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The collection of essays in this book represents more than twenty
years of research on the history and archeology of Judah, as well
as the study of the Biblical literature written in and about the
period that might be called the “Age of Empires”. This
600-year-long period, when Judah was a vassal Assyrian, Egyptian
and Babylonian kingdom and then a province under the consecutive
rule of the Babylonian, Persian, Ptolemaic and Seleucid empires,
was the longest and the most influential in Judean history and
historiography. The administration that was shaped and developed
during this period, the rural economy, the settlement pattern and
the place of Jerusalem as a small temple, surrounded by a small
settlement of (mainly) priests, Levites and other temple servants,
characterize Judah during most of its history. This is the
formative period when most of the Hebrew Bible was written and
edited, when the main features of Judaism were shaped and when
Judean cult and theology were created and developed. The 36 papers
contained in this book present a broad picture of the Hebrew Bible
against the background of the Biblical history and the archeology
of Judah throughout the six centuries of the “Age of Empires”.
This is a collection of essays by leading scholars examining the
period of transition between Persian and Greek rule of Judah, ca.
400-200 BCE. "Judah Between East and West" is a collection of
essays by leading scholars in the field, presenting the main
findings of a recent conference of British and Israeli scholars at
held at Tel Aviv University. The contributions focus on the period
of transition between Persian and Greek rule of Judah, ca. 400-200
BCE, though some of the essays are extended outside these time
limits. The volume aims to explore this period in all its
complexity, as far as the limitations of a single publication
allows! Subjects covered include the archaeology of Maresha/Marisa,
Jewish identity, Hellenization/Hellenism, Ptolemaic administration
in Judah, biblical and Jewish literature of the early Greek period,
the size and status of Jerusalem, the Samaritans in the transition
period, and Greek foundations in Palestine. "The Library of Second
Temple Studies" is a premier book series that offers cutting-edge
work for a readership of scholars, teachers, postgraduate students
and advanced undergraduates in the field of Second Temple studies.
All the many and diverse aspects of Second Temple study are
represented and promoted, including innovative work from historical
perspectives, studies using social-scientific and literary theory,
and developing theological, cultural and contextual approaches.
Archaeological exploration in the Central Highlands of the Southern
Levant conducted during the 1970s and 1980s dramatically
transformed the scholarly understanding of the early Iron Age and
led to the publication of From Nomadism to Monarchy: Archaeological
and Historical Aspects of Early Israel, by Israel Finkelstein and
Nadav Na’aman. This volume explores and reassesses the legacy of
that foundational text. Using current theoretical frameworks and
taking into account new excavation data and methodologies from the
natural sciences, the seventeen essays in this volume examine the
archaeology of the Southern Levant during the early Iron Age and
the ways in which the period may be reflected in biblical accounts.
The variety of methodologies employed and the historical narratives
presented within these contributions illuminate the multifaceted
nature of contemporary research on this formative period. Building
upon Finkelstein and Na’aman’s seminal study, this work
provides an essential update. It will be welcomed by ancient
historians, scholars of early Israel and the early Iron Age
Southern Levant, and biblical scholars. In addition to the editors,
the contributors to this volume are Eran Arie, Erez Ben-Yosef,
Cynthia Edenburg, Israel Finkelstein, Yuval Gadot, Assaf Kleiman,
Gunnar Lehmann, Defna Langgut, Aren M. Maeir, Nadav Na’aman,
Thomas Römer, Lidar Sapir-Hen, Katja Soennecken, Dieter Vieweger,
Ido Wachtel, and Naama Yahalom-Mack.
This is part of a three-volume final report of the renewed
excavations at Ramat Raḥel by the Tel Aviv–Heidelberg
Expedition (2005−2010). It presents the finds from the
Babylonian-Persian pit, one of the most dramatic find-spots at
Ramat Raḥel. The pit yielded a rich assemblage of pottery vessels
and yhwd, lion, and sixth-century “private” stamp impressions,
including, for the first time, complete restored stamped jars, jars
bearing two handles stamped with different yhwd impressions, and
jars bearing both lion and “private” stamp impressions on their
bodies. Residue analysis was conducted on many of the vessels
excavated from the pit to analyze their contents, yielding
surprising results. The finds contribute to our understanding of
the pottery of the Babylonian and early Persian periods (6th−5th
centuries BCE) and to the study of the development of the
stamped-jar administration in the province of Yehud under
Babylonian and Persian rule. Also available from Eisenbrauns: Ramat
Raḥel III: Final Publication of Aharoni'’s Excavations at Ramat
Raḥel (1954, 1959–1962) by Oded Lipschits, Yuval Gadot, and
Liora Freud; and Ramat Raḥel IV: The Renewed Excavations by the
Tel Aviv–Heidelberg Expedition (2005–2010): Stratigraphy and
Architecture, by Oded Lipschits, Mandred Oeming, and Yuval Gadot.
This multidisciplinary study takes a fresh look at Judean history
and biblical literature in the late fourth and third centuries BCE.
In a major reappraisal of this era, the contributions to this
volume depict it as one in which critical changes took place. Until
recently, the period from Alexander’s conquest in 332 BCE to the
early years of Seleucid domination following Antiochus III’s
conquest in 198 BCE was reputed to be poorly documented in material
evidence and textual production, buttressing the view that the era
from late Persian to Hasmonean times was one of seamless
continuity. Biblical scholars believed that no literary activity
belonged to the Hellenistic age, and archaeologists were unable to
refine their understanding because of a lack of secure
chronological markers. However, recent studies are revealing this
period as one of major social changes and intense literary
activity. Historians have shed new light on the nature of the
Hellenistic empires and the relationship between the central power
and local entities in ancient imperial settings, and the redating
of several biblical texts to the third century BCE challenges the
traditional periodization of Judean history. Bringing together
Hellenistic history, the archaeology of Judea, and biblical
studies, this volume appraises the early Hellenistic period anew as
a time of great transition and change and situates Judea within its
broader regional and transregional imperial contexts.
Storage jars of many shapes and sizes were in widespread use in the
ancient world, transporting and storing agricultural products such
as wine and oil, crucial to agriculture, economy, trade and
subsistence. From the late 8th to the 2nd century BCE, the oval
storage jars typical of Judah were often stamped or otherwise
marked: in the late 8th and early 7th century BCE with lmlk stamp
impressions, later in the 7th century with concentric circle
incisions or rosette stamp impressions, in the 6th century, after
the fall of Jerusalem, with lion stamp impressions, and in the
Persian, Ptolemaic and Seleucid periods (late 6th–late 2nd
centuries BCE) with yhwd stamp impressions. At the same time,
several ad hoc systems of stamp impressions appeared: “private”
stamp impressions were used on the eve of Sennacherib’s campaign,
mwṣh stamp impressions after the destruction of Jerusalem, and
yršlm impressions after the establishment of the Hasmonean state.
While administrative systems that stamped storage jars are known
elsewhere in the ancient Near East, the phenomenon in Judah is
unparalleled in its scale, variety and continuity, spanning a
period of some 600 years without interruption. This is the first
attempt to consider the phenomenon as a whole and to develop a
unified theory that would explain the function of these stamp
impressions and shed new light on the history of Judah during six
centuries of subjugation to the empires that ruled the region—as
a vassal kingdom in the age of the Assyrian, Egyptian, and
Babylonian empires and as a province under successive Babylonian,
Persian, Ptolemaic, and Seleucid rule.
This is the first of a three-volume final report on the Tel
Aviv–Heidelberg Renewed Excavations at Ramat Raḥel,
2005–2010. It presents the stratigraphy and architecture of the
excavation areas, including portions of the palatial compound, the
subterranean columbarium complex, and the Late Roman cemetery; site
formation of the tell; twentieth-century fortifications at the
site; and the ancient garden and its water installations.
This is a collection of essays examining the period of transition
between Persian and Greek rule of Judah, ca. 400-200 BCE. Subjects
covered include the archaeology of Maresha/Marisa, Jewish identity,
Hellenization/Hellenism, Ptolemaic administration in Judah,
biblical and Jewish literature of the early Greek period, the size
and status of Jerusalem, the Samaritans in the transition period,
and Greek foundations in Palestine.
Israel Finkelstein is perhaps the best-known Israeli archaeologist
in the world. Renowned for his innovative and ground-breaking
research, he has written and edited more than 20 books and
published more than 300 academic papers. He has served as the
director of the Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology and
is the Jacob M. Alkow Professor of Archeology in the Bronze and
Iron Age at Tel Aviv University. For the past two decades, he has
been co-director of the Megiddo Expedition and is currently
co-director of the Mission archéologique de Qiryat-Yéarim. His
work has greatly changed the face of archaeological and historical
research of the biblical period. His unique ability to see the
comprehensive big picture and formulate a broad framework has
inspired countless scholars to reexamine long-established
paradigms. His trail-blazing work covering every period from the
beginning of the Early Bronze Age through the Hasmonean period,
while sometimes controversial, has led to a creative new approach
that connects archaeology with history, the social sciences, and
the natural and life sciences. Israel Finkelstein is a member of
the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities and a correspondant
étranger of the French Académie des Inscriptions et Belles
Lettres. Professor Finkelstein is the recipient of the prestigious
2005 Dan David Prize for his radical revision of the history of
Israel in the 10th and 9th centuries BCE. In 2009, he was named
Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French
Minister of Culture, and in 2010 received an honorary doctorate
from the University of Lausanne. He is a member of the selection
committee of the Shanghai Archaeology Forum, the Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences. In 2014, his book The Forgotten Kingdom was
awarded the esteemed Prix Delalande-Guérineau by the Académie des
Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in Paris. This volume, dedicated to
Professor Finkelstein’s accomplishments and contributions,
features 36 articles written by his colleagues, friends, and
students in honor of his decades of scholarship and leadership in
the field of biblical archaeology.
The area of the Judean Foothills – the biblical Shephelah
– has in recent years become one of the most intensively
excavated regions in the world. Numerous projects, at sites of
different types and utilizing various methodological approaches,
are actively excavating in this region. Of particular importance
are the discoveries dating to the Iron Age, a period when this
region was a transition zone between various cultures—Philistine,
Canaanite, Judahite, and Israelite. The current volume includes
reports from eight of the excavations currently being conducted in
the region (Azekah, Beth Shemesh, Gezer, Khirbet Qeiyafa, Tel
Burna, Tel Halif, Tell es-Safi/Gath, and Tel Zayit), as well as a
general study of the region by Ido Koch. The importance of this
volume lies not only in the fact that it collects up-to-date
reports on most of the current excavations in the region but also
demonstrates the lively, at times even boisterous, scholarly
discussions taking place on various issues relating to the
archaeology and history of the Iron Age Shephelah and its immediate
environs. This volume serves as an excellent introduction to
current research on the Iron Age in this crucial zone and also
serves as a reflection of current trends, methodologies, and
approaches in the archaeology of the Southern Levant.
The excavations at Ramat Raḥel, just south of Jerusalem, revealed
a complex of structures that existed for hundreds of years in which
the Kingdom of Judah was a vassal of diverse empires. Over some 500
years, jars bearing seals were stored at the site. The findings
throw new light on the late First Temple period and on most of that
of the Second Temple. During these centuries Ramat Raḥel was the
administrative contact point between Judah and the ruling empires.
This is what enabled independent Judean control of Jerusalem and
the Temple, and the ability to maintain Jewish identity within
Jerusalem almost without outside intervention and supervision. All
this came to an end during the Hasmonean revolt.
The period of the demise of the kingdom of Judah at the end of the
6th century B.C.E., the fall of Jerusalem to the Babylonians, the
exile of the elite to Babylon, and the reshaping of the territory
of the new province of Judah, culminating at the end of the century
with the first return of exiles-all have been subjects of intense
scrutiny during the last decade. Lipschits takes into account the
biblical textual evidence, the results of archaeological research,
and the reports of Babylonian and Egyptian sources and provides a
comprehensive survey and analysis of the evidence for the history
of this 100-year-long era. He provides a lucid historical survey
that will, no doubt, become the baseline for all future studies of
this era.
In April, 2008, an international colloquium was held at the
University of Heidelberg-the fourth convocation of a group of
scholars (with some rotating members) who gathered to discuss the
status of Judah and the Judeans in the exilic and postexilic
periods. The goal of this gathering was specifically to address the
question of national identity in the period when many now believe
this very issue was in significant foment and development, the era
of the Persian/Achaemenid domination of the ancient Near East. This
volume contains most of the papers delivered at the Heidelberg
conference, considering the matter under two rubrics: (1) the
biblical evidence (and the diversity of data from the Bible); and
(2) the cultural, historical, social, and environmental factors
affecting the formation of national identity. Contributors: K.
Schmid, J. Schaper, A. C. Hagedorn, C. Nihan, J. Middlemas, D.
Rom-Shiloni, J. Woehrle, Y. Dor, K. Southwood, D. N. Fulton, P.-A.
Beaulieu, L. E. Pearce, D. Redford, A. Lemaire, J. F. Quack, B.
Becking, R. G. Kratz, O. Tal, J. Blenkinsopp, R. Albertz, J. L.
Wright, D. S. Vanderhooft, M. Oeming, and A. Kloner. Earlier
volumes in the series of conferences are: Judah and the Judeans in
the Neo-Babylonian Period, Judah and the Judeans in the Persian
Period, and Judah and the Judeans in the in the Fourth Century
B.C.E.
In July 2003, a conference was held at the University of Heidelberg
(Germany), focusing on the people and land of Judah during the 5th
and early 4th centuries B.C.E.- the period when the Persian Empire
held sway over the entire ancient Near East. This volume publishes
the papers of the participants in the working group that attended
the Heidelberg conference. Participants whose contributions appear
here include: Y. Amit, B. Becking, J. Berquist, J. Blenkinsopp, M.
Dandamayev, D. Edelman, T. Eskenazi, A. Fantalkin and O. Tal, L.
Fried, L. Grabbe, S. Japhet, J. Kessler, E. A. Knauf, G. Knoppers,
R. Kratz, A. Lemaire, O. Lipschits, H. Liss, M. Oeming, L. Pearce,
F. Polak, B. Porten and A. Yardeni, E. Stern, D. Ussishkin, D.
Vanderhooft, and J. Wright. The conference was the second of three
meetings; the first, held at Tel Aviv in May 2001, was published as
Judah and the Judeans in the Neo-Babylonian Period by Eisenbrauns
in 2003. A third conference focusing on Judah and the Judeans in
the Hellenistic era was held in the summer of 2005, at Munster,
Germany, and will also be published by Eisenbrauns.
This volume is the outcome of an international conference held at
Tel Aviv University, May 29-31, 2001. The idea for the conference
germinated at the fifth Transeuphratene colloquy in Paris in March
2000. The Tel Aviv conference was organized in order to encourage
investigation into the obscure five or six decades preceding the
Persian conquests in the latter part of the 6th century. The essays
here are organized in 5 parts: (1) The Myth of the Empty Land
Revisited; (2) Cult, Priesthood, and Temple; (3) Military and
Governmental Aspects; (4) Archaeological Perspectives on the 6th
Century B.C.E.; and (5) Exiles and Foreigners in Egypt and
Babylonia. Contributors: H. M. Barstad, B. Oded, L. S. Fried, S.
Japhet, J. Blenkinsopp, G. N. Knoppers, Y. Amit, D. Edelman, Y.
Hoffman, R. H. Sack, D. Vanderhooft, J. W. Betlyon, A. Lemaire, C.
E. Carter, O. Lipschits, A. Zertal, J. R. Zorn, B. Porten, and R.
Zadok.
This book brings to complete and final publication two past
excavations conducted at the site of Ramat Raḥel. A major part of
the report is devoted to publishing the results of Yohanan
Aharoni’s long-term excavation project at the site during the
years 1954, 1956, 1959–1962. The renewal of excavations at the
site in 2004 triggered the need to reevaluate the site’s
architecture and stratigraphy, and from that the idea to publish
this report was born.
The study of the yehud stamp impressions, which appear on the
handles or bodies of store jars, has persisted for over a century,
beginning with the discovery of the first of these impressions at
Gezer in 1904. Nevertheless, until the pioneering work of Stern in
1973, who cataloged, classified, and discussed the stamp
impressions known up to 1970, discovery and publication of new
stamp impressions were scattered, and analysis was cursory at best.
Furthermore, a gap in research has persisted since then. Now, Oded
Lipschits and David Vanderhooft are pleased to present a
comprehensive catalog (through the winter of 2008–9) of published
and unpublished yehud stamp impressions, with digital photographs
and complete archaeological and publication data for each
impression. This long-overdue resource provides a secure foundation
for general reflection on the whole corpus and illuminates
more-narrow fields such as stratigraphy, paleography,
administration, historical geography, and Persian-period economic
developments within Yehud. The catalog clarifies what is nebulous
apart from a complete corpus, matters such as distribution,
petrographic analysis of the clay, new readings of the seal
legends, use of the toponym yehud, and significance of the title
phwa. The scope of this catalog renders it a worthwhile tool for
all future study of these invaluable artifacts and the period of
history that produced them.
During the past decade, the period from the 7th century B.C.E. and
later has been a major focus because it is thought to be the era
when much of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament was formed. As a
result, there has also been much interest in the historical
developments of that time and specifically in the status of Judah
and its neighbors. Three conferences dealing roughly with a century
each were organized, and the first conference was held in Tel Aviv
in 2001; the proceedings of that conference were published as Judah
and the Judeans in the Neo-Babylonian Period. The second volume was
published in early 2006, a report on the conference held in
Heidelberg in July 2003: Judah and the Judeans in the Persian
Period. Judah and the Judeans in the Fourth Century B.C.E. is the
publication of the proceedings of the third conference, which was
held in Muenster, Germany, in August 2005; the essays in it focus
on the century during which the Persian Empire fell to Alexander
the Great and the Hellenistic kingdoms came to the fore.
Participants whose contributions are published here are: R.
Achenbach, R. Albertz, B. Becking, E. Ben Zvi, J. Blenkinsopp, E.
Eshel, H. Eshel, L. L. Grabbe, A. Kloner, G. N. Knoppers, I.
Kottsieper, A. Lemaire, O. Lipschits, Y. Magen, K. Schmid, I.
Stern., O. Tal, D. Vanderhooft, J. Wiesehöfer, J. L. Wright, and
J. W. Wright.
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