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9781646023790 Academic Inspection Copy

Aspects of Judean Life

Elephantine in Its Persian Imperial and Administrative Context
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Aspects of Judean Life focuses on Elephantine during the fifth century BCE, developing a comprehensive model of Achaemenid Persian imperial governance in Egypt and situating the Judean colony within that framework. It reconsiders the colony at Elephantine not as a band of foreign mercenaries living private lives but as colonial state dependents embedded within Achaemenid systems of land-for-service taxation and imperial administration. Far from isolated, the Judeans emerge as active participants in-and beneficiaries of-the structures of empire. Part 1 offers a cultural history of Imperial Aramaic scribal practice in the Persian period, drawing on Egyptian and Babylonian evidence alongside Phoenician scribal culture. Part 2 reinterprets the Elephantine Papyri through close philological and historical analysis, resolving long-standing problems concerning ethnic designation, administrative purpose, and community sociology. Part 3 reconstructs the professional networks of Judean temple administrators through analysis of Aramaic ostraca and examines the community's role in systems of production, rationing, and taxation. By placing Elephantine in dialogue with evidence from the Nile Delta, Babylonia, and other imperial settlements, this study offers a nuanced account of how Persian policies were locally implemented. It will be an indispensable resource for scholars of the ancient Near East, biblical studies, and imperial history.
James D. Moore is Associate Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at The Ohio State University. He is the author of New Aramaic Papyri from Elephantine in Berlin and Literary Depictions of the Scribal Profession in the Story of Ahiqar and Jeremiah 36.
"Aspects of Judean Life offers a powerful new perspective on the multiple levels of Persian government and scribality within that system. Building on a comprehensive overview of the relevant epigraphs from Elephantine and other parts of Egypt (including many previously unpublished and/or newly collated materials), Moore develops new insights into the Judean community at Elephantine, the character of the textual materials found there, and the distinctive aspects of Persian administration in Egypt." -David M. Carr, author of From Sources to Scrolls and Beyond: Methodologies in Study of the Pentateuch
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