Solving Riddles and Untying Knots
Biblical, Epigraphic, and Semitic Studies in Honor of Jonas C. Greenfield
Inbunden, Engelska, 1995
1 199 kr
Tillfälligt slut
Jonas Greenfield was one of the foremost epigraphers and biblical scholars of this generation. This volume, dedicated to Professor Greenfield by his students, colleagues, and friends, reflects the broad spectrum of academic interests he pursued: Bible, Qumran, epigraphy, and Semitics.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum1995-06-30
- Mått152 x 229 x 56 mm
- Vikt1 406 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor704
- FörlagPennsylvania State University Press
- ISBN9780931464935
Tillhör följande kategorier
- PrefaceBibliography of the Published Writings of Jonas C. GreenfieldAbbreviationsBIBLEJes P. Asmussen: Copenhagen - Some Bird Names in the Judeo-Persian Translations of the Hebrew BibleJoshua Blau: Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities - The Monophthongization of Diphthongs as Reflected in the Use of Vowel Letters in the PentateuchAriel A. Bloch: University of California at Berkeley - The Cedar and the Palm Tree: A Paired Male/Female Symbol in Hebrew and AramaicWilliam M. Brinner: University of California at Berkeley - Some Problems in the Arabic Transmission of Biblical NamesMagen Broshi: Israel Museum and Ada Yardeni: Hebrew University - On ‘netinim’ and False ProphetsAndre Caquot: College de France, Paris - Grandeur et purete du sacerdoce: Remarques sur le ‘Testament de Qahat’ (4Q542)Henri Cazelles: Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris - Ahiqar, ‘Umman’ and ‘Amun,’ and Biblical Wisdom TextsRiccardo Contini: University of Venice - Epistolary Evidence of Address Phenomena in Official and Biblical AramaicMoshe Greenberg: Hebrew University - The Etymology of ‘ndh’ (Menstrual) ImpurityWilliam W. Hallo: Yale University - Slave Release in the Biblical World in Light of a New TextStephen A. Kaufman: Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati - Paragogic ‘nun’ in Biblical Hebrew: Hypercorrection as a Clue to a Lost Scribal PracticeMichael L. Klein: Hebrew Union College, Jerusalem - A Fragment-Targum of ‘Onqelos’ from the Cairo GenizahTryggve Kronholm: University of Uppsala - Abraham, the Physician: The Image of Abraham the Patriarch in the Genuine Hymns of Ephraem SyrusJacob Lassner: Northwestern University - Ritual Purity and Political Exile: Solomon, the Queen of Sheba, and the Events of 586 B.C.E. in a Yemenite FolktaleBaruch A. Levine: New York University - The Semantics of Loss: Two Exercises in Biblical Hebrew LexicographyPeter Machinist: Harvard University - Fate, ‘miqreh,’ and Reason: Some Reflections on Qohelet and Biblical ThoughtAbraham Malamat: Hebrew University - A Recently Discovered Word for ‘Clan’ in Mari and Its Hebrew CognateEmile Puech: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique - Note de lexicographie hebraique qumranienne (‘m-sw / yrwq, mhsbym, swt’)Elisha Qimron: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev - A Work concerning Divine Providence: 4Q413Nahum M. Sarna: Brandeis University - Variant Scriptural Readings in Liturgical TextsLawrence H. Schiffman: New York University - 4QMysteriesa: A Preliminary Edition and TranslationStanislav Segert: University of California at Los Angeles - Poetic Structures in the Hebrew Sections of the Book of DanielShaul Shaked: Hebrew University - Qumran: Some Iranian ConnectionsJ. A. Soggin: Universita di Roma—La Sapienza - Abraham and the Eastern Kings: On Genesis 14Michael E. Stone: Hebrew University - A New Edition and Translation of the ‘Questions of Ezra’Hayim Tadmor: Hebrew University - Was the Biblical ‘saris’ a Eunuch?Shemaryahu Talmon: Hebrew University - A Calendrical Document from Qumran Cave 4 (mismarot D, 4Q325)Jeffrey H. Tigay: University of Pennsylvania - ‘He Had Not Become Wrinkled’ (Deuteronomy 34:7)Emanuel Tov: Hebrew University - A Paraphrase of Exodus: 4Q422J. P. Weinberg: Jerusalem - The Word ‘nbd’ in the Bible: A Study in Historical Semantics and Biblical ThoughtEPIGRAPHYShmuel Ahituv: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev - Flour and Dough: Gleanings from the Arad LettersWalter E. Aufrecht: The University of Lethbridge, Canada - A Phoenician SealKlaus Beyer: Heidelberg University - The Ammonite Tell Siran Bottle Inscription ReconsideredFrank Moore Cross: Harvard University - Paleography and the Date of the Tell Fahariyeh Bilingual InscriptionPhilippe Gignoux: Ecole des Hautes Etudes, Paris - The Pahlavi Inscription on Mount Thomas Cross (South India)Andre Lemaire: Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris - The Xanthos Trilingual RevisitedE. Lipinski: Katholiek Universiteit Leuven - The Inscribed Marble Vessels from KitionPhilip Mayerson: New York University - Grain Prices in Late Antiquity and the Nature of the EvidenceAlan Millard: University of Liverpool - Latin in First-Century PalestineJoseph Naveh: Hebrew University - Phoenician Ostraca from Tel DorSEMITICSTzvi Abusch: Brandeis University - The Socio-Religious Framework of the Babylonian Witchcraft Ceremony ‘Maqlu’: Some Observations on the Introductory Section of the Text, Part IIMaria Giulia Amadasi Guzzo: Universita degli Studi di Roma - More on the Latin Personal Names Ending with ‘-us’ and ‘-ius’ in PunicArnold J. Band: University of California at Los Angeles - Regelson, Pagis, and Wallach: Three Poems on the Hebrew LanguageM. A. Dandamayev: Institute for Oriental Studies, St. Petersburg - The Neo-Babylonian ‘tamkaru’M. J. Geller: University College, London - An Eanna Tablet from Uruk in ClevelandVictor Avigdor Hurowitz: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev - An Old Babylonian Bawdy BalladWilliam L. Moran: Harvard University - Some Reflections on Amarna PoliticsDavid I. Owen: Cornell University - Pasuri-Dagan and Ini-Tessup’s MotherShalom M. Paul: Hebrew University - The ‘Plural of Ecstasy’ in Mesopotamian and Babylonian Love PoetryJack M. Sasson: University of North Carolina - Water beneath Straw: Adventures of a Prophetic Phrase in the Mari ArchivesMarcel Sigrist: Ecole Biblique, Jerusalem - Some di-til-la Tablets in the British MuseumAaron Skaist: Bar-Ilan University - ‘Simu gamru’: Its Function and HistoryMark S. Smith: St. Joseph’s University, Philadelphia - The God Athtar in the Ancient Near East and His Place in KTU 1.6 IIndex of AuthorsIndex of ScriptureIndex of Ancient Texts