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The Neo-Babylonian empire and Babylon in the latter prophets / David Stephen Vanderhooft. [print]

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Harvard Semitic Museum publications | Harvard Semitic monographs ; no. 59.Publication details: Atlanta, Georgia : Scholars Press, (c)1999.Description: xii, 246 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780788505799
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • DS73
  • DS73.V234.N463 1999
Available additional physical forms:
  • COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Contents:
Into the Eternal Shadow of Babylon Neo-Babylonian Ideas of Imperial Rule in the Royal Inscriptions -- The Titulary -- The Absence of Imperial Rhetoric in the Inscriptions of Nabopolassar -- The Evolution of Babylonian Imperial Ideas: Nebuchadnezzar -- The King's Call and Language of Imperial Hegemony -- Nebuchadnezzar as Protector of Humanity -- Babylon as Center of the World -- The King's Enemies -- Precedents and Summary -- Nabonidus's Reformulation -- Babylonian Imperial Administration in the Levant -- The Contraction of Assyria and Egypt's Rise in the Southern Levant -- The Contraction of Assyria -- Egypt's Rise in the Southern Levant -- Nebuchadnezzar's Arrival in the Levant -- Nebuchadnezzar's Empire -- Administrative Geography -- Territorial Divisions in the Empire -- Imperial Officials -- The Case of Judah -- Deportation -- Economic Geography -- Babylon in the Latter Prophets -- Micah 4:10 -- The Foreign Nation Oracles in the First Isaiah -- Isaiah 13 -- Isaiah 14:1-23 -- Isaiah 21:1-10 -- Jeremiah -- The Foe From the North -- The Babylonian King and His Administration -- Habakkuk 1-2 -- Ezekiel -- Ezekiel 17 -- Ezekiel 21:23-29 -- Second Isaiah -- Isaiah 40:18-20 -- Isaiah 46:1-2 -- Isaiah 47 -- Jeremiah 50:1-51:58 -- Descriptions of Babylon -- The Fall of Babylon.
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Into the Eternal Shadow of Babylon Neo-Babylonian Ideas of Imperial Rule in the Royal Inscriptions -- The Titulary -- The Absence of Imperial Rhetoric in the Inscriptions of Nabopolassar -- The Evolution of Babylonian Imperial Ideas: Nebuchadnezzar -- The King's Call and Language of Imperial Hegemony -- Nebuchadnezzar as Protector of Humanity -- Babylon as Center of the World -- The King's Enemies -- Precedents and Summary -- Nabonidus's Reformulation -- Babylonian Imperial Administration in the Levant -- The Contraction of Assyria and Egypt's Rise in the Southern Levant -- The Contraction of Assyria -- Egypt's Rise in the Southern Levant -- Nebuchadnezzar's Arrival in the Levant -- Nebuchadnezzar's Empire -- Administrative Geography -- Territorial Divisions in the Empire -- Imperial Officials -- The Case of Judah -- Deportation -- Economic Geography -- Babylon in the Latter Prophets -- Micah 4:10 -- The Foreign Nation Oracles in the First Isaiah -- Isaiah 13 -- Isaiah 14:1-23 -- Isaiah 21:1-10 -- Jeremiah -- The Foe From the North -- The Babylonian King and His Administration -- Habakkuk 1-2 -- Ezekiel -- Ezekiel 17 -- Ezekiel 21:23-29 -- Second Isaiah -- Isaiah 40:18-20 -- Isaiah 46:1-2 -- Isaiah 47 -- Jeremiah 50:1-51:58 -- Descriptions of Babylon -- The Fall of Babylon.

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