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Cult’s Death in Scripture: The Destruction of Jerusalem’s Temple Remembered by Josephus and Mark
Gabriella Gelardini Tom Thatcher
Memory and Identity in Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity, 2014, p.89
SBL Press
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Título:
Cult’s Death in Scripture: The Destruction of Jerusalem’s Temple Remembered by Josephus and Mark
Autor:
Gabriella Gelardini
Tom Thatcher
Assuntos:
Applied arts
;
Architecture
;
Armed conflict
;
Armed forces
;
Arts
;
Behavioral sciences
;
Buildings
;
Clergy
;
Cognitive psychology
;
Conventional warfare
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Cultural identity
;
Divine attributes
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Divinity
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Emperors
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Jewish identity
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Social psychology
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Temples
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Theology
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War
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Warfare
É parte de:
Memory and Identity in Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity, 2014, p.89
Descrição:
To build on the words of Barry Schwartz, the destruction of the temple in 70 CE definitely “made a difference” for Flavius Josephus, who witnessed its eradication and recorded his memories shortly thereafter in Rome. Though his account of the conflict inJewish War(Bellum judaicum) was intended to set the Roman campaigns, especially those of the Flavians Vespasian and Titus, into the desired perspective, he focuses on the temple’s destruction, giving close attention to the matter of responsibility and thus weighing the question of war guilt. Josephus’s well-known answer to this problem is unambiguous: the Roman commanders were not
Editor:
SBL Press
Idioma:
Inglês
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