Canaan in the Second Millennium B.C.E.Eisenbrauns, 1. jan. 2005 - 410 sider Throughout the past three decades, Nadav Na'aman has repeatedly proved that he is one of the most careful historians of ancient Canaan and Israel. With broad expertise, he has brought together archaeology, text, and the inscriptional material from all of the ancient Near East to bear on the history of ancient Israel and the land of Canaan during the second and first millenniums B.C.E. Many of his studies have been published as journal articles or notes and yet, together, they constitute one of the most important bodies of literature on the subject in recent years, particularly because of the careful attention to methodology that Na'aman always has brought to his work. Collected here are 23 essays on the Hurrians, the Egyptians and their presence in the Levant during the second millennium B.C.E., Canaanite city-states, the Amarna Letters, and the neighbors of Canaan in the north, such as Alalakh and Damascus. The essays range over such topics as scribes and language, archaeology, cultural influences, and the interrelations of the great powers during this period. The volume includes indexes of ancient personal names, place-names, and biblical references. |
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... Bunimovitz 1989:117– 118). One settlement (Jerusalem) out of forty-two remained in the central section of the hill country (“hill of Benjamin”; Bunimovitz 1989:119; Finkelstein 1993). Three settlements, compared with eight, were ...
... Bunimovitz 1989:86– 89). In other areas, the process of re-settlement took much longer. All these data are an indication of the severe crisis during the transition from Middle Bronze II to Late Bronze II and the long enduring outcome of ...
... Bunimovitz (1989:11–34) systematically examined forty-two Middle Bronze II sites all over the country, suggesting that they were destroyed over a period of more than a century and that the settlement crisis was a continuous, locally ...
... (Bunimovitz 1989:158). Differences in burial customs are sometimes an indication of the arrival of new population groups, and I would suggest (with all due caution) that the tombs unearthed at Megiddo and Taanach may belong to the new ...
... Bunimovitz, S. 1989. The Land of Israel in the Late Bronze Age: A Case Study of Socio-Cultural Change in a complex Society. Ph.D. Thesis. Tel Aviv University. (Hebrew). Bunimovitz, S. 1990. Cultural Processes and Socio-Political Change ...
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Ammishtamrus Letter to Akhenaten EA 45 and Hittite Chronology | 40 |
Looking for the Pharaohs Judgment | 50 |
The Origin and the Historical Background of Several Amarna Letters | 65 |
Biryawaza of Damascus and the Date of the Kāmid elLōz Apiru Letters | 82 |
Praises to the Pharaoh in Response to His Plans for Campaign to Canaan | 99 |
The Canaanites and Their Land | 110 |
Economic Aspects of the Egyptian Occupation of Canaan | 216 |
Pharaonic Lands in the Jezreel Valley in the Late Bronze Age | 232 |
On Gods and Scribal Traditions in the Amarna Letters | 242 |
The Transfer of a Social Term to the Literary Sphere | 252 |
The Town of Ibirta and the Relations of the Apiru and the Shasu | 275 |
Amarna ālāni puruzi EA 137 and Biblical ry hprzyhprzwt Rural Settlements | 280 |
The Ishtar Temple at Alalakh | 285 |
A Royal Scribe and His Scribal Products in the Alalakh IV Court | 293 |
Four Notes on the Size of Late Bronze Canaan | 134 |
The Network of Canaanite Late Bronze Kingdoms and the City of Ashdod | 145 |
Canaanite Jerusalem and its Central Hill Country Neighbors in the Second Millennium BCE | 173 |
Yenoam | 195 |
RubutuAruboth | 204 |
Literary and Topographical Notes on the Battle of Kishon | 303 |
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407 | |
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