Salle 5, Site Marcelin Berthelot
Open to all
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Abstract

The second lecture will focus on the book Chronicles as a rewriting of older historical traditions in changed and changing imperial-political environments. It will be shown that Chronicles was (and is) "reforming history" that contributed immensely to the identity negotiation processes of the communities in the Persian province of Yehud where returnees from the Babylonian exile lived together with remainees who have never gone into exile. It will be shown how this book responded to the new political dispensation on different levels: on the overarching imperial level, on provincial level, on the level of tribal memories of old, on cultic level at the temple in Jerusalem, and on the level with diasporic Jews who never returned to the land after the exile.