Adam and Eve in the Armenian Traditions, Fifth through Seventeenth Centuries

Updated by: 
Neta Rozenblit
Research notes: 
NR\Reader checked/17/05/2015
Reference type: 
Book
Author(s): 
Stone, Michael E.
year: 
2013
Full title: 

Adam and Eve in the Armenian Traditions, Fifth through Seventeenth Centuries

Issue / Series Volume: 
38
Series Title: 
Early Judaism and Its Literature
Place of Publication: 
Atlanta
Publisher: 
Society of Biblical Literature
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

The Adam and Eve stories are a foundational myth in the Jewish and Christian worlds, and the way they were recounted reveals a great deal about those doing the retelling. How did the Armenians retell these stories? What values do these retellings express about men and women, their life in the world, sin and redemption? Presented here are twelve hundred years of Armenian telling of the Genesis 1–3 stories in an unparalleled collection of all significant narratives of Adam and Eve in Armenian literature—prose and poetry, homilies and commentaries, calendary and mathematical texts—from its inception in the fifth century to the seventeenth century. This seminal resource contributes to the lively current discussion of how biblical and apocryphal traditions were retold, embroidered, and transformed into the lenses through which the Bible itself was read.

Label: 
28/10/2013
Record number: 
95 962