
At the Intersection of Texts and Material Finds
Stepped Pools, Stone Vessels, and Ritual Purity Among the Jews of Roman Galilee
Stuart S. Miller(Author)
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (Publisher)
2nd Edition
Published on 11. March 2019
423 pages
978-3-647-56478-4 (ISBN)
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Stuart Miller examines the hermeneutical challenges posed by the material and literary evidence pertaining to ritual purity practices in Graeco-Roman Palestine and, especially, the Galilee. He contends that "stepped pools," which we now know were in use well beyond the Destruction of the Temple, and, as indicated by the large collection on the western acropolis of Sepphoris and elsewhere, into the Middle and Late Roman/Byzantine eras,must be understood in light of biblical and popular perspectives on ritual purity. The interpretation of the finds is too frequently forced to conform to rabbinic prescriptions, which oftentimes were the result of the sages' unique and creative, nominalist approach to ritual purity. Special attention is given to the role ritual purity continued to play in the lives of ordinary Jews despite (or because of) the loss of the Temple. Miller argues against the prevailing tendency to type material finds-and Jewish society--according to known groups (pre-70 C.E.: Pharisaic, Sadducaic, Essenic; post 70 C.E.: rabbinic, priestly, etc.). He further counters the perception that ritual purity practices were largely the interest of priests and argues against the recent suggestion that the kohanim resurfaced as an influential group in Late Antiquity. Building upon his earlier work on "sages and commoners," Miller claims that the rabbis emerged out of a context in which a biblically derived "complex common Judaism" thrived. Stepped pools, stone vessels, and other material finds are realia belonging to this "complex common Judaism." A careful reading of the rabbis indicates that they were acutely aware of the extent to which ritual purity rites pertaining to home and family life had "spread," which undoubtedly contributed to their intense interest in regulating them.
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Series
Edition
2. revised edition 2019
Language
English
Place of publication
Göttingen
Germany
Illustrations
with 22 fig.
File size
4,29 MB
ISBN-13
978-3-647-56478-4 (9783647564784)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Stuart S. Miller
At the Intersection of Texts and Material Finds
Stepped Pools, Stone Vessels, and Ritual Purity Among the Jews of Roman Galilee
Book
03/2019
2nd Edition
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
from
€180.00
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Persons
Author
Stuart S. Miller, PhD, is Professor of Hebrew, History, and Judaic Studies at the University of Connecticut.
Cover design or artwork
Stuart S. Miller, PhD, is Professor of Hebrew, History, and Judaic Studies at the University of Connecticut.
Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Preface
- Body
- Introduction. Ritual Baths and Ritual Purity, the Last Fifty Years
- Chapter One: Misleading Use of Terminology: The "miqveh," "bet tevilah," and other "Ritual Baths"
- Chapter Two: The Evolving, Non-Monolithic "Ritual Bath"
- Chapter Three: Pre-Rabbinic, Non-Rabbinic, and Rabbinic Ritual Immersion Practices in the Making
- Divided Stairways, Dual Entrances, and Sectarian Viewpoints
- "Nissoq," Double Pools, and the "Osar"
- Views from Qumran and the Rabbis
- Conclusion
- Chapter Four: Did the Author of P. Oxyrhynchus 840. Know What a "Miqveh" Was?
- Introduction
- The Exchange between "the Savior" and the High Priest
- Running, Natural, and "Living" Waters
- Split Stairways do not Make a "Miqveh" Either
- Spiritual Perceptions of Water in Antiquity and the Meaning of the Fragment
- a) Ancient Near Eastern and Biblical Views
- b) From Jeremiah to the Rabbis
- c) Spiritualizing Water: From the Late Second Temple Period to the Gospel of John
- d) P. Oxyrhynchus 840 and Jewish Ritual Immersion
- Conclusion
- Chapter Five: Further Observations on Stone Vessel Finds and Ritual Purity in Light of Talmudic Sources
- Conclusion
- Chapter Six: The Stepped Pools of the Western Acropolis at Sepphoris
- Chapter Seven: Understanding the Pools: Biblical Perceptions of Purity and the Habitus of the Jews of 'Eres Israel
- Chapter Eight: Domestic Judaism and the "Well-Ordered Bayit:" Who Bathed/Immersed in the Stepped Pools at Sepphoris and Why?
- Introduction
- Popular Devotion to Ritual Purity Practices: The Rabbis' Perspective
- Hand Washing before Eating
- Bodily Immersion and Sexuality
- Popular Perceptions of Water
- The Primary Locus of Ritual Purity Rites after 70 C.?E.: The Home, Family, and the Larger Community of Israel
- Chapter Nine: Priests, Purities, and the Jews of Roman and Late Antique Galilee?-?Rethinking the Priests of Sepphoris and the Mishmarot
- Introduction
- Priests at Sepphoris
- Priests at Tiberias
- Priestly Memory, Identity, and Concerns in Galilee
- Ritual Bathing and Priests
- The Priests, the People, and the Synagogue
- Some Conclusions and Questions worth Pursuing
- Chapter Ten: Non-Rabbinic Ritual Immersion Practices in Post-Talmudic Sources
- Chapter Eleven: From Stepped Pools to Miqva'ot and the Society that Produced Them
- Concluding Thoughts
- Postscript: From Roman Galilee to Nineteenth-Century Chesterfield, Connecticut
- Bibliography
- Index of Primary Sources
- Index of Places
- Index of Foreign Terms, Phrases, and Expressions
- Index of Subjects
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