Fr. 54.50

Persian Royal Judaean Elite Engagements in Early Teispid Achaemenid - The King's Acolytes

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext I learned much from Silverman’s erudition, which speaks to the wealth of information and resources that are now employed in the study of this period. Silverman’s thesis of elite engagement is valuable and explains a lot of the data that we currently possess. The book is highly recommended for biblical scholars, and I suspect will also be well received among Iranologists, Assyriologists, and Egyptologists studying the Teispid and early Achaemenid period. Silverman is judicious yet bold and provocative in his interpretations, which makes for a very interesting and worthwhile read. Informationen zum Autor Dr. Jason M. Silverman is a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Helsinki, Finland. Zusammenfassung Jason Silverman presents a timely and necessary study, advancing the understanding of Achaemenid ideology and Persian Period Judaism. While the Achaemenid Persian Empire (c. 550–330 BCE) dwarfed all previous empires of the Ancient Near East in both size and longevity, the royal system that forged and preserved this civilisation remains only rudimentarily understood, as is the imperial and religious legacy bequeathed to future generations. In response to this deficit, Silverman provides a critically sophisticated and interdisciplinary model for comparative studies. While the Achaemenids rebuilt the Jerusalem temple, Judaean literature of the period reflects tensions over its Persian re-establishment, demonstrating colliding religious perspectives. Although both First Zechariah (1–8) and Second Isaiah (40–55) are controversial, the greater imperial context is rarely dealt with in depth; both books deal directly with the temple’s legitimacy, and this ties them intimately to kings’ engagements with cults. Silverman explores how the Achaemenid kings portrayed their rule to subject minorities, the ways in which minority elites reshaped this ideology, and how long this impact lasted, as revealed through the Judaean reactions to the restoration of the Jerusalem temple. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of FiguresPrefaceAcknowledgementsAbbreviations1. Into the Woods: Judaean Engagements with the Early Persian Empire Part I. 2. Second Isaiah3. Old Persian Creation Theology Part II. 4. First Zechariah, the Temple, and the Great King5. The Phenomenology of Dreams and Visions Part III 6. The Great King, Local Elites, Priests, Temples, and Priests in the early Empire7. The Great King and Local Elites in Early Persian Discourse8. Exit, Pursued by a BearAppendix: Table of DatesBibliography...

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