Jacket Image



Aphrodite and the Rabbis: How the Jews Adapted Roman Culture to Create Judaism As We Know It

Burton L. Visotzky

List price £19.99
Product Details
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9781250085764
Published:
01 Oct 2016
Publisher:
Macmillan
Dimensions:
256 pages - 236 x 154 x 16mm

Categories:

Hard to believe but true:

The Passover Seder is a Greco-Roman symposium banquet

The Talmud rabbis presented themselves as Stoic philosophers

Synagogue buildings were Roman basilicas

Hellenistic rhetoric professors educated sons of well-to-do Jews

Zeus-Helios is depicted in synagogue mosaics across ancient Israel

In Israel there were synagogues where the prayers were recited in Greek.

Historians have long debated the (re)birth of Judaism in the wake of the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple cult by the Romans in 70 CE. What replaced that sacrificial cult was at once something new, even as it also sought to preserve what little it could of the old Israelite religion.

Arguing that its transformation from a Jerusalem centered cult to a world religion was made possible by the Roman Empire, Rabbi Burton Visotzky presents Judaism as a distinctly Roman religion. Full of fascinating detail from the daily life and culture of Jewish communities across the Hellenistic world, Aphrodite and the Rabbis will appeal to anyone interested in the development of Judaism, religion, history, art and architecture.

An engaging tour through Jewish life in the Roman Empire which argues that the Judaism we know today emerged as a direct product of that place and time.

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