Abstract

The perception of Persia in Judaean/Jewish texts from antiquity contributed to the construction of a Judaean/Jewish identity. Genesis 14 gives an example of this; in it, Abra(ha)m wages war with a coalition headed by King Chedorlaomer of Elam. The article argues that Genesis 14 is one of the latest additions to the patriarchal narratives (Genesis 12–36), composed in the Persian or early Hellenistic period. It was conceived and used as an ethnic identity-forming story. The characters in the narrative represented groups and nations in the neighbourhood of the province of Judah. Abra(ha)m was perceived as the ancestor of the Judaeans and the inhabitants of the province Beyond-the-River. The King of Elam represented the Persian Empire. The article uses redaction criticism to argue that Genesis 14 is among the latest additions to the patriarchal narrative in the late Persian or Hellenistic period. Moreover, it uses a combination of philological and historical methods to argue that the description of Abra(ha)m as hāʿibrî (traditionally translated “the Hebrew,” Gen 14: 13) characterises him as a person from the region Eber-nāri (Beyond-the-River). The article uses similar methods to argue that the names of people and places in Genesis 14 referred to political entities in and around Judah. Eventually, the article uses Anthony D. Smith’s theory of ethnic community and elements from postcolonial theory as “reading lenses” and a framework for analysing Genesis 14. Reading this way underscores that Genesis 14 originated and worked as an ethnic identity-forming story.

Highlights

  • The article uses redaction criticism to argue that Genesis 14 is among the latest additions to the patriarchal narrative in the late Persian or Hellenistic period

  • The article uses similar methods to argue that the names of people and places in Genesis 14 referred to political entities in and around Judah

  • The narrative in Genesis 14 chronicles the campaign of King Chedorlaomer of Elam and his coalition and the patriarch Abram’s war with the invaders

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Summary

Introduction

The narrative in Genesis 14 chronicles the campaign of King Chedorlaomer of Elam and his coalition and the patriarch Abram’s war with the invaders. Foes of Abram) asks what nations and territories the names of Abram’s friends and enemies referred to, provided that Genesis 14* was composed in the Persian or early Hellenistic period. It asks if the phrase “Abram hā ibrî” denotes Abram as an individual coming from the region Eber-nāri (Beyond-the-River). Smith’s theory of ethnic community advances our understanding of how the text in antiquity may have contributed to the construction and maintenance of a Judaean/Jewish ethnic identity It hints at how elements of postcolonial theory can enrich a historically oriented and sociologically informed reading of Genesis 14*

Genesis 14 and Its Literary Context
Date of Composition of Genesis 14*
What Triggered the Composition of Genesis 14*?
Samuel 8
The Reference and Perception of Elam and the Other Friends and Foes of Abram
Abram the One from Beyond-the-River
13–17. Leiden
Full Text
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