9781566634014
Death, Burial, and Afterlife in the Biblical World: How the Israelites and Their Neighbors Treated the Dead share button
Rachel S. Hallote
Format Hardcover
Dimensions 6.30 (w) x 8.62 (h) x 0.95 (d)
Pages 256
Publisher Dee, Ivan R. Publisher
Publication Date November 2001
ISBN 9781566634014
Book ISBN 10 1566634016
About Book

While the religion of the Bible has long fascinated readers and scholars, the Israelite attitude toward death remains clouded in mystery even though certain mortuary customs have been passed intact through the ages into modern Judaism. The inherently conservative nature of burial practices and related beliefs explains why, despite being vilified by kings, a Cult of the Dead survived for centuries among the common people. Rachel Hallote's fascinating book examines the archaeological, literary, and artistic evidence for the burial practices of biblical times, their antecedents and successors. Ms. Hallote traces Judaic attitudes toward the dead across the centuries, as burial practices were transformed by the Jews encounter with Persia, Greece, and Rome, and their evolution into the practices of modern Judaism and Christianity. She carries the story forward to the present, with its complex interplay of religious, political, and social beliefs that characterize Western attitudes toward death, burial, and afterlife. While Israelites and early Jews would regularly tamper with their graves, pushing skeletons aside and collecting bones, such rituals are now regarded as desecration—proving that even death can be politicized.

Reviews

CHOICE

[Hallotte's book] definitely deserves a place in the collections of most academic libraries.
— Wade Kotter

Jerusalem Post

Full of fascinating, albeit religiously controversial material.

Pennsylvania State University

A sparkling synthesis of the land of Israel to this day...masterful control...a wonderful read.
— Baruch Halpern

Religous Studies Review

This book, suitable for a lay or profession audience, provides a highly readable and engaging non-technical and general introduction to the topic of death and the afterlife in ancient Isreal through modern times.
— Killebrew, Ann E.

Ann E. Killebrew

This book...provides a highly readable and engaging non-technical and general introduction ...
Religious Studies Review

Choice

Hallote presents a compelling picture of death and dying in ancient Israel...[it] definitely deserves a place in...academic libraries.

Jerusalem Post

Full of fascinating, albeit religiously controversial, material.