Full title
A Recent Study of the Babatha and Salome Archives
Updated By
Research notes
hw-04/11/2012-not checked||reader checked|21/07/2014 SE
Reference type
Year
2010
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Review of Rabbinic Judaism
Volume
13
Issue / Series Volume
1
Pages
88-125
Work type
Label
03/12/2012
Abstract
An essay is presented on the study of Babatha and Salome Komaise archives by author Jacobine Oudshoorn. The study states that the two archives, discovered in the Dead Sea in Israel and Jordan, highlighted the pre-Mishnaic halakhah history. It says that the Babatha archives were usually referred as the brandishing of the praetor's edict and also as the Roman courts of law. Moreover, it relates the two archives on other issues including marriage, guardianship, and succession.
Notes
Review of: Jacobine Oudshoorn, The Relationship between Roman and Local Law in the Babatha and Salome Komaise Archives: General Analysis and Three Case Studies on Law of Succession, Guardianship, and Marriage