Sacred Institutions with Roman CounterpartsWalter de Gruyter, 25 oct. 2012 - 442 pages The series Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft (BZAW) covers all areas of research into the Old Testament, focusing on the Hebrew Bible, its early and later forms in Ancient Judaism, as well as its branching into many neighboring cultures of the Ancient Near East and the Greco-Roman world. |
Table des matières
1 | |
2 | |
9 | |
15 | |
104 The crisis of landtenure | 21 |
105 The poetry of justice | 32 |
106 The personification of justice | 42 |
the ass and its sacks | 47 |
145 The seer as insightful even in death | 185 |
146 The witch of EnDor Circe the Sibyl | 190 |
147 Gergithes and Girgashites | 193 |
Sacred Space and Time in Israel and Italy | 199 |
151 The amphictyony of twelve peoples | 203 |
152 Eastern connections of the Etruscans | 209 |
153 The formulas of Greek and Phoenician colonization | 214 |
154 The magic circle of the city | 218 |
The High God and the Elements | 54 |
111 The elements in general | 59 |
112 Thunder and lightning | 62 |
113 Snow and hail | 68 |
114 Rain and dew | 70 |
115 Summary | 79 |
Divine Kingship Civic Institutions Imperial Rule | 81 |
121 Divine kingship | 87 |
122 Structure of the city and dispersal of the kings power | 97 |
123 Restoration of divine monarchy under Rome | 111 |
124 Christ and Caesar | 114 |
Archery and its Symbolism | 135 |
132 The word for arrows in ancient languages | 140 |
133 The arrow as bearing poison and pestilence | 141 |
134 The High Gods surrogate as sender of plague | 143 |
135 Lightning and snow as the arrow of the High God | 145 |
136 The bow of the High God in the cloud | 146 |
137 The broken bow | 149 |
138 The bow and the quiver | 151 |
139 The bow and the lyre | 153 |
The Mediterranean Seer and Shamanism | 154 |
141 Shamanistic traits of the Mediterranean seer | 157 |
142 The birth and death of the seer | 166 |
143 The seer with his torch as rainmaker | 169 |
144 The seer as hibernating and risen bear | 177 |
155 Regeneration of metals in the mine | 224 |
156 The saecula of the city and their portents | 228 |
The Ark of the Covenant and the Temple of Janus | 235 |
162 The ritual declaration of war | 240 |
163 Euocatio | 242 |
164 The crime of Q Valerius Soranus | 247 |
165 The return of the numen to its home | 250 |
166 The triumphal entry of Jesus | 254 |
167 The victor assimilated to the god | 257 |
168 Common features of the triumphal procession | 259 |
169 An axe as representing the divinity | 267 |
Levels of Connection Between Greek and Hebrew | 273 |
172 Translation evident and presumed | 277 |
173 Names of rulers and cities | 286 |
174 The shared vocabulary | 287 |
175 Ethnics and nounendings | 305 |
176 Old agreements between Semitic and IndoEuropean | 315 |
Additions and Corrections | 324 |
Words discussed | 339 |
Texts cited | 356 |
391 | |
393 | |
396 | |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Aeschylus Akkadian Ancient Apollodorus appears Aram Aramaic arrows attested Augustus bear bronze called Canaanite Carthage Carthaginian century cited Clarendon compares Deut divine earth Egyptian eponym ethnic Etruscan Euripides father feminine frag gods Greece Greek Greek and Hebrew Hamilcar Hannibal heaven Hermes Herodotus Hesiod Hesiod Opera Hittite Homer Iliad Indo-European inscriptions Israel Israel and Hellas Jerusalem Jesus Jupiter justice king kingship land language Latin Levin lightning Livy loanwords Mediterranean Mishna nouns Odyssey original Oxford parallel Pausanias perhaps Persian Peshitto Phoenician plural Plutarch Polybius Punic Rabbinic rain Resheph Roman Rome Sanskrit Saul says seer Semitic Servius shaman snow Solon stone Strabo suffetes temple texts thunder triumph Ugaritic verb Vergil vocabulary vols Weinfeld West EFH words Yahweh Zeus δὲ ἐν καὶ τε τῆς τὸ τὸν τοῦ τῶν בן יהוה