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Article
The number and provenance of Jews in Graeco-Roman antiquity : a note on population statistics

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The legend of the Septuagint
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0521854954 9780521854955 9780511499142 9780521104616 0511191898 9780511191893 0511190719 9780511190711 0511191030 9780511191039 0511499140 1107165946 1280458763 0511191545 0511316089 0521104610 Year: 2006 Publisher: New York Cambridge University Press

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The Septuagint is the most influential of the Greek versions of the Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew Bible. The exact circumstances of its creation are uncertain, but different versions of a legend about the miraculous nature of the translation have existed since antiquity. Beginning in the Letter of Aristeas, the legend describes how Ptolemy Philadelphus commissioned seventy-two Jewish scribes to translate the sacred Hebrew scriptures for his famous library in Alexandria. Subsequent variations on the story recount how the scribes, working independently, produced word-for-word, identical Greek versions. In the course of the following centuries, to our own time, the story has been adapted and changed by Jews, Christians, Muslims and pagans for many different reasons: to tell a story, to explain historical events and to lend authority to the Greek text for the institutions that used it. This book offers the first account of all of these versions over the last two millennia, providing a history of the uses and abuses of the legend in various cultures around the Mediterranean.


Book
Galen's commentary on the Hippocratic treatise Airs, waters, places in the Hebrew translation of Solomon Ha-Me'Ati
Authors: ---
Year: 1982 Publisher: Jerusalem Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities

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