From the Maccabees to the Mishnah

Front Cover
Westminster John Knox Press, Jan 1, 1987 - Religion - 251 pages
As interesting to read as they are informative, the volumes in this important series deal in new ways with topics and materials that illuminate the life and literature of early Christianity...Taken as a whole, the series offers various new avenues of approach to an understanding of the social, intellectual, and literary environment of the early Christian movement.---Victor Paul Furnish, University Distinguished Professor of New Testament, Southern Methodist University
 

Contents

I
13
IV
18
V
20
VI
24
VII
27
IX
30
X
31
XI
32
XLV
134
XLVI
137
XLVII
138
XLVIII
140
XLIX
142
L
143
LI
144
LII
147

XII
34
XIV
35
XV
37
XVI
45
XVII
46
XIX
49
XX
58
XXI
60
XXII
62
XXIV
73
XXV
76
XXVI
78
XXVII
79
XXIX
87
XXX
96
XXXI
101
XXXII
104
XXXIII
106
XXXIV
107
XXXV
108
XXXVI
111
XXXVII
115
XXXVIII
116
XXXIX
119
XL
120
XLI
123
XLII
124
XLIII
125
XLIV
127
LIII
150
LIV
154
LV
159
LVI
160
LVII
164
LIX
166
LX
169
LXI
171
LXII
172
LXIII
174
LXIV
177
LXV
182
LXVI
185
LXVII
186
LXVIII
187
LXIX
190
LXX
191
LXXI
192
LXXII
195
LXXIII
201
LXXIV
213
LXXV
214
LXXVII
215
LXXVIII
216
LXXIX
218
LXXX
221
LXXXI
224
LXXXII
228
LXXXIII
231

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About the author (1987)

Shaye J. D. Cohen received a B.A. in classics from Yeshiva College in 1970, a M.A. in Judaica and rabbinic ordination at the Jewish Theological Seminary, and a second M.A. and a Ph.D. in ancient history at Columbia University. A director and professor of Judaic Studies at Brown University, he previously worked at the Jewish Theological Seminary as Dean of the Graduate School, and was a visiting Professor of History at Columbia University. Holding a keen interest in the history of Judaism and its social and legal boundaries, his published works include Josephus in Galilee and Rome: His Vita and Development as a Historian and From the Maccabees to the Mishnah: A Profile of Judaism. He has also written numerous articles and book chapters on the menstrual taboo in Judaism. He has received numerous honors, including the Faculty Fellow and Whiting Fellow from Columbia University, the Fellowship from the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture, and the Fellow of the American Academy for Jewish Research.

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