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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

L'impérialisme romain en Judée : de la paix d'Apamée à la conquête de Jérusalem par Pompée

Renaud, Alain 25 April 2018 (has links)
Dès la paix d ' Apamée (188 av. J.-C), la politique romaine en Orient provoqua la désagrégation des royaumes hellénistiques et leur réduction progressive en provinces romaines, processus qui se termina lors des conquîtes de Pompée (67-63 av. J.-C). Cependant, cette lente incorporation du monde hellénistique dans l'Empire romain ne se fit pas de façon uniforme et ne peut pas être définit selon des cadres chronologiques trop stricts. Il convient plutôt de l'analyser en fonction d'un schéma tripartite: la reconnaissance, l'évolution de l'alliance, la rupture. C'est dans ce schéma et dans les paradigmes temporels et géographiques de la conquête de l'Orient par Rome que se situent les relations diplomatiques romaines avec la Judée qui, après avoir permis aux Juifs d'arracher leur indépendance à la Syrie, provoquèrent une logique de dépendance dont ils ne purent s'abstraire qu'en rompant leur alliance avec Rome. / Québec Université Laval, Bibliothèque 2013
22

The role of the priests in Israelite identity formation in the exilic/post-exilic period with special reference to Leviticus 19:1-19a / Rol van die priesters in die Israelitiese identiteitsvorming tydens die ballingskaps-/ na-ballingskapstydperk met spesiale verwysing na Levitikus 19:1-19a

Beer, Leilani 07 1900 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 289-298 / Source-criticism of the Pentateuch suggests that the priests (Source P) alone authored the Holiness Code – the premise being that Source P forms one religious, literate and elite group of several. Through the endeavor to redefine Israelite identity during the Neo-Babylonian Empire of 626–539 BCE and the Achaemenid Persian Empire of 550–330 BCE, various ideologies of Israelite identity were produced by various religious, literate and elite groups. Possibly, the Holiness Code functions as the compromise reached between two such groups, these being: the Shaphanites, and the Zadokites. Moreover, the Holiness Code functions as the basis for the agreed identity of Israel as seen by the Shaphanites and the Zadokites. Specifically, in Leviticus 19:1-19a – as being the Levitical decalogue of the Holiness Code, and which forms the emphasis of this thesis – both Shaphanite and Zadokite ideologies are expressed therein. The Shaphanite ideology is expressed through the Mosaic tradition: i.e., through the Law; and the Zadokite ideology is expressed through the Aaronide tradition: i.e., through the Cult. In the debate between the supremacy of the Law, or the Cult – i.e., Moses or Aaron – the ancient Near Eastern convention of the ‘rivalry between brothers’ is masterfully negotiated in Leviticus 19:1-19a. / Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies / D. Phil. (Old Testament)

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