Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα JAJ. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων
Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα JAJ. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων

Δευτέρα 12 Ιανουαρίου 2026

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

 Journal of Ancient Judaism 16:3 (2025)

  • Josef Forsling, "The Bitter Effect of the Water in the Law of Jealousy (Num 5:11–31): Holiness and Impurity in Conflict," 301–323 (abstract)
  • Jodi Magness, "When Was the First Samaritan Temple on Mount Gerizim Built?" 340–349 (abstract)
  • Jonathan Reichel, "Moses as a Tyrant? Moses’s Anti-tyrannical Reaction to Zambrias’s Accusation (Ant. 4.145–149)," 350-370 (abstract)
  • Jozef Tiňo - Marcela Andoková, "Ezekiel’s Exagoge: Jewish Pro-Ptolemaic Propaganda?" 371–401 (abstract)
  • Daniel Charles Smith, "A Palm Grove in Smyrna and the Negotiation of Judean Difference," 402–420 (abstract)
  • Chance E. Bonar, "Jewish Interconnectivity and Diasporic Unrest under Trajan: Stereotypes and Uneasy Histories," 421–444 (abstract)

Σάββατο 23 Ιουλίου 2022

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

 Journal of Ancient Judaism 13/2 (2022)

  • Annette Yoshiko Reed, "Gendering Revealed Knowledge? Prophecy, Positionality, and Perspective across Sibylline and Enochic Discourses," 113–150 (abstract)
  • Sanghwan Lee, "An Examination of the Punitive Blindness of Asael in Light of the Triadic Relationship between Sight, Light, and Knowledge," 151–185 (abstract)
  • Carmen Palmer, "Philo’s Hellenistic-Jewish Approach in On the Decalogue and On the Contemplative Life: Blending Wisdom of Solomon’s Critique against Idols with a Hellenistic Notion of Moderation," 186–201 (abstract)
  • Yonatan Adler, "The Jewish Coins at Dura-Europos," 202–223 (abstract)
  • Catherine E. Bonesho, "R. Cleopatra? Constructions of an Egyptian Queen in the Babylonian Talmud," 224–251 (abstract)

Σάββατο 28 Μαΐου 2022

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

 Journal of Ancient Judaism 13/1 (2022)

  • Laura Quick - Ellena Lyell, "Dressing Daniel: Identity Formation and Embodiment in Daniel 1–6," 1-26
  • Sanghwan Lee, "An Examination of the Punishment Motif in the Book of the Watchers 10:4–8 in Light of Greek Myths," 27–51 (abstract)
  • Tyler Smith, "Josephus’s Jewish Antiquities in Competition with Nicolaus of Damascus’s Universal History," 52–76 (abstract)
  • Stefan Krauter, "Πνεῦμα in the Writings of Flavius Josephus: A Jewish Adaptation of Middle Platonic Trichotomic Anthropology?" 77–84 (abstract)
  • Alexander M. Weisberg, "Assemblages and Realism in Tannaitic Law: Legal Intensities, Affects, and Circuits," 85–111 (abstract)

Τετάρτη 7 Ιουλίου 2021

To τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

 Journal of Ancient Judaism 12/2 (2021)

  • JiSeong James Kwon - Matthias Brütsch, "Das Hohelied als jüdische Version der Liebesdichtung innerhalb eines gemeinsamen intellektuellen Hintergrundes in der hellenistischen Zeit," 149–174 (abstract)
  • James Nati, "'As for the Doer of His Will, May They Ascend as a Fine Fragrance': A Note on Jubilees 2:22," 175–184 (abstract)
  • Atar Livneh, "Moses Proves His Case: Historical Examples in A.J. 4.43–45," 185–204 (abstract)
  • Cameron Evan Ferguson, "A Note on Contra Apionem 1.250: Further Evidence for Anti-Jewish Interpolation," 205–216 (abstract)
  • Daniel A. Machiela - Robert Jones, "Was there a Revival of Hebrew during the Hasmonean Period? A Reassessment of the Evidence,"  217–280 (abstract)
  • Susan Marks, "Who Studied at the Beit Midrash?: Funding Palestinian Amoraic Education," 281–312 (abstract)

Κυριακή 18 Απριλίου 2021

Το τρέχον τεύχος του Journal of Ancient Judaism / The current issue of Journal of Ancient Judaism

 Journal of Ancient Judaism 12/1 (2021)

  • David Katzin, "A Common Tradition Underlying the Temptation Pericope of Matthew 4:1–11 and the Qumran Psalm Pesher (4QpPsa, 4Q171)," 1–47 (abstract)
  • Hanna Tervanotko, "Dice, Stars and Names: Women and Technical Divination in the Dead Sea Scrolls," 48–70 (abstract)
  • Jonathan R. Trotter, "Jewish Identity and the Intercommunal Links between Diaspora Jewish Communities in the Second Temple Period, " 71–93 (abstract)
  • Jennifer Eyl, "Philo and Josephus on the Fidelity of Judeans," 94–121 (abstract)
  • Barak Shlomo Cohen, "The Tannei Rav X Baraitot in the Babylonian Talmud: From Recitation to Ascription, " 122–147 (abstract)

Πέμπτη 17 Δεκεμβρίου 2020

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

 Journal of Ancient Judaism 11/3 (2020)

  • Samuel L. Boyd, "A Prophetic Judgement without Reprieve: The Concepts of Remnant and Law in Amos 3:12," 303–342 (abstract)
  • Liane M. Feldman, "Sanitized Sacrifice in Aramaic Levi’s Law of the Priesthood," 343–368 (abstract)
  • Ariel Feldman and Faina Feldman, "KhQ2207: An Overlooked Stone Inscription from Khirbet Qumran," 369–384 (abstract)
  • Michael L. Satlow, "Josephus’s Knowledge of Scripture," 385–417 (abstract)
  • Benjamin D. Gordon, "Health and the Origins of the Miqveh," 418–459 (abstract)

Πέμπτη 1 Οκτωβρίου 2020

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

 Journal of Ancient Judaism 11/1 (2020)

Special Issue: Genealogy versus Merit? On the Role of Lineage in Ancient Judaism

  • Katell Berthelot, "Genealogy versus Merit? On the Role of Lineage in Ancient Judaism. Introduction," 1–9 
  • Benedikt Eckhardt, "The Impact of Hellenistic Monarchy on Jewish Identity," 11–25 (abstract)
  • Katell Berthelot, "Lineage and Virtue in Josephus: The Respective Roles of Priestly Worldview and Roman Culture," 26–44 (abstract)
  • Yael Wilfand, "Roman Concepts of Citizenship, and Rabbinic Approaches to the Lineage of Converts and the Integration of their Descendants into Israel," 45–75 (abstract)
  • Yedidah Koren, "Policing Lineage in Rabbinic Literature," 76–115 (abstract)
  • Moshe Lavee, "Marital Bond and Genealogical Anxiety – Reaffirming the Schism between Rabbinic Texts from Babylonia and the Land of Israel," 116–147 (abstract)
  • Geoffrey Herman, "Priests without a Temple: On Priests and Rabbis in Sasanian Babylonia," 148–160 (abstract)


Τρίτη 21 Απριλίου 2020

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 10:3 (2019)
  • Jodi Magness, "Herod the Great’s Self-Representation Through His Tomb at Herodium," 258–287 (abstract)
  • Zeev Gur, "The Bathsheba Affair as a Royal Apology of King Solomon," 288–353 (abstract)
  • Eliran Arazi, "Corpse Impurity in Second Temple Judaism: A Revised Approach in Light of the Order of Meaning of Honor and Shame," 354–394 (abstract)
  • Jonathan Klawans, "Masked: Sagacity, Sophistry and Pseudepigraphy in Aristeas," 395–415 (abstract)
  • Karin Hügel, "Jüdische gesetzliche Auslegungen zu weiblicher Homoerotik," 416–454 (abstract)

Πέμπτη 27 Φεβρουαρίου 2020

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 10:2 (2019)

  • Jonathan Kaplan, "The Chronography of Daniel 9 and Jubilees in the Shadow of the Seleucid Era," 116–135 (abstract)
  • Ariel Feldman - Faina Feldman, "A Newly Identified Admonition in 4Q464 5." 136–144 (abstract)
  • Yehuda Brandes, "The Canonization of the Mishnah," 145–180 (abstract)
  • Rachel Rafael Neis, "Fetus, Flesh, Food: Generating Bodies of Knowledge in Rabbinic Science," 181–210 (abstract)
  • Chad Spigel, "The Jewish Minority of Dura-Europos," 211–255 (abstract)

Παρασκευή 6 Δεκεμβρίου 2019

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 10:1 (2019)

  • Jonathan Kaplan, Kelley Coblentz Bautch, "Theme Issue: 'Death and Afterlife Traditions in Early Judaism;," 2–3
  • C. D. Elledge, "Critical Issues in Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Judaism," 4–33 (abstract)
  • Rachel Hachlili, "Unique Jewish Funerary Practices in the Jericho Cemetery of the Second Temple Period," 34–78 (abstract)
  • G. Anthony Keddie, "The Vitae Prophetarum and the Archaeology of Jewish Burials: Exploring Class Distinctions in Early Roman Palestine," 79–98 (abstract)
  • Rebecca L. Harris, "Torah and Transformation: The Centrality of the Torah in the Eschatology of 2 Baruch," 99–114 (abstract)

Σάββατο 17 Αυγούστου 2019

Στο τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / In the current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 9:3 (2019)

  • Mitka R. Golub, Peter Zilberg, "From Jerusalem to Āl-Yāhūdu," 312-324 (abstract)
  • Noah Hacham, Lilach Sagiv, "Social Identity in the Letter of Aristeas," 325-343 (abstract)
  • Lindsey A. Askin, "Beyond Encomium or Eulogy," 344-365 (abstract)
  • Matthew E. Gordley, "Psalms of Solomon as Resistance Poetry," 366-385 (abstract)
  • Yoel Kretzmer-Raziel, "Revolution or Evolution: Mental Criteria in Amoraic Laws of Handling on the Sabbath," 386-420 (abstract)
  • John Van Maaren, "Mapping Jewishness in Antiquity: New Contributions from the Social Sciences," 421-454 (abstract)


Σάββατο 30 Μαρτίου 2019

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 9:2 (2018)

  • Jae Hee Han - Annette Yoshiko Reed, "Reorienting Ancient Judaism,"  144-154 
  • Seth L. Sanders, "Enoch’s Imaginary Ancestor," 155-177 (abstract)
  • Karen B. Stern, "Opening Doors to Jewish Life in Syro-Mesopotamian Dura-Europos," 178-200 (abstract)
  • Zsuzsanna Gulácsi, "Visual Catechism in Third-Century Mesopotamia,"  201-229 (abstract)
  • Azzan Yadin-Israel, "Contact Without Borrowing: Areal Diffusion, Contact-Induced Continuity, and Late Antique Sacrifice,"  230-258 (abstract)
  • Yishai Kiel, "Negotiating 'White Rooster' Magic and Binitarian Christology,"  259-279 (abstract)
  • Simcha Gross, "Rethinking Babylonian Rabbinic Acculturation in the Sasanian Empire,"  280-310 (abstract)


Δευτέρα 21 Ιανουαρίου 2019

Στο τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / In the current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 9:1 (2018)

  • Michal Bar-Asher Siegal, Avi Shmidman, "Reconstruction of the Mekhilta Deuteronomy Using Philological and Computational Tools," 2-25 (abstract)
  • Ruth Henderson, "The Concentric Structure of the Wisdom Poem in Job 28," 26-45 (abstract)
  • Yonatan S. Miller, "Sabbath-Temple-Eden," 46-74 (abstract)
  • Thomas Kazen, "Levels of Explanation for Ideas of Impurity," 75-100 (abstract)
  • David Brodsky, "Jesus, Mary, and Akiva ben Joseph,"  101-141 (abstract)






Τετάρτη 2 Ιανουαρίου 2019

Στο τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / In the current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 8:3 (2017)
  • Mira Balberg, Simeon Chavel, "The Polymorphous Pesah:  Ritual Between Origins and Reenactment," 292-343 (abstract)
  • Pieter B. Hartog, "The Qumran Pesharim and Alexandrian Scholarship: 4Q163/Pesher Isaiah C and Hypomnemata on the Iliad," 344-364 (abstract)
  • Yael Wilfand, "The Roman Context for the Rabbinic Ban on Teaching Greek to Sons," 365-387 (abstract)
  • Ari Mermelstein, "Beauty or Beast? The Pedagogical Function of Metaphor and Emotion in Midrashim on the Law of the Lovely Captive," 388-409 (abstract)
  • Hayim Lapin, "Feeding the Jerusalem Temple: Cult, Hinterland, and Economy in First-Century Palestine," 410-453 (abstract)

Τρίτη 21 Αυγούστου 2018

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 8:2 (2017)

  • Lutz Doering - Sandra Gambetti, "Jews and Drama: Introducing the Special Issue," 146-149 (abstract)
  • René Bloch, "Part of the Scene," 150-169 (abstract)
  • G. Anthony Keddie, Jonathan MacLellan, "Ezekiel’s Exagoge and the Politics of Hellenistic Theatre," 170-187 (abstract)
  • Sandra Gambetti, "Some Considerations on Ezekiel’s Exagoge," 188-207 (abstract)
  • Matthias Hopf, "The Song of Songs as a Hebrew “Counterweight” to Hellenistic Drama," 208-221 (abstract)
  • Jeff Jay, "Spectacle, Stage-Craft, and the Tragic in Philo’s In Flaccum," 222-240 (abstract)
  • Courtney J. P. Friesen, "Virtue and Vice on Stage," 241-256 (abstract)
  • Sören Swoboda, "Tragic Elements in Josephus," 257-270 (abstract)
  • Zeev Weiss, "Actors and Theaters, Rabbis and Synagogues," 271-279 (abstract)
  • Thomas D. Kohn, "Four Jews, and Their Rabbis, Go into a Theatre …," 280-290 (abstract)

Πέμπτη 12 Απριλίου 2018

Στο τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / In the current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 8:1 (2017)

  • Aaron Koller, "The Self-Referential Coda to Avot and the Egyptian-Israelite Literary Tradition of Wisdom," 2-25
  • Siegbert Riecker, "Die Erkenntnisverheißung im Buch Exodus: Ein verunglückter Sprechakt?," 26-41
  • Elisa Uusimäki, "Maskil among the Hellenistic Jewish Sages," 42-68
  • Justin P. Jeffcoat Schedtler, "Perplexing Pseudepigraphy: The Pseudonymous Greek Poets," 69-89
  • Tzvi Novick, "'I am Not a Butcher': Authority and Expertise in Rabbinic Laws of Meat Production in Classical Rabbinic Literature," 112-144

Σάββατο 10 Μαρτίου 2018

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 7:3 (2016)

  • Jonathan Stökl, "Deborah, Huldah, and Innibana: Constructions of Female Prophecy in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible," 333 - 353
  • Agnethe Siquans, "“She Dared to Reprove Her Father:” Miriam’s Image as a Female Prophet in Rabbinic Interpretation," 354 - 384
  • Hanna Tervanotko, "Unreliability and Gender? Untrusted Female Prophets in Ancient Greek and Jewish Texts,"  385 - 396
  • Manuela Giordano, "From Gaia to the Pythia: Prophecy Suits Women," 397 - 422

Δευτέρα 6 Φεβρουαρίου 2017

Το τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / The current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 7:2 (2016)

Andrew Tobolowsky, "Reading Genesis Through Chronicles: The Creation of the Sons of Jacob," 138-168 
Scholars are increasingly aware of the dynamic nature of the interaction between the nine-chapter- long genealogy that begins the book of Chronicles and its source material. However, little attention has been paid to the role this interaction might have played in the creation of some key biblical ideas, particularly in the “eponymous imagination” of the tribes as literally the sons of Jacob. Through comparison with scholarly approaches to the pseudo-Hesiodic Catalogue of Women and an investigation into the ramifications for biblical studies of ethnic theory and historical memory on the fluidity of ethnicity and memory over time, this article seeks to reassess the dynamic power of the Chronicles genealogy as an ethnic charter for the elites of Persian Yehud. Focus on the distinctive imagination of Israel in the crucial narratives in the book of Genesis, as compared with narratives elsewhere in the primary history, and the contributions of the Chronicles genealogy to their redefinition, allows us to address the Bible’s dependence upon the lens the Chronicles genealogy imposes upon it.

Lawrence M. Wills, "Jew, Judean, Judaism in the Ancient Period: An Alternative Argument," 169-193
Applying the terms “Jew” and “Judaism” in the ancient period has recently been challenged by a number of scholars. First, the terms translated as Jew and Judaism are rare in the ancient period, and second, it is argued that these terms retroject later understandings of Judaism as a religion back into a period when Israelites and Yehudim/Ioudaioi are rather understood as an ethnic group. “Judeans” is preferable as a designation to “Jews.” Two challenges have arisen. Some argue that the ethnic meaning of Yehudim/Ioudaioi changed to a more religious meaning in about 100 B. C. E.. Others insist that “Jew” and “Judaism” have always communicated both an ethnic and religious meaning – and still do – and so to insist on an ethnic-only meaning (“Judeans”) in the ancient period is misleading. Here I take up a number of the previous arguments and modify them to form an alternative proposal: Yehudi (feminine Yehudiyah) and related terms arose as assertive, emotive identity terms to reflect a strong affirmation of identity in an international situation. Much as “Quaker” or “American” can be assertive, emotive identity terms relative to the default Society of Friends or United States respectively, so Yehudi/Yehudiyah was used occasionally, then more often, as a strong identity term relative to the default Israel/Israelite.

Michael Flowers, "The Two Messiahs and Melchizedek in 11QMelchizedek," 194-227
11QMelch identifies several eschatological figures in Isa 52:7: prophets, a first and second herald, the community, and (probably) Melchizedek. The heralds are differentiated from one another, something that has been largely overlooked in discussions of 11QMelch. They are also differentiated from the “mountains”/“prophets,” another significant point that is rarely emphasized. That the first herald is a Davidic Messiah is suggested by the author’s apparent quote from the “seventy weeks” prophecy in Dan 9:24–27, a passage that was often used to calculate the advent of the Davidic Messiah. If the lacuna in line 18 contained a clause from Dan 9:25 this would provide further support for interpreting the first herald as the Davidic Messiah since this verse refers to “the prince Messiah.” Moreover, in the history of interpretation, Isa 52:7 was understood, at least by some Christians and Jews, as referring to the Davidic Messiah. Hence, there are grounds for seeing the first herald not as an angel or a Prophet-Messiah but as a royal Messiah. Melchizedek – who goes by the aliases “the Prince of lights” and “Michael” in other works – is distinguished from the two heralds. He is not a Messiah but a chief patron angel who fights on behalf of the sons of light against Belial in the great eschatological war. The second herald is described as a teacher and may therefore be the “Messiah of Aaron”/“Interpreter of the Law” found in other sectarian works. The interpretation proposed in this article allows for parallels to be drawn between 11QMelch and other sectarian works. Against what is commonly supposed, 11QMelch does not seem to reflect a form of messianism that is notably distinctive but one that conforms to the diarchic messianism found in other sectarian writings.

Yonatan Adler, "Between Priestly Cult and Common Culture: The Material Evidence of Ritual Purity Observance in Early Roman Jerusalem Reassessed," 228-248
Although miqwa’ot and chalkstone vessels have been found throughout Israel, the unparalleled number of such finds at Jerusalem has conventionally been explained in terms of the special demands of the Temple cult and of the city’s priestly residents. In light of a growing number of archaeological discoveries from the past number of years, however, the conception that Jerusalem and its Temple served as focal points of ritual purity observance deserves to be significantly reevaluated. The new data indicate that regular, widespread use of ritual baths and chalkstone vessels was not at all unique to Jerusalem or the priesthood, but rather was commonplace to a comparable degree in Jewish society throughout early Roman Judea. Jews everywhere throughout the country strove on a regular basis to maintain the purity of their bodies, clothing, utensils, food, and drink, and there is no reason to suppose that in doing so they somehow had the Temple in mind. Most Jews living at this time would probably have understood the pentateuchal purity regulations as prescribing that ritual purity be maintained on a regular basis in ordinary, everyday life – without specific regard to the Temple or its cult. This new understanding encourages us to reinterpret the archaeological finds from Jerusalem as reflecting an important facet of prevailing common culture rather than as stemming from the unique sanctity of Jerusalem, the Temple, or its priests.

Laura S. Lieber, "Forever Let it Be Said: Issues of Authorial Multivocality in a Samaritan Hymn," 249-268
In this article, an exploration of the performative phenomenon labeled here as “multiauthorial vocality” will serve to highlight both the richness of the Samaritan poetic tradition on its own terms and to suggest significant future directions for comparative study that can integrate Samaritan hymnography and the Samaritan liturgy into their works. This analysis primarily underscores how scholars need to address the essential complexity of liturgical poetry as a performed genre. “Multi-authorial vocality” refers to the process by which multiple authors shape the received experience and significance of the composition as a whole. A single Samaritan hymn by Marqa, “This is His Great Writing,” provides a subject for the analysis, and a translation of the hymn is provided as an appendix. The rhetorical-performative dynamic examined here is not in any way unique to this poem, nor is it distinctive to Samaritans; it is precisely this more “universal” element of liturgical poetry that enables comparative (beyond noting parallel or divergent motifs, themes, and intertextual allusions) to be done. In Marqa’s poem, some figures are explicitly identified as authors or tradents, while others assume that role implicitly. The approach to liturgical texts modeled here does not deny the importance of the author to our text but raises our awareness of how complicated his role is. The poet is, to use an analogy, as much a conductor as a composer; he orchestrates the liturgical experience, but relies on other participants to complete it. Subsequent performers create their own arrangements of the existing words on the page but likewise need the involvement – physical, conceptual, and psychological – of the other participants for the liturgy to “work.” At the same time, it also argues for the importance of integrating Samaritan liturgical traditions into the larger comparative hymnography discussions now underway.


Κυριακή 4 Δεκεμβρίου 2016

Τα δύο τελευταία τεύχη του JAJ / The two recent issues of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 7:1 (2016)

  • Jodi Magness, "Were Sacrifices Offered at Qumran? The Animal Bone Deposits Reconsidered," 5-34 (abstract)
  • Gunnel Ekroth, "A view from the Greek side:Interpretations of animal bones as evidence for sacrifice and ritual consumption," 35-50 (abstract)
  • Dennis Mizzi, "The Animal Bone Deposits at Qumran: An Unsolvable Riddle?," 51-70 (abstract)
  • Lawrence H. Schiffman, "Qumran Temple? The Literary Evidence," 71-85 (abstract)
  • Susan Marks, "Reconsidering Reclining at Qumran," 86-101 (abstract)
  • Cecilia Wassén, "The (Im)purity Levels of Communal Meals within the Qumran Movement," 102-122 (abstract)
  • Alison Schofield, "An Altar in the Desert? 
  • A Response to Jodi Magness, 'Were Sacrifices Offered at Qumran?'," 123-135 (abstract)

Journal of Ancient Judaism 7:2 (2016)

  • Andrew Tobolowsky, "Reading Genesis Through Chronicles: The Creation of the Sons of Jacob," 138-168 (abstract)
  • Lawrence Wills, "Jew, Judean, Judaism in the Ancient Period: An Alternative Argument," 169-193 (abstract)
  • Michael Flowers, "The Two Messiahs and Melchizedek in 11QMelchizedek," 194-227 (abstract)
  • Yonatan Adler,  "Between Priestly Cult and Common Culture: The Material Evidence of Ritual Purity Observance in Early Roman Jerusalem Reassessed," 228-248 (abstract)
  • Laura Lieber, "Forever Let it Be Said: Issues of Authorial Multivocality in a Samaritan Hymn," 249-268 (abstract)

Πέμπτη 8 Σεπτεμβρίου 2016

Στο τρέχον τεύχος του JAJ / In the current issue of JAJ

Journal of Ancient Judaism 6:2 (2015)

  • Brian Rainey, "Their Peace or Prosperity"
  • Etka Liebowitz, "Josephus’s Ambivalent Attitude towards Women and Power: The Case of Queen Alexandra"
  • David Katzin, "A Tertiary Level of Understanding in Qumran Interpretive Texts Discoverable Through Cascading Stichwörter"
  • Paul Heger, "The Seducer and the Rapist. Divergent Qumranic and Rabbinic Interpretations of Deut 22:28–29"
  • Vered Noam, "The Emergence of Rabbinic Culture from the Perspective of Qumran"
  • Ben Zion Rosenfeld, Haim Perlmutter, "'Who is Rich'? The Rich in Roman Palestine 70–250 C. E."