International audienceThis paper examines a group of rabbinic texts pertaining to the translation of the laws of the Torah into seventy languages, which are based on biblical traditions pertaining to the transcription of the Torah on stones after Israel’s entrance into the promised land (Deuteronomy 27:2–8, Joshua 4:1–10 and 8:30–35). After having carefully analyzed the exegetical logic at work in each text, I assess the impact of the Roman context in which the rabbis lived upon this literary tradition, bringing additional rabbinic texts and Roman literary, epigraphic and legal evidence into the conversation. My argument is that, to a great extent, these rabbinic texts interpret the biblical traditions in light of Roman norms concerning the...
In this essay I use the imperial library as a figure of the dynamic reading practices of an imperial...
International audienceThroughout their history, Jews have lived under a succession of imperial power...
In this paper I look at one particular exegetical complex through which, I will argue, the rabbis gr...
International audienceIn the section of On the Life of Moses that deals with Moses as lawgiver, Phil...
International audienceThis paper discusses how early (mainly tannaitic) rabbinic sources viewed Roma...
A great deal of ink has been spilled on the question of early rabbinic literary culture and the rabb...
In this thesis it is argued that the administration of the fiscus Judaicus under the Roman emperor D...
The Vatican document, “The Gifts and the Calling of God Are Irrevocable,” insists that the covenant ...
While it is well-known that the rabbis of the late Roman period often identified the Roman Empire wi...
Palestinian rabbis of the first four centuries lived in an environment in which Roman law was practi...
textAlmost fifty-five years following the findings of the Dead Sea Scrolls, academic studies are now...
Contained within the great wisdom traditions of Israel are many sage counsels about how to live a go...
Talmudic Literature contains three stories about the arrest of Rabbi Eliezer and the accusation of m...
Among the imperial states of the ancient world, the Roman empire stands out for its geographical ext...
Palestine of the post Second Temple era witnessed the emerging transformation of modes of Jewish rel...
In this essay I use the imperial library as a figure of the dynamic reading practices of an imperial...
International audienceThroughout their history, Jews have lived under a succession of imperial power...
In this paper I look at one particular exegetical complex through which, I will argue, the rabbis gr...
International audienceIn the section of On the Life of Moses that deals with Moses as lawgiver, Phil...
International audienceThis paper discusses how early (mainly tannaitic) rabbinic sources viewed Roma...
A great deal of ink has been spilled on the question of early rabbinic literary culture and the rabb...
In this thesis it is argued that the administration of the fiscus Judaicus under the Roman emperor D...
The Vatican document, “The Gifts and the Calling of God Are Irrevocable,” insists that the covenant ...
While it is well-known that the rabbis of the late Roman period often identified the Roman Empire wi...
Palestinian rabbis of the first four centuries lived in an environment in which Roman law was practi...
textAlmost fifty-five years following the findings of the Dead Sea Scrolls, academic studies are now...
Contained within the great wisdom traditions of Israel are many sage counsels about how to live a go...
Talmudic Literature contains three stories about the arrest of Rabbi Eliezer and the accusation of m...
Among the imperial states of the ancient world, the Roman empire stands out for its geographical ext...
Palestine of the post Second Temple era witnessed the emerging transformation of modes of Jewish rel...
In this essay I use the imperial library as a figure of the dynamic reading practices of an imperial...
International audienceThroughout their history, Jews have lived under a succession of imperial power...
In this paper I look at one particular exegetical complex through which, I will argue, the rabbis gr...