Read The Oxford History of the Biblical World Online
Authors: Michael D. Coogan
JO ANN HACKETT
is Professor of the Practice of Biblical Hebrew and Northwest Semitic Epigraphy at Harvard University. She is the author of
The Balaam Text from Tell Deir ‘Alia
and has also written extensively on epigraphy, child sacrifice, and women in the books of Judges and 1 and 2 Samuel. She is currently working on a book of translations of Phoenician and Punic inscriptions and on a project to develop a digital edition of Ugaritic texts.
MARY JOAN WINN LEITH
is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Stonehill College. She is the author of
Wadi Daliyeh I: The Wadi Daliyeh Seal Impressions
and a contributor to the
Macmillan Encyclopedia of Women in Religion
and to the forthcoming revised edition of the
New Oxford Annotated Bible.
She is currently at work on a reference text titled
People of the Bible.
AMY-JILL LEVINE
is E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Professor of New Testament Studies and Director of the Carpenter Program in Religion, Gender, and Sexuality at Vanderbilt Divinity School. She has published books on the Gospel of Matthew and Jewish women in antiquity. Forthcoming is her book
Threatened Bodies: Women, Culture, Apocrypha;
she is also editing a ten-volume series on feminist interpretations of early Christian texts.
CAROL MEYERS
is Professor of Biblical Studies and Archaeology at Duke University and is currently codirector of the Sepphoris Regional Project. She has written, edited, and coedited twelve books, including
Discovering Eve: Ancient Israelite Women in Context; Families in Ancient Israel; Haggai, Zechariah 1–8
and
Zechariah 9–14
(both in the Anchor Bible); and
Women in Scripture.
WAYNE T. PITARD
is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the author
of Ancient Damascus: A Historical Study of the Syrian City-State from Earliest Times until Its Fall to the Assyrians in 732
and numerous articles on the history of Syria-Palestine, the Ugaritic tablets, and concepts of death and afterlife in ancient Syria.
CAROL A. REDMOUNT
is Professor of Egyptian and Syro-Palestinian Archaeology at the University of California-Berkeley. She has excavated throughout the Near East since 1971 and in Egypt since 1978; since 1992 she has directed excavations at Tell el-Muqdam in the Egyptian delta. Her research and publications focus on the archaeology of the delta, interrelationships between Egypt and Syria-Palestine in the second millennium
BCE
, and ancient and ethnoarchaeological ceramic studies.
DANIEL N. SCHOWALTER
is Professor of Religion at Carthage College. He is the author of
The Emperor and the Gods: Images from the Time of Trajan
and contributes to the Archaeo-logical Resources for New Testament Studies series. He is writing a commentary on the Petrine Epistles.
LAWRENCE E. STAGER
is Dorot Professor of the Archaeology of Israel and Director of the Semitic Museum at Harvard University. He has directed archaeological expeditions to Carthage (Tunisia), Idalion (Cyprus), and Ashkelon (Israel). His publications have focused on the archaeology and history of Canaanites, Phoenicians, Israelites, and Philistines. He is currently writing a book on the shared cosmology and symbolism of Jerusalem and the Garden of Eden.
Aaron, as name, 65
Abar Nahara, 280, 282, 286, 299, 305
Abd al-Malik, 443
Abdi-ashirta (ruler of Syria), 49–50
Abdi-Hepa (king of pre-Israelite Jerusalem), 47–48, 84
abecedary, 155
Abner, 193
Abraham
and Aqhat epic, 51
as father of Israelites and Midianites, 108
in Genesis, 25–26
promises to, 26, 28
and Sarah (Abram and Sarai), 26
Achaeans.
See
Mycenaean empire
Achaemenids, 278.
See also
Persian period
Achsaph (Khirbet el-Harbaj), 99
Ackroyd, Peter R., 315
Actium, battle of, 356, 390, 400, 452
Acts of the Apostles, 372–75, 396
Adad-nirari III, 231, 233, 449
Adam and Eve, 21
Adullam (Khirbet ‘Adullam), 98
Aelia Capitolina, 422
agrarian culture, and formation of state in ancient Israel, 179–80, 202–03
agricultural sedentarism, 102
agriculture
in Early Bronze Age, 17
in Palestine, 5
Agrippa I, 362, 376–77, 452
Agrippa II, 357, 362, 378–79, 381, 382, 452
Agrippina, 401
Ahab (king of Israel), 211, 219–21, 222–23, 449
death of, 215
military operations of, 220–21
Ahaz (king of Judah), 449
and Assyria, 242
Ahaziah of Judah, 228–29, 230
and Tel Dan inscription, 211
Ahiram, sarcophagus of, 157
Ahmose (king of Egypt), 43, 79–81
Ahzai (governor of Yehud), 296
Ai, 114
and conquest of Canaan, 96, 98
Ain el-Qudeirat, 67
Ain Ghazal
archaeology of, 11–12
Akhenaten, 45, 46–7, 48–49, 76, 82–84, 448
and Egyptian religion, 82
and monotheism, 111
name, 82
Akhetaten (Tell el-Amarna), 37, 46, 68, 82
Akiba, Rabbi, 422
Akkad, 8, 37
dynasty of, 33
and Sumer, 31
Akkadian language, 8
Amarna letters, 46
Ugarit letters, 118–119
Akra, 328, 333, 334, 335
Alalakh, 37, 40, 43
tablets, 40
Alaric (Visigothic Arian king), 432
Albinus (governor of Judea), 379, 380, 502, 503
Albrektson, Bertil, 23
Albright, William Foxwell, 94, 109, 127, 129
Alcimus (Yaqim), 333–34
Aleppo, 37
excavations at, 40
in Late Bronze Age, 43
Alexander Balas, 334
Alexander Janneus, 335–39, 342, 366, 451
Alexander the Great, 278, 279, 282, 314–15, 317–23, 347, 451
death of, 319
Alexandra (queen of Judea), 339, 343, 352–53, 357, 451
Alexandria, 320, 325, 400
Alexandrion, fortress of, 332, 353
alphabet, invention of, 42, 447
Alt, Albrecht, 102, 103, 129, 217, 240
’am,
Israelite, 113
Amalekites, 107
Amarna
art, 83
letters, 18, 46–50, 72, 83–84, 158
mention of Sea Peoples in, 85
Phoenician cities in, 154
period, 82–84, 86–87
Amasis (pharaoh), 292
Ambrose (bishop of Milan), 427
Amel-marduk (Evil-merodach), 269
Amenhotep I, 43
Amenhotep II, 44, 82, 84
Amenhotep III, 44, 76, 82, 83, 108
Amenhotep IV.
See
Akhenaten
Ammon, 68, 79, 91, 95, 153–54, 167, 224, 280, 287
Ammonite language, 154
Ammonites
in Genesis, 154
in Numbers and Judges, 154
religion of, 156
Ammurapi (king of Ugarit), 117, 118
Amorite kingdoms, 34
Amorites, 34–35, 448
in Genesis, 154
in Numbers and Judges, 154
Amos (prophet), 234–36, 248
Amos, book of, 228
and Jeroboam II, 232–33
and Philistines, 113
and Samaria ostraca, 212
themes of, 234
amphictyony, 145
Amurru, 43, 45, 48–50, 52, 84, 85
Amut-pi-el (ruler of Qatna), 41
anachronism, 28
Ananel (high priest), 357
Anat (goddess of war), 51
Anatolia, 84, 153
cult, and Israel, 156
ancestor worship, 156
ancestral narratives, and ancient Near East, 53–55
angels, Sadducees and, 365
anointing
of king, 197
symbolism of, 198
Anthony (monk), 435
anthropology, and Israelite monarchy, 177–78
Antigonus (son of Aristobolus II), 356
Antigonus (son of John Hyrcanus), 337
Antiochus III, 324, 451
Antiochus IV Epiphanes, 322, 326–30, 331, 341, 451
and Jews, 326–30
and Samaritans, 347
Antiochus V, 333
Antiochus VI, 335
Antiochus VII, 336
Antiochus VIII, 336
Antiochus IX, 336–37
Antipas, 360, 452
building projects of, 362
Antipater, 339, 353, 355–56
Antonia fortress, 380, 383
Antoninus Pius (emperor of Rome), 418, 422
Antonius Felix (governor of Judea), 378
Antony, Mark, 355–56, 390
Aper-El (Asiatic in Egypt), 75–76
Aphek, 99
Apiru, 47–49, 72, 84, 86, 103–04
Apocalypse of Peter, 433
apocalyptic, origins of, 301
apocalypticists, 429
Apostolic Constitutions, 431
Appian, 421
Apries (pharaoh), 265
Apsu (Babylonian god), 8
Apum.
See
Damascus
Aqhat epic, and ancestral narratives in Genesis, 51
Aquila and Priscilla, 379
Arabah, the, 5, 6, 9
Arabian Desert, 9
Arabian Peninsula, 5
and Mount Sinai, 107
Arad, 68, 184, 208, 263
archaeology of, 98
Aramaic language, 321
Babylonian exile and, 270
and book of Ezra, 279
Jesus and, 370
in Persian period, 278–79
in Roman period, 353
Ara Pads, 390, 392
archaeological survey, 176–77, 181
archaeology
and early monarchy, 176–77
and formation of state in early Israel, 181–92
See also
under individual sites
Archelaus, 360
architecture
in Iron Age Israel, 187–89
in Mesopotamian cities, 17
monumental, 188
synagogue, 438–39
Arch of Titus, 358, 384, 408, 410, 421
Aretas III (ruler of Nabatea), 338, 339, 353
Aristobulus I, 336–38
Aristobulus II, 339–40, 352–53
Aristobulus III, 357
ark of the covenant, 172
brought by David to Jerusalem, 198–99
captured by Philistines, 127
and Israelite religion, 156–58
as Yahweh’s throne, 198
ark of Yahweh, 198.
See also
ark of the covenant
Armanum, 31
Armstrong, Karen, 444
arrowheads and inscriptions, 155
Arses (Achaemenid king), 314
Artaxerxes I, 299, 302, 304–05, 451
Artaxerxes II, 451
Arvad, 37, 43, 154–55
Aryandes, 302
Asa (king of Judah), 215–16
Ashdod, 114, 120, 127, 138, 152, 153, 186, 263, 280, 287, 332
Asherah, 221, 234
as wife of El in Ugaritic pantheon, 51
Ashkelon, 68, 91–92, 97, 114, 121, 123–24, 127, 138, 146, 152, 153, 263, 287, 332
bronze linchpin from, 126
Ashur (Assyrian deity), 156
Ashurbanipal, 254, 258, 450
Ashur-dan II, 176
Ashurnasirpal, 220
Ashur-uballit, 258
Assyria, 8, 37, 85, 224, 263
defeat of, by Babylonia, 258–59
empire of, 224, 242–74
history of Israel and, 176, 236–40
and kingdom of Judah, 242–69
religion of, 255
sources from, 243–44
Assyrian annals, 243–44
Aten, 82, 111
Athaliah (queen of Judah), 229, 230, 449
Athanasius, 433
Athenagoras, 417
Athtar, 32
Atrahasis,
20, 21