Eran Gluska
Tel Aviv University, Archaeology and Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations, Graduate Student
- Archeology, Archaeology of Ancient Israel, Ancient Israel, Biblical Archaeology, Biblical History, Ancient Near East, and 42 more'Nationalism' in the Ancient World, Nationalism, Hebrew Bible and Ancient Near East, History of Ancient Israel, Ancient Israelites, Religious Fundamentalism, Biblical Studies, Near Eastern Archaeology, Archaeology of the Levant, a) Archaeology, History and Historiography in the Iron Age, Persian and Hellenistic periods., History of Nationalism and Nation-Building, Nationalism and Archaeology, Ancient Near East (Archaeology), History (Archaeology), Hebrew Bible, Ancient Near Eastern History, Identity (Culture), Deuteronomistic History, Ancient Historiography, Biblical Interpretation, Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, Biblical Exegesis, HIstory of Zionism and Jewish Nationalism, Jewish Diaspora Nationalism, Pentateuchal Theory, Israelite history and religion, Jewish historiography, Ethnicity and National Identity, National Identity, Ancient Israel Ideology, Old Testament, Chronicles-Ezra-Nehemiah, Historical Archaeology, ancient Israelite religion, Archaeology, Chronicles, David, King of Israel, and Caleb in Biblical Memory by Jacob L. Wright, Persian Period, Identity Formation, Inner-Biblical Exegesis, Second Temple Judaism, and Ancient Judaismedit
- Ph.D. student, Ancient Israel biblical, archaeological and historical aspectsedit
Uzziah ruled in Judah for many years, yet the description of his rule in the book of Kings is laconic. The book of Chronicles, on the other hand, provides an extensive description of his reign that stems from authorial ideology, theology,... more
Uzziah ruled in Judah for many years, yet the description of his rule in the book of Kings is laconic. The book of Chronicles, on the other hand, provides an extensive description of his reign that stems from authorial ideology, theology, and processes of identity formation. The book of Ezra-Nehemiah describes a series of confrontations from four directions, with Uzziah’s battles with the Philistines, the Arab tribes, and the Ammonites being three of these fronts. The Chronicler, writing several decades after Ezra-Nehemiah, was aware of the Ezra-Nehemiah text or its narrative, and developed the figure of Uzziah as a great king, thus serving his own national, economic, ethnic, and religious goals.
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
M.Sc. Theses