on Nabatean coinage, see here. For some more articles on the Nabateans by Saeb Rawashdeh, see here and links.

Cross-file under Nabatean (Nabataean) Watch.

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New discoveries near Babylon

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Trove of Artifacts Discovered Near Babylon. Tablets, seals, and more (Nathan Steinmeyer). "The team uncovered two houses filled with nearly 500 artifacts dating to the Old Babylonian period (c. 1894–1595 BCE)." With "numerous cuneiform tablets." Sounds exciting.

For much more on the archaeology, history, and legends of ancient Babylon, see the links collected here.

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Review of Boter, Critical notes on Philostratus' Life of Apollonius of Tyana

BRYN MAYR CLASSICAL REVIEW: .
Gerard Boter, Critical notes on Philostratus' Life of Apollonius of Tyana. Sammlung wissenschaftlicher Commentare. Berlin; Boston: De Gruyter, 2023. Pp. viii, 317. ISBN 9783111243658.

Review by
N. G. Wilson, University of Oxford. nigel.wilson@lincoln.ox.ac.uk

The review is technical, but if you are into the Greek text of the Life of Apollonius, you will want to read it.

For more (and more accessible) PaleoJudaica posts on the first-century itinerant sage Apollonius of Tyana, especially in relation to Jesus, see here and links.

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Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Excavation report: Petra’s Temple of the Winged Lions

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Site-Seeing: Petra’s Temple of the Winged Lions. From the May/June 2017 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review (Glenn J. Corbett). The full text of the article.
ACOR’s Experience Petra program takes place at the site of the Temple of the Winged Lions, an opulent colonnaded temple built to honor al-Uzza, the supreme goddess of the Nabateans. Built on a promontory overlooking the city center, the temple was a majestic sacred complex that featured a massive ascending staircase, a monumental entrance flanked by gigantic columns and an inner cultic chamber with a raised podium set amid a forest of columns. While most of the columns had beautiful Corinthian-style capitals, the dozen columns surrounding the main podium were adorned with the unique “winged lion” capitals that give the monument its name.
It's nice to see something at Petra other than the Al Khazneh Treasury getting some attention. Unfortunately, the photos don't give a good view of any of the winged lion capitals. There are a couple of photos at the Facebook link. If you're not on Facebook, the Universes in Universe site has a photo tour of the temple with a good image of one of the capitals.

Anyway, this is also a good opportunity to note (HT the Bible Places Blog) that the two-volume excavation report on the temple has just been released by ACOR Publications.

Petra’s Temple of the Winged Lions Volume 1: The Site, Project History, and Architecture

Petra’s Temple of the Winged Lions Volume 2: The Finds and Community Engagement

Both edited by Pearce Paul Creasman, Noreen Doyle, and China Shelton, with many contributors. Both are also available for free as downloadable open-access PDF files.

Cross-file under Nabatean (Nabataean) Watch.

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Christian Apocrypha at SBL 2024

THE APOCRYPHICITY BLOG: Christian Apocrypha at SBL 2024 (Tony Burke).
The 2024 Annual Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature runs from November 23 to 26 in San Diego, California. I won’t be attending this year, but I can still post my usual roundup of sessions and individual presentations that focus on Christian Apocrypha. Take note of how many presenters this year are fellows of the Beyond Canon project at Universität Regensburg. Looks like I’ll be the only one left in the office!

[...]

It's an impressive list! The focus of the papers is Christian apocrypha, but that includes the reception of Judith, the mother of the Maccabean martyrs, and the the women in the Ezra apocrypha.

For lots more on Tony's work and on Christian Apocrypha, see here and links.

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Bockmuehl & Eubank (eds.), The Creed and the Scriptures (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK: The Creed and the Scriptures. Edited by Markus Bockmuehl and Nathan Eubank. 2024. VII, 350 pages. Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament (WUNT I) 519. €149.00 including VAT. cloth available 978-3-16-161598-6. Also Available As: eBook PDF €149.00.
Were ancient Christian creeds designed as summaries of Scripture, or, conversely, was the formation of Scripture itself subject to creedal as well as canonical considerations? To what extent were there non-Christian antecedents and analogies to the church's habit of making creeds? The contributors to this volume investigate the relationship between Scripture and ancient Christian creeds. The essays in this volume are divided into four sections devoted to related lines of inquiry. The first asks whether the Christian creeds are sui generis as sometimes claimed, or whether there are close analogies in Jewish and Graeco-Roman antiquity. The second section investigates key critical issues in scholarly study of the creeds. The third turns to case studies illustrating how early Christian writers deploy the creeds in their engagement with scriptural topics. The fourth section turns to thematic studies in the creed.

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Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Oldest "world" map has the Babylonian Ark's location

ANCIENT CARTOGRAPHY: Mystery of the World’s Oldest Map on a Nearly 3,000-year-old Babylonian Tablet Finally Solved ( Leman Altuntaş, Arkeonews).
A recent British Museum video reveals that the “oldest map of the world in the world” on a clay tablet from Babylon was deciphered to reveal a surprisingly familiar story.

The oldest globe ever found is the Imago Mundi, a Babylonian map of the world. This map is a Babylonian clay tablet with a schematic world map and two inscriptions written in the Akkadian language. The probably seventh century BC is when this map was created. It shows a small part of the world as the ancient Babylonians knew it, and it was found in the southern Iraqi city of Abu Habba (Sippar).

[...]

One point of interest is that the map claims to tell the location of the Flood Ark.
Aside from mapping out what they thought existed outside of their world, the Babylonian scribe also included references to a well-known story (basically the Babylonian version of the biblical story of Noah’s Ark) and mythical animals and lands.

The ancient Babylonians thought that the remains of the enormous ark that their version of Noah, named Utnapishtim, had constructed in 1800 BC at God’s command were located on the backside of a mountain, the same mountain that the Bible says Noah’s Ark crashed on, beyond the bitter river.

The article links to a Youtube video on the map, narrated by Irving Finkel, who, as usual, is in top form.

The story of the finding of the crucial missing piece of the map is not quite as good as the one about George Adam Smith going back to Iraq and finding a tablet (actually of the Atrahasis Epic) which filled in the missing part of his Gilgamesh Flood story fragment. But it's impressive anyway.

For the Babylonian Ark tablet, to which Dr, Finkel refers in the video and which he also published, see here and links.

Please do not try to use this map to find the Ark. It does not give precise coordinates!

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Review of Lukas, Josephus Latinus, Antiquitates Judaicae Buch 6 und 7

BRYN MAYR CLASSICAL REVIEW: Josephus Latinus, Antiquitates Judaicae Buch 6 und 7: Einleitung, Edition und Kommentar zur Übersetzungstechnik.
Randolf Lukas, Josephus Latinus, Antiquitates Judaicae Buch 6 und 7: Einleitung, Edition und Kommentar zur Übersetzungstechnik. Bochumer altertumswissenschaftliches Colloquium, 112. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2022. Pp. 296. ISBN 9783868219692.

Review by
Scott G. Bruce, Fordham University. sbruce3@fordham.edu

... This edition of Books 6 and 7 of the Latin Antiquities is nothing short of revelatory. Lukas’s enduring contribution to the field is twofold. First, after decades of inertia following the harsh criticism of Blatt’s edition, he has rejuvenated the study of the Latin Antiquities by establishing the Latin texts for two more books of Josephus’s history. Second and more importantly, in his systematic reevaluation of the entire manuscript tradition of the Latin Antiquities, Lukas has single-handedly provided a new foundation for the study of the Latin legacy of Josephus’s Antiquities in the western Middle Ages. ...

For more on the Latin translations of the works of Josephus, see here and links, plus here and here.

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Burke on Christian Apocrypha

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Christian Apocrypha: The “Lost Gospels”? Apocryphal texts and early Christianity (Ellen White).

This essay summarizes the article “‘Lost Gospels’—Lost No More” by Tony Burke in the September/October 2016 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review. And there is a link to the full article itself.

For more on the "lost gospels" and how lost they really were(n't), see the links collected here and here.

For lots more on Tony Burke's work on the Christian Apocrypha see his blog Apocryphicity and the PaleoJudaica posts here, here, and here, with many links.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Lindenlaub, The Beloved Disciple as Interpreter and Author of Scripture in the Gospel of John (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK: Julia D. Lindenlaub. The Beloved Disciple as Interpreter and Author of Scripture in the Gospel of John. 2024. XV, 224 pages.Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 2. Reihe (WUNT II) 611. €79.00 including VAT. sewn paper available 978-3-16-162689-0. Also Available As: eBook PDF €79.00.
Summary

Julia D. Lindenlaub presents the Gospel of John's deliberate emphasis on its status as a written literary composition as modelled on antecedent esteem for authoritative written texts in ancient Judaism. The gospel's creative representation of its authorship reveals a correspondence between scripture and gospel and therein an overlooked motivation for its preoccupation with the written medium. The Gospel of John attributes its authorship to the work of a »beloved« disciple, whose role in the story presents him as both writer of the gospel and competent reader of texts from the Jewish scriptures. The author evaluates this figure's interpretation of these writings alongside his claim to compose a text in the same tradition. The argument presented reveals how the gospel's concern for referring to its written medium distinguishes it as »scriptural« in the sense of its Jewish predecessors.

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Monday, October 28, 2024

Please excuse the weekend blogging hiatus.

Everything is fine. I was just unusually busy.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

On literacy in Iron Age II Judah

NORTHWEST SEMITIC EPIGRAPHY: Was literacy important in the biblical Kingdom of Judah? Expert offers answers. Questions related to literacy in ancient times are not an exclusive prerogative of academic studies on the Israelites (Rossella Tercatin, Jerusalem Post).
Jews are known as the "people of the book," but was literacy important in biblical times? As explained by Matthieu Richelle, a Professor of Old Testament at the Université Catholique de Louvain in a recent paper published in the latest volume of the Jerusalem Journal of Archaeology, "the subject of literacy in ancient Israel and Judah remains hotly debated among scholars, and the case of the Kingdom of Judah proves especially controversial."

[...]

It's nice to see some new articles from Rossella Tercatin recently. This article is a good summary of a technical article published in the current volume (7, 2024) of the open-access Jerusalem Journal of Archaeology. I noted this volume, and its focus on Iron-Age II Hebrew epigraphy, here. The article and its abstract:
Literacy in the Kingdom of Judah: A Typology of Approaches and a Criticism of Quantitative Perspectives

Matthieu Richelle
Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium, matthieu.richelle@uclouvain.be

Abstract

The subject of literacy in ancient Israel and Judah remains hotly debated among scholars, and the case of the Kingdom of Judah proves especially controversial. To disentangle a complicated issue, this article first draws up a typology of approaches used by scholars to tackle questions such as the population’s rate of literacy, the Judeans’ ability to write down literary texts, and the development of literacy throughout the centuries. Then, it critically examines two quantitative approaches, which have been highly influential and currently promote the thesis that the levels of literacy were minimal in the early monarchic period in Judah (in contrast to the situation in Israel) and considerably increased at the end of this period.

Professor Richelle's observations and conclusions seem sensible to me. Given that most of the evidence, presumably written on fragile papyrus and vellum, is long gone, any conclusions should be provisional.

For reasons to hope for the discovery of surviving scrolls from this era, start here (toward the end) and follow the links.

For lots more on the question of literacy in First-Temple-era Judah, see the thread of posts that starts here and concludes here.

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Shaked memorial volume (De Gruyter, open access)

THE AWOL BLOG: Yahwism under the Achaemenid Empire: Professor Shaul Shaked in Memoriam. Edited by: Gad Barnea and Reinhard G. Kratz and published by De Gruyter in 2024.
About this book

Open Access

The Achaemenid period (550–330 BCE) is rightly seen as one of the most formative periods in Judaism. It is the period in which large portions of the Bible were edited and redacted and others were authored—yet no dedicated interdisciplinary study has been undertaken to present a consistent picture of this decisive time period.
This book is dedicated to the study of the touchpoints between Yahwistic communities throughout the Achaemenid empire and the Iranian attributes of the empire that ruled over them for about two centuries. Its approach is fundamentally interdisciplinary. It brings together scholars of Achaemenid history, literature and religion, Iranian linguistics, historians of the Ancient Near East, archeologists, biblical scholars and Semiticists. The goal is to better understand the interchange of ideas, expressions and concepts as well as the experience of historical events between Yahwists and the empire that ruled over them for over two centuries. The book will open up a holisitic perspective on this important era to scholars of a wide variety of fields in the study of Judaism in the Ancient Near East.

Also noted by the Bibliographia Iranica Blog.

I am very pleased to see the late Professor Shaul Shaked honored with this volume. A couple of years ago I noted the (at the time upcoming) symposium that was the basis for the volume. The topic covers a major focus of his career, although his chronological range was much wider.

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