Horizons of Ancestral Inheritance: Commentary on the Levi, Qahat, and Amram Qumran Aramaic Traditions
Stock No: WW705433
Horizons of Ancestral Inheritance: Commentary on the Levi, Qahat, and Amram Qumran Aramaic Traditions  -     By: Andrew B. Perrin

Horizons of Ancestral Inheritance: Commentary on the Levi, Qahat, and Amram Qumran Aramaic Traditions

Bloomsbury Publishing / 2022 / Hardcover

In Stock
Stock No: WW705433

Buy Item Our Price$162.50
In Stock
Quantity:
Stock No: WW705433
Bloomsbury Publishing / 2022 / Hardcover
Quantity:

Add To Cart

or checkout with

Add To Wishlist
Quantity:


Add To Cart

or checkout with

Wishlist

Product Close-up
Please allow an additional 4 business days before your product ships due to temporary delays. Thank you for your patience.
* This product is available for shipment only to the USA.

Product Information

Title: Horizons of Ancestral Inheritance: Commentary on the Levi, Qahat, and Amram Qumran Aramaic Traditions
By: Andrew B. Perrin
Format: Hardcover
Number of Pages: 272
Vendor: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication Date: 2022
Dimensions: 9.21 X 6.14 X 0.63 (inches)
Weight: 1 pound 3 ounces
ISBN: 0567705439
ISBN-13: 9780567705433
Series: Library of Second Temple Studies
Stock No: WW705433

Publisher's Description

In this study of the Aramaic materials at Qumran, Andrew B. Perrin examines the Aramaic Levi Document, Words of Qahat, and Visions of Amram, showing how they exhibit a concentration of priestly concerns/knowledge and exploring new models for evaluating their potential textual or traditional connections. The Aramaic texts among the Dead Sea Scrolls are among the most understudied items in the Qumran collection, and with open questions posed around their origins, transmission, and reception in and beyond the Second Temple period, these writings provide both new materials and fresh insight into the thought, identity, and practice of ancient Judaism.

Perrin's analysisincludes a new transcription, critical notes, and translation of the Aramaic Levi, Qahat, and Amram fragments based upon the latest digital images. He pairs them with a comprehensive commentary on the conceptual elements, codicological features, and cultural contexts of the materials, and he concludes with a fresh synthesis regarding the textual formation of these Aramaic, priestly pseudepigrapha as a "constellation" of texts within a larger world or scribal-priestly activity and traditions.


Ask a Question

Author/Artist Review