Ancient Near East
Religion and the Aramaic Incantation Bowls
By , University of California, Los Angeles (June 2007)
Sections: Ancient Near East
Subjects: Christianity, Ancient Near East Religions, Judaism, Religion.
Periods: 1 - 999 CE, 250 - 500 CE, 500 - 999 CE.
Key Topics: magic, popular belief, Zoroastrianism, syncretism.
Abstract
The corpus of Late Antique Aramaic incantation texts is defined. The issues in this field are identified as explicating the language of the Aramaic dialects used for these texts, correlating the religious identity of their authors with the dialects and the scripts used for them, the level of the authors’ literacy, and explaining the magic praxis of the bowls and their demonology. The pagan, Judaic, Mandaean, Christian, and Zoroastrian content of these texts is surveyed. It is noted that the nature of this content tends to be explained in terms of syncretism and popular religion.
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-8171.2007.00029.x
This article abstract has been viewed 4119 times.
Top 5 related articles
-
Studying Ancient Israelite Ritual: Methodological Considerations
By , Wichita State University
(Vol. 2, July 2007)
Religion Compass -
Religious Literature of Late Period and Greco-Roman Egypt
By , University of Chicago
(Vol. 1, November 2006)
Religion Compass -
Performance Criticism of the Hebrew Bible
By and , Gannon University Miami University
(Vol. 3, April 2008)
Religion Compass -
The Specialized Religions of Ancient Mediterranean Seafarers
By , Pacific School of Religion
(Vol. 3, May 2008)
Religion Compass -
Medicine and Religion in Ancient Egypt
By , Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
(Vol. 1, October 2006)
Religion Compass
Top 5 Related Blackwell Reference Chapters
Magic (Ancient Near Eastern)
[viii] Incantation priests (see Temples (ancient near eastern)) recited spells as part of magical rituals ...
Magic (Ancient Egyptian)
[vi] Important in daily life, Egyptian magic was based upon the ‘sympathetic’ principle, affirming that ...
Magic
The art of influencing events by the occult control of natural and spiritual forces. In the Bible sorcery, ...
Biblical criticism
Critical study of the Hebrew Bible. Higher, or literary, criticism deals with questions of authorship, ...
Criticism, biblical
see Biblical criticism.