Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period

The book of Jeremiah exhibits several symptoms of what might be called “Egyptomania.” It contains more references to Egypt than any other book of the Hebrew Bible except Genesis and Exodus and mentions Egypt more often than any other foreign nation except Babylon. Many of these references are highly specific, touching on Egyptian geography (Jer 2:16), religious practices (Jer 46:25), and military and political decisions (Jer 37:5).1 Jeremiah 42:1–43:7 even preserves a tradition that the prophet Jeremiah relocated to Egypt following the assassination of Gedaliah, the Babylonian appointed governor of Judah. The reason for this “Egyptomania,” as I will argue throughout this book, is primarily historical. As recent scholarship on Egyptian-Israelite interaction has shown, the pharaohs of the Twenty-Sixth or Saite Dynasty2 (664– 525 BCE) ruled Judah as a vassal state for much of the late seventh and early sixth centuries BCE—the time period during which the book of Jeremiah first began to take shape. My goal in this book, therefore, is to interpret the book of Jeremiah in light of this historical background. Focusing on the experiences of Judahites living under Egyptian rule, I argue, changes how we read and interpret the book of Jeremiah in three important ways: it helps explain the antipathy toward Egypt evident in several passages of this prophetic work; it provides a historical anchor for redactional approaches to dating the text; and it places the work’s repeated calls for submission to Babylon in a different light. These calls do not present a choice between Judahite autonomy and Babylonian domination, but rather a choice between Egyptian and Babylonian control...

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wilson Wright, Aren M.
Format: Libro biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Society of Biblical Literature 2023
Subjects:HISTORIA ANTIGUA, HISTORIA DE EGIPTO, BIBLIA. A.T. JEREMÍAS, HISTORIA POLITICA, HISTORIA MILITAR, JUDIOS, RELIGION, FUENTES DE LA HISTORIA,
Online Access:https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/16596
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:ucacris:123456789-16596
record_format koha
spelling oai:ucacris:123456789-165962023-12-05T09:07:57Z Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period Wilson Wright, Aren M. HISTORIA ANTIGUA HISTORIA DE EGIPTO BIBLIA. A.T. JEREMÍAS HISTORIA POLITICA HISTORIA MILITAR JUDIOS RELIGION FUENTES DE LA HISTORIA The book of Jeremiah exhibits several symptoms of what might be called “Egyptomania.” It contains more references to Egypt than any other book of the Hebrew Bible except Genesis and Exodus and mentions Egypt more often than any other foreign nation except Babylon. Many of these references are highly specific, touching on Egyptian geography (Jer 2:16), religious practices (Jer 46:25), and military and political decisions (Jer 37:5).1 Jeremiah 42:1–43:7 even preserves a tradition that the prophet Jeremiah relocated to Egypt following the assassination of Gedaliah, the Babylonian appointed governor of Judah. The reason for this “Egyptomania,” as I will argue throughout this book, is primarily historical. As recent scholarship on Egyptian-Israelite interaction has shown, the pharaohs of the Twenty-Sixth or Saite Dynasty2 (664– 525 BCE) ruled Judah as a vassal state for much of the late seventh and early sixth centuries BCE—the time period during which the book of Jeremiah first began to take shape. My goal in this book, therefore, is to interpret the book of Jeremiah in light of this historical background. Focusing on the experiences of Judahites living under Egyptian rule, I argue, changes how we read and interpret the book of Jeremiah in three important ways: it helps explain the antipathy toward Egypt evident in several passages of this prophetic work; it provides a historical anchor for redactional approaches to dating the text; and it places the work’s repeated calls for submission to Babylon in a different light. These calls do not present a choice between Judahite autonomy and Babylonian domination, but rather a choice between Egyptian and Babylonian control... 2023-06-27T11:14:04Z 2023-06-27T11:14:04Z 2023 Libro Wilson Wright, A. M. Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period [en línea]. Ancient Near East Monographs (30). Atlanta : Society of Biblical Literature; Centro de Estudios de Historia del Antiguo Oriente, 2023. Disponible en: https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/16596 978-1628374629 https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/16596 eng Acceso abierto http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf Egipto Society of Biblical Literature Ancient Near East Monographs - Monografías sobre el Antiguo Cercano Oriente, Vol. 30. Atlanta : Society of Biblical Literature; Centro de Estudios de Historia del Antiguo Oriente, 2023.
institution UCA
collection DSpace
country Argentina
countrycode AR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uca
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de la UCA
language eng
topic HISTORIA ANTIGUA
HISTORIA DE EGIPTO
BIBLIA. A.T. JEREMÍAS
HISTORIA POLITICA
HISTORIA MILITAR
JUDIOS
RELIGION
FUENTES DE LA HISTORIA
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
HISTORIA DE EGIPTO
BIBLIA. A.T. JEREMÍAS
HISTORIA POLITICA
HISTORIA MILITAR
JUDIOS
RELIGION
FUENTES DE LA HISTORIA
spellingShingle HISTORIA ANTIGUA
HISTORIA DE EGIPTO
BIBLIA. A.T. JEREMÍAS
HISTORIA POLITICA
HISTORIA MILITAR
JUDIOS
RELIGION
FUENTES DE LA HISTORIA
HISTORIA ANTIGUA
HISTORIA DE EGIPTO
BIBLIA. A.T. JEREMÍAS
HISTORIA POLITICA
HISTORIA MILITAR
JUDIOS
RELIGION
FUENTES DE LA HISTORIA
Wilson Wright, Aren M.
Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period
description The book of Jeremiah exhibits several symptoms of what might be called “Egyptomania.” It contains more references to Egypt than any other book of the Hebrew Bible except Genesis and Exodus and mentions Egypt more often than any other foreign nation except Babylon. Many of these references are highly specific, touching on Egyptian geography (Jer 2:16), religious practices (Jer 46:25), and military and political decisions (Jer 37:5).1 Jeremiah 42:1–43:7 even preserves a tradition that the prophet Jeremiah relocated to Egypt following the assassination of Gedaliah, the Babylonian appointed governor of Judah. The reason for this “Egyptomania,” as I will argue throughout this book, is primarily historical. As recent scholarship on Egyptian-Israelite interaction has shown, the pharaohs of the Twenty-Sixth or Saite Dynasty2 (664– 525 BCE) ruled Judah as a vassal state for much of the late seventh and early sixth centuries BCE—the time period during which the book of Jeremiah first began to take shape. My goal in this book, therefore, is to interpret the book of Jeremiah in light of this historical background. Focusing on the experiences of Judahites living under Egyptian rule, I argue, changes how we read and interpret the book of Jeremiah in three important ways: it helps explain the antipathy toward Egypt evident in several passages of this prophetic work; it provides a historical anchor for redactional approaches to dating the text; and it places the work’s repeated calls for submission to Babylon in a different light. These calls do not present a choice between Judahite autonomy and Babylonian domination, but rather a choice between Egyptian and Babylonian control...
format Libro
topic_facet HISTORIA ANTIGUA
HISTORIA DE EGIPTO
BIBLIA. A.T. JEREMÍAS
HISTORIA POLITICA
HISTORIA MILITAR
JUDIOS
RELIGION
FUENTES DE LA HISTORIA
author Wilson Wright, Aren M.
author_facet Wilson Wright, Aren M.
author_sort Wilson Wright, Aren M.
title Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period
title_short Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period
title_full Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period
title_fullStr Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period
title_full_unstemmed Jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period
title_sort jeremiah’s egypt prophetic reflections on the saite period
publisher Society of Biblical Literature
publishDate 2023
url https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/16596
work_keys_str_mv AT wilsonwrightarenm jeremiahsegyptpropheticreflectionsonthesaiteperiod
_version_ 1787224529027727360