The Contribution of Qumran Aramaic to the Study of the New Testament

Full title
The Contribution of Qumran Aramaic to the Study of the New Testament
Research notes

Unsung/not checked/01/06/2016

Reference type
Author(s)
Fitzmyer, Joseph A.
Year
1974
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
New Testament Studies
Volume
20
Issue / Series Volume
4
Abbreviated Series Name
NTS
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Place of Publication
Cambridge
Pages
382-407
Work type
Abstract

Our knowledge of the corpus of extra-biblical and extra-rabbinical Aramaic texts has largely been the acquisition of the last seventy-five to a hundred years. Through numerous discoveries in Egypt, Arabia, Palestine, Syria, Asia Minor, Armenia, Mesopotamia, Persia and the Indus Valley we have come to know what various phases of Aramaic were like from the tenth century B.C. until roughly the eighth century A.D. This knowledge has enabled us to situate the biblical Aramaic of Ezra and Daniel in a matrix similar to that provided by extra-biblical Hebrew texts for biblical Hebrew.