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Homicide in the Biblical World

Homicide in the Biblical World

Homicide in the Biblical World

Pamela Barmash, Washington University, St Louis
November 2004
Available
Paperback
9780521547734

    Homicide in the Biblical World analyses the treatment of homicide in the Hebrew Bible and demonstrates that it is directly linked to the unique social structure and religion of ancient Israel. Close parallels between biblical law and ancient Near Eastern law are evident in the laws of the ox that gored and the pregnant woman who is assaulted, but, when the total picture of the process by which homicide was adjudicated comes into view, what is most noticeable is how little of it is similar to ancient Near Eastern law. This book reconstructs biblical law from both legal texts and narrative texts and analyses both the law collections and documents from actual legal cases from the ancient Near East.

    • This is the only book that focuses on the treatment of homicide in the Bible
    • Incorporates extra-biblical material from the Ancient Near East
    • Combines legal texts and ancient narratives for a new understanding

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...a fine scholarly endeavor suited for other critical scholars and graduate students...addresses many interesting topics connected to laws concerning homicide." - Catholic Biblical Quarterly, Robert Karl Gnuse, Loyola University

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 2004
    Paperback
    9780521547734
    270 pages
    228 × 152 × 24 mm
    0.365kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. A first case, the story of Cain and Abel
    • 2. Blood feud and state control
    • 3. The development of the cities of refuge in the Bible
    • 4. Pollution and homicide
    • 5. Typologies of homicide
    • 6. Lex Talionis
    • 7. International law in the Ancient Near East
    • 8. Conclusion
    • 9. Excursus aeven: cuneiform sources on homicide.
      Author
    • Pamela Barmash , Washington University, St Louis

      Pamela Barmash is Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible and Biblical Hebrew at Washington University in St. Louis. She received her PhD from Harvard University and her Rabbinic Ordination from The Jewish Theological Seminary. She has published in various journals including Vetus Testamentum, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Jewish Quarterly Review, Journal of Biblical Literature, and Hebrew Studies.