Historically, those studying Israelite religion have ignored the existence of women in Iron Age Israel (1200⁻587 BCE). They have, therefore, accounted neither for the religious beliefs of half of ancient Israel’s population nor for the responsibilities that women assumed for maintaining religious rituals and traditions. Such reconstructions of Israelite religion are seriously flawed. Only in the last four decades have scholars, primarily women, begun to explore women’s essential roles in Israel’s religious culture. This article utilizes evidence from the Hebrew Bible and from archaeological sites throughout Israel. It demonstrates that some women had roles within the Jerusalem Temple. Most women, however, resided in ...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 108-111)The kibbutz society is based on the principles of...
Burial statistics indicate high infant mortality when large families were economically necessary. Fe...
Historically, those studying Israelite religion have ignored the existence of women in Iron Age Isra...
The lives of women are largely hidden in the Old Testament. New archaeological investigationsinto th...
This research focuses on Israel’s religion during the Patriarchal age (2000 to 1500 B.C). The belief...
Archaeological evidence has established that an alternative religious culture existed before the est...
The Hebrew Bible discloses women who are leaders, prophets, queens, midwives, harlots, mothers, wido...
Anglická anotace The focus of my baccalaureate thesis is an issue of marriage and family in Israel i...
The prophet as a religious functionary with an intermediating role has been presented in the academi...
Did the God of Israel have a wife? Posed in the context of monotheistic Rabbinic Judaism and Christi...
Recent archaeological discoveries have suggested that there was a Canaanite goddess who was not only...
Israelite religions have always fascinated scholars. Initial studies used the Bible as their main so...
The article refers to the findings of Kuntillet Ajrud (inscriptions and drawings) in which, accordin...
© 2016 Dr. Lauren Elise MeathThis study examines three areas in which religious Jewish women are cha...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 108-111)The kibbutz society is based on the principles of...
Burial statistics indicate high infant mortality when large families were economically necessary. Fe...
Historically, those studying Israelite religion have ignored the existence of women in Iron Age Isra...
The lives of women are largely hidden in the Old Testament. New archaeological investigationsinto th...
This research focuses on Israel’s religion during the Patriarchal age (2000 to 1500 B.C). The belief...
Archaeological evidence has established that an alternative religious culture existed before the est...
The Hebrew Bible discloses women who are leaders, prophets, queens, midwives, harlots, mothers, wido...
Anglická anotace The focus of my baccalaureate thesis is an issue of marriage and family in Israel i...
The prophet as a religious functionary with an intermediating role has been presented in the academi...
Did the God of Israel have a wife? Posed in the context of monotheistic Rabbinic Judaism and Christi...
Recent archaeological discoveries have suggested that there was a Canaanite goddess who was not only...
Israelite religions have always fascinated scholars. Initial studies used the Bible as their main so...
The article refers to the findings of Kuntillet Ajrud (inscriptions and drawings) in which, accordin...
© 2016 Dr. Lauren Elise MeathThis study examines three areas in which religious Jewish women are cha...
Gender discrimination is not a new phenomenon. It has been prevalent in many civilisations through t...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 108-111)The kibbutz society is based on the principles of...
Burial statistics indicate high infant mortality when large families were economically necessary. Fe...