The Menorah, the Ancient Seven-armed Candelabrum: Origin, Form, and SignificanceBRILL - 539 Seiten The menorah was the most important and dominant symbol in Jewish art, both in the Land of Israel and the Diaspora. The menorah was an integral part of the Temple ritual and was the most important of the Temple vessels. Its later representation served the purpose of reminding the Jews of their previous glory as well as their pride in the Temple, and expressed the longing and hope for the renewal of the Temple services and worship. Following the destruction of the Temple, the menorah took on the profound significance of the Temple. It also came to symbolize Judaism, when it was necessary to distinguish synagogues, Jewish tombs, and catacombs from Christian or pagan structures in the Land of Israel and the Diaspora . The menorah image has been found depicted in synagogues, public buildings, homes, and the funerary context throughout the Land of Israel and the Diaspora, leaving no doubt as to which are Jewish structures. The prominent position of the menorah in Jewish art emphasizes its significance. The book is presenting the art, archaeological, historical and literary evidence for the development, form, meaning, and significance of the menorah during the Second Temple period and the Late Antiquity. |
Inhalt
HISTORY AND ORIGIN OF THE MENORAH | 7 |
THE MENORAH | 41 |
THE FORM OF THE MENORAH | 121 |
MEANING INTERPRETATION AND SIGNIFI | 171 |
THE ACCOMPANYING RITUAL OBJECTS | 211 |
WORKSHOPS ARTISTS CRAFTSMEN | 251 |
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS | 275 |
Corpus of Menoroth on Finds in Israel | 285 |
D6 Menorah on architectural elements | 362 |
D9 Menorah on sarcophagi | 427 |
Corpus of Menoroth on Lamps Found in Israel and | 441 |
L3 Beth Nattif lamps b | 447 |
L7 North African type lamp | 458 |
L8 North African variation type lamps | 464 |
L11 Samaritan lamps | 470 |
L12 Bronze lamps | 476 |
IS4 Menorah on lintels | 293 |
IS5 Menorah on chancel screens | 304 |
IS7 Menorah on columns | 310 |
IS9 Menorah on tomb doors | 317 |
IS11 Menorah at the necropolis of Beth Shearim | 328 |
IS12 Menorah on bread stamps | 336 |
IS17 Menorah on pilgrim vessels | 347 |
IS18 Miscellaneous | 354 |
Glossary | 501 |
| 512 | |
| 523 | |
| 535 | |
to Chapters | 3 |
Corpus | 60 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Exile: Old Testament, Jewish, and Christian Conceptions James M. Scott Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1997 |
Exile: Old Testament, Jewish, and Christian Conceptions Bruce D. Chilton,Porton,Louis H. Feldman Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2021 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
3rd-4th cent 4th cent 5th-6th cent aedicula arcosolium arms Barag baseless Beth She'an Beth Shearim branches bronze Caesarea candelabra carved chancel screen Chart of menorah clay lamps cm Jerusalem Corpus Pl Courtesy crossbar ritual objects decorated depicted Diaspora Dura Europos engraved epitaph ethrog Figure flames ritual objects Form of menorah fragment Frey Golan gold glasses Goodenough 1953 graffiti Hachlili Hammath Hammath Tiberias Hebrew Hecht Museum incense shovel incised inscribed inscription Israel Antiquities Authority Israel Museum Jerusalem Jewish symbols lampstand Land of Israel light fittings lintel lulav marble menorah forms menoroth menoroth flanking Monteverde mosaic pavements motifs Müller & Bees Museo Vaticano Museum Form ornamented painted pair of menoroth plaster Reifenberg relief round ritual objects sarcophagus Sardis scrolls Sdot Yam Second Temple Sepphoris shewbread shewbread table shofar stone stylized Susiya synagogue mosaic Tabernacle Tiberias tomb tombstone Torah shrine tripod base vase Vigna Randanini Villa Torlonia

