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Jewish interpretations in Hebrew and Aramaic

Graham Davies-1979-05-10-Cambridge University Press eBooks
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At first glance the Hebrew and Aramaic texts appear to be unpromising material for a geographical inquiry such as this. Where there is any interest at all in the itineraries and the names that appear in them, the approach is generally that of the etymologising midrash. This kind of interpretation, which could find some justification in the Old Testament itself (cf. Ex. 17: 7; Num. 11:3, 34), deduces from a name something about the early history of Israel, assuming that the name was conferred on the place because of a specific occurrence in Israel's past. Even where this kind of exegesis is not present, the overall interest of the translators and commentators seems to be in non-geographical aspects of the Biblical text, either the harmonising of apparently contradictory accounts or the extracting of a universal halakhic principle from it. Yet such ‘spiritualising’ interpretations are not the whole of what these exegetes had to say about the text. There are some indications of an interes

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At first glance the Hebrew and Aramaic texts appear to be unpromising material for a geographical inquiry such as this. Where there is any interest at all in the itineraries and the names that appear in them, the approach is generally that of the etymologising midrash. This kind of interpretation, which could find some justification in the Old Testament itself (cf. Ex. 17: 7; Num. 11:3, 34), deduces from a name something about the early history of Israel, assuming that the name was conferred on the place because of a specific occurrence in Israel's past. Even where this kind of exegesis is not present, the overall interest of the translators and commentators seems to be in non-geographical aspects of the Biblical text, either the harmonising of apparently contradictory accounts or the extracting of a universal halakhic principle from it. Yet such ‘spiritualising’ interpretations are not the whole of what these exegetes had to say about the text. There are some indications of an interes

Keywords

HebrewBiblical HebrewLinguisticsJudaismPhilosophyHistoryHebrew BibleBiblical studies

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