1 5 1 .20 6 . 15 : Date Prof. Gershon Galil : Name Curriculum Vitae and List of Publications I. Curriculum Vitae 1. Personal Details Name: Gershon Galil Marital Status: Married (+ two sons and a daughter) Citizenship and Identity Card Number: Israelite, 65333882 Permanent Address: Sitvanit 10, Kiriat Tiv'on Home Telephone Number: 04-9530978 Office Address and Phone: Department of Jewish History, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa, 31905, ISRAEL. Phone: 04-8240948 Electronic Address: [email protected]Telefax Number: 04-8252037 2. Higher Education DEGREE DEPARTMENT INSTITUTE DATE B.A. History Jewish History The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1711 Teaching Certificate School of Education The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1711 Ph.D. Jewish History The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1711
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51.206.15: Date Prof. Gershon Galil: Name
Curriculum Vitae and List of Publications
I. Curriculum Vitae
1. Personal Details
Name: Gershon Galil
Marital Status: Married (+ two sons and a daughter)
Citizenship and Identity Card Number: Israelite, 65333882
Permanent Address: Sitvanit 10, Kiriat Tiv'on
Home Telephone Number: 04-9530978
Office Address and Phone: Department of Jewish History, University of Haifa, Mount
6. Biblical studies (see mainly my commentaries on the Books of Joshua
and 1 Chronicles); D 12, 12a
7. Socio-economic studies (see mainly my last book The Lower Stratum
Families in the Neo-Assyrian Period; C/28: Financing of Private
Commercial Enterprises in the Neo-Assyrian Period: KAV 121 and
other Related Texts from Aššur [published in SAAB XV];
C/29–30, 36; D/4, 7, 11; E/3 and more).
In the next few years I plan to work on a book entitled The Deuteronomistic Composition,
Past, Present and Future which will concentrate on the great composition of the
Deuteronomist. This book will be divided into three parts and 12 chapters. The unity of the
composition will be studied in the first part, which will contain chapters on its structure and
chronological framework, as well as the relation between the book of Jeremiah and the books
of Deuteronomy, Joshua–Kings. I will argue that the distinct resemblances in content and
form between the Deuteronomistic editing in Deuteronomy, Joshua–Kings, on the one hand,
and in Jeremiah, on the other, may have been that of a single person, who in the mid-sixth
century BCE prepared a wide-ranging history of Israel from Moses to Jeremiah. The message
of the composition is one of hope and consolation: the destruction and the exile are not
presented as a dead end, and are not the finis of the relationship between God and his people:
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on the contrary, this catastrophe is merely the start of a new path. The bond between God and
Israel is eternal, and the Israelites will know restoration and redemption. The second part of
the book will study the formation of these six books, and the third part will concentrate on the
theological and historical perceptions of the Deuteronomist.
I also aim to complete my study on the Upper Stratum families in the Neo-Assyrian period
(8th
–6th
centuries BCE). I have studied about 1200 Akkadian texts relating to these 250
families, and I intend to publish my research in a special volume entitled The Upper Stratum
Families in the Neo-Assyrian Period.
BOOKS IN PREPARATION
1. The Deuteronomistic Composition: Past, Present and Future
Assyrian Period-The Upper Stratum Families in the Neo 2.
ARTICLES IN PREPARATION
1. Prices in the Neo-Assyria Period: I. Slaves – 45 pp.
2. Hezekiah in the Maelstrom between Sennacherib and Shabataka: Goals, Plans and
Achievements.
3. Joshua and Mosses in the Book of Joshua
4. The New Aramaic Inscription from Jabesh Gilead: Language and History (with U.
Schattner-Rieser) – Eretz Israel 32 (2015).
5. The Historicity of the Kingdom of David and Solomon: Biblical and Extra-Biblical data
6. Grants and Decrees as a Historical Source: How to Use and to Deal with Them,
in G-B. Lanfranchi, R. Mattila, R. Rollinger (eds.), Writing Neo-Assyrian History: Sources,
Problems and Approaches. Proceedings of the International Meeting, University of Helsinki,
September 22nd – 25th, 2014 (State Archives of Assyria Studies), Helsinki 2016.
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Professor Gershon Galil
List of Publications 1983-2014
1983 1. The Genealogies of the Tribe of Judah, Ph. D. Dissertation, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1983, pp. 354 + xxxv (Supervisor: Prof. Z. Kallai). 2. Entries in Genesis, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1983 (Hebrew). 3. Entries in Jeremiah, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1983 (Hebrew). 4. Editor and Coordinator of Jeremiah, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1983 (Hebrew). 1984 5. The Administrative Districts of the Judean Hill Area, Zion, 49 (1984), pp. 205-224 (Hebrew). 6. Pristhood and Kingship in the Genealogy of the House of Aaron, Beth Miqra, 30 (1984), pp. 168-172 (Hebrew). 7. The Land of Dan, Tarbitz, 54 (1984), pp. 1-19 (Hebrew). 8. Entries in Ezekiel, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1984 (Hebrew). 9. Editor and Coordinator of Ezekiel, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1984 (Hebrew). 1985 10. J. Wellhausen, The Judean Clanss and Families (=De Gentibus et Familiis Judaeis): Preface, Notes and Translation from the Latin (in collaboration with L. Ulmann) Jerusalem (The Dinur Center) 1985, pp. 10+44+45* (Hebrew). 11. The Sons of Judah and the Sons of Aaron in Biblical Historiography, Vetus Testamentum, 35 (1985), pp. 488-495. 12. The Administrative Division of the Shephelah, Shnaton: An Annual for Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, 9 (1985), pp. 55-71 (Hebrew). 13. Entries in 1 Samuel, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1985 (Hebrew). 14. Entries in Ezra-Nehemiah, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1985 (Hebrew). 15. Editor and Coordinator of 1 Samuel, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1985 (Hebrew). 16. Editor and Coordinator of Ezra-Nehemiah, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1985 (Hebrew).
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1986 17. Entries in Numbers, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1986 (Hebrew). 18. Entries in Isaiah, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1986 (Hebrew). 19. Editor and Coordinator of Numbers, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1986 (Hebrew). 20. Editor and Coordinator of Isaiah, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1986 (Hebrew). 1987 21. The Administrative Division of the Kingdom of Judah in Light of the Epigraphical Data, Zion, 52 (1987), pp. 495-509 (Hebrew). 22. Entries in Leviticus, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1987 (Hebrew). 23. Editor and Coordinator of Leviticus, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1987 (Hebrew). 24 . Editor and Coordinator of Song of Songs, Ruth and Lamentations, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1987 (Hebrew). 1988 25. Sennacherib Versus Hezekiah: A New Look at the Assyrian Campaign to the West in 701 BCE, Zion, 53 (1988), pp. 1-12 (Hebrew). 26. On the use of Epigraphical Sources for the Study of Biblical History, Zion, 53 (1988), pp. 214-216 (Hebrew). 27 . Editor and Coordinator of Kohelet, Ester, and Daniel, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1988 (Hebrew). 1989 28. Entries in 2 Samuel, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1987 (Hebrew). 29. Editor and Coordinator of 2 Samuel, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Ramat-Gan (Revivim) 1987 (Hebrew). 1990 30. The Pre-Davidic Period in Chronicles, Zion, 55 (1990), pp. 1-26 (Hebrew). 31. Geba?, Beth-Dagon and the Boundary between Asher and Zebulun, Cathedra, 57 (1990), pp. 3-18 (Hebrew). 32. The Formation of Judah, Proceedings of the Tenth World Congress of Jewish Studies, Division A, The Bible and its World, Jerusalem 1990, pp. 1-8 (Hebrew).1991 33. The Chronicler's Genealogies of Ephraim, Biblische Notizen, 56 (1991), pp. 11-14.
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34. The Genealogy of Ephraim in I Chronicles 7, Beth Miqra, 36 (1991), pp. 139-143 (Hebrew) 35. A New Look at the Cronology of the Last Kings of Judah, Zion, 56 (1991), pp. 5-19 (Hebrew). 36. The Babylonian Calendar and the Chronology of the Last Kings of Judah, Biblica, 72 (1991), pp. 367-378. 1992 37. Pirathon, Timnatha and the Fortifications of Bacchides, Cathedra, 63 (1992), pp. 22-30 (Hebrew). 38. Judah and Assyria in the Sargonid Period, Zion, 57 (1992), pp. 111-133 (Hebrew). 39. Geba?-Ephraim and the Northern Boundary of the Kingdom of Judah in the Days of Josiah, Tarbitz, 61 (1992), pp. 1-13 (Hebrew). 40. Conflicts between Assyrian Vassals, State Archives of Assyria Bulletin,6 (1992), pp. 55-63. 1993 41. Pirathon, Parathon and Timnatha, Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palastina-Vareins, 109 (1993), pp. 49-53. 42. Geba?-Ephraim and the Northern Boundary of Judah in the Days of Josiah, Revue biblique, 100 (1993), pp. 358-367. 43. The Land of Israel in the Monarchic Period, The Hebrew Encyclopedia, Supp. VI, Jerusalem - Tel Aviv 1993, col. 431-461 (Hebrew). 44. Entries in Exodus, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1993 (Hebrew). 45. Entries in 1 Kings, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1993 (Hebrew). 46. Entries in 2 Kings, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1993 (Hebrew). 47. Editor and Coordinator of Exodus, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1993 (Hebrew). 48. Editor and Coordinator of 1 Kings, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1993 (Hebrew). 49. Editor and Coordinator of 2 Kings, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1993 (Hebrew). 1994 50. The Book of Joshua. A Critical Commentary on the Book of Joshua, with an Introduction (in collaboration with Y. Zakovitz; Olam Hatanach), Jerusalem-Tel Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1994, 224 pp. (Hebrew) 51. The Crystallization of the Book of Joshua, Proceedings of the Eleventh World Congress of Jewish Studies, Division A, The Bible and its World, Jerusalem 1994, pp. 47-53 (Hebrew). 52. Entries in Judges, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1994 (Hebrew).
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53. Editor and Coordinator of Judges, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1994 (Hebrew). 54. Editor and Coordinator of The Twelve Minor Prophets - vol. I, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1994 (Hebrew). 1995 55. The Book of I Chronicles. A Critical Commentary on the Book of Chronicles, with an Introduction (in collaboration with M. Garsiel, M. Kochman and Y. Amit; Olam Hatanach), Jerusalem-Tel Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995, 288 pp. (Hebrew) 56. The Last Years of the Kingdom of Israel and the Fall of Samaria, The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, 57 (1995), pp. 52-65. 57. New Look at the "Azekah Inscription", Revue biblique, 102 (1995), pp. 321-329. 58. Entries in Deuteronomy, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew). 59. Entries in 2 Chronicles, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew). 60. Editor and Coordinator of Deuteronomy, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew). 61. Editor and Coordinator of 2 Chronicles, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew). 62. Editor and Coordinator of The Twelve Minor Prophets - vol. II, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew). 63. Editor and Coordinator of The Psalms - vol. II, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew). 1996 64. The Chronology of the Kings of Israel and Judah, Leiden-New York-Koln, E. J. Brill, 1996, (SHCANE 9) XIX + 180 pp. 65. The Chronological Data in the Greek Text of Kings, Shnaton: An Annual for Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, 11 (1996), pp. 56-77 (Hebrew). 66. Review: Who wrote the Book of Joshua, HAARETZ, July 5, 1996, pp. 5, 26 (Hebrew). 67. Entries in Job, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1996 (Hebrew). 68. Editor and Coordinator of Job, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1996 (Hebrew). 69. Editor and Coordinator of The Psalms - vol. I, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew). 70. Editor and Coordinator of Proverbs, Olam Hatanach: A Critical Commentary of the Bible, Jerusalem-Tel-Aviv (Davidson-Atai) 1995 (Hebrew).
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1997 71. The Canaanite City States in the 14th Century BCE, Cathedra, 84 (1997), pp. 7-52 (Hebrew). 1998 72. Ashtaroth in the Amarna Period, Israel Oriental Studies, 18 (1998), pp. 373-385. 73. The Economic Activity of Wealthy Families in Nineveh in the 8th and 7th Centuries BCE, in I. Bartal and I. Gafni (eds.), Sexuality and the Family in History, Jerusalem 1998, pp. 27-41 (Hebrew). 74. Jerusalem from the Late 4th Millennium BCE to 586 BCE, in Y. Shavit (ed.), Jerusalem: A Biography, Tel Aviv 1998, pp. 13-37 (Hebrew). 1999 75. The Historical Reliability of the Book of Chronicles, in: Y. Avishur and R. Deutsch (eds.), Michael: Historical, Epigraphical and Biblical Studies in Honor of Prof. Michael Heltzer, Tel Aviv - Jaffa 1999, pp. 55*-62* (Hebrew). 76. Malamat, Abraham (1922- ), in: J. H. Hayes (ed.), Dictionary of Biblical Interpretation, Nashville (Abingdon Press) 1999, pp. 113-114. 2000 77. Studies in Historical Geography and Biblical Historiography presented to Zecharia Kallai, G. Galil and M. Weinfeld (eds.), Leiden-Boston- Koln, E.J.BRILL, 2000 (= Supplement to Vetus Tesatamentum, LXXXI), 280 pp. 78. A New Look at the Inscriptions of Tiglath-Pileser III, Biblica, 81 (2000), pp. 511-520. 79. The Historical Context of Judah 19: 40-48, Biblische Notizen, 104 (2000), pp. 11-15. 80. The Boundaries of Aram-Damascus, in: Studies in Historical Geography and Biblical Historiography presented to Zecharia Kallai, G. Galil and M. Weinfeld (eds.), Leiden, 2000 (= Supplement to Vetus Tesatamentum, LXXXI), pp. 35-41. 2001 81. Israel and Assyria, Haifa - Tel Aviv(Haifa University Press and Zmora-Bitan) 2001, 184 pp. This book was awarded the BAHAT PRIZE, 2000 (the first prize). 82. A Re-arrangement of the Fragments of the Tel Dan Inscription and the Relations between Israel and Aram, Palestine Exploration Quarterly, 133 (2001), pp. 16-21. 83. The Tel Dan Inscription, in: Z. Talshir et al. (eds.), Homage to Samuel: Studies in the World of the Bible, Jerusalem 2001, pp. 67-74 (Hebrew). 84. The Massage of the Book of Kings in Relation to the Deuteronomy and Jeremiah, Bibliotheca Sacra, 158 (2001), pp. 406-414. 85. The Jerahmeelites and the Negeb of Judah, The Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society, 28 (2001), pp. 33-42. 86. Two Neo-Assyrian Tablets from Tel Hadid, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Breves et Utilitaires, 2001/3, pp. 68-69.
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2002 87. Shalmaneser III in the West, Revue biblique,109 (2002), pp. 40-56. 2004 88. The Message of the Book of Kings and the Deuteronomistic History, in: M. Heltzer and M.Malul (eds.), Teshurot LaAvishur: Studies in the Bible and the Ancient Near East, in Hebrew and Semitic Languages. Festschrift Presented to Prof. Yitzhak Avishur on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday, Tel Aviv - Jaffa 2004, pp. 179-184 (Hebrew). 89. The "Synchronistic History" and the Book of Chronicles: Reconsidering the Reliability of Ancient Near Eastern Texts, Henoch, 26 (2004), pp. 136-144. 90. The Chronological Framework of the Deuteronomistic History, Biblica, 85 (2004), pp. 413-421. 2005 91. The Formation of I Chr 2:3-4:23 and the Election of King David, in: Y. Sefati, P. Artzi, Ch. Cohen, B.L.Eichler and V.A.Hurowitz (eds.), "An Experienced Scribe who neglects nothing", Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honor of Jacob Klein, Bethesda, MD 2005, pp. 707-717 2006 92. Financing of Private Commercial Enterprises in the Neo-Assyrian Period: KAV 121 and other Related Texts from Assur, State Archives of Assyria Bulletin, 15 (2006), pp. 21-41. 93. Review of M. CHRISTINE TETLEY, The Reconstructed Chronology of the Divided Kingdom (Winona Lake, IN: Esenbrauns, 2005), pp. xiv+194", The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, 68 (2006), pp. 131-133. 94. Review of S. Ahituv, Haktav VeHaMiktav, Jerusalem 2005, 465 pp.", Qadmoniot, 39 (2006), pp. 126-127 (Hebrew) 95. ADD 79 (=SAA XIV 209) reconsidered, Nouvelles Assyriologiques Breves et Utilitaires, 2006/1, no. 02, p. 2. 2007 96. The Lower Stratum Families in the Neo-Assyrian Period, Leiden - Boston (BRILL) 2007 (CHANE 27), xviii + 403 pp. 97. David and Hazael: War, Peace, Stones and Memory, Palestine Exploration Journal 139 (2007), pp. 79-84. 98. Israelite Exiles in Media: A New Look at ND 2443+, Beth Miqra, 52 (2007), pp. 41-60 (Hebrew) 99. E-Review of R. W. Klein, 1 Chronicles: A Commentary (Hermeneia: A critical and Historical Commentary on the Bible; Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2006), pp. xxi + 561.",Review of Biblical Literature, 5/2007, pp. 1-4. 100. "David and Hazael: War, Peace, Stones and Memory ", Palestine Exploration Journal, 139 (2007), pp. 79-84. 101. The Rise and Fall of Two Regional Empires, SHNATON: An Annual for Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, 17 (2007), pp. 3-14.
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2008 102. A New Look at a Neo-Assyrian sale of "Land and People", in: M. Cogan and D. Kahn (eds.), Treasures on Camel's Humps: Historical and Literary Studies presented to Israel Eph'al, Jerusalem 2008, pp. 71-82. 103. Review of Shalom M. Paul, Isaiah 40-66: Introduction and Commentary (MIKRA LEYISRA'EL). I-II, Tel-Aviv and Jerusalem 2008, pp. xvi + 619, HAARETZ , 10.6.2008, p. 4 (Hebrew). 104. Polemics and Propaganda in the Deuteronomistic History", in S. Bar (ed.), In the Hill-Country, and in the Shephelah, and in the Arabah (Joshua 12, 8): Studies and Reseaerches Presented to Adam Zertal in the Thirties Anniversary of the Manasseh Hill-Country Survey, Jerusalem 2008, pp. 239-247 (Hebrew). 105. Alltagstexte aus neuassyrischen Archiven und Bibliotheken der Stadt Assur. By Betina Faist. Studien zu den Assur-Texten, vol. 3. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2007. Pp. xx + 250, plates, Journal of the American Oriental Society, 128 (2008), pp. 7-8. 2009 106. Homeland and Exile: Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of Bustenay Oded, G. Galil, M. Geller and A. Millard (eds.), Leiden - Boston, BRILL, 2009 (= Supplement to Vetus Tesatamentum, CXXX), xxiv + 643 pp. 107. Israelite Exiles in Media: A New Look at ND 2443+, Vetus Testamentum 59 (2009), pp. 71-79. 108. The Formation of the Clan of Hur, in: S. Vargon et al. (eds.), Studies in Bible and Exegesis, 8 (2009), pp. 409-425 (Hebrew) - (Refereed). 109.The Galilee between Israel and Damascus, in: Z. Safrai (ed.),Galilee Studies, Ramat-Gan 2009, pp. 26-36. (Hebrew). 110. J. T. Sparks, The Chronicler's Genealogies: Towards anUnderstanding of 1 Chronicles 1-9,
Society of Biblical Literature Academia Biblica 28, Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2008. Pp. xvi +385, Review of Biblical Literature, 7/2009, pp. 1-7. 111. "International Private Commerce in the Neo-Assyrian Period", Eretz Israel, 29 (2009), pp. 92-99 (Hebrew). 112. Appropriation of Land by Officials in the Neo-Assyrian Period, In: G. Galil, M. Geller and A.
and Exile: Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of HomelandMillard (eds.), 119.–pp. 95 Boston 2009 (= Supplement to Vetus Tesatamentum, CXXX), –, Leiden Bustenay Oded
Studies (eds.), et al. . Time and Memory in the Deuteronomistic History, in: M. Garsiel113
195 (Hebrew).–, 10 (2009), pp. 179ble and ExegesisBi in 114. The Early Monarchic Age in Israel: a review of Moshe Garsiel, The Rise of the Monarchy in Israel: Studies in the Book of Samuel, The Open University of Israel, 4 vols., Raanana, Israel 2008
).181 (Hebrew-54 (2009), pp. 172(NS) Beth Miqra
0120
91 (Hebrew).–, 19 (2010), pp. 71Beer Sheva. Forbidden Boundaries: Ideology and Reality, 115
116. The Hebrew Inscription from Khirbet Qeiyafa/Neta'im: Script, Language, Literature
242.–[2010], pp. 193 41 (2009) ,Forschungen-Ugaritand History,
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Kings: The Books ofDates and Calendar in Kings, in: A. Lemaire and B. Halpern (eds.), .117Sources, Composition, Historiography and Reception ), (Supplements to Vetus Testamentum
Leiden – Boston 2010, pp. 427–443. 118. King David's First Decade as King of Jerusalem and his Relations with the Philistines in Light of
New Reifer and A. Faust (eds.), -the Qeiyafa Excavations and Inscription, in: E. Baruch, A. Levy(Hebrew). 71–Gan 2010, pp. 21-, RamatVolume 16 – Studies on Jerusalem
119. The Book of Chronicles: Literature. Historiography and Theology: a review-article of I. Kalimi, The Reshaping of Ancient Israelite History in Chronicles, Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2005, xiii,
arit309 (in collaboration with S-20 (2010), pp. 299 Mo'ed: Annual for Jewish Studies473 pp., Cohen) – (Hebrew). 120. "The secret things belong to the Lord our God" (Deut 29: 29): Retribution in the Persian Period,
94.–39 (2010), pp. 89 Transeuphratène
1120
121. F. M. Fales, Guerre et paix en Assyrie: Religion et impérialisme, Les Conférences de l'École
-1 , 3/2011, pp.Review of Biblical Literature2 Paris: Cerf, 2010, 246 pp., pratique des hautes etudes10.
122. M. Cogan, The Raging Torrent: Historical Inscriptions from Assyria and Babylonia Relating to
-61 (2011), pp. 117Israel Exploration Journal, , Carta, Jerusalem 2008, xiv + 250 pp. Ancient Israel120. 123. Z. Kallai, Studies in Biblical Historiography and Geography: Collection of Studies (Beiträge zur Erforschung des Alten Testaments und des Antiken Judentums 56), Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main,
242.-, 61 (2011), pp. 240Israel Exploration Journal2010. 262 pp.
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124. Polemics and Propaganda in the Deuteronomistic Composition, in G. B. Lanfranchi, Leggo! Studies Presented to Frederick Mario Ponchia (eds.), D. M. Bonacossi, C. Pappi, and S.
.306–Wiesbaden (Harrassowitz Verlag) 2012, pp. 293 ,Fales on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday 125. The Socio-economic Status of the People enumerated in Sales of "Land and People"
Looking at the Assyrian Period, in K. Abraham and J. Fleishman (eds.),-Neoin the , Bethesda Ancient Near East and the Bible Through the same Eyes: A Tribute to Aaron Skaist
MD (CDL Press) 2012, pp. 221-236.
126. Solomon's Temple: Fiction or Reality?, in G. Galil et al (eds.), The Ancient Near East in the 12
th-10
th Centuries BCE: Culture and History, Münster 2012, pp. 137-148.
ZAFRIRA: -TESHURA LE(eds.), et al. Retribution in the Book of Chronicles, in: M. Gruber 127-Studies in the Bible, the History of Israel and the Ancient Near East, Presented to Zafrira Ben
.(Hebrew) 117-Beer Sheva 2012, pp. 109),Barak
1320 128. David, King of Israel, between the Arameans and the Northern and Southern Sea Peoples in
174.–, 44 (2013), pp. 159Forschungen-UgaritLight of New Epigraphic and Archaeological Data 129. "‘yyn ḫlq’ The Oldest Hebrew Inscription from Jerusalem", Strata: Bulletin of the Anglo-Israel Archaeological Society, 31 (2013), pp. 5–26. 130. Solomon's Temple: Fiction or Reality?, in M. Avioz et al. (ed.), Zer Rimmonim. FS Rimmon Kasher, Atlanta, 2013, pp. 117-131 (Hebrew).
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131. "yyn hlq": The Most Ancient Hebrew Inscription from Jerusalem, in: E. Baruch, A. Levy-Reifer 71 –Gan 2013, pp. 21-, RamatVolume 19 – New Studies on Jerusalem), and A. Faust (eds.
(Hebrew).
1420 132. "A Concise History of Palistin/Patin/Unqi/ʿmq in the 11th–9th Centuries BC", Semitica 56 (2014), pp. 75–104.
41.-45 (2014), pp. 27 Transeuphratène3. "The Kingdom of Patin in the 9th Century BC" 31
134. Jerusalem , Hamath and Philistine Gath in the 10th Century BCE, in: E. Baruch, A. Levy-Reifer
71 –Gan 2014, pp. 21-, RamatVolume 20 – New Studies on Jerusalemand A. Faust (eds.), (Hebrew)
Forthcoming 135. The New Aramaic Inscription from Tell Abu al-Kharaz (Jabesh Gilead): Language, Symbolism and History, Eretz Israel 32 (2015; Joseph Naveh Volume; in collaboration with Ursula Schattner-Rieser).
136. A New Look at the History of Jabesh-Gilead (Tell Abu al-Karaz) in Light of New Archaeological and Epigraphic Data Ugarit-Forschungen, 46 (2015).
137. More Neo-Assyrian Families, State Archives of Assyria Bulletin.
138. The Kingdom of Palistin/Patin and the Kingdom of David and Solomon in Light of New Epigraphic and Archaeological Data, in M. Cogan (ed.), Jacob Klein Volume (Israel Academy of Sciences; Hebrew). 139. Grants and Decrees as a Historical Source: How to Use and to Deal with Them, in G-B. Lanfranchi, R. Mattila, R. Rollinger (eds.), Writing Neo-Assyrian History: Sources, Problems and Approaches. Proceedings of the International Meeting, University of Helsinki, September 22
nd–25
th
2014 (State Archives of Assyria Studies), Helsinki, 2016. 140. The Everlasting Love: Past, Present and Future in the Deuteronomistic Composition. 141. Prices in the Neo-Assyria Period: I. Slaves. 142. Hezekiah in the Maelstrom between Sennacherib and Shabataka: Goals, Plans and Achievements.
143. Joshua and Mosses in the Book of Joshua
144. Hezekiah in the Maelstrom between Sennacherib and Shabataka
145. The Historicity of the Kingdom of David and Solomon: Biblical and Extra-Biblical data
146. The Upper Stratum Families in the Neo-Assyrian Period.