Early Judaism- A Comprehensive Overview

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institution of military settlement continued to be an important anchor for
Macedonian control in the region, and that Jews could and did acquire
power and prominence in other areas of life through that initial channel.
Another avenue of inquiry into the history of third-century Palestine
is afforded by coinage. A series of small silver denomination, dubbed by
numismatists “Yehud coins,” crosscuts the boundary between the Persian
and Hellenistic eras, and is coextensive with the period of Ptolemaic rule.
Two features of these coins have attracted historical notice. The first is the
fact that the name of the local governor (who apparently had acted as the
minting authority under the Persians) disappears from the third-century
issues. This absence, combined with the centrality of high priests in the lit-
erary sources, has led many to the conclusion that the Jewish high priest
assumed an enlarged secular role under the Ptolemies. In addition to the
Letter of Aristeasand the Tobiad romance, other texts referential to this pe-
riod (1 Macc. 12:20-23; Sirach 50; 3 Maccabees 2; HecataeusapudDiodorus
40.3.5-6) are unanimous in presenting the high priest as representative and
leader of the Jewish people. These portraits may well be idealized, but the
presumption that they reflect some degree of reality remains a defensible
hypothesis. The modification of the coin legendYehudtoYehudahon the
later groups may indicate an administrative reorganization (perhaps dur-
ing the reign of Ptolemy II). Advocates of the high priest-as-political-
leader thesis often see the coins as indirect corroboration that the office
was melding into a combination of cultic, diplomatic, and municipal roles.
Enticing as these theories are, the numismatic evidence remains mute and
therefore amenable to other interpretations. Whatever else they may point
to, the coins do reveal that the coming of Ptolemaic rule did not involve a
total break with existing institutions.
But Ptolemaic rule was not to last. Seleucus I’s claim upon the lands of
the Levant was never forgotten by his heirs, who, over the course of the
third century, launched no fewer than five successive campaigns to recover
the region. The last of these, fought between 202 and 198, definitively
wrested Palestine from the Ptolemies, ushering in a century of Seleucid
dominance (see map 4).

Antiochus III


With the reign of Antiochus III (223-187b.c.e.), Jewish history became in-
extricably bound up with the fortunes of the Seleucid dynasty. When he

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chris seeman and adam kolman marshak

EERDMANS -- Early Judaism (Collins and Harlow) final text
Tuesday, October 09, 2012 12:03:50 PM

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