הפולמוס היהודי-שומרוני על תחום היישוב השומרוני בתקופות ההלניסטית והחשמונאית לאור מגילות קומראן והספרות החיצונית

Full title
הפולמוס היהודי-שומרוני על תחום היישוב השומרוני בתקופות ההלניסטית והחשמונאית לאור מגילות קומראן והספרות החיצונית
Updated By
Research notes

reader checked|14/01/2012 AL

Reference type
Author(s)
Hamitovsky, Itzhak
Editor(s)
Bar-Asher, Moshe
Dimant, Devorah
Year
2009
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
מגילות: מחקרים במגילות מדבר יהודה ז [ Meghillot: Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls VII ]
Translated title
The Jewish-Samaritan Territorial Controversy During the Hellenistic and Hasmonean Periods as Reflected in the Qumran Scrolls and the Pseudepigrapha
Publisher
Haifa University and Bialik Institute
Place of Publication
Jerusalem
Pages
43-70
Work type
Language
Label
13/04/2009
Abstract

The task of reconstruction of Samaritan history in antiquity is far from simple. This essay suggests that a critical reading of some anti-Samaritan Jewish traditions in the Pseudepigrapha and in the Qumran scrolls reveals a major component of Samaritan identity during this period: the territorial component. At the heart of the stories relating controversies about Joseph's successors, and the traditions surrounding the story of the massacre at Shechem and what followed when Jacob went to Beth-El (Gen. 34–35), are Jewish-Samaritan controversies. Recently, scholarly opinion has shifted and accepts the notion that at least some of these traditions were Samaritan in origin and that later Jewish authors responded to these traditions, which were grounded in Samaritan territorial notions.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
Composition / Author
Passage
7
Composition / Author
Passage
30
Composition / Author
Passage
34