Edom and southern Jordan in the iron age

Abstract: During the Iron Age, the region of modern southwestern Jordan was known as Edom, a name that appears in biblical and post-biblical literature and in contemporary Egyptian, Assyrian, and Neo-Babylonian sources. (Another name, Seir, was very much related to Edom in biblical and extra-bibl...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Tebes, Juan Manuel
Formato: Parte de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Routledge 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/15363
Aporte de:
id I33-R139-123456789-15363
record_format dspace
institution Universidad Católica Argentina
institution_str I-33
repository_str R-139
collection Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Católica Argentina (UCA)
language Inglés
topic EDAD DE HIERRO
CIVILIZACIONES ANTIGUAS
Edom
ARQUEOLOGIA
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
DESCUBRIMIENTO
spellingShingle EDAD DE HIERRO
CIVILIZACIONES ANTIGUAS
Edom
ARQUEOLOGIA
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
DESCUBRIMIENTO
Tebes, Juan Manuel
Edom and southern Jordan in the iron age
topic_facet EDAD DE HIERRO
CIVILIZACIONES ANTIGUAS
Edom
ARQUEOLOGIA
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
DESCUBRIMIENTO
description Abstract: During the Iron Age, the region of modern southwestern Jordan was known as Edom, a name that appears in biblical and post-biblical literature and in contemporary Egyptian, Assyrian, and Neo-Babylonian sources. (Another name, Seir, was very much related to Edom in biblical and extra-biblical texts, to the extent that some scholars consider them to be synonyms.) Our knowledge about Edom is much more limited than about their central Transjordanian neighbors, Ammon and Moab, owing to the very few Edomite inscriptions found and the problems of interpretation of the local archaeological evidence. Since the early 19th century southwestern Jordan was visited by European travelers who noted the local topography and documented the still visible archaeological remains. However, it was not until Nelson Glueck carried out three seasons of exploration of local sites in the 1930s, followed by the excavation of the prominent Iron Age site of Tell el-Kheleifeh, that serious knowledge of the region was acquired. Glueck’s conclusions regarding the history of settlement during the Iron Age have remained influential until today (Brown and Kutler 2006: 65–90). During the 1960s–1980s, C.-M. Bennett directed excavations at three Edomite sites, Busayra, Tawilan, and Umm al-Biyara, building the skeleton of the chronology of the Edomite settlement (Bennett and Bienkowski 1995; Bienkowski 2002, 2011). Until the 1990s, scholarship studied the history of Edom based to a large extent on the biblical narrative, viewing the relations between Judahites and Edomites as central for the identarian configurations of both peoples (Bartlett 1989). However, during the last 20 years new archaeological research in the region, accompanied by novel interpretations drawing from anthropology and ethnography, have tremendously widened our knowledge about the Edomites, extending their origins to the early Iron Age.
format Parte de libro
author Tebes, Juan Manuel
author_facet Tebes, Juan Manuel
author_sort Tebes, Juan Manuel
title Edom and southern Jordan in the iron age
title_short Edom and southern Jordan in the iron age
title_full Edom and southern Jordan in the iron age
title_fullStr Edom and southern Jordan in the iron age
title_full_unstemmed Edom and southern Jordan in the iron age
title_sort edom and southern jordan in the iron age
publisher Routledge
publishDate 2022
url https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/15363
work_keys_str_mv AT tebesjuanmanuel edomandsouthernjordanintheironage
bdutipo_str Repositorios
_version_ 1764820523701764096