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The institution of the Hasmonean high priesthood /

In The Institution of the Hasmonean High Priesthood, Vasile Babota offers an interdisciplinary study of the historical process (167-140 B.C.E.), which led to the establishment of the Hasmonean rebellious priests as high priests of the Hellenistic Judea.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Babota, Vasile, 1974- (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Boston : Brill, [2014]
Colección:Supplements to the Journal for the study of Judaism ; v. 165.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1. Scholarly Studies on the Jewish High Priesthood; 2. The Aim and Importance of the Present Study; 3. The Methodology of the Present Study; 4. The Structure of the Present Study; Chapter One Sources and Their Characteristics; Introduction; A. First Maccabees; Introduction; Unity and Structure; Authorship, Purpose and Audience; Date; Sources; Historical Reliability; Conclusion; B. Second Maccabees; Introduction; Unity and Structure; Sources; Authorship, Place(s) of Composition, Date; Purpose(s); Historical Reliability; Conclusion; C. Flavius Josephus
  • Introduction1. Jewish War 1; Aim, Audience, Unity, Structure and Date; Sources; Historical Reliability; Conclusion; 2. Jewish Antiquities 12-13 and 20, and Life; Audience, Aim, Structure, and Unity; Sources; Josephus' Method of Writing History; The Use of First Maccabees in Ant. 12-13; The Early Hasmonean High Priesthood in Ant. 12-13 and 20; 3. Life; 4. Against Apion; Conclusion; Chapter Two The Pre-Hasmonean High Priests of the Seleucid Period; Introduction; 1. The Institution of the Seleucid Judea; 2. Judea, the Jerusalem Temple, and the Hasmoneans of Modein
  • 3. The Edicts of Antiochus III for Jews and the Jerusalem Temple3.1. The Royal strategos and archiereus Ptolemy and the Jerusalem High Priest; 3.2. King Antiochus III and the Judean Authorities; 3.3. Antiochus III, the Jewish ethnos, and the Jerusalem Temple; 4. King Seleucus IV and the Royal archiereus Olympiodorus; 5. The Jewish High Priest Onias III and the Inner Struggles; 6. The Jewish High Priest Jason and the Hellenizing Reform; 6.1. The Institution of the Gymnasium and of the "Antiocheans"; 6.2. The Jewish High Priesthood for Sale: A Hellenistic Innovation
  • 7. The New High Priest Menelaus and the Jerusalem gerousia8. Menelaus, Jason's Attack on the Temple, and King Antiochus IV; 9. The Royal Official Apollonius, the Profanation of the Jerusalem Temple, and the Institution of the Seleucid Akra; 10. The Royal Edict of King Antiochus IV Epiphanes; 11. A Religious Persecution in Samaria?; 12. The Royal Edict, the Jerusalem Temple, and Its Priesthood; Conclusion; Chapter Three The Hasmonean Revolt and the High Priesthod of Menelaus; Introduction; 1. The Beginnings of the Hasmonean Revolt; 2. The Anabasis of Antiochus IV and the Hasmonean Revolt
  • 3. The Hasmonean Priestly Revolt and the High Priest Menelaus3.1. The Appeal of Menelaus before King Antiochus IV; 3.2. The High Priesthood of Menelaus for Sale?; 3.3. The Jewish Rebels, the Chief Minister Lysias, and the Romans; 4. The Capture, Rededication, and the Fortification of the Temple; 5. King Antiochus V Eupator and the New Royal Edict; 6. The Hasmonean Attacks around Judea and against the Royal Akra; 7. The Attack of Antiochus V-Lysias on the Jewish Rebels, and Its Aftermath; 8. The Hasmoneans, the High Priest Menelaus, and His Arrest; 9. The Escape of the Oniads into Egypt