List of Figures Prologue: Re-telling an Ancient Jewish Family Tale 1: Archival Ethnography 2: Nabatea and the Nabateans 3: Life in Maoza 4: Muqimu Borrows Money from his Wife 5: Archelaus Purchases a Date-palm Orchard 6: Archelaus Rescinds his Purchase 7: Shim"on Purchases a Date-palm Orchard 8: P. Yadin 4: Its Character and Parties 9: P. Yadin 4 and Shim"on's Purchase of the Orchard 10: An Ancient Jewish Family Tale Appendix 1: The Emended Nabatean Aramaic Text of P. Yadin 4 (with annotations) Appendix 2: Translations of P. Yadin 1-4 (with annotations) List of References Index of Secondary Authors
Philip F. Esler is Portland Chair of New Testament Studies at the
University of Gloucestershire. He is a Higher Education
administrator and academic who became the inaugural Chief Executive
of the UK's Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) in 2005,
remaining in that role until 2009. From 1995 to 2010 he was
Professor of Biblical Criticism at St Andrews University. From 1998
to 2001 he was Vice-Principal for Research and Provost of St
Leonard's College at St
Andrews. During the years 1999 to 2003 he served as a member of the
Board of Scottish Enterprise Fife. From October 2010 to March 2013
he was Principal and Professor of Biblical Interpretation at St
Mary's University College Twickenham. He had an earlier career as a
lawyer, working in Sydney during 1978-81 and 1984-92 as an articled
clerk, then solicitor and barrister.
[The book] should be read and studied by all students of the Second
Revolt and the Bar Kokhba materials, and may it inspire many other
such close analyses of the surviving written evidence.
*Michael Owen Wise, Dead Sea Discoveries*
In summary, Esler's study represents true and meaningful progress
in our understanding of the long-neglected Nabataean documents from
the Babatha archive; this volume confirms that, far from being an
already exploited source, the archive still has much to say about
the economic, social and cultural history of the apparently
marginal territory between southern Judaea and northern Arabia, in
a period some decades removed from the Bar Kochba uprising.
*Dorota Hartman, Annali, Sezione Orientale*
It is truly a masterful feat to transform crumbling agricultural
receipts into such a vibrant tale. Esler takes the names of
sellers, buyers, and guarantors and transforms them into characters
from the past. ... Most notably, Esler writes with a refreshing
ease accompanying an evocative methodology.
*Krista N. Dalton, Religion*
Esler's book has the twists and turns of a detective story, but its
biggest surprise is the people into whose world we have been
permitted to peer. Women, at least the upper-middle-class Jewish
and Nabatean women of Babatha's circle, turn out to have been major
financial players in this world. They bought and sold property,
financed ventures from which they stood to gain, and even protected
their interests at the risk of legal and marital conflict when
things did not go according to plan. Babatha's resourceful
foresight, together with Philip Esler's lawyerly scholarship, have
granted us a glimpse into a fascinating social world that defies
our preconceptions and calls out for further study.
*Elizabeth Shanks Alexander, Jewish Review of Books*
Babatha's Orchard is an extraordinary accomplishment. The book has
as its focus four legal documents that deal with the sale of an
orchard, about as dry as situation as can be imagined, but Philip
F. Esler recreates the social and personal circumstances with great
imagination and scholarly insight. It is like seeing a tattered
black and white photograph turned into a film of the highest
quality: what is two dimensional and in poor condition is
transformed into a multidimensional narration with many nuances.
His book is an inspiring model for scholars, and educated laypeople
will find this book an enchanting entryway into a lost world.
*Pamela Barmash, Reading Religion*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |