Saturday, April 19, 2025

Dochhorn (ed.), Parabiblica Aethiopica (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK:
Parabiblica Aethiopica

Editiones et Studia
Edited by Jan Dochhorn

[Parabiblica Aethiopica. Editiones et Studia.]
2025. IX, 211 pages.
Parabiblica (PBib) 4
Published in German.

€119.00
including VAT

cloth
available
978-3-16-164189-3

Also Available As:
eBook PDF
€119.00

Summary

This volume deals with Ethiopian apocryphal/parabiblical literature. It consists of three editions and two studies. The edited texts are the Ethiopian version of the Historia de Melchisedech (ed. Jan Dochhorn), the Ethiopian version of the Revelatio Stephani (ed. Damien Labadie), and an Apocryphon about the binding of Isaac (ed. Ted Erho). The studies are devoted to the Ethiopian version of the Apocalypse of Peter (Mathew Goff) and the Andǝmta Tradition to 1 Enoch (Ralph Lee).

Cross-file under Ethiopic Watch.

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Friday, April 18, 2025

More on that Iron-Age dye factory at Shiqmona

PHOENICIAN WATCH, IN ISRAEL: Made from snails and fit for kings: First biblical-era dye factory found on Israel’s coast. Ancient Tel Shiqmona site yields first evidence of large-scale purple dye production centuries before Roman times, possibly supplying First Temple in Jerusalem (Rosella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
As a result, the researchers found evidence connected to the production of the purple dye dating as early as 1,100 BCE and throughout the 6th century BCE. These are exactly the years in which many of the narratives included in the Bible are said to have taken place. In 586 BCE, for example, the Babylonian conquest completely destroyed the regional economy and Jerusalem’s First Temple.

“In the past, the assumption was that the first large-scale production facilities of purple dye were only established in Roman times, around the 1st century CE,” another author, Prof. Ayelet Gilboa from the University of Haifa, told The Times of Israel over the phone. “Tel Shiqmona offers evidence that already in the 9th century BCE, purple dye was produced at an industrial scale. It was not just one individual dyeing a garment for a king.”

The underlying article has just been published in PLOS ONE, open access. It takes into account information from the most recent excavations at Shiqmona.
Tel Shiqmona during the Iron Age: A first glimpse into an ancient Mediterranean purple dye ‘factory’

Golan Shalvi , Naama Sukenik, Paula Waiman-Barak, Zachary C. Dunseth, Shay Bar, Sonia Pinsky, David Iluz, Zohar Amar, Ayelet Gilboa
Published: April 16, 2025
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0321082

Abstract

Purple-dyed textiles, primarily woolen, were much sought after in the Ancient Near East and the Mediterranean, and they adorned the powerful and wealthy. It is commonly assumed that in antiquity, purple dye—extracted from specific species of marine mollusks—was produced in large quantities and in many places around the Mediterranean. But despite numerous archaeological excavations, direct and unequivocal evidence for locales of purple-dye production remains very limited in scope. Here we present Tel Shiqmona, a small archaeological tell on Israel’s Carmel coast. It is the only site in the Near East or around the Mediterranean—indeed, in the entire world—where a sequence of purple-dye workshops has been excavated and which has clear evidence for large-scale, sustained manufacture of purple dye and dyeing in a specialized facility for half a millennium, during the Iron Age (ca. 1100–600 BCE). The number and diversity of artifacts related to purple dye manufacturing are unparalleled. The paper focuses on the various types of evidence related to purple dye production in their environmental and archaeological contexts. We utilize chemical, mineralogical and contextual analyses to connect several categories of finds, providing for the first time direct evidence of the instruments used in the purple-dye production process in the Iron Age Levant. The artifacts from Shiqmona also serve as a first benchmark for future identification of significant purple-dye production sites around the Mediterranean, especially in the Iron Age.

I have noted previous reports on the Phoenician dye factory at Shiqmona (Shikmona) here and here. Follow the links at the latter (cf. here) for PaleoJudaica posts involving Tyrian purple dye and the Israelite telekhet dye, both made from the murex snail. For more on the early-tenth-century BCE dyed textile fragments excavated in the Timna Valley (and their implications), see here.

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

On the Rephaim

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: The Riddle of the Rephaim. Exploring the mysterious demigods of the Bible (Jonathan Yogev).
The identification of the beings known as “Rephaim” in biblical and ancient Near Eastern sources has caused much bewilderment throughout the years. Biblical dictionaries and encyclopedias usually provide two main meanings for the word: (1) ghosts or shades of the dead, and (2) a mythical and ancient race of giants. These meanings are mostly derived from the mentions of the Rephaim in the Bible.

[...]

This is a good brief survey of what we know about the ancient Rephaim. I noted Dr. Yogev's 2021 book on them here. I have also posted on them myself now and then, recently here, and here. Also relevant: here. And for posts on the biblical giant Og, perhaps the best-known of the Rephaim, see here and links, notably here, here, and here.

This BHD essay is timely, since I will soon have something new for you about the giants, including the Rephaim. Watch this space!

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

Guggenheim Fellowship for Annette Yoshiko Reed

THE HARVARD GAZETTE: Three affiliates named 2025 Guggenheim Fellows.
Three Harvard affiliates were awarded Guggenheim Fellowships this week, winning support for groundbreaking work in sociology, Jewish studies, and sculpture.
Congratulations to all three recipients, but especially to:
Annette Yoshiko Reed, M.T.S. ’99, Krister Stendahl Professor of Divinity and professor of New Testament and early Christianity at Harvard Divinity School, will use the fellowship to complete a book exploring the cultural power of forgetting within Judaism, as well as a related project on Christian erasures of Jews and Judaism as epistemicide. This research will contribute to the theorization of forgetting in memory studies and Jewish studies by exploring the loss of the ancient Jewish literary heritage that was recovered during the mid-20th century with the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Professor Reed's work has been noted often at PaleoJudaica.

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

Thursday, April 17, 2025

Is Mark a Jewish or Gentile work?

THE BIBLE AND INTERPRETATION:
What if the Earliest Extant Gospel Promotes a Form of Judaism

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The reading that the Gospel of Mark’s vision of ideal practice, belief, and expectation is a form of Judaism, rather than something else, is able to better explain the full narrative of the Gospel and is fully comprehensible within the context of the first-century ancient mediterranean world.

See also The Gospel of Mark’s Judaism and the Death of Christ as Ransom for Many (Mohr Siebeck, 2025).

By John Van Maaren
University of Vienna
April 2025

I noted the publication of the book here.

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

Webinar on Cleopatra and Zenobia in the Talmuds

ZOOM EVENT: CAMS lecture: Cate Bonesho, “The Rabbis' Queens: Cleopatra and Zenobia in Talmudic Literature”
Date & Time: Apr 18, 2025 09:00 PM in [London, but you can reset to your time zone]

Description: Join the Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies department at Penn State for the final lecture in the 2024/25 series “Connected Histories of the Ancient Mediterranean and Near East.”

Catherine Bonesho (UCLA) will deliver a talk entitled:

“The Rabbis' Queens: Cleopatra and Zenobia in Talmudic Literature”

Abstract:
The famous Egyptian queen Cleopatra and the Palmyrene queen Zenobia each ruled at and within the intersections of the ancient Near East and the Mediterranean. Polemical Roman sources like those of Cassius Dio and the Historia Augusta have loomed large in scholarship and in the public perception of the queens; however, they do not represent the only kinds of sources and approaches to the queens. Indeed, my analysis will focus on the handful of references to Zenobia and Cleopatra in the classical rabbinic texts of the Palestinian and Babylonian Talmuds and will emphasize the need of a large scope study that contextualizes the rabbinic passages in the rich afterlives of Cleopatra in the late antique world. Using the Palmyrene queen Zenobia as an exemplar, I show how those living under and responding to Roman rule in the third century CE and later appropriated Cleopatra and her persona. Similarly, the rabbis of the Babylonian Talmud use Cleopatra’s portrait toward a variety of goals. First, they tell stories of Cleopatra’s knowledge of embryology and the human body to support certain rabbinic concepts, including resurrection and menstrual impurity. Second, they elevate and include the rabbis themselves in the famous struggle of Cleopatra versus Rome, East versus West, with the goal of further authorizing the rabbinic project itself.

Free, but requires registration at the link.

Cross-file under Talmud Watch.

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

Summer School of Oriental Language

BIBLIOGRAPHIA IRANICA: Summer School of Oriental Languages.

An ambitious 10-day summer school program sponsored by Lausanne University and held in Venice this July. Taught in French. You pick your major and minor ancient language to study. You will struggle to come up with one that isn't covered. Follow the link for full details.

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

Prof. Meir Lubetski (1938-2025)

SAD NEWS FROM H-JUDAIC: The passing of Prof. Meir Lubetski (1938-2025).
H-Judaic is saddened to learn of the passing of Prof. Meir Lubetski (1938-2025), longtime professor of Literature and Languages at Baruch College, City University, New York.

Raised in Israel, Prof. Lubetski pursued his Ph.D. at New York University with Cyrus Gordon and spent his entire career at Baruch, where he focused on Biblical and Rabbinic Literature, Hebrew Language and Literature, Yiddish Language and Literature, and Ancient Near Eastern Languages and Literatures.

[...]

May his memory be for a blessing.

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

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Where does the Bible say to celebrate Passover? It's complicated.

FOR PASSOVER: Pesach in Egypt ⇄ Pesach in Jerusalem (Dr. Hillel Mali, TheTorah.com).
Exodus instructs each family in Egypt to slaughter a paschal lamb and eat it at home, while Deuteronomy commands a community ritual, to take place at the central worship location, i.e., the Jerusalem Temple. These two conceptions cross-pollinate, first in the Torah and then in its early reception: Jubilees requires everyone to eat in the Temple as their home; the Mishnah requires everyone to slaughter together in three cohorts; most surprisingly, R. Eliezer claims that, in theory, all of Israel can share one paschal animal.

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

van der Toorn, Israelite Religion (Yale)

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW: Publication Preview | Writing a History of Israelite Religion (Karel van der Toorn).
In his classic study Ancient Mesopotamia: Portrait of a Dead Civilization (rev. ed. 1977), A. Leo Oppenheim gave the section on religion the provocative title “Why a Mesopotamian Religion Should Not Be Written.” The reasons he adduced were of two orders. First, “the nature of the available evidence,” and second, “the problem of comprehension across the barriers of conceptual conditioning.” The same problems beset the study of Israelite religion. The nature of these difficulties is not such, however, as to render the entire venture completely impossible. On the contrary, the challenges of problematic and fragmentary evidence, on the one hand, and of the culture gap between them and us, on the other, are a stimulus to try and overcome them. ...
I haven't seen the book, but this introductory statement is excellent.

Although the above is a "publication preview," according to the Yale University Press website it was published yesterday:

Israelite Religion
From Tribal Beginnings to Scribal Legacy

by Karel van der Toorn

Series: The Anchor Yale Bible Reference Library

432 Pages, 6.12 x 9.25 in, 40 b-w illus.

Hardcover
9780300248111
Published: Tuesday, 15 Apr 2025
$40.00

eBook
9780300281620
Published: Tuesday, 15 Apr 2025
$40.00

Description

A panoramic, thousand-year history of Israelite religion, from the Iron Age to the birth of Judaism, by a renowned biblical scholar

From its Iron Age beginnings to its aftermath in the Roman period, Israelite religion went through significant changes and transformations. As the Israelites responded to major historical events and political realities, their collective beliefs and practices evolved over time and developed new forms, even as earlier elements of religious culture remained an active substratum.

Weaving together biblical literature, archaeology, and comparative sources, award-winning author Karel van der Toorn tells the sweeping story of how Israelite religion evolved from a tribal cult honoring the ancestors and the “god of the fathers” to a scriptural religion practiced by an ethnic minority within the Roman Empire. He demonstrates how religion was integral to nation-building as Israel transitioned from a nomadic chiefdom to a monarchical state; how religious practices changed in response to the loss of political independence; and how in the final centuries before the Common Era, as Hellenistic culture permeated the Eastern Mediterranean, Israelite religion gave rise to a variety of reading communities committed to a body of sacred scripture, with the law of Moses at its core.

Combining literary studies, anthropology, linguistics, history, and more, this book tells the fascinating story of Israelite religion as it has never been told before.

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

John Van Seters (1935-2025)

INDEED: Terribly Sad News: John van Seters has Died (Jim West, Zwinglius Redivivus).
His daughter shared the very sad news about the passing of her father, Jack Sasson’s esteemed colleague, John Van Seters, just short of his 90th birthday.
Jim and Jack Sasson on the Agade list have shared the daughter's message.

Known best for his revisionist approach to Pentateuchal research, Professor Van Seters was an influential contributor to biblical studies, especially in the latter part of the twentieth century. For more details, see his Wikipedia page here.

Reqiescat in pace.

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

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

On ancient synagogue iconography

DECORATIVE ART: Elephant in the synagogue: Iconography in thriving post-Temple community raises questions. How can these discoveries be reconciled with the widespread view that the post-Temple remnant of Jews in the Holy Land was insignificant and subject to oppression by the Romans? (JACOB SIVAK, Jerusalem Post).
... What does this brief survey of figural synagogue art tell us? Foremost, and especially important today in the context of widespread efforts to detach the Jewish story from its indigenous connection to the Land of Israel, is the fact that the Jewish people continued to inhabit and prosper in the Holy Land for hundreds of years after the destruction of the Temple, even in the midst of a Christianized Roman Empire. In addition, there is the realization that Judaism has survived over the centuries because of its ability to balance Jewish particularism with the pressures of external cultures and religions.
It is a good survey - of ancient synagogue art in the Land of Israel and the Diaspora, with some attention to some early modern Eastern European traditions too.

For the remarkable discoveries at Huqoq, not least those synagogues and their mosaics, see here and follow the many links. For many PaleoJudaica posts on other ancient synagogues in Israel, see here and links. For the question of pagan imagery in late-antique synagogues, see here and links. For many posts on the Dura-Europos synagogue and its decorative art, see here and links.

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

Text excerpts in Syriac manuscripts

SYRIAC WATCH: What Syriac scribes chose to keep: A digital dive into 1,000 manuscripts (Hebrew University press release at Phys.Org).
A new study uses digital tools to analyze nearly 1,000 Syriac manuscripts from the British Library, focusing on how scribes and editors selected and rearranged parts of texts—a practice known as excerpting. Researcher Noam Maeir introduces a new measurement called Excerpts Per Manuscript (EPM) to track how often this happened. This approach reveals that the people who copied and compiled these manuscripts were not just preserving texts—they were actively shaping what future generations would read and remember.

[...]

Manuscripts were expensive to copy! Sometimes scribes would just copy favorite passages, even compiling passages from different works into one new manuscript.

Studying excerpting practices in the abundant Syriac manuscript tradition is bound to be illuminating. The digitization of Wright's nineteenth-century catalogue of the Syriac manuscripts in the British Library made the research possible.

The analysis in the article is of Wright's catalogue, not the manuscripts themselves, and it depends on his work for its accuracy. This could be made clearer in both the Phys.Org article and the PLOS ONE abstract. The technical article describes the methodology in detail.

AI isn't up to anything like identifying excertps from other works in a collection of exotic-language ancient and medieval manuscripts. We still need human researchers for that. I suspect it will be quite a while before that changes. Whether LLM AI will ever be up to it remains to be seen.

The underlying article at PLOS ONE is open access:

Material philology and Syriac excerpting practices: A computational-quantitative study of the digitized catalog of the Syriac manuscripts in the British Library

Noam Maeir
Published: March 31, 2025
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0320265

Abstract

This study explores the literary practice of excerpting in Syriac manuscripts through a computational-quantitative analysis, contributing to the emerging field of Syriac material philology. The primary objective is to offer a “big picture” charting of Syriac excerpting as a non-authorial literary practice. Using digitized data from the British Library’s Syriac manuscript collection, the study analyzes nearly 20,000 excerpts, introducing the Excerpts Per Manuscript (EPM) metric to quantify and compare excerpting practices across manuscripts. The results reveal that most manuscripts contain fewer than 20 excerpts, but a small number show much higher levels of excerpting, highlighting the immense intellectual and literary activities implicated in their production. These high-EPM manuscripts appear across multiple genres, indicating that excerpting was a widespread and essential cultural activity rather than confined to specific literary types.

The study also finds that manuscripts with the highest EPM values are concentrated between the 6th and 9th centuries CE, corresponding with a period of intense literary compilation in late antiquity. This pattern reflects the importance of excerpting in knowledge organization, aligning with broader trends in the canonization of texts within Christian, Jewish, and Greco-Roman traditions. The research emphasizes the limitations of earlier cataloging approaches, which obscure non-authorial practices by focusing on authors and texts. By reorienting data through computational analysis, the study provides new insights into the role of excerpting in Syriac manuscript culture. This approach demonstrates the value of digital tools in material philology, uncovering patterns that bridge genres and timeframes, and identifying high-EPM manuscripts as key sites of intellectual and cultural activity in the Syriac literary tradition.

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

Van Maaren, The Gospel of Mark's Judaism and the Death of Christ as Ransom for Many (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK:
John Van Maaren

The Gospel of Mark's Judaism and the Death of Christ as Ransom for Many

[Das Judentum des Markusevangeliums und der Tod Christi als Lösegeld für viele.] 2025. XVII, 293 pages.
Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament (WUNT I) 534

€134.00
including VAT
cloth
available
978-3-16-164412-2

Also Available As:
eBook PDF
€134.00

Summary

Until recently, there has been a near consensus that the Gospel of Mark is an expression of a Gentile, post-Jewish, form of Christ adherence. In his book, John Van Maaren challenges the notion of »Gentile Mark« by developing the first narrative-wide reading of the Gospel as an expression of first-century Judaism. He consolidates insights from scattered studies and proposes new interpretations of specific texts and broader themes. He aims to lay the foundation for resituating the earliest extant account of Jesus within the history of early Christ-followers and first-century Judaism, re-examining the place of the law, the nations, the death of Jesus, and the expected kingdom of God.

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

Monday, April 14, 2025

Lied and Nongbri, Working with Manuscripts (Yale)

VARIANT READINGS: Working with Manuscripts (Brent Nongbri).
It’s a nice moment when you receive the first copies of a book you’ve written. Yesterday, I had the pleasure of opening the box of authors’ copies of Working with Manuscripts, written together with my colleague Liv Ingeborg Lied.

[...]

Full details:
Working with Manuscripts
A Guide for Textual Scholars

by Liv Ingeborg Lied and Brent Nongbri

192 Pages, 5.50 x 8.50 in, 17 b-w illus.

Paperback
9780300264425
Published: Tuesday, 15 Apr 2025
$25.00

eBook
9780300281477
Published: Tuesday, 15 Apr 2025
$25.00

Hardcover
9780300264432
Published: Tuesday, 15 Apr 2025
$85.00

Description

A first-of-its-kind handbook outlining best practices and common pitfalls for students and textual scholars interested in beginning to work with manuscripts

While manuscripts are rare in most of the world today, they were once ubiquitous. Before the printing press, literature was preserved and transmitted through handwritten copies containing variant readings, mistakes, corrections, and other unique features. Those who study premodern texts, however, often use as their primary sources not these diverse artifacts but critical editions that present a single convenient hybrid text.

Brent Nongbri and Liv Ingeborg Lied argue that knowledge of manuscripts is important for all interpreters of ancient texts, even if learning how to study them can be confusing and intimidating. In this book they draw on their decades of experience with Jewish and Christian manuscripts to demystify manuscript work. Combining their interests in manuscripts as material artifacts with the ethical issues surrounding the study of manuscripts, Lied and Nongbri guide students through the main phases of research, from considerations of provenance and access to the practicalities of on-site research, analysis, and publication. The book includes aids for locating manuscripts, helpful case studies, tips for organizing data, a glossary, suggestions for further reading, and more.

Written in an engaging style with students in mind, this handbook provides an invaluable resource for anyone who wants to study a manuscript for the first time.

The formal publication date is tomorrow. Congratulations to both authors!

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

4QIsaiaho

THE ETC BLOG: A Less Studied Isaiah Scroll (Anthony Ferguson).
In my own personal study of Isaiah, I’ve come across a less known and less studied Dead Sea Scroll, 4QIsao (4Q68), that preserves some insightful, even peculiar details. It dates paleographically to 100-50 BC which makes it a little younger than the more popular 1QIsaa.

[...]

Technical details follow, with a summary at the end of the post.

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

Review panel on Neis, When a Human Gives Birth to a Raven (6 - author response)

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW has published what I take to be the final essay in its review panel on Rafael Rachel Neis, When a Human Gives Birth to a Raven:

Author Response | Neis, When a Human Gives Birth to a Raven (Rafael Rachel Neis).

In the panel itself I began by asking those gathered to something a little different, something embodied and experimental.
I noted the earlier essays in the series here and links.

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

Sunday, April 13, 2025

Ritual and Law in the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK:
Ritual and Law in the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East

Edited by Tzvi Abusch, Alan Lenzi and Jeffrey Stackert

[Ritual und Gesetz in der Hebräischen Bibel und im Alten Orient.]
2024. VIII, 265 pages.
Forschungen zum Alten Testament (FAT) 184

€129.00
including VAT

cloth
available
978-3-16-163879-4

Also Available As:
eBook PDF
€129.00

Summary

The authors of this volume celebrate the contributions of David P. Wright to the fields of biblical studies and ancient Near Eastern studies. They place particular focus on topics of ritual and law, the major concerns of Wright's scholarship. The studies included deal with various texts and issues in the Hebrew Bible, Mesopotamian texts and material culture, Hittite cultic ritual, and comparative mythology.

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