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Collecting Practices and Opisthographic Collections in Qumran and Herculaneum: Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah, cartea 149

Autor Ayhan Aksu
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 dec 2024
In Collecting Practices and Opisthographic Collections in Qumran and Herculaneum, Ayhan Aksu offers a new perspective on practices of collection in both the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Herculaneum papyri. This study focuses on the intriguing question how ancient scribes and scholars used manuscripts to bring different texts in conversation with each other. Central to Aksu’s approach are opisthographic manuscripts – scrolls that contain text on both the front and back side. Comparative research of the rich papyrus collection from Herculaneum reveals that scribes across various regions of the Mediterranean developed dynamic approaches to engage with their texts.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004716230
ISBN-10: 9004716238
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah


Notă biografică

Ayhan Aksu, Ph.D. (2022, University of Groningen), is a postdoctoral researcher at the KU Leuven. His research focuses on ancient Judaism and the Dead Sea Scrolls, with special attention to ancient manuscript practices.

Cuprins

Acknowledgements
List of Tables
Abbreviations

Introduction
1 Opisthographs and Questions of Text Collections and Communities
2 Studying Ancient Manuscript Culture
3 Methods and Research Approaches
4 Comparative Approach
5 Outline of This Study

Part1 The Material Variety of the Qumran Opisthographs



Introduction to Part1

1 Opisthographic Practices in the Dead Sea Scrolls
1 What is an Opisthograph?
2 Recto and Verso on Ancient Papyri
3 Opisthographic Practices in the Dead Sea Scrolls
4 Unidentified Opisthographic Manuscripts
5 Qumran Tefillin
6 Manuscripts Carrying Titles on the Verso
7 Opisthograph with Continuous Text on Both Sides: 4Q504
8 Documentary Opisthographs
9 Documentary Opisthographs on the Verso of Literary Texts

2 Five Literary Opisthographs from Qumran
1 Introduction
2 Literary Opisthograph 4Q415/4Q414
3 Literary Opisthograph 4Q433a/4Q255
4 Literary Opisthograph 4Q499/4Q497
5 Literary Opisthograph 4Q503/4Q512
6 Literary Opisthograph 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506

3 The Palaeography of the Literary Opisthographs
1 Introduction
2 4Q433a
3 4Q255
4 4Q499
5 4Q497
6 4Q503
7 4Q512
8 4Q509
9 4Q496
10 4Q506
11 General Discussion
12 Opisthographs and the Choice for Papyrus

4 Concluding Remarks to Part1

Part2 Literary Diversity and the Opisthograph 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506: A Case Study



Introduction to Part2

5 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506: Three Compositions and the Question of Classification
1 The Publication History of 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506
2 4Q509: A Prayer Cycle of Festival Prayers
3 General Reflections on Devorah Dimant’s Model of Classification
4 4Q509 and Its Classification According to Dimant
5 4Q496: A Copy of the War Scroll
6 4Q506: A Prayer Cycle for Days of the Week
7 Words of the Luminaries: Sectarian, Non-Sectarian, Pre-Sectarian?

6 Opisthograph 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506 and the Question of Textual and Literary Diversity
1 The Opisthograph: An Emic Category?
2 A Codicological Analysis of 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506
3 Extracts and Excerpts
4 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506 and Literary Diversity
5 Graeco-Roman Reading Culture: Texts and Events
6 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506 as a Prayer Collection and Historical Reflection

Part3 Collections and Textual Diversity: Graeco-Roman Evidence and the Villa of the Papyri



Introduction to Part3

7 Conceptualizing Collections in Literary and Papyrological Sources
1 Library, Archive, and Collection: Emic and Etic Conceptions
2 Collection from a Comparative Perspective: Book Lists of Papyri Finds

8 The Villa of the Papyri and Graeco-Roman Practices of Collection
1 Herculaneum and the Villa of the Papyri
2 Deposition Context and ‘Lived’ Context
3 The Archaeology of the Villa of the Papyri
4 The Collection of Papyri
5 Diachronicity and Dynamism
6 Herculaneum as a Private, Scholarly Collection
7 Opisthograph PHerc. 1021 as an ‘Opisthographic Collection’

9 Comparing the Villa-Papyri and the Dead Sea Scrolls
1 Herculaneum and Qumran: Contrast and Correlation
2 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506 Revisited

Conclusion
1 The Qumran Opisthographs
2 Opisthographs: Manuscript Reuse or Collections of Valued Works?
3 Opisthograph 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506 and the Question of Classification
4 Opisthograph 4Q509/4Q496/4Q506 as an Opisthographic Collection
5 Collections and Collecting Practices: Herculaneum and Qumran

Bibliography
Index of Modern Authors
Index of Ancient Sources