This article reviews the contributions of Cynthia Edenburg, Joachim Krause and Konrad Schmid and offers further arguments for the setting of Joshua 24, a post-priestly text, in the second half of the Persian period. It also underlines the Samaritan perspective of the chapter. Indeed, the aim of Joshua 24 was to create a Hexateuch, which would have been acceptable by Judeans, Samaritans and, under certain circumstances, also for the Diaspora
This article looks at how priestly legal materials can be seen to have been used in Joshua. This inc...
The article engages with the old question of Priestly influence in the book of Joshua and is, to a l...
This philological and literary study of Genesis 49 argues against a widely hold scholarly opinion th...
This article reviews the contributions of Cynthia Edenburg, Joachim Krause and Konrad Schmid and off...
International audienceThe book of Joshua is in the very center of the recent discussion about the ex...
Joshua 24 is generally assumed to be the concluding chapter of a Hexateuch. Several texts in Genesis...
In the first part of the contribution, Joshua’s place as last book of the Hexateuch will be discusse...
The differences between the MT and LXX texts of Joshua 24 are numerous and complex. In this essay, I...
Biblical research aimed at clarifying the hermeneutical complexities surrounding the book of Joshua ...
In this article, I identify a socio-historical context where conquest traditions were rewritten: nam...
The article reconstructs the textual growth of the death and burial accounts of Joshua (Josh 24:28-3...
"The Book of Joshua contains the papers of the Colloquium Biblicum Lovaniense 2010 on the Book of Jo...
The problem of how Deuteronomy relates to the Pentateuch and to the book of Joshua came to the fore ...
This paper examines Joshua 22,9-34, a passage where the Transjordanians are potentially violating th...
The article engages with the old question of Priestly influence in the book of Joshua and is, to a l...
This article looks at how priestly legal materials can be seen to have been used in Joshua. This inc...
The article engages with the old question of Priestly influence in the book of Joshua and is, to a l...
This philological and literary study of Genesis 49 argues against a widely hold scholarly opinion th...
This article reviews the contributions of Cynthia Edenburg, Joachim Krause and Konrad Schmid and off...
International audienceThe book of Joshua is in the very center of the recent discussion about the ex...
Joshua 24 is generally assumed to be the concluding chapter of a Hexateuch. Several texts in Genesis...
In the first part of the contribution, Joshua’s place as last book of the Hexateuch will be discusse...
The differences between the MT and LXX texts of Joshua 24 are numerous and complex. In this essay, I...
Biblical research aimed at clarifying the hermeneutical complexities surrounding the book of Joshua ...
In this article, I identify a socio-historical context where conquest traditions were rewritten: nam...
The article reconstructs the textual growth of the death and burial accounts of Joshua (Josh 24:28-3...
"The Book of Joshua contains the papers of the Colloquium Biblicum Lovaniense 2010 on the Book of Jo...
The problem of how Deuteronomy relates to the Pentateuch and to the book of Joshua came to the fore ...
This paper examines Joshua 22,9-34, a passage where the Transjordanians are potentially violating th...
The article engages with the old question of Priestly influence in the book of Joshua and is, to a l...
This article looks at how priestly legal materials can be seen to have been used in Joshua. This inc...
The article engages with the old question of Priestly influence in the book of Joshua and is, to a l...
This philological and literary study of Genesis 49 argues against a widely hold scholarly opinion th...