A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set. Группа авторов

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set - Группа авторов страница 79

A Companion to the Achaemenid Persian Empire, 2 Volume Set - Группа авторов

Скачать книгу

2002b, 2007, 2015; Grabbe 2004: pp. 54–69). Taken together with the evidence from the Egyptian (Porten and Yardeni 1986–1999, quoted as TADAE) and Babylonian diaspora (Pearce 2006, 2011; Pearce and Wunsch 2014; Wunsch and Pearce forthcoming; see also Kratz 2015: pp. 136–153; Lemaire 2015: pp. 37–73), they allow for a spotlight on the political, economic, social, and religious‐historical situation of Judaism during the Persian period and are therefore of special historical value.

      Three kinds of epigraphical sources have come down to us from Judah and its vicinity in southern Palestine: stamp impressions (Avigad 1976; Ariel 2000; Lipschits and Vanderhooft 2011), coins (Meshorer 1982, 1990/91, 2001; Mildenberg 1988, 1996) and ostraca (see Lemaire 2002b, esp. Eph‘al and Naveh 1996; Lemaire 1996, 2002a, 2006, 2007; Porten and Yardeni 2006; see also Kratz 2015: pp. 181–187; Lemaire 2015: pp. 86–98).

      The coins provide valuable information about the monetary system during the fourth century BCE and the various cultural influences that manifest themselves in the minting. Amongst those coins two specimens are of special significance as they shed some light on the order of high priests in Jerusalem. Two, if not three, high priests are attested epigraphically: Yohanan (I.) mentioned in the papyri from Elephantine around 400 BCE (TADAE A4.7–8; cf. Neh 12:22); his son and successor Jaddua, who appears on a Judean coin from the second half of the fourth century BCE (Spaer 1986/7; cf. Neh 12:11.22); and Yohanan (II?) on a further Judean coin from the end of the Persian period (Barag 1986/7; Meshorer 2001: p. 14), who is most likely to be identified with Onias I. (Josephus, Ant. 11.347; for a different view, see Lemaire 2015: pp. 94–95, who – following L. Fried – identifies this one with Yohanan I). In light of the epigraphic evidence, taking into account the possibility of longer periods of office, the list in Neh 12:10f., 22.26 appears to be complete (Vanderkam 1991; Kratz 2004: pp. 106–111; Dušek 2007: pp. 549–591). A coin depicting a deity on a winged wheel is of special religious‐historical importance (Meshorer 1982: pp. 21–30); the identification of the deity, however, is disputed (Grabbe 2004: pp. 66–67; Lemaire 2015: p. 93).

      At Wadi Daliyeh, 14 km north of Jericho, excavations have yielded – besides several human skeletons – Aramaic papyri, clay bullae, and coins from Samaria (Leith 1997; Gropp 2001; Dušek 2007; Kratz 2015: pp. 165–181; Lemaire 2015: pp. 75–86; on Samaria see also Zengellér 2011; Frey, Schattner‐Rieser, and Schmid 2012; Knoppers 2013; Hensel 2016). How this material arrived at its place of discovery we do not know. It is commonly presumed that refugees transported the material there when they had to flee from the city of Samaria after the failed uprising against Andromachos, the prefect of Alexander the Great. The papyri are not very well preserved but due to their formulaic character they can be fairly well reconstructed. The material stems from the fourth century BCE and more precisely from the time of Artaxerxes II to Darius III. The coins discovered in various places of the Province of Samaria can be dated to the same period (Meshorer and Qedar 1991, 1999; Mildenberg 1996). The papyri are private deeds that first and foremost deal with the selling of slaves, but there is also the deed of a house sale and receipts for the repayment of a loan; in one case we may even have the minutes of a legal dispute. The clay bullae and coins are of interest because of their iconography. Here too, the minting shows different (Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Persian, and Greek) cultural influences and motifs, amongst them representations of deities and naked men. Especially significant is a coin that shows a portrait and inscription of the god Zeus on one side and has a Yahwistic name on the reverse (Lemaire 2002b: p. 223; 2015: pp. 81–82). The rededication of the two temples of Yhwh on Mt. Gerizim and in Jerusalem to sanctuaries of Zeus under Antiochus IV obviously fell on fertile ground.

      The political structure, too, reflected in the epigraphic material reminds us of its Judean neighbors and of Elephantine. The name Samaria is attested in its long form (šmryn/šmrn) as well as in abbreviations (šmr, šm, šn, š). The Persian satrapy of Transeuphrates is the superordinated political unit. Its satrap Mazaios/Masdaj is mentioned by its full name or in abbreviated form (mz) on coins: “Mazday who resides over Ebir‐nari and Cilicia” (mzdy zy ʿl ʿbr nhra wḥlk). Samaria itself had the status of a province (šmryn mdyntʾ) and was ruled by a governor (pḥt šmryn/šmrn). The capital is called a “fortress” (šmryn byrtʾ). In accordance to this terminology, the papyri are written “in the fortress Samaria (that is) in the Province of Samaria.” Coins mention a prefect (sgnʾ) and judges (dynʾ) as subordinate officials. In addition we have several names without a title; here we can assume that they belong to further administrative officers who had the right to mint coins, amongst them maybe even priests as they belong to the ruling elite of a “fortress” – both in the Province of Yehud and in Elephantine.

Скачать книгу