SB/not checked/23/01/2022
Against the background of a reconstructed inter-state ethical code, the rise of the Hasmoneans, Judea's ruling dynasty, is given a new perspective. Doron Mendels explores how concepts such as liberty, justice, fairness, loyalty, reciprocity, adherence to ancestral laws, compassion, accountability and love of fatherland became meaningful in the relations between nations in the Hellenistic Mediterranean sphere, as well as between ruling empires and their subject states. The emerging Jewish state echoed this ethical system.
|Table of Contents
|Preface and Acknowledgements
|Part I: Mapping the Hellenistic Political Inter-state Ethical Code
|Introduction
|Chapter 1: Dialogue, War and the Public Declaration of Liberty (200-196 BCE)
|Chapter 2: Two Zones of Influence – One Ethical System
|Chapter 3: Hearings granted to Enemies through Dialogue
|Chapter 4: The Use and Abuse of an Inter-state Ethical System – Rome's slide into Dominance
|Part II: Ethical Climate, Patterns of Behavior and the Emerging Jewish State
|Introduction
|Chapter 5: The Hasmonean State as a Test Case for Patterns of Relationship between Empire and Subject State – The Book of 1 Maccabees
|Chapter 6: The Subject State Corresponds and Reacts to the Hellenistic Inter-state Ethical System – The Book of 2 Maccabees
|Bibliography