2015
DOI: 10.1177/1476993x15599873
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Intermediary Beings in Late Antique Judaism: A History of Scholarship

Abstract: Recent years have seen a steady rise in the scholarly interest in intermediary beings in Late Antique Judaism. The present article traces developments in the academic study of intermediary beings, and surveys scholarly approaches to angels, demons, and other intermediary beings in (1) rabbinic literature, (2) Late Antique Jewish liturgy, (3) Hekhalot literature, and (4) material artifacts such as metal amulets and clay bowls. It traces a shift from a nineteenth-century discomfort with intermediary beings and a… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This particular field of study has been intensively explored in recent years. Editions of new texts and reeditions of those already known appear and a large scholarly production is constantly brought forth (for the survey see Ronis 2015). The main reason, however, why I put aside this category of sources is the nature of the links between the Jewish magic and the Greek magic in the late antiquity.…”
Section: General Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This particular field of study has been intensively explored in recent years. Editions of new texts and reeditions of those already known appear and a large scholarly production is constantly brought forth (for the survey see Ronis 2015). The main reason, however, why I put aside this category of sources is the nature of the links between the Jewish magic and the Greek magic in the late antiquity.…”
Section: General Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%