Descripción
Pages: xi + 373 p. Illustrations:98 b/w, 20 tables b/w. Language(s):English. Publication Year:2019. Brepols, ISBN: 978-2-503-55532-4 - Paperback -- SUMMARY The period of 100 200 CE was a lively one in the history of Galilee, northern Israel one leaving a considerable mark upon Jewish history in general. The destruction of the Jerusalem temple in 70 CE, as well as the failures of the two revolts, lead to Galilee becoming the heartland of Jewish settlement in Palestine. Our reconstruction of Galilee s Jewish community during this period has been primarily informed, however, by a single retrospective voice the later rabbinic writings. This obviously brings with it certain limitations, not least of which is its reliability. A new source from which to understand the period in question is therefore desirable. Being Jewish in Galilee, 100 200 CE provides an in-depth archaeological study of Galilee s Jewish community in the period concerned. It explores evidence of infrastructure, art and architecture, as well as ritual practices from this period in Galilee by drawing comparisons with the period before and by contextualizing this material within the broader cultural environment of the Roman East. Set within debates of cultural interaction in the Roman East in general, the book offers an archaeological understanding of what being Jewish meant to the Jewish communities in Galilee during this period; and in what way these communities differed from their Phoenician, Syrian and Arab neighbors. TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Introduction 2 Infrastructure Accessing the Region 3 Building New Urban Communities Magdala, Sepphoris, and Tiberias 4 Public Building and Urban Identity 5 The Development of the Synagogue after 70 CE 6 Changing Countryside? Houses and Settlement Patterns 7 Housing and Urban Society 8 Jewish Purification Practices 9 Conclusions. N° de ref. del artículo ca2661
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