1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910464464803321

Autore

Wyatt N (Nick)

Titolo

Space and time in the religious life of the Near East / / Nicolas Wyatt

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Sheffield, England : , : Sheffield Academic Press, , [2001]

©2001

ISBN

0-567-04942-6

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (369 p.)

Collana

The biblical seminar ; ; 85

Disciplina

291.3/5/09394

Soggetti

Space and time - Religious aspects

Electronic books.

Middle East Religion

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (pages [333]-354) and indexes.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; CONTENTS; PREFACE; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; ABBREVIATIONS; INTRODUCTION; Chapter 1 ORIENTATION AND THE LOCATION OF THE SELF; Introduction; Tables of the Vocabulary of Orientation; 1(1) Ugaritic; 1(2) Hebrew; 1(3) Arabic; 1(4) Akkadian; 1(5) Sumerian; 1(6) Greek; 1(7) Latin; 1(8) Egyptian; 1(9) Sanskrit; Chapter 2 MYTHIC SHAPINGS OF THE WORLD; Introduction; I Egypt: local Cosmogony Traditions; 2(1) Heliopolis: Sex; 2(2) Memphis: (Sex and) Giving Birth; 2(3) Hermopolis: an Egg i); 2(4) Hermopolis: an Egg ii); 2(5) Hermopolis: an Egg iii); 2(6) Thebes: Various Elements Including ''Making''

2(7) Memphis: Speech2(8) An Egyptian Creation Tradition from el-Berseh (ca 1000 BCE): Making; II Mesopotamia: local Cosmogony Traditions; 2(9) Babylon: the Conflict of Marduk and Tiamat; 2(10) Marduk Constructs the World: Division of the Vanquished Deity; III Creation and the Status of Human Beings; 2(11) A Sumerian Tradition from Nippur; 2(12) A further Sumerian Tradition from Nippur; 2(13) The Theogony of Dunnu; 2(14) Marduk (Ea) creates Mankind; IV Creation in Israelite and Judahite Thought; 2(15) The Triestly Account''; 2(16) An Exilic Version of the Creation, from a Lament

V The Creation of Man in Israelite and Judahite Thought2(17) The Triestly Account''; 2(18) The ''Yahwist''s Account'' of Creation; VI Conceptions of the Universe; 2(19) Multiple Levels in the Universe in



Mesopotamia; 2(20) The Threefold Structure of the Israelite Universe i); 2(21) The Threefold Structure of the Israelite Universe ii); 2(22) Barriers in the Underworld in Egypt; 2(23) The Realm of Death in Mesopotamian Thought: the Descent of Ishtar; VII The Cartographic Imagination; 2(24) The Babylonian Map of the World; Figures; Babylonian Map of the World

2(25) Further Aspects of Egyptian Cosmology i): The Idea of the Celestial Nile2(26) Further Aspects of Egyptian Cosmology ii): The Four Pillars of Heaven; 2(27) Further Aspects of Egyptian Cosmology iii): Ra''s Crossing of the Celestial Nile; 2(28) Further Aspects of Egyptian Cosmology iv): The Osirian Destiny of the King; 2(29) Further Aspects of Egyptian Cosmology v): The Idea of the Infernal and Celestial Nile; 2(30) Greek Images of the Surrounding Sea i): Homer and Hesiod; 2(31) Greek Images of the Surrounding Sea ii): Hesiod

2(32) Greek Images of the Surrounding Sea iii): the Homeric Hymns2(33) Greek Images of the Surrounding Sea iv): Herodotus; 2(34) Greek Images of the Surrounding Sea v): Pindar; 2(35) The Cosmic Ocean in Biblical Tradition: Passages mentioning Yam Suf; 2(36) Marduk and the Kingship of the Gods i); 2(37) Marduk and the Kingship of the Gods ii); VIII Miscellaneous Elements; 2(38) Calendars i): The Egyptian Calendar; 2(39) Calendars ii): Some other Near Eastern Calendars; 2(40) Calendars iii): The Gezer Calendar; 2(41) Deities of the World Structure

2(42) The Number Seven i): Sun, Moon and the Planets

Sommario/riassunto

Space and time are basic features of the world-view, even the theology, of many religions, ancient and modern. How did the world begin, and how will it end? What is the importance of religious architecture in symbolizing sacred space? Where and how do we locate the self? The divine world? Wyatt''s textbook treats ancient Near Eastern religions from a perspective that allows us to access how religion shapes and orders the world of human thought and experience. The book is designed especially for classroom use, each chapter provided with suggested reading, copious quotations from ancient texts a