Czy Hiob istniał realnie?
Data
2011
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
Wydawnictwo KUL
Abstrakt
Among the royal correspondence from Tell el-Amarna (XIV cent. BC) there is one letter (EA 256) with the name of Job (Ayyabu), an Egyptian vassal from the town Ashtarti in Transjordan. He has been accused of violating the vassal treaty and transferring to Hittites. Another letter (EA 364) is addressed to Pharaoh by Job himself. There he dismisses false accusations and pledges loyalty towards Egypt. With time the “historical” Job has become a literary character of the Bible and the model of how to bear patiently the adversities of life. Local Arabs remember him up to this day, and his grave, following the tradition, is located precisely in the place mentioned in the correspondence from Tell el-Amarna.
Opis
Słowa kluczowe
Hiob, Bliski Wschód, dokumentacja z Tell el-Amarna, kult św. Hioba, Biblia, Pismo Święte, Stary Testament, egzegeza, egzegeza biblijna, Syria, kraina Us, starożytność, historyczność postaci biblijnych, postaci biblijne, Job, Middle East, Tell el-Amarna documentation, cult of St Job, Bible, Old Testament, exegesis, biblical exegesis, land of Us, antiquity, historicity of biblical characters, biblical characters, biblistyka, biblical studies
Cytowanie
Scripta Biblica et Orientalia, 2011, T. 3, s. 173-181.
Licencja
Attribution 3.0 Poland