The Flavian Amphitheatre (Colosseum) | Rome, completed by Titus in 80CE | Image Source
This Week: New Huqoq mosaic, Jews in Rome, Nag Hammadi codices, Marginalia Origin Forum bonanza, heresy, Sinai palimpsests – and more!
Read MoreThe Flavian Amphitheatre (Colosseum) | Rome, completed by Titus in 80CE | Image Source
The Flavian Amphitheatre (Colosseum) | Rome, completed by Titus in 80CE | Image Source
This Week: New Huqoq mosaic, Jews in Rome, Nag Hammadi codices, Marginalia Origin Forum bonanza, heresy, Sinai palimpsests – and more!
Read MoreTaking the ethnographic disposition as a starting point allows us to see how heresiologists acted in line with many other ancient writers, beyond or before Christianity, who also meant to know the world around them.
Read MoreIn 2017, the Religious Worlds of Late Antiquity SBL section organized a review panel to discuss Todd Berzon's Classifying Christians: Ethnography, Heresiology, and the Limits of Knowledge in Late Antiquity. During the month of July, AJR will feature the panelists' responses.
Read MoreFoot of the Constantine colossus | Courtyard of the Musei Capitolini, Rome | Image Source
Foot of the Constantine colossus | Courtyard of the Musei Capitolini, Rome | Image Source
This Week: Dead Sea Scrolls bonanza, big private money and biblical scholarship, the Alexamenos graffiti, Melania, Roman usurpers – and more!
Read MoreIt would not be a mischaracterisation or an exaggeration to say that the late Roman state was a polity defined by civil war. Roman leaders at this time approached their rule ever cognizant of the fact that sooner or later, one of their subordinates could don the purple robe, stand before a provincial army, and be proclaimed emperor.
Read MoreMelania, then, is a testament both to the impact the Melanias had on the nascent Christianity of the fourth century as well as the impact that Elizabeth Clark has had in shaping the study of that very world.
Read MoreBen Ezra Synagogue | Site of the Cairo Geniza, Old Cairo | Image Source
Ben Ezra Synagogue | Site of the Cairo Geniza, Old Cairo | Image Source
This Week: Sex in Sasanian Iran, the Cairo Geniza, Jubilees palimpsests, ancient birds, massive digital exhibitions – and more!
Read MoreA History of Judaism, while marketed as a ‘popular book,’ needs also to be considered for its ‘innovative conservatism,’ that is, its between-the-lines critique of current academic tendencies, and its active decision to step back towards a historiographical approach to the study of religion that has mostly lost its holding among current scholars.
Read MoreSixth-century mosaic of Jesus and the Samaritan Woman | Santa Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna | Image Source
Sixth-century mosaic of Jesus and the Samaritan Woman | Santa Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna | Image Source
This Week: Anatomy and virginity in late antiquity, Roman-Jewish tomb discoveries, Samaritans, false etymology, Pentateuch mysteries, papyrus furore – and more!
Read MoreThe multiplicity of virginity and the rise of anatomical definitions created both opportunities and problems for late ancient Christian reasoning.
Read MorePoster ad for the 1959 film, Solomon and Sheba | Starring Yul Brynner and Gina Lollobrigida, directed by King Vidor | Image Source
Poster ad for the 1959 film, Solomon and Sheba | Starring Yul Brynner and Gina Lollobrigida, directed by King Vidor | Image Source
This Week: Teaching biblical epic, Jesus’ foreskin, ancient Israelite legal petitions, robots, Achaemenid Persepolis, early Christian inscriptions – and more!
Read More“The trickiest part of the review assignment is getting students to understand what it means to perform expertise as a biblical scholar.”
Read MoreThis book represents a step forward in Prudentian scholarship by situating the Peristephanon in its social and historical context.
Read MoreIllustration of Job struck by disease | Folio 46r, Syriac Bible of Paris (BN, MS syr. 341) | Image source
Illustration of Job struck by disease | Folio 46r, Syriac Bible of Paris (BN, MS syr. 341) | Image source
This Week: Massive Syriac open access site launch, digital humanities everywhere, even more ancient animals, God’s wife, Dead Sea Scrolls – and more!
Read MoreThe human animal destroys itself through confusion over its animality, but it destroys other animals in that confusion too.
Read MoreCaves cut into the rock | The site of Qumran, Israel | Image source
Caves cut into the rock | The site of Qumran, Israel | Image source
This Week: Grumpy donkeys, Christian milk, pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions, cult of saints, Talmud online, NAPS – and more!
Read MoreBeth Berkowitz continues AJR’s Animal Forum: “Ancient texts like the Talmud allow us to take biopolitics back to their formative years, to reveal how animals came to occupy the margins of personhood and how their only partially suppressed subjectivities formed the backdrop for the emergence of the human self as we know it.”
Read MoreAttention to the ways that the apparently natural is harnessed to specific cultural ideologies through our most basic metaphors of food is the first step in redefining what it means to “eat well.”
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