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ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

December 6, 2018

Week in Review (12/7/18)

by Ancient Jew Review


Neo-Assyrian bas-relief from Ninevah of Assyrian king Ashurbanipal slaying a lion | Currently housed in the British Museum, London | Image Source

Neo-Assyrian bas-relief from Ninevah of Assyrian king Ashurbanipal slaying a lion | Currently housed in the British Museum, London | Image Source

Neo-Assyrian bas-relief from Ninevah of Assyrian king Ashurbanipal slaying a lion | Currently housed in the British Museum, London | Image Source

Neo-Assyrian bas-relief from Ninevah of Assyrian king Ashurbanipal slaying a lion | Currently housed in the British Museum, London | Image Source

This Week: Journeys in the east, Assyrian kings, Gothic queens, surprises with Sappho, ambitious digital humanities initiatives, Torah on display – and more!

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December 4, 2018

Amalasuintha: The Transformation of Queenship in the Post-Roman World

by Massimiliano Vitiello in Articles


Diptych of Rufus Gennadius Probus Orestes, Ivory, ca. 530 CE (Victoria and Albert Museum)

Diptych of Rufus Gennadius Probus Orestes, Ivory, ca. 530 CE (Victoria and Albert Museum)

Diptych of Rufus Gennadius Probus Orestes, Ivory, ca. 530 CE (Victoria and Albert Museum)

Diptych of Rufus Gennadius Probus Orestes, Ivory, ca. 530 CE (Victoria and Albert Museum)

Unlike these Gothic queens, Amalasuintha was more than an instrument of diplomacy: she was diplomacy, a ruling mother who dealt with legates directly, without an interpreter since she knew so many languages

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TAGS: publications


December 3, 2018

Book Note | Journeys in the Roman East

by Timothy Luckritz Marquis in Book Notes


Tabula Peutingeriana

Tabula Peutingeriana

Tabula Peutingeriana

Tabula Peutingeriana

“Like a Roman idol marking a crossroads in a way that makes visible the danger and domination that was always there, focusing on travel allows writers ancient and modern a vantage point on interplays between materiality and ideology that otherwise might slip by us.”

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November 29, 2018

Week in Review (11/30/18)

by Ancient Jew Review


Announcement of the resurrection of Christ, from a C13 Peshitta Gospel | State Library of Berlin, Sachau 304, parchment manuscript 195 Bl., f.106v | Image Source

Announcement of the resurrection of Christ, from a C13 Peshitta Gospel | State Library of Berlin, Sachau 304, parchment manuscript 195 Bl., f.106v | Image Source

Announcement of the resurrection of Christ, from a C13 Peshitta Gospel | State Library of Berlin, Sachau 304, parchment manuscript 195 Bl., f.106v | Image Source

Announcement of the resurrection of Christ, from a C13 Peshitta Gospel | State Library of Berlin, Sachau 304, parchment manuscript 195 Bl., f.106v | Image Source

This week we return from break: forgery, apocrypha, disreputable professions, Syriac, material ancient religion, a liberal sprinkling of Samaritans – and more!

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November 25, 2018

Book Note | Trade and Taboo: Disreputable Professions in the Roman Mediterranean

by Alexander D. Perkins in Book Notes


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Unknown.jpeg

In fact, Bond argues, it is in part because of the indispensability of these professions that they were so stigmatized. The lowbrow, servile nature of these labors disqualified members of the elite from practicing them, but the dependency of civic institutions and day-to-day well-being upon them brought great wealth and power to those within the trade.

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November 16, 2018

Week in Review (11/16/2018)

by Ancient Jew Review


English Hebrew Psalter, open at Ps. 6:7-9:19, with extensive French and Latin annotation | MS. Bodl. Or. 621, f.2b, early thirteenth-century | Image Source

English Hebrew Psalter, open at Ps. 6:7-9:19, with extensive French and Latin annotation | MS. Bodl. Or. 621, f.2b, early thirteenth-century | Image Source

English Hebrew Psalter, open at Ps. 6:7-9:19, with extensive French and Latin annotation | MS. Bodl. Or. 621, f.2b, early thirteenth-century | Image Source

English Hebrew Psalter, open at Ps. 6:7-9:19, with extensive French and Latin annotation | MS. Bodl. Or. 621, f.2b, early thirteenth-century | Image Source

This Week: The resurrection, Bulgarian Byzantium, the Jewish Bible, Gospel books (or not), open access digital tools - and more!

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November 13, 2018

Gospels Before the Book

by Matthew Larsen in Articles


cover concept.jpg
cover concept.jpg

Ignoring, or at least unaware of, the disjointed discourses about gospel textuality and authorship within the first centuries of the Common Era, modern historians of ancient Christianity speak about first century gospel texts in ways unknown in the first and second century discourses about the gospel. 

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TAGS: publications


November 12, 2018

Book Note | Resurrection of the Dead in Early Judaism

by Karen Connor McGugan in Book Notes


GUEST_a229a516-80fa-430d-b3eb-ecfe5ee0a688.jpeg
GUEST_a229a516-80fa-430d-b3eb-ecfe5ee0a688.jpeg

“As Elledge’s book capably demonstrates, it is the diversity, complexity and adaptability of resurrection belief—the very attributes that make it so difficult for scholars to pin down—that characterized and facilitated its growth in early Jewish thought.”

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November 8, 2018

Week in Review (11/10/2018)

by Ancient Jew Review


So-called “carpet” page from the Burgos Bible | Dated 1260, from Burgos in Spain | Image Source

So-called “carpet” page from the Burgos Bible | Dated 1260, from Burgos in Spain | Image Source

So-called “carpet” page from the Burgos Bible | Dated 1260, from Burgos in Spain | Image Source

So-called “carpet” page from the Burgos Bible | Dated 1260, from Burgos in Spain | Image Source

This Week: Dissertation spotlight on the rabbinic bible, Pauline gift exchange, the Arabic Bible, tools for Hebrew, Bodmer papyri online, Judeo-Persian, piyyutim – and more!

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November 7, 2018

Dissertation Spotlight | Daniel Picus

by Daniel Picus in Articles


Julius Fehr (German, 1860-1900) “A Rabbi scholar in his study”

Julius Fehr (German, 1860-1900) “A Rabbi scholar in his study”

Julius Fehr (German, 1860-1900) “A Rabbi scholar in his study”

Julius Fehr (German, 1860-1900) “A Rabbi scholar in his study”

“I argue that that the rabbis are deeply concerned with the form, format, and divisions of the biblical text, and that these aspects of the text have a crucial role in rabbinic understandings of the formation and transformation of the reader.”

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TAGS: dissertation


November 5, 2018

Book Note | A Spiritual Economy: Gift Exchange in the Letters of Paul of Tarsus

by Jennifer Quigley in Book Notes


GUEST_b45b8964-529c-477c-a654-18d16faac4b5.jpeg
GUEST_b45b8964-529c-477c-a654-18d16faac4b5.jpeg

A Spiritual Economy is a helpful addition to recent studies in gifts in the letters of Paul, and its multidisciplinary engagement contributes to the study of religion in antiquity and to broader conversations in history, sociology, and anthropology about gift exchange.

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November 1, 2018

Week in Review (11/2/18)

by Ancient Jew Review


Sixth/seventh-century incantation bowl with Aramaic inscription | From Nippur, currently in the Met Collection L1999.83.3 | Image Source

Sixth/seventh-century incantation bowl with Aramaic inscription | From Nippur, currently in the Met Collection L1999.83.3 | Image Source

Sixth/seventh-century incantation bowl with Aramaic inscription | From Nippur, currently in the Met Collection L1999.83.3 | Image Source

Sixth/seventh-century incantation bowl with Aramaic inscription | From Nippur, currently in the Met Collection L1999.83.3 | Image Source

This Week: Responses to anti-Semitism, forged scrolls, Constantine’s daughter, commemoration in Roman Syria, Antioch through time, a menagerie of ancient fauna – and more!

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October 30, 2018

Book Note | The Archaeology of Death in Roman Syria: Burial, Commemoration, and Empire

by Dina Boero in Book Notes


Tower Tombs located in Palmyra, Syria (Wikimedia Commons)

Tower Tombs located in Palmyra, Syria (Wikimedia Commons)

Tower Tombs located in Palmyra, Syria (Wikimedia Commons)

Tower Tombs located in Palmyra, Syria (Wikimedia Commons)

Whereas most archaeologists of Roman Syria focus on discrete regions, de Jong is the first to undertake a systematic study of burials from across the province. 

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October 26, 2018

Week in Review (10/27/18)

by Ancient Jew Review


The basalt Tel Dan stele, C9-C8BCE | On display at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem | Image Source

The basalt Tel Dan stele, C9-C8BCE | On display at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem | Image Source

The basalt Tel Dan stele, C9-C8BCE | On display at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem | Image Source

The basalt Tel Dan stele, C9-C8BCE | On display at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem | Image Source

This Week: Ancient Jewish identity, Ioudaios in John, a crash-course in angels, assassins, Holy Land photography, collaborative apocrypha – and more!

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October 24, 2018

Ancient Jewish Identity

by David Goodblatt in Articles


Ivory casket that illustrated Joshua’s conquest of the Promised Land, 900–1000 CE. At the Metropolitan Museum of New York.

Ivory casket that illustrated Joshua’s conquest of the Promised Land, 900–1000 CE. At the Metropolitan Museum of New York.

Ivory casket that illustrated Joshua’s conquest of the Promised Land, 900–1000 CE. At the Metropolitan Museum of New York.

Ivory casket that illustrated Joshua’s conquest of the Promised Land, 900–1000 CE. At the Metropolitan Museum of New York.

“In Judaism, as we saw, a bad Jew was still a Jew.  The belief in shared ancestry was the anchor that permitted some to drift without breaking loose.”

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TAGS: essays


October 21, 2018

Book Note | Exegeting the Jews: The Early Reception of the Johannine “Jews”

by Janelle Peters in Book Notes


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Unknown.jpeg

But decoding slanderous language is not just a complicated task for modern scholars; the Gospel of John’s earliest interpreters also chewed over the anti-Jewish language in the text. In Exegeting the Jews, Michael Azar examines the earliest reception of John’s anti-Jewish language.

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October 18, 2018

Week in Review (10/19/2018)

by Ancient Jew Review


Mosaic of a philosopher sitting on a rock | Likely sixth century, currently housed in the Great Palace Mosaic Museum, Istanbul | Image Source

Mosaic of a philosopher sitting on a rock | Likely sixth century, currently housed in the Great Palace Mosaic Museum, Istanbul | Image Source

Mosaic of a philosopher sitting on a rock | Likely sixth century, currently housed in the Great Palace Mosaic Museum, Istanbul | Image Source

Mosaic of a philosopher sitting on a rock | Likely sixth century, currently housed in the Great Palace Mosaic Museum, Istanbul | Image Source

This Week: Full-body resurrection, rhetorician rabbis, invented Christianity, computational digital humanities, heaps of ancient pots, even more apocrypha - and more!

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October 16, 2018

Resurrection: Why, how, and for whom?

by Thomas McGlothlin in Articles


Resurrection as Salvation_Cover.jpg
Resurrection as Salvation_Cover.jpg

By shifting away from the relationship between resurrection and embodiment, I read “behind” or at least “around” the flashpoints surrounding the nature of the resurrected body.

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TAGS: publications


October 15, 2018

Book Note | Rabbis and Classical Rhetoric: Sophistic Education and Oratory in the Talmud and Midrash

by Michael Rosenberg in Book Notes


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35749536._UY400_SS400_.jpg

“Whether they received these forms from Cicero or came to them independently, the fact that the rabbis are not alone in producing these forms makes clear that the strategy is effective, and Hidary’s rhetorical analyses ably show what that strategy is. A literary work need not be efficient or conclusive to be persuasive.”

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October 11, 2018

Week in Review (10/12/2018)

by Ancient Jew Review


Solidus of Constantine I (326CE, Rome) | Exhibited in the Bode-Museum, Berlin | Image Source

Solidus of Constantine I (326CE, Rome) | Exhibited in the Bode-Museum, Berlin | Image Source

Solidus of Constantine I (326CE, Rome) | Exhibited in the Bode-Museum, Berlin | Image Source

Solidus of Constantine I (326CE, Rome) | Exhibited in the Bode-Museum, Berlin | Image Source

This Week: Double book notes, Constantine and miracles, even *more* noncanonical scriptures, manuscripts everywhere, the Nubian Tomb of Peniut – and more!

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