The Ten Lost Tribes. A World History - Zvi Ben-Dor Benite

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  1. Commodianus,Commodiani Carmina, 176. Commodianus is referring here to
    Esdras 13 : 40. On Commodianus and Esdras, see Bergren, “People Coming from the
    East.” See also Robinson, “Introduction.” Citing this verse, Richard Bauckham com-
    ments, “this is clearly no longer the real geography of the historical diaspora of the
    northern Israelites, but a mythical place beyond the known world.” I would also stress
    that echoed here are real geographical considerations in placing this mythical place
    beyond Persia. See Bauckham,Gospel Women, 102.

  2. Babylonian Talmud, Qiddushin, 72 a. On these locations, see Neubauer,
    Ge ́ographie, 372 – 374.

  3. Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin, 94 a.

  4. Moazami, “Millennialism,” 1 – 16.

  5. Anderson,Alexander’s Gate, 62.

  6. MidrashSifra, ch. 8 , 4. Cited also in Neubauer, “Where Are the Ten Tribes?”
    I: 20.

  7. Neubauer, “Where Are the Ten Tribes?” I: 20.

  8. Mishnah, Sanhedrin, 10 : 10.

  9. Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin, 110 b.

  10. MidrashBereshith Rabba, 73 , 6. All Midrashim appear in Eisenstein,Otsar
    Midrashim.

  11. Palestinian Talmud, Sanhedrin, 53 b. This is Neubauer’s translation with my
    emendments.

  12. MidrashPesikta Rabbati, 31. Biblical Riblah is in Babylon, but located also in
    Syria and therefore is an equivalent for Antiochia. This translation is from Braude,
    Pesikta Rabbati, 617.

  13. MidrashLamentationsRabbah, 2 : 5.

  14. MidrashNumbers Rabbah, 16 : 25.

  15. Neubauer, “Where Are the Ten Tribes?” I: 20.

  16. Etheridge,The Targums; Targum Yonathan;Exodus 34 : 10.

  17. Midrash‘Eser Galuyot, in Jellinek,Bet ha-Midrash, 113 – 116.

  18. Neubauer, “Where Are the Ten Tribes?” IV: 412 ; Friedlaender, “Jews of Arabia.”

  19. Jones,Pliny, 10 : 392 – 394. On Pliny’s work as imperial project, see Murphy,
    Pliny the Elder’s Natural History.

  20. Josephus,Works of Flavius Josephus, 450.

  21. Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin, 65 a.

  22. Another interpretation of ‘Aqiva’s martyrdom is in Boyarin,Dying for God,
    107 – 108 , and passim.

  23. Feldman,Jew and Gentile, 158 – 161. However, see also Michael, “Jewish
    Sabbath”; Gandz, “Origin of the Planetary Week”; Zafran, “Saturn and the Jews”;
    Broughall, “Pattern of the Days”; Bentwich, “Graeco-Roman View of Jews”; Bruce,
    “Tacitus on Jewish History.” There is also a highly relevant connection between Saturn
    and messianism. Kabbalah scholar Moshe Idel, has recently ventured to make precisely
    such connections. By way of introducing a new interpretation of the 17 th-century
    “messiah” Sabbatai Zvi, and aiming to “broaden the pertinent contexts of the emergence
    and expansion of Sabbataianism,” Idel points to the connection between the name


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