Historical and Biblical Israel: The History, Tradition, and Archives of Israel and Judah

Updated by: 
Shlomo Brand
Research notes: 
SB/not checked/21/12/2021
Reference type: 
Book
Author(s): 
Kratz, Reinhard G.
year: 
2015
Full title: 

Historical and Biblical Israel: The History, Tradition, and Archives of Israel and Judah

Collaborating Author: 
Translated by Kurtz, Paul Michael
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

At the center of this book lies a fundamental yet unanswered question: under which historical and sociological conditions and in which manner the Hebrew Bible became an authoritative tradition, that is, holy scripture and the canon of Judaism as well as Christianity. The book answers this very question by distinguishing between historical and biblical Israel. This foundational and, for the arrangement of the book, crucial distinction affirms that the Israel of biblical tradition, i.e. the sacred history (historia sacra) of the Hebrew Bible, cannot simply be equated with the history of Israel and Judah. Thus, this book provides a synthesis of both the Israelite and Judahite history and the genesis and development of biblical tradition in two separate chapters, though each area depends directly and inevitably upon the other. These two distinct perspectives on Israel are then confronted and correlated in a third chapter, which constitutes an area intimately connected with the former but generally overlooked apart from specialized inquiries: those places and “archives” that either yielded Jewish documents and manuscripts (Elephantine, Al-Yahudu, Qumran) or associate conspicuously with the tradition of the Hebrew Bible (Mount Gerizim, Jerusalem, Alexandria). Here, the various epigraphic and literary evidence for the history of Israel and Judah comes to the fore. Such evidence sometimes represents Israel’s history; other times it reflects its traditions; still others it reflects both simultaneously. The different sources point to different types of Judean or Jewish identity in Persian and Hellenistic times.

URL: 
https://oxford.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198728771.001.0001/acprof-9780198728771
Record number: 
108 648