A Companion to the Hellenistic and Roman Near East. Группа авторов
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Название: A Companion to the Hellenistic and Roman Near East

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: История

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isbn: 9781119037422

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СКАЧАТЬ leaders, a significant body of literature among the Dead Sea Scrolls was produced by and for a particular group of Jews which named itself the Yahad, the “Union” or “Community” (Collins 2010). This group is often presented as a “sect” within Judaism; but whether such terminology might properly be applied to it is currently disputed (Jokintara 2010). The Yahad was a highly organized group, admission to which was strictly controlled and activated in stages: members were required to observe stringent rules of purity; to keep the commandments of the Torah exactly as the Yahad interpreted them; and scrupulously to follow regulations set out by the Yahad, or to suffer penalties for non-compliance. The group apparently regarded itself as Israel tout court. Texts which may be described as “codes” or “rules” for conduct in general and in particular situations are characteristic of this Yahad, and include “the Rule of the Community” (1QS and corresponding documents from 4QS); the “Messianic Rule” (1QSa); the “War Scroll” (1QM); and “Some of the Observances of the Torah” (4QMMT). The many poetic compositions included in the collection known to scholars as Hodayot (Thanksgiving Hymns) are very probably for the most part products of the Yahad. The lengthy “Temple Scroll” (11QTemp) is not usually regarded as a Yahad document, but it bears some kind of family resemblance to the “codes” mentioned here (Schiffman 1995; VanderKam and Flint 2002). These collections of rules strongly suggest that the Yahad had some greater or lesser affinity in organization, ritual practice, and belief with the Essenes described in the writings of Philo and Josephus. Indeed, some scholars identify the two groups, whereas others are more cautious, arguing that the “rules” may be better understood as witnessing to a number of different, though closely related groups or associations which shared a common vision of what constitutes Israel as a nation, the ways in which she should maintain purity and ensure that she was a holy nation, and her hopes for the future. This is especially so when the evidence of the Damascus Document is scrutinized: this does not mention Yahad, but legislates for a group (or possibly groups) broadly similar in outlook, but differing in several key details from the group described in the Community Rule (Hempel 1998; Collins 2010).

      The End of the Hasmoneans, the Rise of the Herodians, and the Two Jewish Revolts

      The independence of the Hasmonean state was maintained until 63 BCE; and the evidence of the Qumran manuscripts indicates that literary activity continued apace in this period, attesting as it does to a wide variety of genres. Much of this activity is represented by works now in fragmentary form which treated the religious life of Israel in general or the ordering of the Yahad in particular: it seems that some of the pesharim may date from the later years of Hasmonean rule. In 63 BCE, however, the Romans took control of Jerusalem and Judaea, while confirming in office the reigning Hasmonean high priest John Hyrcanus II. The events leading to these political changes involved Jewish factionalism on a grand scale and effective civil war, one group of Jews aligning themselves with John Hyrcanus and his Pharisee supporters, another with his energetic brother Aristobulos II and the Sadducees. The Psalms of Solomon, composed originally in Hebrew and surviving in Greek translation, consist in their final form of 18 poems which reflect on this civil strife, the Roman intervention under Pompey which brought it to an end, and on its uncomfortable aftermath. Jewish attitudes are judged; the nature of Pompey’s invasion is critiqued and analysed; and the ultimate future of the Jews is entrusted to God and the activities of a Davidic Messiah (Atkinson 2004).

      The end of the Hasmonean state, and the advent of the Romans as rulers of Judaea, led to the eventual rise of Herod I as king of the Jews, a position he maintained from 37 to 4 BCE as a steadfast ally of Rome. A Life of Herod was composed in Greek by the prolific philosopher, scholar, and historian Nicolaus of Damascus (born around 64 BCE): now lost, it is widely believed that this Life was the major source for the account of Herod’s reign set out by the Jewish priest-historian Josephus in his Antiquities books 15–17 (Wacholder 1962). It is also clear that Josephus mined the very extensive writings of Nicolaus to find information on the Jews in Hasmonean and earlier periods as well. Josephus himself is celebrated for his account of the First Jewish War against Rome (66–73 CE), which he published around 75 CE, and for his Anqtiquities of the Jews (published around 95 CE), which tells the story of Israel in 20 books from the creation of the world until the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE, using as sources the books of the Hebrew Bible, and non-canonical Jewish texts like Maccabees. Josephus’s works, therefore, cover the whole of Herod’s reign, the fortunes of Herod’s family, and the rule of the Roman governors in Palestine until the outbreak of war, relying on sources no longer available to us. Although not conspicuous for his loyalty to his own people during the war of 66–70, and sometimes presenting events in which he was directly involved in a less than dispassionate manner, Josephus is the only writer to have left us a connected narrative of the history of the Jewish people from pre-Hasmonean times to the fall of the Temple. He wrote in Greek, and was thus able to command a non-Jewish readership which preserved his writing for posterity. Of all the Jewish sources noted in this essay, he is undoubtedly the best known, and certainly the most widely investigated as a source for historical material (Feldman and Hata 1989; Hadas-Lebel 1993; Rajak 2002; Mason 2003a; Sievers and Lembi 2005; see also Chapter 7).