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The Historian and the Bible Essays in Honour of Lester L. Grabbe

edited by Philip R. Davies
edited by Diana Vikander Edelman

Grabbe's distinguished colleagues and friends offer their reflections on the practice and theory of history writing, on the current controversies and topics of major interest.

  • Imprint: T & T Clark International
  • Series: Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies, The
  • Series Volume: 530
  • Pub. date: 21 Oct 2010
  • ISBN: 9780567202680
256 Pages, hardcover World rights
Translation Rights Available
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Description

Lester Grabbe is probably the most distinguished, and certainly the most prolific of historians of ancient Judaism, the author of several standard treatments and the founder of the European Seminar on Historical methodology. He has continued to set the bar for Hebrew Bible scholarship.

In this collection some thirty of his distinguished colleagues and friends offer their reflections on the practice and theory of history writing, on the current controversies and topics of major interest. This collection provides an opportunity for scholars of high caliber to consider groundbreaking ideas in light of Grabbe's scholarship and influence. This festschrift offers the reader a unique volume of essays to explore and consider the far-reaching influence of Grabbe on the field of Biblical studies as a whole.

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations

THE EDITORS
 Introduction

HANS BARSTAD
 History and Memory. Some Reflections on the ‘Memory Debate’ in Relation to the Hebrew Bible

NIELS PETER LEMCHE
 Postcolonial Studies and the Study of Israelite History.

NADAV NAAMAN
 Text and Archaeology in a Period of Great Decline: The Contribution of the Amarna Letters to the Debate on the Historicity of Nehemiah’s Wall

RAINER ALBERTZ
 Secondary Sources Also Deserve to be Historically Evaluated: The Case of the United Monarchy

THOMAS L. THOMPSON
 Reiterative Narrative and the Problem of the Exile

ANDRÉ LEMAIRE
 Hazor in the Second Half of the 10th Century BCE: Historiography, Archaeology and History

MARIO LIVERANI
 The Chronology of the Biblical Fairy-Tale

EHUD BEN ZVI
 The Story of Micaiah, son of Imlah: What Could the Ancient Intended Readers Learn from It?

DIANA V. EDELMAN
 Of Priests and Prophets and Interpreting the Past: The Egyptian Hm-Ntr and Hry-Hbt and the Judahite nabi’

HUGH G.M. WILLIAMSON
 Welcome Home

ODED LIPSCHITS
 Here is a Man Whose Name is ?ema?’  (Zechariah 6:12)

BOB BECKING
 Drought, Hunger, and Redistribution: A Social-Economic Reading of Nehemiah 5

JOSEPH BLENKINSOPP
  Footnotes to the Rescript of Artaxerxes (Ezra
  7:11-26)

GARY N. KNOPPERS
 Aspects of Samaria’s Religious Culture during the Early Hellenistic Period

E. AXEL KNAUF
 Biblical References to Judean Settlement in Eretz Israel (and Beyond) in the Late Persian and Early Hellenistic Periods

PHILIP R. DAVIES
 The Hebrew Canon and the Origins of Judaism

GEORGE J. BROOKE
 What Makes a Text Historical? Assumptions behind the Classification of Some Dead Sea Scrolls

Author(s)

Philip R. Davies, Philip R. Davies is Professor of Biblical Studies in the University of Sheffield, UK.

Diana Vikander Edelman,

Diana V. Edelman is a senior lecturer in the Department of Biblical Studies at the University of Sheffield.

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