Israel and the assyrians : Deuteronomy, the succession treaty of Esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion

Introducción: The origins and purpose of the book of Deuteronomy remain, despite significant progress in the two centuries since de Wette, two of the most contested points in biblical scholarship. A prominent feature of attempts to ground the deuteronomic text in a historical context over the last h...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Crouch, Carly Lorraine
Formato: Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Society of Biblical Literature 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/7999
Aporte de:
id I33-R139123456789-7999
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 Esarhaddon, King of Assyria, -669 B.C.
Biblia. A.T. Deuteronomio
Biblia A.T.
ANTIGUO TESTAMENTO
RELIGION
LITERATURA ASIRO-BABILONICA
TRADICION
SUBVERSION
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
spellingShingle Esarhaddon, King of Assyria, -669 B.C.
Biblia. A.T. Deuteronomio
Biblia A.T.
ANTIGUO TESTAMENTO
RELIGION
LITERATURA ASIRO-BABILONICA
TRADICION
SUBVERSION
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
Crouch, Carly Lorraine
Israel and the assyrians : Deuteronomy, the succession treaty of Esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion
topic_facet Esarhaddon, King of Assyria, -669 B.C.
Biblia. A.T. Deuteronomio
Biblia A.T.
ANTIGUO TESTAMENTO
RELIGION
LITERATURA ASIRO-BABILONICA
TRADICION
SUBVERSION
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
description Introducción: The origins and purpose of the book of Deuteronomy remain, despite significant progress in the two centuries since de Wette, two of the most contested points in biblical scholarship. A prominent feature of attempts to ground the deuteronomic text in a historical context over the last half century has been the observation of certain affinities between Deuteronomy and ancient Near Eastern vassal treaties and loyalty oaths. More specifically, it has been suggested that the book of Deuteronomy, in some more or less original form, constituted a subversive appropriation of Neo-Assyrian imperial ideology in favor of a Yahwistic theocentricity: a text deliberately designed to undermine the authority of the Assyrian king by planting YHWH in his stead. The prevalence of this assertion has its roots in the widespread recognition of similarities between elements of Deuteronomy, especially chapters 13 and 28, and Assyrian vassal treaties and loyalty oaths, with a particular focus on the Succession Treaty of Esarhaddon, commonly referred to as VTE...
format Libro
author Crouch, Carly Lorraine
author_facet Crouch, Carly Lorraine
author_sort Crouch, Carly Lorraine
title Israel and the assyrians : Deuteronomy, the succession treaty of Esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion
title_short Israel and the assyrians : Deuteronomy, the succession treaty of Esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion
title_full Israel and the assyrians : Deuteronomy, the succession treaty of Esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion
title_fullStr Israel and the assyrians : Deuteronomy, the succession treaty of Esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion
title_full_unstemmed Israel and the assyrians : Deuteronomy, the succession treaty of Esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion
title_sort israel and the assyrians : deuteronomy, the succession treaty of esarhaddon, and the nature of subversion
publisher Society of Biblical Literature
publishDate 2019
url https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/7999
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