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Couverture rigide. Condition: Très bon. [RÖMER (Th.), DUFOUR (B.), PFITZMANN (F.), UEHLINGER (Ch.) éds.]. Entre dieux et hommes: anges, démons et autres figures intermédiaires.Acte du colloque organisé par le Collège de France, Paris, 19-20 mai 2014.Textes de A. Angelini, M. Guichard, J. Kellens, L. Marti, Ch. Nihan, B.B. Schmidt, etc.Fribourg, 2017, gr. in-8°, cart. pl. toile édit. 750 gr.
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Hardcover. Condition: Very Good+. Text clean and tight; no dust jacket; in French; Orbis Biblicus Et Orientalis 286; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 367 pages.
Language: French
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Condition: Sehr Gut. Zustandsbeschreibung: leichte Lagerspuren, leicht bestoßen, Mängelexemplarstempel auf Schnitt/unused, minor shelfwear, slightly bumped, remainder mark stamp on edge. Actes du colloque organisé par le Collège de France, Paris, les 19 et 20 mai 2014. Édités par Thomas Römer, Bertrand Dufour, Fabian Pfitzmann et Christoph Uehlinger. 20 contributions address intermediate beings as imagined in ancient Near Eastern societies and reflected in their textual and visual records. - It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient and modern, to imagine and question the differences between humans and deities as well as their means to communicate between each other. Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship in more than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they presume the existence of various intermediate and often liminal entities, whom scholars have usually classified in terms of ?angels?, ?demons?, ?heroes? etc. According to ancient belief, such beings (some anonymous, others named such as Pazuzu, Azazel, Gabriel, Metatron, or Satan.) could take over roles that were considered as unfitting for the gods themselves; they could act as messengers and intermediaries, or in contrast even rival the gods. The dead (or at least the prominent among the deceased, such as kings or prophets) could be considered as intermediates in their own right, since they were thought to have special knowledge of a sphere that the living could only imagine imperfectly. To keep such entities at a distance or to satisfy them and gain their sympathy could at times prove no less challenging than to serve the gods. On the other hand, imagining those entities helped ancient societies and individuals, and particularly the literary elites among them, to manage and structure the contingencies of the world they lived in. The present volume offers the proceedings of an international symposium, organized by the chair of ĞMilieux Bibliquesğ and held at the Collège de France on 19-20 May 2014, dealing with intermediate beings as imagined in ancient Near Eastern societies and reflected in their textual and visual records. The aim was to get a better sense of how such entities were conceived, what roles they were attributed and what functions they fulfilled in culture and society, religion and literature, ritual and belief. The contributions scrutinize cuneiform and other ancient Near Eastern texts, as well as biblical literature, in order to understand ancient Mesopotamian, Levantine and Israelite conceptions of human-divine hybrids and intermediaries; other papers address ancient Egyptian, Jewish, Manichaean, Christian, Zoroastrian, and Islamic sources and beliefs. In all their variety, and in the variety of the numinous figures (collectives or individuals, anonymous or named) that are analyzed, these studies provide vivid insights into how the ancients experienced and modeled the reality they lived in when mobilizing human-divine intermediates for their own concerns. - Table des Matières: Michaël Guichard: Génies protecteurs dans l?art et les textes. L?imaginaire à la table du roi de Mari. - Nils P. Heeßel: Mesopotamian Démons. Foreign and Yet Native Powers? - Hans-Peter Mathys: La naissance des géants en Nb 13,33. - Lionel Marti: Anges ou démons? Les êtres divins vus par les savants assyriens. - Youri Volokhine: Du côté des ĞBèsğ infernaux. - Christophe Nihan: Les habitants des ruines dans la Bible hébraïque. - Anna Angelini: L?imaginaire comparé du démoniaque dans les traditions de l?Israël ancien. Le bestiaire d?Esaïe dans la Septante. - Diana Edelman: Living with Ancestral Spirits in Judah in the Iron Age and Persian Period. - Brian B. Schmidt: Was There An Early Israélite Pandémonium? - Bernd Janowski: Le bouc émissaire. Un intermédiaire rituel entre cosmos et chaos. - Matthieu Pellet: ĞHérosğ. Une catégorie intermédiaire? Étude comparative de la figure épique grecque du héros (hêrôs) et celle du gibbôr vétérotestamentaire. - Jean Kellens: Figures de la subsidiarité divine dans le mazdéisme. - Dominique Charpin: L?intercession dans la civilisation mésopotamienne. - Thomas Rômer: De la nécessité du diable. - Daniele Garrone: Vis-à-vis de Dieu et représentant du peuple (Ex 18,19ba). Postures de Moïse entre Yhwh et Israël. - Dany Nocquet: L?homme-guide d?Ezéchiel d?Ez 40-48. Une manifestation anthropomorphique de Yhwh? - Christoph Uehlinger: La figure de l?ange révélateur. À quoi bon? - David Hamidovic: Les identités multiples de Métatron dans le judaïsme ancien. Homme, ange, dieu. - Valérie Nicolet: Trop-plein dans le monde divin. Le panthéon de Paul. - Bernadette Martel-Thoumian: Messages divins et intermédiaires dans quelques chroniques historiques mameloukes. XII,367 Seiten mit einigen Abb., gebunden (Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis; Vol. 286/Academic Press Fribourg/Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2017). Früher EUR 110,00. Gewicht: 722 g - Gebunden/Gebundene Ausgabe.
Language: French
Published by Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2017
ISBN 10: 3525544111 ISBN 13: 9783525544112
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Ln. 1. XII, 367 S., Illustr., (Orbis biblicus et orientalis, 286) Wegen der EPR-Bestimmungen liefern wir nicht nach Bulgarien, Dänemark, Estland, Griechenland, Irland, Litauen, Luxemburg, Malta, Kroatien, Polen, Portugal, Rumänien, Schweden, Slowakei, Slowenien und Ungarn. Sprache: Französisch Gewicht in Gramm: 733.
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Published by Librairie d'Amérique et d'Orient Adrien Maisonneuve - Jean Maisonneuve successeur, 2014
ISBN 10: 2720011622 ISBN 13: 9782720011627
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Couverture souple. Condition: Comme neuf. Paris 2014.1 Volume/1. -- Comme Neuf -- Broché. Format in-8°. ------ 654 pages. illustrations en noir et en couleurs, portrait.******************** EXTRAIT: "" Paradoxalement et pendant longtemps, les Phéniciens, réputés pour leur alphabet, apparaissaient presque comme un peuple sans histoire et sans culture écrite. Aucune oeuvre littéraire phénicienne n'avait été transmise jusqu'à nous dans sa langue originale et seuls quelques fragments de leur tradition mythologique et historique étaient inclus dans la tradition littéraire grecque, essentiellement dans les oeuvres de Flavius Josèphe et d'Eusèbe de Césarée. Dans ces conditions, étudier la civilisation phénicienne apparaissait souvent : Ğworking with no datağ. Le jugement sur les Phéniciens s'appuyait essentiellement sur celui de leurs voisins et parfois ennemis : les Hébreux et les Grecs. Comme le soulignait fortement MAURICE SZNYCER, les études sur les Phéniciens se brisaient souvent sur deux écueils : le Ğbibliocentrismeğ et l'Ğhellénocentrismeğ et faisaient parfois une large place à l'imagination et au roman. Depuis une quarantaine d'années, en partie grâce à l'opiniâtreté et à la diplomatie du regretté SABATINO MOSCATI, les recherches sur la civilisation phénico-punique se sont organisées autour de la Méditerranée avec des congrès internationaux tous les quatre ou cinq ans. Les fouilles archéologiques de sites phéniciens et puniques se sont multipliées, jusque sur les bords portugais et marocains de l'Atlantique. De nombreuses expositions ont révélé l'originalité de cette civilisation qui a joué un rôle primordial dans le commerce et la diffusion de l'écriture alphabétique et de diverses techniques dans tout le bassin méditerranéen et même au-delà. Bien que la tradition littéraire phénico-punique sur papyrus et sur cuir semble irrémédiablement perdue, les découvertes épigraphiques et archéologiques ont éclairé de nombreux pans de cette civilisation. Une revue, la Rivista di Studi Fenici, et plusieurs séries se sont spécialisées dans ce domaine tandis que de nombreux articles et monographies ont été publiées dans des revues et collections Ğorientalistesğ. C'est dans ce contexte international que s'est située l'activité scientifique de JOSETTE ELAYI. Après une formation classique d'helléniste, son expérience d'enseignement universitaire à Beyrouth et à Baghdad l'a orienté naturellement vers l'étude du Proche-Orient ancien. De façon plus précise, après l'apprentissage des langues sémitiques anciennes, son premier article et sa thèse de Doctorat d'État ès-Lettres : ĞPénétration grecque en Phénicieğ marquent déjà l'orientation fondamentale de ses recherches ultérieures synthétisées tout récemment dans son Histoire de la Phénicie (Pour l'histoire, Paris, Perrin, 2013). Pendant quelque 35 ans, les Phéniciens d'Orient, en particulier au Liban, mais aussi d'Occident, en particulier d'Espagne, ont été au centre de son activité scientifique. Il n'est pas nécessaire de développer ici ses nombreuses publications scientifiques que l'on retrouvera facilement à la fin de ce livre, dans sa ĞBibliographieğ. Sans écarter aucun des divers aspects de la civilisation phénicienne, ses recherches ont surtout porté sur deux domaines où ses travaux représentent des progrès particulièrement significatifs : la numismatique et l'époque perse. En collaboration avec son mari, ALAIN GÉRARD ELAYI, et en utilisant les dernières méthodes d'analyse scientifique, elle a totalement renouvelé notre connaissance des monnaies phéniciennes d'Arwad, de Byblos, de Sidon et de Tyr aux Ve et IVe s. av. n. è. Sa synthèse sur les Trésors de monnaies phéniciennes et ses corpus des monnaies de Sidon, Tyr et Byblos sont maintenant des références incontournables : elle y associe les aspects les plus techniques de la numismatique à une interprétation historique d'ensemble. "". ******************.
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Published by Academic Press Fribourg, 2017
ISBN 10: 3727818158 ISBN 13: 9783727818158
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ISBN 10: 3525544111 ISBN 13: 9783525544112
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient and modern, to imagine and question the differences between humans and deities as well as their means to communicate between each other. Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship in more than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they presume the existence of various intermediate and often liminal entities, whom scholars have usually classified in terms of "angels", "demons", "heroes" etc. According to ancient belief, such beings (some anonymous, others named such as Pazuzu, Azazel, Gabriel, Metatron, or Satan.) could take over roles that were considered as unfitting for the gods themselves; they could act as messengers and intermediaries, or in contrast even rival the gods. The dead (or at least the prominent among the deceased, such as kings or prophets) could be considered as intermediates in their own right, since they were thought to have special knowledge of a sphere that the living could only imagine imperfectly. To keep such entities at a distance or to satisfy them and gain their sympathy could at times prove no less challenging than to serve the gods. On the other hand, imagining those entities helped ancient societies and individuals, and particularly the literary elites among them, to manage and structure the contingencies of the world they lived in. The present volume offers the proceedings of an international symposium, organized by the chair of Milieux Bibliques and held at the College de France on 19-20 May 2014, dealing with intermediate beings as imagined in ancient Near Eastern societies and reflected in their textual and visual records. The aim was to get a better sense of how such entities were conceived, what roles they were attributed and what functions they fulfilled in culture and society, religion and literature, ritual and belief. The contributions scrutinize cuneiform and other ancient Near Eastern texts, as well as biblical literature, in order to understand ancient Mesopotamian, Levantine and Israelite conceptions of human-divine hybrids and intermediaries; other papers address ancient Egyptian, Jewish, Manichaean, Christian, Zoroastrian, and Islamic sources and beliefs. In all their variety, and in the variety of the numinous figures (collectives or individuals, anonymous or named) that are analyzed, these studies provide vivid insights into how the ancients experienced and modeled the reality they lived in when mobilizing human-divine intermediates for their own concerns. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient and modern, to imagine and question the differences between humans and deities as well as their means to communicate between each other. Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship in more than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they pr Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Language: French
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ISBN 10: 3727818158 ISBN 13: 9783727818158
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ISBN 10: 3727818158 ISBN 13: 9783727818158
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient andmodern, to imagine and question the differences between humans anddeities as well as their means to communicate between each other.Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship inmore than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they presume theexistence of various intermediate and often liminal entities, whomscholars have usually classified in terms of angels, demons,heroes etc. According to ancient belief, such beings (some anonymous,others named such as Pazuzu, Azazel, Gabriel, Metatron, or Satan.)could take over roles that were considered as unfitting for the godsthemselves; they could act as messengers and intermediaries, or incontrast even rival the gods. The dead (or at least the prominent amongthe deceased, such as kings or prophets) could be considered asintermediates in their own right, since they were thought to havespecial knowledge of a sphere that the living could only imagineimperfectly. To keep such entities at a distance or to satisfy them andgain their sympathy could at times prove no less challenging than toserve the gods. On the other hand, imagining those entities helpedancient societies and individuals, and particularly the literary elitesamong them, to manage and structure the contingencies of the world theylived in.The present volume offers the proceedings of an internationalsymposium, organized by the chair of Milieux Bibliques and held at the College de France on 19-20 May2014, dealing with intermediate beings as imagined in ancient NearEastern societies and reflected in their textual and visual records. Theaim was to get a better sense of how such entities were conceived, whatroles they were attributed and what functions they fulfilled in cultureand society, religion and literature, ritual and belief. Thecontributions scrutinize cuneiform and other ancient Near Eastern texts,as well as biblical literature, in order to understand ancientMesopotamian, Levantine and Israelite conceptions of human-divinehybrids and intermediaries; other papers address ancient Egyptian,Jewish, Manichaean, Christian, Zoroastrian, and Islamic sources andbeliefs. In all their variety, and in the variety of the numinousfigures (collectives or individuals, anonymous or named) that areanalyzed, these studies provide vivid insights into how the ancientsexperienced and modeled the reality they lived in when mobilizinghuman-divine intermediates for their own concerns. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient and modern, to imagine and question the differences between humans and deities as well as their means to communicate between each other. Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship in more than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they pr Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Published by Librairie d'Amérique et d'Orient Adrien Maisonneuve - Jean Maisonneuve successeur, 2014
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Tapa blanda. Condition: New. ROEMER, T. / B. DUFOUR / F. PFITZMANN / C. UEHLINGER, EDS.: ENTRE DIEUX ET HOMMES. ANGES, DEMONS ET AUTRES FIGURES INTERMEDIAIRES. ACTES DU COLLOQUE, COLLEGE DE FRANCE, PARIS, 19-20 MAI 2014 . FRIBOURG, 2017, xii 367 p.figuras, 735 gr. Encuadernacion original. Nuevo. (C/B) 735 gr. Libro.
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient and modern, to imagine and question the differences between humans and deities as well as their means to communicate between each other. Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship in more than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they presume the existence of various intermediate and often liminal entities, whom scholars have usually classified in terms of "angels", "demons", "heroes" etc. According to ancient belief, such beings (some anonymous, others named such as Pazuzu, Azazel, Gabriel, Metatron, or Satan.) could take over roles that were considered as unfitting for the gods themselves; they could act as messengers and intermediaries, or in contrast even rival the gods. The dead (or at least the prominent among the deceased, such as kings or prophets) could be considered as intermediates in their own right, since they were thought to have special knowledge of a sphere that the living could only imagine imperfectly. To keep such entities at a distance or to satisfy them and gain their sympathy could at times prove no less challenging than to serve the gods. On the other hand, imagining those entities helped ancient societies and individuals, and particularly the literary elites among them, to manage and structure the contingencies of the world they lived in. The present volume offers the proceedings of an international symposium, organized by the chair of Milieux Bibliques and held at the College de France on 19-20 May 2014, dealing with intermediate beings as imagined in ancient Near Eastern societies and reflected in their textual and visual records. The aim was to get a better sense of how such entities were conceived, what roles they were attributed and what functions they fulfilled in culture and society, religion and literature, ritual and belief. The contributions scrutinize cuneiform and other ancient Near Eastern texts, as well as biblical literature, in order to understand ancient Mesopotamian, Levantine and Israelite conceptions of human-divine hybrids and intermediaries; other papers address ancient Egyptian, Jewish, Manichaean, Christian, Zoroastrian, and Islamic sources and beliefs. In all their variety, and in the variety of the numinous figures (collectives or individuals, anonymous or named) that are analyzed, these studies provide vivid insights into how the ancients experienced and modeled the reality they lived in when mobilizing human-divine intermediates for their own concerns. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient and modern, to imagine and question the differences between humans and deities as well as their means to communicate between each other. Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship in more than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they pr Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
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ISBN 10: 3727818158 ISBN 13: 9783727818158
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient andmodern, to imagine and question the differences between humans anddeities as well as their means to communicate between each other.Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship inmore than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they presume theexistence of various intermediate and often liminal entities, whomscholars have usually classified in terms of angels, demons,heroes etc. According to ancient belief, such beings (some anonymous,others named such as Pazuzu, Azazel, Gabriel, Metatron, or Satan.)could take over roles that were considered as unfitting for the godsthemselves; they could act as messengers and intermediaries, or incontrast even rival the gods. The dead (or at least the prominent amongthe deceased, such as kings or prophets) could be considered asintermediates in their own right, since they were thought to havespecial knowledge of a sphere that the living could only imagineimperfectly. To keep such entities at a distance or to satisfy them andgain their sympathy could at times prove no less challenging than toserve the gods. On the other hand, imagining those entities helpedancient societies and individuals, and particularly the literary elitesamong them, to manage and structure the contingencies of the world theylived in.The present volume offers the proceedings of an internationalsymposium, organized by the chair of Milieux Bibliques and held at the College de France on 19-20 May2014, dealing with intermediate beings as imagined in ancient NearEastern societies and reflected in their textual and visual records. Theaim was to get a better sense of how such entities were conceived, whatroles they were attributed and what functions they fulfilled in cultureand society, religion and literature, ritual and belief. Thecontributions scrutinize cuneiform and other ancient Near Eastern texts,as well as biblical literature, in order to understand ancientMesopotamian, Levantine and Israelite conceptions of human-divinehybrids and intermediaries; other papers address ancient Egyptian,Jewish, Manichaean, Christian, Zoroastrian, and Islamic sources andbeliefs. In all their variety, and in the variety of the numinousfigures (collectives or individuals, anonymous or named) that areanalyzed, these studies provide vivid insights into how the ancientsexperienced and modeled the reality they lived in when mobilizinghuman-divine intermediates for their own concerns. It has long been an important issue for many religions, both ancient and modern, to imagine and question the differences between humans and deities as well as their means to communicate between each other. Ancient Near Eastern texts and iconography conceive this relationship in more than binary terms (i.e., human vs. divine): they pr Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
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