Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context: A Tribute to Nadav NaʼamanEisenbrauns, 01.01.2006 - 466 Seiten With this volume, Professor Na'aman's students and colleagues honor "one of the greatest historians of our time in the study of the biblical period" (from the Preface). Nadav Na'aman is Professor of Jewish History in the Biblical Period at Tel Aviv University (and has held the Kaplan Chair for the History of Egypt and Israel in Ancient Times since 2005). Over the past three decades, he has established a reputation for innovative and careful research in hundreds of memorable articles and monographs, many appearing in a recent three-volume set of his collected essays published by Eisenbrauns (Ancient Israel and Its Neighbors [2005]; Canaan in the Second Millennium B.C.E. [2005]; Ancient Israel's History and Historiography [2006]). Reflecting the breadth and interconnectedness of Professor Na'aman's research areas, this volume contains contributions on archaeology, ancient Near East (other than ancient Israel), Israel's ancient history and historiography, and biblical studies. Contributors include: Yairah Amit, Moshe Anbar, Hans M. Barstad, Bob Becking, Amnon Ben-Tor, Ehud Ben Zvi, J. Blenkinsopp, Yoram Cohen and Itamar Singer, Philip R. Davies, Diana Edelman, I. Eph'al and H. Tadmor, Israel Finkelstein, Lester L. Grabbe, Sara Japhet, Gary N. Knoppers, Oded Lipschits, Amihai Mazar, Tryggve N. D. Mettinger, Tallay Ornan, Ronny Reich and Benjamin Sass, Miriam Tadmor, David Ussishkin, John Van Seters, H. G. M. Williamson, and Ran Zadok. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 37
... Final Verses of the Kings of Israel and Judah. Sarah Japhet Jubilee Volume, ed. N. Wazana et al. Jerusalem: Magnes, forthcoming. [Hebrew] 2. Stratum X12 Inscriptions: Summary, Provenance and Reassessment. Aphek 2. [coauthored with Yuval ...
... final redaction artificially harmonized. Because of all these limitations, we cannot create a historical biography of David, and ought to leave the task to fiction writers, novelists.9 Naaaman also highlights the presence of ...
... final editors of the Hebrew Bible chose to retain large collections of this genre in the latest editions of the prophetic books. We find words against the nations in all the prophets. Well-known collections are Isa 13–23, Jer 46–51, and ...
... final form of the text. Since it is not possible to refer to a large number of texts here, I use Isa 1–39 as a starting point, or “pilot corpus.” The choice of this particular body of texts is simply due to the fact that it happens to ...
... final editing of the Hebrew Bible, has wide-reaching consequences. In recent research, some scholars have argued that the prophetic compositions of the Hebrew Bible are late, postexilic compositions, without connection to any historical ...
Inhalt
1 | |
17 | |
53 | |
Observations on Josiahs Account in Chronicles and Implications | 89 |
A Late Synchronism between Ugarit and Emar | 123 |
The Origin of Biblical Israel | 141 |
King Saul and the Expansion | 171 |
The Lying Pen of the Scribes? Jeremiah and History | 189 |
The Glass Half Full | 255 |
Three Hebrew Seals from the Iron Age Tombs | 313 |
The DeuteronomistHistorian or Redactor? | 359 |
1819 | 377 |
Indexes | 455 |