Following the Coins from the Excavations at Khirbet Qumran (1951-1956) and Aïn Feshkha (1956-1958)

Following the Coins from the Excavations at Khirbet Qumran (1951-1956) and Aïn Feshkha (1956-1958)
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Artikel-Nr:
9783525501948
Veröffentl:
2023
Erscheinungsdatum:
01.12.2023
Seiten:
346
Autor:
Bruno Callegher
Gewicht:
1778 g
Format:
321x240x26 mm
Serie:
10, Novum Testamentum et Orbis Antiquus, Series Archaeologica (NTOA.SA)
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Bruno Callegher is Full Professor on Numismatic and Monetary History at the University of Trieste.

Martin Ebner ist Professor em. für die Exegese des Neuen Testaments an der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn.

Dr. theol. Max Küchler ist em. Professor für Neues Testament und Biblische Umwelt an der Universität Freiburg / Schweiz.

Peter Lampe ist Professor für Neutestamentliche Theologie an der Universität Heidelberg.

Stefan Schreiber ist Professor für Neues Testament und Direktor des Seminars für Zeit- und Religionsgeschichte des Neuen Testaments an der Universität Münster.

Dr. theol. Gerd Theißen ist Professor für Neutestamentliche Theologie an der Universität Heidelberg.

Jürgen Zangenberg ist Professor für Neues Testament und Frühchristliche Literatur an der Universität Leiden.
The Qumran coins (hoard and single finds) are worthy of a novel. They were perfectly examined by H. Seyrig and A. Spijkerman, then the popular conviction spread that the coins had been lost. In fact, they were always kept where they had been classified. Now they are finally published and provide the possibility to suggest that Qumran was a very open centre for trade and transactions, at least from finally the end of the second century BC until the destruction of the site in 70/72 CE.This documentation provides a new reasoning on effective data - not on assumptions.
The Qumran coins are finally published and provide the possibility to suggest that Qumran was a very open centre for trade and transactions.Everyone has written about the Qumran coins without having seen them. Finally: here they are!
The Qumran coins are finally published and provide the possibility to suggest that Qumran was a very open centre for trade and transactions.

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