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" Iudaea Capta vs. Mother Zion: "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1075442
Doc. No : LA119071
Call No : ‭10.1163/15700631-12494235‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : G. Anthony Keddie
Title & Author : Iudaea Capta vs. Mother Zion: [Article] : The Flavian Discourse on Judaeans and Its Delegitimation in 4 Ezra\ G. Anthony Keddie
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Journal for the Study of Judaism
Date : 2018
Volume/ Issue Number : 49/4-5
Page No : 498–550
Abstract : This study proposes that the empire-wide Iudaea capta discourse should be viewed as a motivating pressure on the author of 4 Ezra. The discourse focused on Iudaea capta, Judaea captured, was pervasive across the Roman empire following the First Revolt. Though initiated by the Flavians, it became misrecognized across the Mediterranean and was expressed in a range of media. In this article, I examine the diverse evidence for this discourse and demonstrate that it not only cast Judaeans as barbaric enemies of Rome using a common set of symbols, but also attributed responsibility for a minor provincial revolt to a transregional ethnos/gens. One of the most distinctive symbols of this discourse was a personification of Judaea as a mourning woman. I argue that 4 Ezra delegitimates this Iudaea capta discourse, with its mourning woman, through the counter-image of a Mother Zion figure who transforms into the eschatological city. This study proposes that the empire-wide Iudaea capta discourse should be viewed as a motivating pressure on the author of 4 Ezra. The discourse focused on Iudaea capta, Judaea captured, was pervasive across the Roman empire following the First Revolt. Though initiated by the Flavians, it became misrecognized across the Mediterranean and was expressed in a range of media. In this article, I examine the diverse evidence for this discourse and demonstrate that it not only cast Judaeans as barbaric enemies of Rome using a common set of symbols, but also attributed responsibility for a minor provincial revolt to a transregional ethnos/gens. One of the most distinctive symbols of this discourse was a personification of Judaea as a mourning woman. I argue that 4 Ezra delegitimates this Iudaea capta discourse, with its mourning woman, through the counter-image of a Mother Zion figure who transforms into the eschatological city.
Descriptor : 4 Ezra
Descriptor : apocalyptic discourse
Descriptor : First Jewish Revolt
Descriptor : Flavian dynasty
Descriptor : General
Descriptor : Iudaea capta/Judaea capta
Descriptor : Jewish Studies
Descriptor : Jewish-Roman relations
Descriptor : Mother Zion
Descriptor : Roman iconography
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/15700631-12494235‬
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10.1163-15700631-12494235_24010.pdf
10.1163-15700631-12494235.pdf
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