Jerusalem Against RomeWhile conquering the world, Rome encountered a great number of peoples around the Mediterranean. We know very little about how these populations viewed their conquerors. The Jews were the only people to offer a comprehensive view of Rome over a great span of time. They expressed it in a rich corpus of Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic sources, reflecting the evolution of the relations between Jews and Romans: from alliance and friendship to tensions and revolt, culminating for the Jews in temporary compliance to foreign domination together with hopeful expectations for redemption. The image of Rome which emerges from apocryphal, Talmudic and Midrashic literature durably shaped the Jewish political, moral and eschatological vision of the world and history. |
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Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
FROM FRIENDSHIP TO DISILLUSIONMENT | 7 |
ROME BEFORE 66 B C E AS SEEN BY PHILO | 41 |
FLAVIUS JOSEPHUS HISTORIAN OF | 75 |
ROME AND THE DESTRUCTION OF | 111 |
The punishment of Rome and the return of Nero | 122 |
The events of Hadrians reign | 167 |
From Antonine the Pious to Diocletian | 193 |
Aphrodite | 325 |
Dionysius or Mithra? | 333 |
Popular beliefs and magic practices | 342 |
The question of the imperial cult | 348 |
THE MORAL IMAGE OF ROME | 365 |
Moral judgement of Rome in rabbinic sources | 380 |
APOCALYPTIC THEMES BEFORE 70 | 421 |
THE ROLE OF APOCALYPTICAL IDEAS | 439 |
CONSCIOUSNESS OF ROMAN POWER | 207 |
The Senate | 216 |
Local administration | 227 |
Economic power | 242 |
THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A MODUS | 265 |
From conciliation to resignation | 293 |
THE IMAGE OF PAGANISM AND THE | 305 |
ROME AT THE END OF THE FIRST CEN | 455 |
The exasperation of Messianic expectancy and its historical | 477 |
APOCALYPSE DENIAL AND PERSISTENCE | 489 |
CONCLUSION | 525 |
List of abbreviations | 531 |
565 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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