Introduction
1 - The ‘Hebrew slave’: comments on the slave law, Exodus
21:2-11
2 - The manumission of slaves – the fallow year – the Sabbatical
Year – the Jubilee Year
3 - Andurārum and Mišarum: comments on the problem of social edicts
and their application in the ancient Near East
4 - The Greek ‘amphictyony’: could it be a prototype for Israelite
society in the Period of the Judges?
5 - The chronology in the story of the Flood
6 - ‘Hebrew’ as a national name for Israel
7 - Rachel and Leah: on the survival of outdated paradigms in the
study of the origin of Israel
8 - The Old Testament: a Hellenistic book?
9 - Power and social organization: some misunderstandings and some
proposals, or is it all a question of patrons and clients?
10 - Is it still possible to write a history of ancient Israel?
11 - Is it still possible to speak about an ‘Israelite religion’?
From the perspective of a historian
12 - Kings and clients: on loyalty between the ruler and the ruled
in ancient ‘Israel’
13 - Justice in western Asia in antiquity, or why no laws were
needed!
14 - From patronage society to patronage society
15 - Are we Europeans really good readers of biblical texts and
interpreters of biblical history?
16 - History writing in the ancient Near East and Greece
17 - Good and bad in history: the Greek connection
18 - On the problems of reconstructing pre-Hellenistic Israelite
(Palestinian) history
19 - How does one date an expression of mental history? The Old
Testament and Hellenism
20 - Chronology and archives: when does the history of Israel and
Judah begin?
21 - ‘Because they have cast away the law of the Lord of Hosts’, or
‘We and the rest of the world’: the authors who ‘wrote’ the Old
Testament
Index
Niels Peter Lemche is Professor in the Faculty of Theology, University of Copenhagen.
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