Alexandria: hub of the Hellenistic World

Das antike Alexandria war eines der zentralen Drehkreuze der hellenistischen Welt und ein kulturelles und religiöses Kaleidoskop. Geschäftsleute und Migrierende, Gelehrte, Philosophen und die religiöse Avantgarde strömten aus aller Welt in diese Metropole. Entsprechend wurde Alexandria zu einem Ort,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament
Corporate Author: International Conference Alexandria: Hub of the Hellenistic World 2017, Bern (Author)
Contributors: Schließer, Benjamin 1977- (Editor) ; Rüggemeier, Jan 1981- (Editor) ; Kraus, Thomas J. 1965- (Editor) ; Frey, Jörg 1962- (Editor) ; Herrmann, Daniel (Contributor)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Tübingen Mohr Siebeck 2021
In: Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament (460)
Reviews:[Rezension von: Alexandria] (2022) (Runia, David T., 1951 -)
[Rezension von: Alexandria] (2022) (Paget, James Carleton, 1966 -)
Series/Journal:Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 460
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Alexandria / Religion / Culture / History 331 BC-600
B Alexandria / Religion / Culture / Classical antiquity
B Alexandria / Hellenistic Jews / Church
Further subjects:B Collection of essays
B Conference papers and proceedings
B Antiquities
B Alexandria (Egypt) Antiquities Congresses
B Neues Testament
B Religion
B Jewish Identity
B Alexandria (Egypt) - Religion - Congresses
B Alexandria (Egypt) Religion Congresses
B Archaeology
B Civilization
B Early Christianity
B Isis
B Classical antiquity
B Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament
B Hellenism
B Conference program 2017 (Bern)
B Egyptian Religion
B Alexandria (Egypt) Civilization Congresses
B Egypt - Alexandria
B Antike Religionsgeschichte
B Alexandria (Egypt) - Antiquities - Congresses
B Altes Testament
B Alexandria (Egypt) - Civilization - Congresses
Online Access: Inhaltsverzeichnis (Aggregator)
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Parallel Edition:Electronic
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Summary:Das antike Alexandria war eines der zentralen Drehkreuze der hellenistischen Welt und ein kulturelles und religiöses Kaleidoskop. Geschäftsleute und Migrierende, Gelehrte, Philosophen und die religiöse Avantgarde strömten aus aller Welt in diese Metropole. Entsprechend wurde Alexandria zu einem Ort, an dem hellenistische, ägyptische, jüdische und frühchristliche Identitäten entstanden, koexistierten, sich gegenseitigen beeinflussten und miteinander rivalisierten. Die Prozesse der Identitätsbildung sind aus verschiedenen interdisziplinären Blickwinkeln zu beleuchten, um der Vielfalt des urbanen Lebens und dem Reichtum der literarischen und nicht-literarischen Quellen gerecht zu werden. Der vorliegende Band versammelt sechsundzwanzig Beiträge aus den Bereichen der Archäologie, der Alten Geschichte, der Klassischen Philologie, der Religionswissenschaften, der Philosophie, der alttestamentlichen Wissenschaft, der Narratologie, der Judaistik, der Papyrologie und der neutestamentlichen Wissenschaft.InhaltsübersichtJan Rüggemeier: Alexandria: Hub of the Hellenistic World. Introduction I. The City Gregory E. Sterling: »The Largest and Most Important« Part of Egypt. Alexandria according to Strabo – Balbina Bäbler: Whose »Glory of Alexandria«? Monuments, Identities and the Eye of the Beholder – Barbara Schmitz: Alexandria: What Does the So-Called Letter of Aristeas Tell Us about Alexandria? – Christina Harker: Religious Violence and the Library of Alexandria – Maria Sokolskaya: Was Demetrius of Phalerum the Founder of the Alexandrian Library? II. Egyptian and Hellenistic Identities Christoph Riedweg: Alexandria in the New Outline of Philosophy in the Roman Imperial Period and in Late Antiquity – Stefan Pfeiffer: Bottom Up or Top Down: Who Initiated the Building of Temples for Augustus in Alexandria and Upper Egypt? – Sylvie Honigman: The Shifting Definition of Greek Identity in Alexandria through the Transition from Ptolemaic to Roman Rule – Beatrice Wyss: Cultural Rivalry in Alexandria: The Egyptians Apion and Chaeremon – Sandra Gambetti: When Syrian Politics Arrived in Egypt. 2nd Century BCE Egyptian Yahwism and the Vorlage of the LXX – Michael Sommer: The Apocalypse of Zephaniah and the Tombs of the Egyptian Chora. An Archaeological Contribution to B. J. Diebner's Opinion about the Relation between Clement of Alexandria and the Coptic Tradition of the Apocalypse of Zephaniah III. Jewish Alexandria Benjamin Wright: The Letter of Aristeas and the Place of the Septuagint in Alexandrian Judaism – Jan N. Bremmer: The First Pogrom? Religious Violence in Alexandria in 38 CE? – René Bloch: How Much Hebrew in Jewish Alexandria? – Justin P. Jeffcoat Schedtler: From Alexandria to Caesarea and Beyond. The Transmission of the Fragments of the Hellenistic Jewish Authors – John Granger Cook: Philo's Quaestiones in Genesin and Paul's σῶμα πνευματικόν IV. From the New Testament to Early Christianities Samuel Vollenweider: Apollos of Alexandria. Portrait of an Unknown – Jörg Frey: Locating New Testament Writings in Alexandria. On Method and the Aporias of Scholarship – Benjamin Schliesser: Jewish Beginnings: Earliest Christianity in Alexandria – Enno Edzard Popkes: The Interpretation of Pauline Understandings of Resurrection within »The Treatise on the Resurrection« (NHC I 4) – Wolfgang Grünstäudl: The Quest for Pantaenus Paul Collomp, Wilhelm Bousset, and Johannes Munck on an Alexandrian Enigma – Thomas J. Kraus: Alexandria, City of Knowledge: Clement on »Statues« in his Protrepticus (chapter 4) – Anna van den Kerchove: Origen and the »Heterodox.« The Prologue of the Commentary on John within the Christian Alexandrian Context – Luca Arcari: »Monotheistic« Discourses in Pseudo-Justin's De monarchia. The »Uniqueness« of God and the Alexandrian Hegemony – Tobias Nicklas: The Martyrdom of Mark in Late Antique Alexandria
Alexandria was one of the main hubs of the Hellenistic world and a cultural and religious »kaleidoscope.« Merchants and migrants, scientists and scholars, philosophers, and religious innovators from all over the world and from all social backgrounds came to this ancient metropolis and exchanged their goods, views, and dreams. Accordingly, Alexandria became a place where Hellenistic, Egyptian, Jewish, and early Christian identities all emerged, coexisted, influenced, and rivaled each other. In order to meet the diversity of Alexandria's urban life and to do justice to the variety of literary and non-literary documents that bear witness to this, the volume examines the processes of identity formation from a range of different academic perspectives. Thus, the present volume gathers together twenty-six contributions from the realm of archaeology, ancient history, classical philology, religious studies, philosophy, the Old Testament, narratology, Jewish studies, papyrology, and the New Testament.Survey of contentsJan Rüggemeier: Alexandria: Hub of the Hellenistic World. Introduction I. The City Gregory E. Sterling: »The Largest and Most Important« Part of Egypt. Alexandria according to Strabo – Balbina Bäbler: Whose »Glory of Alexandria«? Monuments, Identities and the Eye of the Beholder – Barbara Schmitz: Alexandria: What Does the So-Called Letter of Aristeas Tell Us about Alexandria? – Christina Harker: Religious Violence and the Library of Alexandria – Maria Sokolskaya: Was Demetrius of Phalerum the Founder of the Alexandrian Library? II. Egyptian and Hellenistic Identities Christoph Riedweg: Alexandria in the New Outline of Philosophy in the Roman Imperial Period and in Late Antiquity – Stefan Pfeiffer: Bottom Up or Top Down: Who Initiated the Building of Temples for Augustus in Alexandria and Upper Egypt? – Sylvie Honigman: The Shifting Definition of Greek Identity in Alexandria through the Transition from Ptolemaic to Roman Rule – Beatrice Wyss: Cultural Rivalry in Alexandria: The Egyptians Apion and Chaeremon – Sandra Gambetti: When Syrian Politics Arrived in Egypt. 2nd Century BCE Egyptian Yahwism and the Vorlage of the LXX – Michael Sommer: The Apocalypse of Zephaniah and the Tombs of the Egyptian Chora. An Archaeological Contribution to B. J. Diebner's Opinion about the Relation between Clement of Alexandria and the Coptic Tradition of the Apocalypse of Zephaniah III. Jewish Alexandria Benjamin Wright: The Letter of Aristeas and the Place of the Septuagint in Alexandrian Judaism – Jan N. Bremmer: The First Pogrom? Religious Violence in Alexandria in 38 CE? – René Bloch: How Much Hebrew in Jewish Alexandria? – Justin P. Jeffcoat Schedtler: From Alexandria to Caesarea and Beyond. The Transmission of the Fragments of the Hellenistic Jewish Authors – John Granger Cook: Philo's Quaestiones in Genesin and Paul's σῶμα πνευματικόν IV. From the New Testament to Early Christianities Samuel Vollenweider: Apollos of Alexandria. Portrait of an Unknown – Jörg Frey: Locating New Testament Writings in Alexandria. On Method and the Aporias of Scholarship – Benjamin Schliesser: Jewish Beginnings: Earliest Christianity in Alexandria – Enno Edzard Popkes: The Interpretation of Pauline Understandings of Resurrection within »The Treatise on the Resurrection« (NHC I 4) – Wolfgang Grünstäudl: The Quest for Pantaenus Paul Collomp, Wilhelm Bousset, and Johannes Munck on an Alexandrian Enigma – Thomas J. Kraus: Alexandria, City of Knowledge: Clement on »Statues« in his Protrepticus (chapter 4) – Anna van den Kerchove: Origen and the »Heterodox.« The Prologue of the Commentary on John within the Christian Alexandrian Context – Luca Arcari: »Monotheistic« Discourses in Pseudo-Justin's De monarchia. The »Uniqueness« of God and the Alexandrian Hegemony – Tobias Nicklas: The Martyrdom of Mark in Late Antique Alexandria
ISBN:3161598938
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1628/978-3-16-159893-7