Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible, 2020
This volume examines how gender relations were regulated in ancient Near Eastern and biblical law... more This volume examines how gender relations were regulated in ancient Near Eastern and biblical law. The textual corpus examined includes the various pertinent law collections, royal decrees and instructions from Mesopotamia and Hatti, and the three biblical legal collections.
Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible offers an invaluable resource for anyone working on Near Eastern society and culture, and gender in the ancient world more broadly.
Peled, Ilan. 2016. Masculinities and Third Gender: The Origins and Nature of an Institutionalized... more Peled, Ilan. 2016. Masculinities and Third Gender: The Origins and Nature of an Institutionalized Gender Otherness in the Ancient Near East (Alter Orient und Altes Testament, vol. 435). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.
The aim of this book is to track a distinct human phenomenon in the history of the ancient Near East: persons who were born males, but under various social and historical circumstances their masculine identity was considered to be ambiguous. On the basis of this, these persons can be classified as belonging to a third gender They bore specific titles, and were engaged in cult or palace administration. The contexts of their documentation occasionally depict them as possessing or exhibiting traits that were uncharacteristic of the standard social expectations of men in Mesopotamia. The terms that describe these persons were grouped in numerous lexical lists, which supply us with the frame and boundaries of the present research. To a lesser extent, the grouping of these persons is apparent in narrative and literary compositions. The most notable of these titles were gala/kalû, assinnu, kurgarrû and lú-sag / ša rēši. Other similar titles that were documented less frequently were kulu’u, girseqû,tīru, SAG-UR-SAG, pilpilû, nāš pilaqqi, sinnišānu and parû. Their sexual and gender ambiguity was realized in numerous and diverse manners. Occasionally, it bore a clear physiological form, in the shape of castration; sometimes its attributes were external, such as cross-dressing; in other cases, it became apparent through typically feminine behavioral patterns, such as dancing, singing or lamenting. Last but not least, lack of procreativity constituted another form of gender ambiguity, as it contradicted one of the most important gender functionalities of people in the ancient Near East: the siring of offspring. Hence, the common denominator of all these figures appears to have been flawed manliness. Effeminacy was not necessarily the key factor in this case, as some of these figures seem to have been rather masculine. It was sufficient that these persons deviated enough from the customary model of ancient Near Eastern masculinity, in order to be considered as part of this third gender class. The concepts of social “otherness” are essential for demarcating social borders, which, in turn, define patterns of normative social conduct. The present research demonstrated that this human phenomenon of a third gender in the ancient Near East involved mainly the matter of social definitions. Social identity is defined by its limitations: where it begins and ends, and what exists beyond it. The strange, the extreme and the bizarre signify what common, hegemonic, people are not, and therefore mark who common, hegemonic, people actually are. These boundaries are constructed by using social mechanisms of norms and prohibitions. In this sense, the third gender figures were socially constructed, and served social needs of defining norms of conformity.
Table of Contents:
Introduction 1. Aims, Scope, Methodology and Structure of the Book 2. Third Gender: Ambiguous Masculinity and Social Conformity 3. Male Third Gender Figures in the Ancient Near East: History of Research 4. The Formation of Masculinity (and Femininity): Theoretical Perspectives 5. The Features of Hegemonic Masculinity in the Ancient Near East
Chapter 1: Mesopotamian Narrative and Hymnic Text Introduction 1. Inanna/Ištar’s Descent to the Netherworld 2. The Fashioning of the gala 3. Inanna and Ebiḫ 4. Inanna and Enki 5. Lady of Largest Heart 6. This City, which Has Been Looted 7. The Epic of Erra 8. A Myth of Dumuzi 9. Enki and Ninmaḫ 10. Gilgameš and Aga 11. The Curse of Akkad 12. The Lament for Eridu 13. The Debate between Grain and Sheep
Chapter 2: gala, kalû and kulu’u Introduction 1. gala/kalû and gala-maḫ/kalamāḫu 2. kulu’u
Chapter 3: assinnu and kurgarrû Introduction 1. assinnu and kurgarrû in Lexical Lists 2. assinnu and kurgarrû in Administrative and Historical Texts 3. assinnu and Prophecy in Mari and the Ancient Near East 4. assinnu and kurgarrû in Cultic Texts 5. assinnu and kurgarrû in Narrative Texts 6. assinnu and kurgarrû in Omen, Ritual and Incantation Texts
Chapter 4: lú-sag / ša rēši and Castration in the Ancient Near East Introduction 1. lú-sag / ša rēši: Brief Chronological Survey of the Titles 2. lú-sag / ša rēši: The Evidence of Castration 3. Castration from Theoretical and Clinical Perspectives
Chapter 5: Less Known Third Gender Figures Introduction 1. girseqû 2. tiru/tīru 3. SAG-UR-SAG 4. pi-li-pi-li/pilpilû 5. sinnišānu 6. nāš pilaqqi 7. parû
Summary and Conclusions 1. Summaries and Conclusions of Individual Chapters 2. Internal Division to Sub-Categories within the Third Gender 3. Masculinities and Third Gender in the Wider Context:Castration, Homosexuality and Cultic Performance 4. Third Gender and Hegemonic and Subordinate Masculinities 5. In Conclusion: Why Third Gender?
The volume under review offers a study of the realm of marital disputes among the Jews who lived ... more The volume under review offers a study of the realm of marital disputes among the Jews who lived in Islamic Egypt during the first quarter of the second millennium (ca. 1000-1250 CE). As such, it offers insights into the intersection between gender and law among this Jewish community, especially focusing on women's daily coping with their legal status as an inferior gender class within a society that was characteristically male-dominant.
The Routledge Handbook of Emotions in the Ancient Near East, 2022
This chapter explores expressions of contempt, mockery, ridicule, and similar emotions in Akkadia... more This chapter explores expressions of contempt, mockery, ridicule, and similar emotions in Akkadian and Hittite literary compositions.
This article combines theoretical and historical approaches for studying notions of heroism and v... more This article combines theoretical and historical approaches for studying notions of heroism and villainy in ancient Mesopotamia, as reflected in royal propaganda and rhetoric. It focuses on the different manners in which Mesopotamian kings of the second and first millennia BCE constructed the image of their rivals as villains who deviate from the standard characteristics of the heroic ruler. The theoretical framework of the article is based on heroism studies, a recently-established field within the social sciences, which studies the role of heroes and villains in human society. The article utilizes these theoretical considerations for analyzing Mesopotamian royal inscriptions where the ruler's rivals were portrayed as villains. Seven villain-archetypes are identified and discussed, each of which contrasting one or more of the typical heroic traits of the Mesopotamian ruler. By combining sociological, psychological and philological methodologies, this article offers a new perspective on ancient Mesopotamian society and culture.
The ancient Near East is widely regarded as the “cradle of Western civilisation” and the birthpla... more The ancient Near East is widely regarded as the “cradle of Western civilisation” and the birthplace of writing. As such, it was home to the earliest documented compendia we sometimes call “law collections”, and to some of the earliest records of institutionalised religion in human history. In the ancient Near East, these two major systems, official law and organised religion, did not usually intermingle. When they did, they compensated for one another, filling the gaps caused by the limitations of the other.
This article surveys the statutes referring to delict in the ancient Near Eastern law collections... more This article surveys the statutes referring to delict in the ancient Near Eastern law collections. It presents an introductory discussion of delict and of law compendia from Mesopotamia and Hatti, and explains the complexities involved in analysing these sources. Five categories of delict are then studied from qualitative and quantitative points of view: theft, damage, homicide, injury, and perjury. Each category is surveyed and analysed separately, and, finally, several delicts that defy the strict classification to one specific category are discussed.
Animals and their Relation to Gods, Humans and Things in the Ancient World, 2019
Peled, Ilan. 2019. "Categorization and Hierarchy: Animals and their Relations to Gods, Humans and... more Peled, Ilan. 2019. "Categorization and Hierarchy: Animals and their Relations to Gods, Humans and Things in the Hittite World." In: Mattila, R., Fink, S. and Ito, S. (eds.) Animals and their Relation to Gods, Humans and Things in the Ancient World (Studies in Universal and Cultural History). Springer Verlag, Wiesbaden: 79–93.
Gender and Methodology in the Ancient Near East. Proceedings of the Second Workshop held in Barcelona, February 1–3 2017 (edited by Budin, S. L., Cifarelli, M., Garcia-Ventura, A. and Millet Albà, A.), 2018
Identifying gender ambiguity in historical settings—that is, gender markers among past human soci... more Identifying gender ambiguity in historical settings—that is, gender markers among past human societies—can be an elusive endeavor for the modern scholar. Only rarely is it possible to trace aspects of gender ambiguity in ancient texts as well as in archaeological artifacts. This, however, is exactly my aim in this paper. Building upon my past research on hegemonic—and especially, non-hegemonic—masculine identities in the ancient Near East, the case study discussed here involves the male cult attendants of Inanna/Ištar, the Mesopotamian goddess of sexuality and war.
This article compares the ancient Near Eastern and biblical laws pertaining to delict. Since I of... more This article compares the ancient Near Eastern and biblical laws pertaining to delict. Since I offer an in-depth study elsewhere (Peled 2019) of delict-related felonies attested in the different ancient Near Eastern law collections, the present article only touches upon this issue in brief, while focusing on the pertinent biblical laws. The main questions addressed here therefore relate to the manner in which biblical law treated different delicts, and to how similar or different the attitudes to delict were in the extant ancient Near Eastern and biblical legal corpora.
Introduction of the volume "Structures of Power: Law and Gender Across the Ancient Near East and ... more Introduction of the volume "Structures of Power: Law and Gender Across the Ancient Near East and Beyond", Oriental Institute Seminars no. 12 (ed. Ilan Peled, 2017).
Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible, 2020
This volume examines how gender relations were regulated in ancient Near Eastern and biblical law... more This volume examines how gender relations were regulated in ancient Near Eastern and biblical law. The textual corpus examined includes the various pertinent law collections, royal decrees and instructions from Mesopotamia and Hatti, and the three biblical legal collections.
Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible offers an invaluable resource for anyone working on Near Eastern society and culture, and gender in the ancient world more broadly.
Peled, Ilan. 2016. Masculinities and Third Gender: The Origins and Nature of an Institutionalized... more Peled, Ilan. 2016. Masculinities and Third Gender: The Origins and Nature of an Institutionalized Gender Otherness in the Ancient Near East (Alter Orient und Altes Testament, vol. 435). Münster: Ugarit-Verlag.
The aim of this book is to track a distinct human phenomenon in the history of the ancient Near East: persons who were born males, but under various social and historical circumstances their masculine identity was considered to be ambiguous. On the basis of this, these persons can be classified as belonging to a third gender They bore specific titles, and were engaged in cult or palace administration. The contexts of their documentation occasionally depict them as possessing or exhibiting traits that were uncharacteristic of the standard social expectations of men in Mesopotamia. The terms that describe these persons were grouped in numerous lexical lists, which supply us with the frame and boundaries of the present research. To a lesser extent, the grouping of these persons is apparent in narrative and literary compositions. The most notable of these titles were gala/kalû, assinnu, kurgarrû and lú-sag / ša rēši. Other similar titles that were documented less frequently were kulu’u, girseqû,tīru, SAG-UR-SAG, pilpilû, nāš pilaqqi, sinnišānu and parû. Their sexual and gender ambiguity was realized in numerous and diverse manners. Occasionally, it bore a clear physiological form, in the shape of castration; sometimes its attributes were external, such as cross-dressing; in other cases, it became apparent through typically feminine behavioral patterns, such as dancing, singing or lamenting. Last but not least, lack of procreativity constituted another form of gender ambiguity, as it contradicted one of the most important gender functionalities of people in the ancient Near East: the siring of offspring. Hence, the common denominator of all these figures appears to have been flawed manliness. Effeminacy was not necessarily the key factor in this case, as some of these figures seem to have been rather masculine. It was sufficient that these persons deviated enough from the customary model of ancient Near Eastern masculinity, in order to be considered as part of this third gender class. The concepts of social “otherness” are essential for demarcating social borders, which, in turn, define patterns of normative social conduct. The present research demonstrated that this human phenomenon of a third gender in the ancient Near East involved mainly the matter of social definitions. Social identity is defined by its limitations: where it begins and ends, and what exists beyond it. The strange, the extreme and the bizarre signify what common, hegemonic, people are not, and therefore mark who common, hegemonic, people actually are. These boundaries are constructed by using social mechanisms of norms and prohibitions. In this sense, the third gender figures were socially constructed, and served social needs of defining norms of conformity.
Table of Contents:
Introduction 1. Aims, Scope, Methodology and Structure of the Book 2. Third Gender: Ambiguous Masculinity and Social Conformity 3. Male Third Gender Figures in the Ancient Near East: History of Research 4. The Formation of Masculinity (and Femininity): Theoretical Perspectives 5. The Features of Hegemonic Masculinity in the Ancient Near East
Chapter 1: Mesopotamian Narrative and Hymnic Text Introduction 1. Inanna/Ištar’s Descent to the Netherworld 2. The Fashioning of the gala 3. Inanna and Ebiḫ 4. Inanna and Enki 5. Lady of Largest Heart 6. This City, which Has Been Looted 7. The Epic of Erra 8. A Myth of Dumuzi 9. Enki and Ninmaḫ 10. Gilgameš and Aga 11. The Curse of Akkad 12. The Lament for Eridu 13. The Debate between Grain and Sheep
Chapter 2: gala, kalû and kulu’u Introduction 1. gala/kalû and gala-maḫ/kalamāḫu 2. kulu’u
Chapter 3: assinnu and kurgarrû Introduction 1. assinnu and kurgarrû in Lexical Lists 2. assinnu and kurgarrû in Administrative and Historical Texts 3. assinnu and Prophecy in Mari and the Ancient Near East 4. assinnu and kurgarrû in Cultic Texts 5. assinnu and kurgarrû in Narrative Texts 6. assinnu and kurgarrû in Omen, Ritual and Incantation Texts
Chapter 4: lú-sag / ša rēši and Castration in the Ancient Near East Introduction 1. lú-sag / ša rēši: Brief Chronological Survey of the Titles 2. lú-sag / ša rēši: The Evidence of Castration 3. Castration from Theoretical and Clinical Perspectives
Chapter 5: Less Known Third Gender Figures Introduction 1. girseqû 2. tiru/tīru 3. SAG-UR-SAG 4. pi-li-pi-li/pilpilû 5. sinnišānu 6. nāš pilaqqi 7. parû
Summary and Conclusions 1. Summaries and Conclusions of Individual Chapters 2. Internal Division to Sub-Categories within the Third Gender 3. Masculinities and Third Gender in the Wider Context:Castration, Homosexuality and Cultic Performance 4. Third Gender and Hegemonic and Subordinate Masculinities 5. In Conclusion: Why Third Gender?
The volume under review offers a study of the realm of marital disputes among the Jews who lived ... more The volume under review offers a study of the realm of marital disputes among the Jews who lived in Islamic Egypt during the first quarter of the second millennium (ca. 1000-1250 CE). As such, it offers insights into the intersection between gender and law among this Jewish community, especially focusing on women's daily coping with their legal status as an inferior gender class within a society that was characteristically male-dominant.
The Routledge Handbook of Emotions in the Ancient Near East, 2022
This chapter explores expressions of contempt, mockery, ridicule, and similar emotions in Akkadia... more This chapter explores expressions of contempt, mockery, ridicule, and similar emotions in Akkadian and Hittite literary compositions.
This article combines theoretical and historical approaches for studying notions of heroism and v... more This article combines theoretical and historical approaches for studying notions of heroism and villainy in ancient Mesopotamia, as reflected in royal propaganda and rhetoric. It focuses on the different manners in which Mesopotamian kings of the second and first millennia BCE constructed the image of their rivals as villains who deviate from the standard characteristics of the heroic ruler. The theoretical framework of the article is based on heroism studies, a recently-established field within the social sciences, which studies the role of heroes and villains in human society. The article utilizes these theoretical considerations for analyzing Mesopotamian royal inscriptions where the ruler's rivals were portrayed as villains. Seven villain-archetypes are identified and discussed, each of which contrasting one or more of the typical heroic traits of the Mesopotamian ruler. By combining sociological, psychological and philological methodologies, this article offers a new perspective on ancient Mesopotamian society and culture.
The ancient Near East is widely regarded as the “cradle of Western civilisation” and the birthpla... more The ancient Near East is widely regarded as the “cradle of Western civilisation” and the birthplace of writing. As such, it was home to the earliest documented compendia we sometimes call “law collections”, and to some of the earliest records of institutionalised religion in human history. In the ancient Near East, these two major systems, official law and organised religion, did not usually intermingle. When they did, they compensated for one another, filling the gaps caused by the limitations of the other.
This article surveys the statutes referring to delict in the ancient Near Eastern law collections... more This article surveys the statutes referring to delict in the ancient Near Eastern law collections. It presents an introductory discussion of delict and of law compendia from Mesopotamia and Hatti, and explains the complexities involved in analysing these sources. Five categories of delict are then studied from qualitative and quantitative points of view: theft, damage, homicide, injury, and perjury. Each category is surveyed and analysed separately, and, finally, several delicts that defy the strict classification to one specific category are discussed.
Animals and their Relation to Gods, Humans and Things in the Ancient World, 2019
Peled, Ilan. 2019. "Categorization and Hierarchy: Animals and their Relations to Gods, Humans and... more Peled, Ilan. 2019. "Categorization and Hierarchy: Animals and their Relations to Gods, Humans and Things in the Hittite World." In: Mattila, R., Fink, S. and Ito, S. (eds.) Animals and their Relation to Gods, Humans and Things in the Ancient World (Studies in Universal and Cultural History). Springer Verlag, Wiesbaden: 79–93.
Gender and Methodology in the Ancient Near East. Proceedings of the Second Workshop held in Barcelona, February 1–3 2017 (edited by Budin, S. L., Cifarelli, M., Garcia-Ventura, A. and Millet Albà, A.), 2018
Identifying gender ambiguity in historical settings—that is, gender markers among past human soci... more Identifying gender ambiguity in historical settings—that is, gender markers among past human societies—can be an elusive endeavor for the modern scholar. Only rarely is it possible to trace aspects of gender ambiguity in ancient texts as well as in archaeological artifacts. This, however, is exactly my aim in this paper. Building upon my past research on hegemonic—and especially, non-hegemonic—masculine identities in the ancient Near East, the case study discussed here involves the male cult attendants of Inanna/Ištar, the Mesopotamian goddess of sexuality and war.
This article compares the ancient Near Eastern and biblical laws pertaining to delict. Since I of... more This article compares the ancient Near Eastern and biblical laws pertaining to delict. Since I offer an in-depth study elsewhere (Peled 2019) of delict-related felonies attested in the different ancient Near Eastern law collections, the present article only touches upon this issue in brief, while focusing on the pertinent biblical laws. The main questions addressed here therefore relate to the manner in which biblical law treated different delicts, and to how similar or different the attitudes to delict were in the extant ancient Near Eastern and biblical legal corpora.
Introduction of the volume "Structures of Power: Law and Gender Across the Ancient Near East and ... more Introduction of the volume "Structures of Power: Law and Gender Across the Ancient Near East and Beyond", Oriental Institute Seminars no. 12 (ed. Ilan Peled, 2017).
Fourth NINO (Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten) Annual Meeting, Utrecht University, Jan... more Fourth NINO (Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten) Annual Meeting, Utrecht University, January 2023.
International workshop: Law and Religion in the Middle East and Mediterranean through the Ages, U... more International workshop: Law and Religion in the Middle East and Mediterranean through the Ages, University of Amsterdam, June 2019
Second NINO (Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten) Annual Meeting, University of Amsterdam... more Second NINO (Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten) Annual Meeting, University of Amsterdam, January 2020.
Organizer Ilan Peled has brought together a number of speakers on Mesopotamia and the Cuneiform World (session 1) and on Egyptology and Semitic epigraphy (session 2). Lightning sessions (project presentations, session 3) and an award ceremony of the NINO Thesis Prizes will complete the programme.
Detail Summary:
Date: 30 January 2020 Time: 09:45 - 18:30 Location: P.C. Hoofthuis Lecture hall 1.05
Programme:
09:45-10:15 | Registration, coffee 10:15-10:30 | Opening words
10:30-12:30 | Session 1: Mesopotamia and the Cuneiform World; Chair: Willemijn Waal
* Andrew George (SOAS University of London): “Mythical Time in Mesopotamian Incantations” * Daniel Schwemer (University of Würzburg): “Any Evil, a stalking ghost, and the ox-headed demon” * Karel van der Toorn (UvA): “Celebrating New Year in the Ancient Near East” * Ilan Peled (UvA): “The Scapegoat Ritual in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible”
12:30-13:30 | Lunch break
13:30-15:00 | Session 2: Egyptology and Epigraphy; Chair: Ben Haring
* Kasia Szpakowska (Swansea University): “An iconography of protective Middle and New Kingdom daemons” * Jacques van der Vliet (LU/NINO): “Old and new in late antique Egyptian magic” * Margaretha Folmer (VU/LU): “A magic lead tablet in Aramaic from Late Antiquity”
Workshop: Law and Religion, Amsterdam, June 28
The public is invited to the workshop “Law and Re... more Workshop: Law and Religion, Amsterdam, June 28
The public is invited to the workshop “Law and Religion in the Middle East and Mediterranean through the Ages”, to be held at the University of Amsterdam this summer.
This workshop gathers a select group of specialists who will discuss the different aspects of the relationship between law and religion in the Middle East and the Mediterranean basin from ancient times on.
Time and place: Friday, June 28, P.C. Hoofthuis, lecture hall 1.05 (Spuistraat 134, Amsterdam).
Program:
09:30-10:00: Gathering, coffee
10:00-10:15: Opening words (Irene Zwiep)
10:15-12:00: Session 1, Ancient Near Eastern and Christian Law. Chair: Karel van der Toorn
• Sophie Démare-Lafont (key-note speaker, Université Paris II - Panthéon-Assas / Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, PSL): “Gods as Judges: The Making of Law in the Ancient Near East” • Ilan Peled (University of Amsterdam): “A Deo Lex? Law and Religion in Ancient Near Eastern Legislation” • Jan Hallebeek (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam): “Church Asylum in Late Antiquity: Concession by the Emperor or Competence of the Church?”
12:00-13:30: Lunch break
13:30-15:00: Session 2, Biblical and Jewish Law. Chair: Irene Zwiep
• Jacques van Ruiten (University of Groningen): “Legal Material in the Book of Jubilees” • Margaretha Folmer (Leiden University / Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam): “The Divorce Motif in Jewish Magical Texts from Late Antiquity” • Leo Mock (Tilburg University): “The Rabbis and Idolatry”
• Nicolet Boekhoff-van der Voort (Radboud University Nijmegen): “The Impact of Imitation: The Development of the Sunna of the Prophet Muhammad as the Second Source of Islamic Jurisprudence” • Jelle Bruning (Leiden University): “Compensating for the Illegal Sale of a Slave: A Socio-Historical Approach to Early-Islamic Laws on Sale”
16:30-16:45: Concluding words (Ilan Peled)
Attendance is open to all, free of charge, but we kindly ask attendees to register in advance by sending an email to: Law.Religion.Amsterdam@gmail.com
Questions and enquiries can be sent to the workshop organizer, Ilan Peled: i.peled@uva.nl
The workshop was made possible thanks to the generous support of the Stichting Vrienden van het Juda Palache Instituut and the Amsterdam School of Historical Studies (ASH).
National Association of Professors of Hebrew - annual conference, Amsterdam 2018. Organizing comm... more National Association of Professors of Hebrew - annual conference, Amsterdam 2018. Organizing committee: Yaniv Hagbi, Ilan Peled and Irene Zwiep.
The public is invited to:
STRUCTURES OF POWER:
LAW AND GENDER ACROSS THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST AN... more The public is invited to:
STRUCTURES OF POWER:
LAW AND GENDER ACROSS THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST AND BEYOND
The Oriental Institute 11th Annual Postdoctoral Conference
March 6-7 (Friday-Saturday) 2015
The two-day conference will bring together leading experts of various cultures and periods throughout human history, discussing different aspects of the interface between the spheres of legal institutions and gender relations.
The conference panels will be dedicated to the following themes:
Formal Law and Informal Custom
Law, Religion and Cult
Law, Administration and Economy
Family, Kin Relations and Marriage
Speakers:
Gary Beckman, Laura Culbertson, Tal Ilan, Tom McGinn, Brian Muhs, Melinda Nelson-Hurst, Ilan Peled, David Powers, Karen Radner, Adele Scafuro, Edward Shaughnessy, Dan Sheffield, Laura Skosey and Cornelia Wunsch.
Location:
Breasted Hall, The Oriental Institute, University of Chicago, 1155 East 58th St. Chicago IL 60637.
For questions or further details, please contact the conference organizer, Ilan Peled:
Announcing the launch of a new research project: “Law and Order: The Legal Regulation of Gender i... more Announcing the launch of a new research project: “Law and Order: The Legal Regulation of Gender in Ancient Mesopotamia”.
Issues of law and gender relations are highly significant in the life of every human society, past and present alike. They touch upon the very foundations of the social order, and pertain to the manner in which people are organized, establish social institutions and perpetuate stratification and inequality. “Law and Order: The Legal Regulation of Gender in Ancient Mesopotamia” is a research project that aims at illuminating how law governed gender relations in the ancient Near East, and whether people’s actual behavior in everyday life indeed followed official directives of legal instructions and corresponded to them.
The project utilizes a digital database, LaOCOST (Law and Order: Cuneiform Online Sustainable Tool), which includes legal and non-legal textual sources: http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/lacost/
This paper surveys several aspects of the topic of male gender ambiguity in the ancient Near East... more This paper surveys several aspects of the topic of male gender ambiguity in the ancient Near East, by focusing on cross-cultural parallels between Mesopotamia and ancient Israel. Since male gender ambiguity is a topic too vast as to be sufficiently discussed in one article, I limit the discussion to three main points: the employment of eunuchs at royal courts, the meaning of the term “holder of spindle” and the social attitude toward homosexuality.
Avar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Life and Society in the Ancient Near East, 2022
This article combines theoretical and historical approaches for studying notions of heroism and v... more This article combines theoretical and historical approaches for studying notions of heroism and villainy in ancient Mesopotamia, as reflected in royal propaganda and rhetoric. It focuses on the different manners in which Mesopotamian kings of the second and first millennia BCE constructed the image of their rivals as villains who deviate from the standard characteristics of the heroic ruler. The theoretical framework of the article is based on heroism studies, a recently-established field within the social sciences, which studies the role of heroes and villains in human society. The article utilizes these theoretical considerations for analyzing Mesopotamian royal inscriptions where the ruler’s rivals were portrayed as villains. Seven villain-archetypes are identified and discussed, each of which contrasting one or more of the typical heroic traits of the Mesopotamian ruler. By combining sociological, psychological and philological methodologies, this article offers a new perspectiv...
Identifying gender ambiguity in historical settings—that is, gender markers among past human soci... more Identifying gender ambiguity in historical settings—that is, gender markers among past human societies—can be an elusive endeavor for the modern scholar. Only rarely is it possible to trace aspects of gender ambiguity in ancient texts as well as in archaeological artifacts. This, however, is exactly my aim in this paper. Building upon my past research on hegemonic—and especially, non-hegemonic—masculine identities in the ancient Near East, the case study discussed here involves the male cult attendants of Inanna/Ištar, the Mesopotamian goddess of sexuality and war.
The ancient Near East is widely regarded as the “cradle of Western civilisation” and the birthpla... more The ancient Near East is widely regarded as the “cradle of Western civilisation” and the birthplace of writing. As such, it was home to the earliest documented compendia we sometimes call “law collections”, and to some of the earliest records of institutionalised religion in human history. In the ancient Near East, these two major systems, official law and organised religion, did not usually intermingle. When they did, they compensated for one another, filling the gaps caused by the limitations of the other.
This article compares the ancient Near Eastern and biblical laws pertaining to delict. Since I of... more This article compares the ancient Near Eastern and biblical laws pertaining to delict. Since I offer an in-depth study elsewhere (Peled, forthcoming) of delict-related felonies attested in the different ancient Near Eastern law collections, the present article only touches upon this issue in brief, while focusing on the pertinent biblical laws. The main questions addressed here therefore relate to the manner in which biblical law treated different delicts, and to how similar or different the attitudes to delict were in the extant ancient Near Eastern and biblical legal corpora.
This article surveys the statutes referring to delict in the ancient Near Eastern law collections... more This article surveys the statutes referring to delict in the ancient Near Eastern law collections. It presents an introductory discussion of delict and of law compendia from Mesopotamia and Hatti, and explains the complexities involved in analysing these sources. Five categories of delict are then studied from qualitative and quantitative points of view: theft, damage, homicide, injury, and perjury. Each category is surveyed and analysed separately, and, finally, several delicts that defy the strict classification to one specific category are discussed.
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Books by Ilan Peled
Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible offers an invaluable resource for anyone working on Near Eastern society and culture, and gender in the ancient world more broadly.
The aim of this book is to track a distinct human phenomenon in the history of the ancient Near East: persons who were born males, but under various social and historical circumstances their masculine identity was considered to be ambiguous. On the basis of this, these persons can be classified as belonging to a third gender They bore specific titles, and were engaged in cult or palace administration. The contexts of their documentation occasionally depict them as possessing or exhibiting traits that were uncharacteristic of the standard social expectations of men in Mesopotamia. The terms that describe these persons were grouped in numerous lexical lists, which supply us with the frame and boundaries of the present research. To a lesser extent, the grouping of these persons is apparent in narrative and literary compositions. The most notable of these titles were gala/kalû, assinnu, kurgarrû and lú-sag / ša rēši. Other similar titles that were documented less frequently were kulu’u, girseqû,tīru, SAG-UR-SAG, pilpilû, nāš pilaqqi, sinnišānu and parû. Their sexual and gender ambiguity was realized in numerous and diverse manners. Occasionally, it bore a clear physiological form, in the shape of castration; sometimes its attributes were external, such as cross-dressing; in other cases, it became apparent through typically feminine behavioral patterns, such as dancing, singing or lamenting. Last but not least, lack of procreativity constituted another form of gender ambiguity, as it contradicted one of the most important gender functionalities of people in the ancient Near East: the siring of offspring. Hence, the common denominator of all these figures appears to have been flawed manliness. Effeminacy was not necessarily the key factor in this case, as some of these figures seem to have been rather masculine. It was sufficient that these persons deviated enough from the customary model of ancient Near Eastern masculinity, in order to be considered as part of this third gender class. The concepts of social “otherness” are essential for demarcating social borders, which, in turn, define patterns of normative social conduct. The present research demonstrated that this human phenomenon of a third gender in the ancient Near East involved mainly the matter of social definitions. Social identity is defined by its limitations: where it begins and ends, and what exists beyond it. The strange, the extreme and the bizarre signify what common, hegemonic, people are not, and therefore mark who common, hegemonic, people actually are. These boundaries are constructed by using social mechanisms of norms and prohibitions. In this sense, the third gender figures were socially constructed, and served social needs of defining norms of conformity.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1. Aims, Scope, Methodology and Structure of the Book
2. Third Gender: Ambiguous Masculinity and Social Conformity
3. Male Third Gender Figures in the Ancient Near East: History of Research
4. The Formation of Masculinity (and Femininity): Theoretical Perspectives
5. The Features of Hegemonic Masculinity in the Ancient Near East
Chapter 1: Mesopotamian Narrative and Hymnic Text
Introduction
1. Inanna/Ištar’s Descent to the Netherworld
2. The Fashioning of the gala
3. Inanna and Ebiḫ
4. Inanna and Enki
5. Lady of Largest Heart
6. This City, which Has Been Looted
7. The Epic of Erra
8. A Myth of Dumuzi
9. Enki and Ninmaḫ
10. Gilgameš and Aga
11. The Curse of Akkad
12. The Lament for Eridu
13. The Debate between Grain and Sheep
Chapter 2: gala, kalû and kulu’u
Introduction
1. gala/kalû and gala-maḫ/kalamāḫu
2. kulu’u
Chapter 3: assinnu and kurgarrû
Introduction
1. assinnu and kurgarrû in Lexical Lists
2. assinnu and kurgarrû in Administrative and Historical Texts
3. assinnu and Prophecy in Mari and the Ancient Near East
4. assinnu and kurgarrû in Cultic Texts
5. assinnu and kurgarrû in Narrative Texts
6. assinnu and kurgarrû in Omen, Ritual and Incantation Texts
Chapter 4: lú-sag / ša rēši and Castration in the Ancient Near East
Introduction
1. lú-sag / ša rēši: Brief Chronological Survey of the Titles
2. lú-sag / ša rēši: The Evidence of Castration
3. Castration from Theoretical and Clinical Perspectives
Chapter 5: Less Known Third Gender Figures
Introduction
1. girseqû
2. tiru/tīru
3. SAG-UR-SAG
4. pi-li-pi-li/pilpilû
5. sinnišānu
6. nāš pilaqqi
7. parû
Summary and Conclusions
1. Summaries and Conclusions of Individual Chapters
2. Internal Division to Sub-Categories within the Third Gender
3. Masculinities and Third Gender in the Wider Context:Castration, Homosexuality and Cultic Performance
4. Third Gender and Hegemonic and Subordinate Masculinities
5. In Conclusion: Why Third Gender?
Bibliography
Indices
Articles by Ilan Peled
Law and Gender in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible offers an invaluable resource for anyone working on Near Eastern society and culture, and gender in the ancient world more broadly.
The aim of this book is to track a distinct human phenomenon in the history of the ancient Near East: persons who were born males, but under various social and historical circumstances their masculine identity was considered to be ambiguous. On the basis of this, these persons can be classified as belonging to a third gender They bore specific titles, and were engaged in cult or palace administration. The contexts of their documentation occasionally depict them as possessing or exhibiting traits that were uncharacteristic of the standard social expectations of men in Mesopotamia. The terms that describe these persons were grouped in numerous lexical lists, which supply us with the frame and boundaries of the present research. To a lesser extent, the grouping of these persons is apparent in narrative and literary compositions. The most notable of these titles were gala/kalû, assinnu, kurgarrû and lú-sag / ša rēši. Other similar titles that were documented less frequently were kulu’u, girseqû,tīru, SAG-UR-SAG, pilpilû, nāš pilaqqi, sinnišānu and parû. Their sexual and gender ambiguity was realized in numerous and diverse manners. Occasionally, it bore a clear physiological form, in the shape of castration; sometimes its attributes were external, such as cross-dressing; in other cases, it became apparent through typically feminine behavioral patterns, such as dancing, singing or lamenting. Last but not least, lack of procreativity constituted another form of gender ambiguity, as it contradicted one of the most important gender functionalities of people in the ancient Near East: the siring of offspring. Hence, the common denominator of all these figures appears to have been flawed manliness. Effeminacy was not necessarily the key factor in this case, as some of these figures seem to have been rather masculine. It was sufficient that these persons deviated enough from the customary model of ancient Near Eastern masculinity, in order to be considered as part of this third gender class. The concepts of social “otherness” are essential for demarcating social borders, which, in turn, define patterns of normative social conduct. The present research demonstrated that this human phenomenon of a third gender in the ancient Near East involved mainly the matter of social definitions. Social identity is defined by its limitations: where it begins and ends, and what exists beyond it. The strange, the extreme and the bizarre signify what common, hegemonic, people are not, and therefore mark who common, hegemonic, people actually are. These boundaries are constructed by using social mechanisms of norms and prohibitions. In this sense, the third gender figures were socially constructed, and served social needs of defining norms of conformity.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1. Aims, Scope, Methodology and Structure of the Book
2. Third Gender: Ambiguous Masculinity and Social Conformity
3. Male Third Gender Figures in the Ancient Near East: History of Research
4. The Formation of Masculinity (and Femininity): Theoretical Perspectives
5. The Features of Hegemonic Masculinity in the Ancient Near East
Chapter 1: Mesopotamian Narrative and Hymnic Text
Introduction
1. Inanna/Ištar’s Descent to the Netherworld
2. The Fashioning of the gala
3. Inanna and Ebiḫ
4. Inanna and Enki
5. Lady of Largest Heart
6. This City, which Has Been Looted
7. The Epic of Erra
8. A Myth of Dumuzi
9. Enki and Ninmaḫ
10. Gilgameš and Aga
11. The Curse of Akkad
12. The Lament for Eridu
13. The Debate between Grain and Sheep
Chapter 2: gala, kalû and kulu’u
Introduction
1. gala/kalû and gala-maḫ/kalamāḫu
2. kulu’u
Chapter 3: assinnu and kurgarrû
Introduction
1. assinnu and kurgarrû in Lexical Lists
2. assinnu and kurgarrû in Administrative and Historical Texts
3. assinnu and Prophecy in Mari and the Ancient Near East
4. assinnu and kurgarrû in Cultic Texts
5. assinnu and kurgarrû in Narrative Texts
6. assinnu and kurgarrû in Omen, Ritual and Incantation Texts
Chapter 4: lú-sag / ša rēši and Castration in the Ancient Near East
Introduction
1. lú-sag / ša rēši: Brief Chronological Survey of the Titles
2. lú-sag / ša rēši: The Evidence of Castration
3. Castration from Theoretical and Clinical Perspectives
Chapter 5: Less Known Third Gender Figures
Introduction
1. girseqû
2. tiru/tīru
3. SAG-UR-SAG
4. pi-li-pi-li/pilpilû
5. sinnišānu
6. nāš pilaqqi
7. parû
Summary and Conclusions
1. Summaries and Conclusions of Individual Chapters
2. Internal Division to Sub-Categories within the Third Gender
3. Masculinities and Third Gender in the Wider Context:Castration, Homosexuality and Cultic Performance
4. Third Gender and Hegemonic and Subordinate Masculinities
5. In Conclusion: Why Third Gender?
Bibliography
Indices
Organizer Ilan Peled has brought together a number of speakers on Mesopotamia and the Cuneiform World (session 1) and on Egyptology and Semitic epigraphy (session 2). Lightning sessions (project presentations, session 3) and an award ceremony of the NINO Thesis Prizes will complete the programme.
Detail Summary:
Date: 30 January 2020
Time: 09:45 - 18:30
Location: P.C. Hoofthuis Lecture hall 1.05
Programme:
09:45-10:15 | Registration, coffee
10:15-10:30 | Opening words
10:30-12:30 | Session 1: Mesopotamia and the Cuneiform World; Chair: Willemijn Waal
* Andrew George (SOAS University of London): “Mythical Time in Mesopotamian Incantations”
* Daniel Schwemer (University of Würzburg): “Any Evil, a stalking ghost, and the ox-headed demon”
* Karel van der Toorn (UvA): “Celebrating New Year in the Ancient Near East”
* Ilan Peled (UvA): “The Scapegoat Ritual in the Ancient Near East and the Hebrew Bible”
12:30-13:30 | Lunch break
13:30-15:00 | Session 2: Egyptology and Epigraphy; Chair: Ben Haring
* Kasia Szpakowska (Swansea University): “An iconography of protective Middle and New Kingdom daemons”
* Jacques van der Vliet (LU/NINO): “Old and new in late antique Egyptian magic”
* Margaretha Folmer (VU/LU): “A magic lead tablet in Aramaic from Late Antiquity”
15:00-15:30 | Coffee break
15:30-16:30 | Session 3: Project presentations (“lightning”)
* Caroline Waerzeggers + Melanie Gross + Maarja Seire (LU)
* Rolf Strootman (UU)
* Natalie Naomi May (LU)
* Susanna Wolfert-de Vries (UU)
* Elizabeth Hicks (LU/NINO)
16:30-17:00 | NINO Thesis Prizes: award and presentations
17:00-17:30 | Closing words, presentation of NINO Annual Meeting 2021
17:30-18:30 | Drinks (“borrel”)
The public is invited to the workshop “Law and Religion in the Middle East and Mediterranean through the Ages”, to be held at the University of Amsterdam this summer.
This workshop gathers a select group of specialists who will discuss the different aspects of the relationship between law and religion in the Middle East and the Mediterranean basin from ancient times on.
Time and place: Friday, June 28, P.C. Hoofthuis, lecture hall 1.05 (Spuistraat 134, Amsterdam).
Program:
09:30-10:00: Gathering, coffee
10:00-10:15: Opening words (Irene Zwiep)
10:15-12:00: Session 1, Ancient Near Eastern and Christian Law. Chair: Karel van der Toorn
• Sophie Démare-Lafont (key-note speaker, Université Paris II - Panthéon-Assas / Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, PSL): “Gods as Judges: The Making of Law in the Ancient Near East”
• Ilan Peled (University of Amsterdam): “A Deo Lex? Law and Religion in Ancient Near Eastern Legislation”
• Jan Hallebeek (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam): “Church Asylum in Late Antiquity: Concession by the Emperor or Competence of the Church?”
12:00-13:30: Lunch break
13:30-15:00: Session 2, Biblical and Jewish Law. Chair: Irene Zwiep
• Jacques van Ruiten (University of Groningen): “Legal Material in the Book of Jubilees”
• Margaretha Folmer (Leiden University / Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam): “The Divorce Motif in Jewish Magical Texts from Late Antiquity”
• Leo Mock (Tilburg University): “The Rabbis and Idolatry”
15:00-15:30: Coffee
15:30-16:30: Session 3, Islamic law. Chair: Robbert Woltering
• Nicolet Boekhoff-van der Voort (Radboud University Nijmegen): “The Impact of Imitation: The Development of the Sunna of the Prophet Muhammad as the Second Source of Islamic Jurisprudence”
• Jelle Bruning (Leiden University): “Compensating for the Illegal Sale of a Slave: A Socio-Historical Approach to Early-Islamic Laws on Sale”
16:30-16:45: Concluding words (Ilan Peled)
Attendance is open to all, free of charge, but we kindly ask attendees to register in advance by sending an email to: Law.Religion.Amsterdam@gmail.com
Questions and enquiries can be sent to the workshop organizer, Ilan Peled: i.peled@uva.nl
For program, abstracts and further details, please see our website: https://religion.law.blog
The workshop was made possible thanks to the generous support of the Stichting Vrienden van het Juda Palache Instituut and the Amsterdam School of Historical Studies (ASH).
STRUCTURES OF POWER:
LAW AND GENDER ACROSS THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST AND BEYOND
The Oriental Institute 11th Annual Postdoctoral Conference
March 6-7 (Friday-Saturday) 2015
The two-day conference will bring together leading experts of various cultures and periods throughout human history, discussing different aspects of the interface between the spheres of legal institutions and gender relations.
The conference panels will be dedicated to the following themes:
Formal Law and Informal Custom
Law, Religion and Cult
Law, Administration and Economy
Family, Kin Relations and Marriage
Speakers:
Gary Beckman, Laura Culbertson, Tal Ilan, Tom McGinn, Brian Muhs, Melinda Nelson-Hurst, Ilan Peled, David Powers, Karen Radner, Adele Scafuro, Edward Shaughnessy, Dan Sheffield, Laura Skosey and Cornelia Wunsch.
Location:
Breasted Hall, The Oriental Institute, University of Chicago, 1155 East 58th St. Chicago IL 60637.
For questions or further details, please contact the conference organizer, Ilan Peled:
email: ilanpeled@uchicago.edu
office: 773-702-7497
Looking forward to see you there!
Issues of law and gender relations are highly significant in the life of every human society, past and present alike. They touch upon the very foundations of the social order, and pertain to the manner in which people are organized, establish social institutions and perpetuate stratification and inequality. “Law and Order: The Legal Regulation of Gender in Ancient Mesopotamia” is a research project that aims at illuminating how law governed gender relations in the ancient Near East, and whether people’s actual behavior in everyday life indeed followed official directives of legal instructions and corresponded to them.
The project utilizes a digital database, LaOCOST (Law and Order: Cuneiform Online Sustainable Tool), which includes legal and non-legal textual sources: http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/lacost/