The Law in the Late Second Temple Period

Updated by: 
Oz Tamir
Research notes: 
OT/not checked/09/02/2020 pages no. to be added
Reference type: 
Book section
Author(s): 
Collins, John J.
year: 
2019
Full title: 

The Law in the Late Second Temple Period

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
The Oxford Handbook of Biblical Law
Editor(s): 
Pamela Barmash
Place of Publication: 
Oxford
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

The Torah of Moses was recognized as the ancestral law of Judah from the time of Ezra. Its status was revoked briefly by Antiochus Epiphanes. In the Hasmonean era there was a turn to intensive halakhic discussion, attested in the Dead Sea Scrolls. This was a factor in the rise of sectarianism. The papyri from the early second century ce take a flexible attitude to laws, drawing on Jewish or Roman law as seemed advantageous. The literature from the Hellenistic Diaspora treats the law broadly as a summary of Jewish tradition. Despite some claims that the law functioned as a civic law in the Diaspora, there are only a few instances in the papyri where Jews base appeals on Jewish law, and we do not know what the judges decided in those cases.

URL: 
https://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199392667.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199392667-e-20
Label: 
02/03/2020
Record number: 
106 552