Saturday, August 09, 2025

Schiffman, Sources and Interpretations (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
Sources and Interpretations

Studies in Ancient Jewish History, Literature, and Religion.

Series: The Brill Reference Library of Judaism, Volume: 78

Author: Lawrence H. Schiffman

This volume brings together over fifty of Schiffman’s Studies on Ancient Judaism that have helped to shape this emerging field. Throughout, these studies display a wide-ranging perspective, bringing together all kinds of sources, written or archaeological, to illuminate ancient Judaism and its complex history. Topics explored include the history of the Jews and Judaism in Late Antiquity, the Bible in Jewish tradition, ancient Jewish thought, law, and liturgy, magic and mysticism, relation of the Dead Sea Scrolls to Rabbinic Literature, Judean Desert texts, and Judaism and Christianity. The volume concludes with studies of the work of several modern rabbis and academic scholars.

Copyright Year: 2025

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-71572-1
Publication: 16 Jun 2025
EUR €183.00

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-71571-4
Publication: 26 Jun 2025
EUR €183.00

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Friday, August 08, 2025

A rediscovered Coptic-era city in Egypt

COPTIC ARCHAEOLOGY WATCH: From Pagan Temples to Coptic Prayers: New Discovery Sheds Light on Early Christianity in Egypt (Jerusalem Post Staff).
Archaeologists working in the Bagawat necropolis, which contains 263 standing structures behind the Hibis Temple, uncovered mud-brick houses, tombs, two churches, wall paintings, large pottery jars for grain, cooking ovens, pottery and glass fragments, stone pieces, and burial spaces—evidence of a self-sustaining desert community.

The larger church followed a basilica plan with a central nave, side aisles, square columns, and a hall that suggested the community’s status. The second, smaller and rectangular, bears Coptic texts on its interior walls. A mural shows Jesus healing a sick person, while other chapel domes display Torah scenes. Thousands of inscriptions in Greek, Latin, Coptic, and Arabic span several centuries.

Another lost city in Egypt?

It sounds like this site at the Kharga Oasis is important for the study of the rise of late-antique Coptic Christianity.

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Update on the Critical Edition of the Hebrew Psalter Project

THE OTTC BLOG: CEHP Transcription Update (Drew Longacre).

For more on the Critical Edition of the Hebrew Psalter Project, see here, here, and here. It is good to hear that it has received new funding and it can continue.

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Bruce Chilton's Bible and Interpretation essays

THE BIBLE AND INTERPRETATION: Writings of Bruce Chilton.
Since the launch of The Bible and Interpretation in 2000, Bruce Chilton has been a leading contributor to the site. In recognition of his outstanding scholarship and his invaluable contributions over the past 25 years, we are pleased to honor him with a curated list of his articles.
That is, his articles at The Bible and Interpretation.

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Thursday, August 07, 2025

Aramaic epitaph discovered in the sword cave

ARAMAIC WATCH: ‘Abba of Naburya has perished’: Unique 1,900-year-old inscription found in Dead Sea cave. Four-line Aramaic text, one of the few legible inscriptions from the era, may be tied to the Bar Kochba Revolt. The words were spotted only inches away from hidden Roman swords (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
“Abba of Naburya has perished,” the first line reads. Only isolated words or letters in the additional three lines have been deciphered, including the words “on us,” “he took,” and “the.”

The inscription was discovered in a cave near the Ein Gedi National Park in the Dead Sea region. The cave was already known to archaeologists as it contains a stalactite with a fragmentary ink inscription written in ancient Hebrew script characteristic of the First Temple period.

The inscription sounds poignant. During the Bar Kokhba Revolt, the Romans sometimes besieged groups of rebels in caves until they starved. The Cave of Horror contained what appear to be similar epitaphs on ostraca and parchment associated with graves there. If the inscription dates to this revolt, it may have a like context.

For more on that Hebrew inscription in this cave and the four swords found near the two inscriptions, see here.

Cross-file under Northwest Semitic Epigraphy and Technology Watch..

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The Talmudic sages and late-antique viticulture

TALMUD WATCH MEETS ARCHAEOBOTANY: Talmudic sages were active participants in ancient Mediterranean wine culture. According to a new study, the sages "sought ways to allow Jewish farmers to remain part of the wine industry without compromising Halacha” (Joanie Margulies, Jerusalem Post).
The researchers used an interdisciplinary approach, combining textual analysis of rabbinic literature like the Mishna, the Tosefta, and the Jerusalem Talmud with archaeological evidence and Classical Greek and Latin agricultural treatises. This integration of evidence demonstrated the sages’ deep familiarity with vineyard planning and growing techniques.

A key finding of the study was that the distances mandated by the sages between vine rows to prevent crossbreeding were “nearly identical” to those found in Classical-era vineyards in Italy and France.

The underlying article is published in the Journal of Interdisciplinary History. It is behind the subscription wall.
Mediterranean Viticulture in Late Antique Palestine

Shulamit Miller, Guy Bar-Oz, Eyal Ben-Eliyahu, Gil Gambash The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (2025) 56 (1): 43–79. https://doi.org/10.1162/jinh.a.3

Abstract

Viticulture in Late Antiquity was a widespread, economically vital, and regionally diverse form of horticulture in the Mediterranean world, and archaeological and textual sources such as rabbinical literature shed light on viticulture, particularly in Palestine. Vineyard cultivation was shaped by local geography, climate, and religious norms, with techniques ranging from dryland farming to terracing, and from small plots to industrial-scale wine production. Rabbinical texts highlight Jewish legal and theological concerns—such as prohibitions on mixed planting and non-kosher wine—yet also show that rabbis operated within a shared Mediterranean viticultural koiné. Despite religious distinctions, vintners engaged in trade, adapted common practices, and contributed to a vibrant, interconnected viticultural economy. This article’s multidisciplinary perspective positions Palestine as a fully integrated participant in Late Antique Mediterranean wine culture, with its own regional adaptations shaped by religious, economic, and environmental factors.

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The fate of the Crosby-Schøyen Codex

IT BELONGS IN A MUSEUM. AND THAT'S WHERE IT IS: The Anonymous Buyer of One of World’s Oldest Books? The Green Collection. Scholars worried that the text had disappeared from the public, but the Crosby-Schøyen Codex is now on display at the Museum of the Bible (Emily Belz, Christianity Today).
The buyer of one of the oldest books in existence is no longer anonymous, and the book is viewable by the public after scholars fretted that it had disappeared into unknown private hands.

The Green Collection, connected to the Museum of the Bible, revealed that it purchased the Crosby-Schøyen Codex, which contains what is perhaps the earliest complete versions of Jonah and 1 Peter, at an auction last year.

[...]

HT Brent Nongbri at Variant Readings.

This is very good news!

We last saw the Coptic Crosby-Schøyen Codex when it was sold at a Christie's auction in June of 2024. For many PaleoJudaica posts, follow the links from there. Two substantive posts are here and here.

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

Wednesday, August 06, 2025

Greek Matthew and 6 Ezra fragments from Oxyrhynchus

VARIANT READINGS: New Article on P.Oxy. 1 2 and P.Oxy. 7 1010 (Brent Nongbri).

Behind the bland title of Brent's post lies a very interesting article on two long-known manuscripts that deserve more attention:

AnneMarie [Luijendijk] and I gave a general overview of Christian codices among the Oxyrhynchus papyri and then focused on two pieces, P.Oxy. 1 2, a papyrus bifolium containing the beginning of the Gospel According to Matthew in Greek and P.Oxy. 7 1010, a parchment leaf from a codex containing 6 Ezra.
The Matthew papyrus is dated to the third century and is of interest to New Testament scholars.

The second manuscript is of particular interest to PaleoJudaica. The full text of 6 Ezra is known only in a Latin translation appended to the Latin version of 4 Ezra. This Latin combination of 4-5-6 Ezra is known as 2 Esdras. This small, late-antique parchment fragment preserves the little that we have of the Greek original of 6 Ezra.

This open-access article gives background on Christian papyri from Oxyrhynchus. It discusses the details of this manuscript and explores the question of its provenance (Jewish or Christian). The authors also argue that the manuscript was a stand-alone one containing only 6 Ezra. This is an important datum for questions about the text's origin, transmission, and attachment to 4-5 Ezra. The article also points to an intriguing reference to a copy of an Ezra book–conceivably this very manuscript—in a fourth-century personal letter, also discovered at Oxyrhynchus.

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Conference: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Apocalypticism in the 7th-9th Centuries

H-JUDAIC: EVENT: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Apocalypticism in the 7th-9th Centuries (September 1-3).
Conference
Date September 1, 2025 - September 3, 2025
Location United Kingdom
Subject Fields Jewish History / Studies

Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Apocalypticism in the 7th-9th Centuries
Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations, University of Southampton
1-3 September 2025
All times are British Summer Time or UTC+1

The conference marks the final event of a funded project examining apocalyptic literature of Jews, Christians, and Muslims in this formative period of contact and conflict. The aim is to bring together scholars from different disciplines to inspire innovative discussion about the nature of apocalypticism and Jewish-Christian-Muslim relations at the emergence of Islam.

Follow the link for the conference schedule and free online-attendance registration information. It's not clear to me whether registration for in-person attendance is still possible.

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More on the possible synagogue in Castulo

ARCHAEOLOGY UPDATED: Study suggests 4th-century prayer site may be one of Spain’s earliest synagogues. Oil lamps decorated with menorahs and architectural evidence uncovered in the Roman city of Castulo suggest that the building was not a church, but served as Jews’ place of worship (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
A 4th-century building in the Ibero-Roman city of Cástulo in south-central Spain, traditionally interpreted by experts as an early Christian church, might have instead been a synagogue, a group of Spanish archaeologists has argued.

[...]

I've covered this story and the underlying technical article already here. But this article includes some new details from an email interview with an excavator.

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Tuesday, August 05, 2025

Ezra and Nehemiah pseudepigrapha?

AN EXPERIMENT:

There are a number of Old Testament pseudepigrapha associated with the name of Ezra: 4 (5-6) Ezra, Greek/Latin Apocalypse of Ezra, Apocalypse of Sedrach(?), Vision of Ezra, Questions of Ezra, Revelation of Ezra. Yet no pseudepigrapha survive which are attributed to his contemporary Nehemiah. Not one.

Why?

What do you think? Comments enabled.

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Judicial neutrality and the Bible

THE BIBLE AND INTERPRETATION:
The Bible and the Myth of Judicial Impartiality

Judicial neutrality is critiqued through an exploration of ancient legal traditions that both uphold and challenge the ideal of rule-bound justice. Narratives such as those of Daniel, Susanna, Herod, and Jesus reveal how rigid legalism can lead to injustice, while empathy and contextual judgment often result in fairer, more humane outcomes.

See also Trial Stories in Jewish Antiquity: Counternarratives of Justice (Oxford, 2024).

By Chaya Halberstam
Professor and Chair, Department of Religious Studies
King’s University College at Western University
July 2025

I noted the publication of the book here.

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Tony Burke's Regensburg Year: July 2025

THE APOCRYPHICITY BLOG: My Regensburg Year Part 12: July 2025.

Tony Burke was on research sabbatical for the 2024-25 academic year at the University of Regensburg in Germany. The year is now done and this is his final report:

This was it. Our last month. The plan was to spend one week in Poland and in the other three I would finish my book. Only one of those things was going to happen.

[...]

Never mind about the book. It will get done. Meanwhile Tony reports that during the year they visited fifty cities in fifteen countries and he presented six academic papers.

Back to work for Tony at York University. I have enjoyed following his Regensburg year.

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

Cross-file under New Testament Apocrypha Watch.

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Monday, August 04, 2025

Ancient Star of David with a cross in it? Nope.

DECORATIVE ART: Grave Dig Uncovers 1,500-Year-Old Mosaic with Star of David and Cryptic Greek Petition in Türkiye (Leman Altuntaş, Arkeonews).
A routine burial in southeastern Türkiye has led to an extraordinary archaeological discovery. While digging a grave in the rural Özbilek neighborhood of Ergani district, local residents uncovered a stunning 35-square-meter mosaic floor believed to date back to the late Roman or early Byzantine period.

What makes the find even more fascinating is the presence of a six-line inscription in ancient Greek, resembling a formal petition or plea, along with a unique Star of David containing a Christian cross motif — a symbol rarely seen in combination. The mosaic was unearthed on March 8 during preparations for a burial, but the find has only recently been detailed by local museum authorities.

The article above has the best photo of the "Star of David" that I could find. As you can see, it is an eight-pointed star, two overlapping squares. It is not a Star of David. The Star of David is a six-pointed star, two overlapping equilateral triangles.

There is a + design in the center of the star. I don't know if it is a Christian cross. It's not obvious to me that it is. The mosaic has lots of geometric designs in it. You can see a better overall photo of it here. There is another + shape in the center of the big main design. The star containing the + is in the lower right.

It gets stranger. The Jerusalem Post reports: Mosaic with Star of David and Hidden Messages in Ancient Greek Found in Turkey. It too claims "The most striking feature of the mosaic is its incorporation of a Star of David with a cross motif and six lines of text written in Ancient Greek." There is a photo at the top which does depict a hexagram in a mosaic. There is a greenish blob in the center which has no resemblance to a cross. The article doesn't quite say that this is the mosaic being covered, but it certainly permits the reader to assume that.

I spent too much of my morning going down a rabbit hole to work out that the pictured mosaic is a fourth-century BCE one at Neo Paphos in Cyprus. It contains various geometric and other shapes, including, strikingly, a swastika next to the star. Both are just geometric designs in this period.

I was not surprised to see this notice at the bottom of the JP article: "Written with the help of a news-analysis system." In other words, it is AI generated.

In short, the mosaic discovered recently in Türkiye is of interest in itself, but it doesn't contain a Star of David. I suspect the "cross" is just a geometric decoration as well, but I don't know.

It is disappointing that the various journalists who transmitted this story didn't read it carefully enough to see the obvious problem with it. And doubly disappointing that the "Jerusalem Post Staff" let their article go through with that confusing and misleading photo. Why not use a photo of the actual Türkiye mosaic?

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Sunday, August 03, 2025

Lundbom, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi (Cascade)

NEW BOOK FROM WIPF AND STOCK (CASCADE):
Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi Hebrew Prophets of the Sixth and Fifth Centuries

by Jack R. Lundbom
Series: Cascade Companions

Imprint: Cascade Books
212 Pages, 5.00 x 8.00 x 0.42 in

Paperback
9798385237388
Published: June 2025
$28.00 / £21.00 / AU$43.00

eBook
9798385237401
Published: June 2025
$28.00 / £21.00 / AU$43.00

DESCRIPTION

This book introduces readers to Hebrew prophets of the sixth and fifth centuries BC, providing detailed discussion of Haggai's prophecy, of selected prophecies from I and II Zechariah, and of Malachi's prophecy. After a survey of the historical background of the period and brief introductions to each prophet, prophecies are translated; their rhetorical and compositional nature is noted, then discussed in detail. Questions for reflection are provided, making the book suitable for Bible study and small group discussions.

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