Nouvelles découvertes à Ur (Iraq)

La reprise de l’exploration archéologique d’Ur à l’automne 2015 lors d’une campagne dirigée par E. Stone a donné des résultats très intéressants ; ayant été invité à y prendre part comme épigraphiste, je suis heureux d’en rendre compte ici brièvement, une communication plus longue étant prévue à la RAI de Philadelphie en juillet 2016.

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Nouvelle parution de Thomas Römer : The Invention of God

Thomas Römer

The Invention of God, translated by Raymond Geuss, Cambridge, MA / London : Harvard University Press, 2015 (originally published in French as L’invention de Dieu, Les livres du nouveau monde, Paris : Edition du Seuil, 2014).

Cover: The Invention of God in HARDCOVER

320 pages, hardcover

Who invented God? When, why, and where? Thomas Römer seeks to answer these questions about the deity of the great monotheisms—Yhwh, God, or Allah—by tracing Israelite beliefs and their context from the Bronze Age to the end of the Old Testament period in the third century BCE.

That we can address such enigmatic questions at all may come as a surprise. But as Römer makes clear, a wealth of evidence allows us to piece together a reliable account of the origins and evolution of the god of Israel. Römer draws on a long tradition of historical, philological, and exegetical work and on recent discoveries in archaeology and epigraphy to locate the origins of Yhwh in the early Iron Age, when he emerged somewhere in Edom or in the northwest of the Arabian peninsula as a god of the wilderness and of storms and war. He became the sole god of Israel and Jerusalem in fits and starts as other gods, including the mother goddess Asherah, were gradually sidelined. But it was not until a major catastrophe—the destruction of Jerusalem and Judah—that Israelites came to worship Yhwh as the one god of all, creator of heaven and earth, who nevertheless proclaimed a special relationship with Judaism.

A masterpiece of detective work and exposition by one of the world’s leading experts on the Hebrew Bible, The Invention of God casts a clear light on profoundly important questions that are too rarely asked, let alone answered.

Thomas Römer is Professor of the Hebrew Bible at the Collège de France and Professor at the University of Lausanne.

Raymond Geuss is Emeritus Professor in the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge.

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674504974

 

En l’honneur de Jack Sasson : Telling Mari History (New York University, 22 octobre 2015)

Dans le cadre du colloque « Telling Mesopotamian History », qui se tiendra au Center for Ancient History de New York University en l’honneur de Jack Sasson, aura lieu jeudi 22 octobre à 5.00 p.m. une keynote session intitulée « Telling Mari History » :

What We Should Not Know… about the Mari Intelligence Corps
Jean-Marie Durand, Académie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres, Paris; former Chair of
Assyriology, Collège de France

Glimpses of Aleppo
Dominique Charpin, Chair of Mesopotamian Civilization, Collège de France

The Last Days of Samsi-Addu’s Empire
Nele Ziegler, Research Director, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

programme

affiche

Parution de Recherches en Haute-Mésopotamie II

Vient de paraître : L. Marti, Ch. Nicolle &  K. Shawaly (éd.) L., Recherches en Haute-Mésopotamie II. Mission archéologique de Bash Tapa (campagnes 2012-2013) et les enjeux de la recherche dans la région d’Erbil, Mémoires de NABU 17, Paris, 2015, ix + 219 pages (ISBN : 978-2-9538653-3-2)

Présentation (p. i-ix)

Table_des_matières (p. 219)

Pour commander : http://sepoa.fr/?page_id=27