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Science in Qumran Aramaic texts / edited by Ida Fröhlich.
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/Created
Tübingen : Mohr Siebeck, [2022]
©2022
Description
262 pages ; 24 cm.
Availability
Copies in the Library
Location
Call Number
Status
Location Service
Notes
ReCAP - Remote Storage
BM538.S3 S366 2022
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Details
Subject(s)
Judaism and science
—
History
[Browse]
Qumran community
—
Science
—
History
[Browse]
Manuscripts, Aramaic
[Browse]
Editor
Fröhlich, Ida
[Browse]
Contributor
Fröhlich, Ida
[Browse]
Series
Ancient cultures of sciences and knowledge ; 1.
[More in this series]
Ancient cultures of sciences and knowledge ; 1
[More in this series]
Summary note
"Qumran Aramaic texts were not written on the spot. Dated to various times, they represent fragments of biblical books, works related to biblical traditions, and several texts citing biblical passages. The texts contain a number of Mesopotamian elements. By the 7th century BC Mesopotamia had become bilingual, and Aramaic became the mediating language that conveyed cuneiform literature and science to foreign groups living in Mesopotamia and abroad. In the present volume, science is understood as human knowledge about the natural and human world that had been described, systematized, and transmitted. Thus, traditional fields of science are expanded by astrology, magical healing, and others. The contributors show that Qumran Aramaic texts reflect the incorporation and adaptation of Mesopotamian science into the culture of Jewish diaspora communities. They express a new scientific worldview created by these groups as well as their self-definition, and show a new face to the community that preserved them"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Contents
Introduction. Science in Qumran Aramaic texts / Ida Fröhlich
"Secular" science in Mesopotamia / Markham J. Geller
“The Script of God” : Daniel 5:25 in the light of Mesopotamian Omen Literature / Réka Esztári/Ádám Vér
Symptoms and symbols, prayers and portents : diagnostic physiognomy and the Diviner in the Aramaic Prayer of Nabonidus (4Q242) / Andrew B. Perrin
The heavenly counterpart of Adapa and Enoch in Babylonia and Israel / Amar Annus
How 4Q Astronomical Enoch a-b (4Q208–209) transformed elements of late Babylonian magical hemerological texts into a synchronistic calendar / Helen R. Jacobus
Jewish Aramaic science and mythology : Babylonian or Levantine heritage? / Jonathan Ben-Dov
Writing science, writing magic : possible functions for the act of writing - scientific knowledge reflected in 4Q560 / Tupá Guerra
Enoch at the ends of the earth : horizon-based astronomy and the stars in 1 Enoch 33–36 / Henryk Drawnel:-- "From there I traveled to another place" : (1QEn passim) - geography in 1 Enoch 20–32 / Nóra David
The Provenance and Purpose of the Genesis Apocryphon / Siam Bhayro, Anne Burberry
Authorizing knowledge : magical healing and the watchers' tradition in Qumran / Ida Fröhlich.
Show 8 more Contents items
ISBN
9783161613876 ((paperback))
3161613872 ((paperback))
OCLC
1319647380
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