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About The Book
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The remarkable discovery of ancient Near Eastern law collections or codes beginning with the Laws of Hammurabi and followed by many other collections in decades following opened a new window upon biblical law. This volume seeks to examine within a single study all of the biblical laws that are similar in content with ancient Near Eastern laws from Sumer Babylonia Assyria and Hatti. The book also examines a small but important group of early rabbinic laws from postbiblical times that exhibit significant similarities with laws found in the ancient Near Eastern collections or codes. This later group of laws although absent from the Bible are nevertheless of comparable antiquity. The presentation focuses on the actual law statements preserved in these ancient law codes. The discussion then adds narratives records and reports of legal actions from ancient sources outside the laws-all of which relate to the formal law statements. The discourse is non-polemical in tone and does not seek to revisit all theories and interpretations. The format allows readers including those who are new to the subject of biblical law to engage the primary sources on their own. This books intriguing thesis is that there are many remainders of ancient near eastern law that survive in the late antique legal literature of rabbinic Judaism (the Mishnah and the two Talmuds) . . . Greengus uniquely shows how this influence may be discovered in rabbinic legal materials that lack explicit biblical models and antecedents. A fascinating read for all those interested in the history of law and intercultural influences. -Richard S. Sarason Professor of Rabbinic Literature and Thought Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion Cincinnati Samuel Greengus analyzes an important group of biblical laws with all the legal and linguistic resources discovered in the past century . . . This book will prove indispensable for readers who seek to understand the meaning of biblical laws in their original cultural context and in the course of their ongoing application in postbiblical times. -Jeffrey H. Tigay Emeritus Ellis Professor of Hebrew and Semitic Languages and Literatures University of Pennsylvania Greengus presents a comprehensive discussion of biblical law in relation to the entire spectrum of law in the ancient Near East the Greco-Roman world and Rabbinic Judaism. Written for the general reader as well as the specialist this volume opens the biblical laws to a broad range of readers from a variety of fields. -Marvin A. Sweeney Claremont Lincoln University and Claremont School of Theology Academy for Jewish Religion California Samuel Greengus is Julian Morgenstern Emeritus Professor of Bible and Near Eastern Literature at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati Ohio. He is the author of Old Babylonian Tablets from Ishchali and Vicinity (1979) and Studies in Ishchali Documents (1986).