MARC 主機 00000cam a2200769Ii 4500 001 ocn908072450 003 OCoLC 005 20151102133154.0 008 150427t20152015enkab b 000 0 eng d 020 1784911062 020 9781784911065 035 (OCoLC)908072450|z(OCoLC)910078354 040 YDXCP|beng|erda|cYDXCP|dOCLCO|dZCU|dUAB|dCDX|dNDD|dDRU |dNhCcYME 050 4 BS580.D3|bR59 2015 090 BS580.D3|bR59 2015 100 1 Rodan, Simona,|eauthor. 245 10 Aegean mercenaries in light of the Bible :|bclash of cultures in the story of David and Goliath /|cSimona Rodan. 264 1 Oxford [England] :|bArchaeopress Publishing,|c[2015] 264 4 |c℗♭2015. 300 iv, 112 pages :|billustrations, maps ;|c25 cm. 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent. 337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia. 338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier. 504 Includes bibliographical references (pages 103-112) 600 00 David,|cKing of Israel. 907 .b76521291|b04-12-16|c10-02-15 910 RDA ENRICHED 910 ybp 910 Backstage 910 TOC 910 Hathi Trust report SPM 910 BROWNu 970 01 |tList of Figures|piii 970 01 |tIntroduction|p1 970 11 |l1.|tAegean mercenaries and their role in the Near East and in Egypt since the 8th century BCE|p4 970 11 |l2.|tAegean mercenaries in the Bible|p9 970 11 |lA.|tResearch approaches to the story of the duel between David and Goliath and the figure of Goliath|p12 970 11 |lA.1.|tThe story of the duel has no historical basis|p13 970 11 |lA.2.|tThe story was created and edited after David's period (8th century BCE till the Second Temple period)|p13 970 11 |lA.3.|tThe story was written around the time of David|p21 970 11 |lB.|tWho were the opponents in the duel and when did the event take place?|p27 970 11 |lC.|tThe defensive armament of Goliath and conclusions about his identity and name|p29 970 11 |lC.1.|tThe ethos of military arms and shields in Greece and Israel|p29 970 11 |lC.2.|tThe development of hoplite armor|p31 970 11 |lC.3.|tComparison between the armor of Goliath and the hoplite armor|p40 970 11 |lC.3.1.|tThe armor of Goliath and its heavy weight|p40 970 11 |lC.3.2.|tThe shield bearer of Goliath|p40 970 11 |lC.3.3.|tThe helmet of Goliath|p41 970 11 |lC.4.|tDiversionary tactics|p42 970 11 |lC.5.|tHow did ⁺ђ₀đ₁і₀ł₀¬₀ł₀ı₁₁ѓ₀ł₀ℓ' turn into ⁺ђGoliath'|p47 970 11 |lD.|tThe name is the message: four proofs|p50 970 11 |lD.1.|tParallel instances of a military equipment item turning into a personal name or epithet|p50 970 11 |lD.2.|tThe Philistine warrior was nameless|p52 970 11 |lD.3.|tThere are multiple ⁺ђGoliaths'|p53 970 11 |lD.4.|tNames of additional biblical foreign warriors which derive from military terms|p54 970 11 |lE.|tWho was the enemy represented by Goliath? The Saites and their Aegean mercenaries|p61 970 11 |lF.|tSaite-Aegean myths in a distorted mirror|p73 970 11 |lF.1.|tThe armor and helmet that saved the nation and its king|p73 970 11 |lF.2.|tDeliverance of the army by a hero in a duel with an armed giant|p79 970 11 |lG.|tThe story of the duel in light of the biblical attitude to the Babylonian exiles and the Egyptian diaspora|p82 970 01 |tConclusion|p98 970 01 |tBibliography|p103 970 01 |lA.|tLiterary sources and commentaries|p103 970 01 |lB.|tModern studies|p105 970 01 |tAbbreviations|p112 998 r0001|b10-02-15|cm|da|e-|feng|genk|h0|i1 998 r0001|b10-02-15|cm|da|e-|feng|genk|h0|i1
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