Who Were the Early Israelites and Where Did They Come From?

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Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 31 de març 2006 - 268 pàgines
Other Editions: Hardcover

This book addresses one of the most timely and urgent topics in archaeology and biblical studies -- the origins of early Israel. For centuries the Western tradition has traced its beginnings back to ancient Israel, but recently some historians and archaeologists have questioned the reality of Israel as it is described in biblical literature. In "Who Were the Early Israelites and Where Did They Come From?" William Dever explores the continuing controversies regarding the true nature of ancient Israel and presents the archaeological evidence for assessing the accuracy of the well-known Bible stories.

Confronting the range of current scholarly interpretations seriously and dispassionately, Dever rejects both the revisionists who characterize biblical literature as "pious propaganda" and the conservatives who are afraid to even question its factuality. Attempting to break through this impasse, Dever draws on thirty years of archaeological fieldwork in the Near East, amassing a wide range of hard evidence for his own compelling view of the development of Israelite history.

In his search for the actual circumstances of Israel's emergence in Canaan, Dever reevaluates the Exodus-Conquest traditions in the books of Exodus, Numbers, Joshua, Judges, and 1 & 2 Samuel in the light of well-documented archaeological evidence from the late Bronze Age and early Iron Age. Among this important evidence are some 300 small agricultural villages recently discovered in the heartland of what would later become the biblical nation of Israel. According to Dever, the authentic ancestors of the "Israelite peoples" were most likely Canaanites -- together with some pastoral nomadsand small groups of Semitic slaves escaping from Egypt -- who, through the long cultural and socioeconomic struggles recounted in the book of Judges, managed to forge a new agrarian, communitarian, and monotheistic society.

Written in an engaging, accessible style and featuring fifty photographs that help bring the archaeological record to life, this book provides an authoritative statement on the origins of ancient Israel and promises to reinvigorate discussion about the historicity of the biblical tradition.

 

Pàgines seleccionades

Continguts

The Current Crisis in Understanding the Origins of Early Israel
1
The Exodus History or Myth?
7
The Conquest of Transjordan
23
The Conquest of the Land West of the Jordan Theories and Facts
37
Facts on the Ground The Excavated Evidence for the Archaeological Rediscovery of the Real Israel
75
More Facts on the Ground Recent Archaeological Surveys
91
A Summary of the Material Culture of the Iron I Assemblage
101
Previous Attempts at a Synthesis of Textual and Artifactual Data on Early Israel
129
Yet Another Attempt at Synthesis Early Israel as a Frontier Agrarian Reform Movement
167
Who Were the Early Israelites? Ethnicity and the Archaeological Record
191
Salvaging the Biblical Tradition History or Myth?
223
Some Basic Sources Usually in Chronological Order
242
Index of Authors
258
Index of Subjects
261
Index of Scripture References
267
Copyright

Toward Another Synthesis on the Origins and Nature of Early Israel
153

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Sobre l'autor (2006)

William G. Dever is professor emeritus of Near Easternarchaeology and anthropology at the University of Arizonain Tucson. He has served as director of the Nelson GlueckSchool of Biblical Archaeology in Jerusalem, as director ofthe W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research inJerusalem, and as a visiting professor at universitiesaround the world. He has spent thirty years conductingarchaeological excavations in the Near East, resulting in alarge body of award-winning fieldwork.

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