This short note discusses the nature and significance of the war crime “burning the bones of the dead†referred to in Amos 2:1. A lack of historical data as far as the Hebrew Bible is concerned inhibits a more precise understanding of this serious accusation. After the presentation of a variety of examples from ancient Near Eastern sources (particularly from Assyrian war records) relating to the violation of the remains of the dead, especially the bones, it is now possible to gain a clearer picture of the severity of the crime in Amos. “Burning the bones†was conceived to be the complete annihilation of the memory of a dead person. Accordingly, a relationship between the living and the spirit of the dead is no longer possible, an aspe...
Pp. 79–100 in The Other Face of the Battle: The Impact of War on Civilians in the Ancient Near East,...
The biblical text is replete with narratives of targeted killings (TKs), although it is not stated a...
Destruction and human remains investigates a crucial question frequently neglected in academic debat...
In the oracles against the nations in Amos 1-2, several acts of the nations are condemned as “transg...
War dead had a special status in antiquity, just as the bodies of the dead are protected by the laws...
In the oracles against the nations in Amos 1-2, several acts of the nations are condemned as "transg...
While many forms of violence against human beings are considered taboo, others are considered accept...
This investigation aims to ascertain whether or not the Israelites believed in the supernatural bene...
The mysterious term „marzeah” occurs twice in the Old Testament. In the Book of Amos it stands for a...
The non-burial motif in the Hebrew Bible borrows language, imagery, and rhetorical strategies from i...
Material remains and textual sources from throughout the Mediterranean World (Greece, North Africa, ...
The chief lamentation priest Inanna-mansum died thirteen years before his house was destroyed by fir...
This paper is a study of the topos of the king burning captives in the Assyrian royal inscriptions. ...
Jewish communities across Europe were irrevocably decimated during the Holocaust by systematic and a...
This essay is about capital punishment and mutilation in Ancient Egypt’s pharaonic era. The earlier ...
Pp. 79–100 in The Other Face of the Battle: The Impact of War on Civilians in the Ancient Near East,...
The biblical text is replete with narratives of targeted killings (TKs), although it is not stated a...
Destruction and human remains investigates a crucial question frequently neglected in academic debat...
In the oracles against the nations in Amos 1-2, several acts of the nations are condemned as “transg...
War dead had a special status in antiquity, just as the bodies of the dead are protected by the laws...
In the oracles against the nations in Amos 1-2, several acts of the nations are condemned as "transg...
While many forms of violence against human beings are considered taboo, others are considered accept...
This investigation aims to ascertain whether or not the Israelites believed in the supernatural bene...
The mysterious term „marzeah” occurs twice in the Old Testament. In the Book of Amos it stands for a...
The non-burial motif in the Hebrew Bible borrows language, imagery, and rhetorical strategies from i...
Material remains and textual sources from throughout the Mediterranean World (Greece, North Africa, ...
The chief lamentation priest Inanna-mansum died thirteen years before his house was destroyed by fir...
This paper is a study of the topos of the king burning captives in the Assyrian royal inscriptions. ...
Jewish communities across Europe were irrevocably decimated during the Holocaust by systematic and a...
This essay is about capital punishment and mutilation in Ancient Egypt’s pharaonic era. The earlier ...
Pp. 79–100 in The Other Face of the Battle: The Impact of War on Civilians in the Ancient Near East,...
The biblical text is replete with narratives of targeted killings (TKs), although it is not stated a...
Destruction and human remains investigates a crucial question frequently neglected in academic debat...