Between Cooperation and Hostility

Multiple Identities in Ancient Judaism and the Interaction with Foreign Powers
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237x160x24 mm
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Dr. theol. Reinhard Achenbach ist Privatdozent für Altes Testament und Akademischer Oberrat für Hebräisch an der Evangelisch-Theologischen Fakultät in München.
Prof. Dr. Sebastian Grätz lehrt Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft an der Universität Mainz mit den Forschungsschwerpunkten Geschichte und Religionsgeschichte Israels sowie Literatur der alttestamentlichen Spätzeit.

Doron Mendels ist Professor für Geschichte an der Hebräischen Universität Jerusalem.

Dr. Johannes Schnocks ist Professor für Zeit- und Religionsgeschichte des Alten Testaments an der Katholisch-Theologischen Fakultät der Universität Münster.

Rainer Albertz ist em. Professor für Altes Testament an der Universität Münster.

Dr. theol. Jakob Wöhrle ist Professor für Altes Testament an der Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg.
The question of why the cooperation of Jews with the Persian and Ptolemaic empires achieved some success and why it failed with regard to the Seleucids and the Romans, even turning into military hostility against them, has not been sufficiently answered. The present volume intends to show, from the perspectives of Hebrew Bible, Judaic, and Ancient History Studies, that the contrasting Jewish attitudes towards foreign powers were not only dependent on specific political circumstances. They were also interrelated with the emergence of multiple early Jewish identities, which all found a basis in the Torah, the prophets, or the psalms.

The impact of multiple Jewish identities.
The contributors of this volume investigate the impact of multiple Jewish identities on Jewish attitudes towards the Persian, Hellenistic and Roman empires.
The question of why the cooperation of Jews with the Persian and Ptolemaic empires achieved some success and why it failed with regard to the Seleucids and the Romans, even turning into military hostility against them, has not been sufficiently answered. The present volume intends to show, from the perspectives of Hebrew Bible, Judaic, and Ancient History Studies, that the contrasting Jewish attitudes towards foreign powers were not only dependent on specific political circumstances. They were also interrelated with the emergence of multiple early Jewish identities, which all found a basis in the Torah, the prophets, or the psalms.

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