In the last decade or so, new data and interpretations on the onomastics of Iron Age Philistia have appeared. In this article, we review, discuss, and suggest some insights regarding some of these Philistine personal names (e.g., Goliath), names of deities (e.g., PTGYH), and terms (e.g., seren). We assess them from linguistic, cultural, anthropological, and historical points of view. We then propose how they can be understood within the wider socio-cultural context(s) of Iron Age Philistia specifically and the wider eastern Mediterranean in general, and how they can be incorporated into efforts to understand the origins, development, and transformation of the Philistines and their culture(s)
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 360: 1–22.The description of the equipment of ...
On the basis of the interdisciplinary platform Trismegistos (www.trismegistos.org), the project 'Cre...
The paper surveys and discusses the updated archaeological evidence for Philistine cult and religion...
The biblical references to the Philistines do not contain any memory of early Iron I events or cultu...
Evidence for religious praxis in the Philistine culture of the Iron Age Southern Levant, based on ar...
Traditionally, for almost a century, scholars have interpreted the name of the famous giant Goliath ...
The religious perceptions of divine identity in Iron Age Levantine polities supply a discrete body o...
My dissertation focuses on theophoric names -some 200,000 attestations- in Late Period and Graeco-Ro...
The Philistines and their culture represent one of the most fascinating episodes in the history of t...
The Philistines were of mixed Indo-European nations mainly of Proto-Celtic Danubian descent. These D...
none1noNaming customs and name patterns may vary considerably in different areas of Egyptian territo...
The Hebrew Bible contains numerous injunctions against Israelite involvement in polytheistic worship...
The Philistines were immigrants from the Aegean region and Cyprus who arrived at the southern coast ...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 77-85.Chapter 1. Preliminaries -- Chapter 2. Review of the li...
In a pair of separate studies, which originally appeared in the J. Alexander Kerns Memorial Vol. (19...
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 360: 1–22.The description of the equipment of ...
On the basis of the interdisciplinary platform Trismegistos (www.trismegistos.org), the project 'Cre...
The paper surveys and discusses the updated archaeological evidence for Philistine cult and religion...
The biblical references to the Philistines do not contain any memory of early Iron I events or cultu...
Evidence for religious praxis in the Philistine culture of the Iron Age Southern Levant, based on ar...
Traditionally, for almost a century, scholars have interpreted the name of the famous giant Goliath ...
The religious perceptions of divine identity in Iron Age Levantine polities supply a discrete body o...
My dissertation focuses on theophoric names -some 200,000 attestations- in Late Period and Graeco-Ro...
The Philistines and their culture represent one of the most fascinating episodes in the history of t...
The Philistines were of mixed Indo-European nations mainly of Proto-Celtic Danubian descent. These D...
none1noNaming customs and name patterns may vary considerably in different areas of Egyptian territo...
The Hebrew Bible contains numerous injunctions against Israelite involvement in polytheistic worship...
The Philistines were immigrants from the Aegean region and Cyprus who arrived at the southern coast ...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 77-85.Chapter 1. Preliminaries -- Chapter 2. Review of the li...
In a pair of separate studies, which originally appeared in the J. Alexander Kerns Memorial Vol. (19...
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 360: 1–22.The description of the equipment of ...
On the basis of the interdisciplinary platform Trismegistos (www.trismegistos.org), the project 'Cre...
The paper surveys and discusses the updated archaeological evidence for Philistine cult and religion...