Publications - B

DOCTORAL DISSERTATION

1. Michael Segal, The Book of Jubilees: Rewritten Bible, Redaction, Ideology and Theology (Hebrew) (#‎2,‎15,‎16,‎36,‎37)

Supervisors: Profs. Menahem Kister and Israel Knohl

Awarded September 2004

 

BOOKS 

2. Michael Segal, The Book of Jubilees: Rewritten Bible, Redaction, Ideology and Theology (Jerusalem: Hebrew University Magnes Press, 2007; 319 pp.) (in Hebrew) – updated with minor revisions of #‎1.

‎2a. Michael Segal, The Book of Jubilees: Rewritten Bible, Redaction, Ideology and Theology (Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism 117; Leiden: Brill, 2007; 370 pp.) – translation (by author) of #1.

2012: Reprinted softcover edition of #‎2a (Society of Biblical Literature)

 

3. Michael Segal,  Dreams, Riddles, and Visions: Textual, Contextual, and Intertextual Approaches to the Book of Daniel (BZAW 455; Berlin: De Gruyter, 2016) (#‎20,‎43,‎47,‎48)

 

4. Michael Segal and Shemaryahu Talmon, The Hebrew University Bible: The Twelve Prophets (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, to appear in 2018–2019)

 

BOOKS EDITED

5. A. Rofé, M. Segal, Z. Talshir, S. Talmon (eds.), Textus 23 (2008), 332 pages

Special Volume: Textual Criticism and Beyond I

 

6. A. Rofé, M. Segal, Z. Talshir, S. Talmon (eds.), Textus 24 (2009), 334 pages

Special Volume: Textual Criticism and Beyond II

 

7. M. Segal, N. Mizrahi, R. Birnbaum, N. Zagagi (eds.), Textus 25 (2010), 346 pages (Special Volume in Honor of Prof. David Weissert)

 

8. M. Kister, H. Newman, Michael Segal, R. Clements (eds.), Tradition, Transmission and Transformation: From Second Temple Literature through Judaism and Christianity in Late Antiquity: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Symposium of the Orion Center for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Associated Literature, Jointly Sponsored by the Hebrew University Center for the Study of Christianity, 22–24 February, 2011 (STDJ 113; Leiden: Brill; 2015).

 

9. Michael Segal and Rafael Zer, Textus 26 (2016), 280 pages

 

10. Binyamin Y. Goldstein, Michael Segal, and George J. Brooke (eds), HĀ-'ÎSH MŌSHE: Studies in Scriptural Interpretation in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature in Honor of Moshe J. Bernstein (STDJ 122; Leiden: Brill, 2017).

 

11. Menahem Kister, Michael Segal, and Ruth Clements (eds.), The Religious Worldviews Reflected in the Dead Sea Scrolls: Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Symposium of the Orion Center for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Associated Literature (STDJ 127; Leiden: Brill, 2018).

 

CHAPTERS IN COLLECTIONS

12. Michael Segal and M. Morgenstern, “XHev/SePhylactery,” in J. Charlesworth (ed.), Miscellaneous Texts from the Judaean Desert (DJD 38; Oxford: Clarendon, 2000), 183–191.

 

13. Michael Segal, “4QReworked Pentateuch or 4QPentateuch?,” in L.H. Schiffman, E. Tov, J. C. Vanderkam (eds.), The Dead Sea Scrolls: Fifty Years After Their Discovery(Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 2000), 391–399.

 

14. Michael Segal, “Between Bible and Rewritten Bible,” in Biblical Interpretation at Qumran (Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature; ed. M. Henze; Grand Rapids/Cambridge: Eerdmans, 2005), 10–28.

 

15. Michael Segal, “The Relationship Between the Legal and Narrative Passages in Jubilees (Reuben and Bilhah/ Judah and Tamar),” in Rewriting the Bible: Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference of the Orion Center for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Associated Literature (STDJ 58; ed. E. Chazon, D. Dimant and R. Clements; Leiden: Brill, 2005), 203–228. (#1)

 

16. Michael Segal, “The Chronological Redaction of Jubilees,” in Shai le-Sara Japhet: Studies in the Bible, Its Exegesis and Its Language (eds. M. Bar-Asher et al.; Jerusalem: Bialik Institute, 2007), 369–387 (in Hebrew). (#1)

 

17. Michael Segal, “The Composition of Jubilees,” in Enoch and the Mosaic Torah: The Evidence of Jubilees (eds. Gabriele Boccaccini and Giovanni Ibba; Grand Rapids/Cambridge: Eerdmans, 2009), 22–35.

 

18. Michael Segal, “Identifying Biblical Interpretation in Parabiblical Texts,” in The Dead Sea Scrolls In Context: Integrating the Dead Sea Scrolls in the Study of Ancient Texts, Languages, and Cultures (2 vols.; VTSup 140/141; eds. A. Lange, E. Tov, M. Weigold; Leiden: Brill, 2011), 1:295–308

 

19. Michael Segal, “Qumran Research in Israel: Rewritten Bible and Biblical Interpretation”, in The Dead Sea Scrolls in Scholarly Perspective: A History of Scholarship (ed. D. Dimant; Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judea 99; Leiden: Brill, 2012), 315–333.

 

20. Michael Segal, “‘For From Zion Shall Come Forth Torah…’ (Isaiah 2:3):  Biblical Paraphrase and the Exegetical Background of Susanna,” in New Approaches to the Study of Biblical Interpretation in Judaism of the Second Temple Period and in Early Christianity: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Symposium of the Orion Center (eds. G. Anderson, D. Satran, and R. Clements; Leiden: Brill, 2013), 21–39. (#3)

 

21. Michael Segal, “Monotheism and Angelology in the Book of Daniel,” in One God – One Cult – One Nation. Archaeological and Biblical Perspectives (eds. R. Kratz and H. Spieckermann; BZAW 405; Berlin: de Gruyter, 2010), 405–420.

 

22. Michael Segal, “Biblical Interpretation – Yes and No,” in What is Bible? (eds. K. Finsterbusch and A. Lange; CBET 67; Leuven: Peeters, 2012), 63–80.

 

23. Michael Segal, “The First Patriarchs: Law and Narrative in the Garden of Eden Story,” in Rewriting and Interpreting the Hebrew Bible: The Biblical Patriarchs in the Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls (eds. D. Dimant and R. Kratz; BZAW 439; Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2013): 77–100.

 

24. Moshe Morgenstern and Michael Segal, “The Genesis Apocryphon,” in Outside the Bible: Ancient Jewish Writings Related to Scripture (3 vols.; eds. L.H. Feldman, J.L. Kugel, and L.H. Schiffman; Lincoln: Jewish Publication Society/University of Nebraska Press, 2013), 237–262. I contributed a concise exegetical commentary of the Aramaic Genesis Apocryphon (Qumran Cave 1).

 

25. Michael Segal, “Exegesis and Interpretation,” in Companion to the Dead Sea Scrolls (eds. G. Brooke and C. Hempel; T. & T. Clark; 14 double-spaced pages; accepted for publication.

 

26. Michael Segal, entries in Textual History of the Bible (Brill, published electronically at http://www.brill.com/products/online-resources/textual-history-bible-online; print format, 2016–2017)

‎26a. “1.6 The Biblical Text as Attested in Ancient Literature” (7000 words)

‎26b. “18.2.2 (Proto-)Masoretic Texts and Texts Close to MT” [Daniel] (3800 words)

‎26c. “18.2.3 Other texts” [Qumran texts of Daniel] (2400 words)

‎26d. “21.1.1 Jubilees” (2500 words)

 

27. Michael Segal, “The Old Greek Version and Masoretic Text of Daniel 6,” in Die Septuaginta: Orte und Intentionen. Proceedings of the Fifth International Wuppertal Symposium on the Septuagint (eds. S. Kreuzer, M. Meiser, and M. Sigismund; WUNT; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2016), 404–428.

 

28. Michael Segal, “Methodological Considerations in the Preparation of an Edition of the Hebrew Bible,” in The Text of the Hebrew Bible and Its Editions: Studies in Celebration of the Fifth Centennial of the Complutensian Polyglot (eds. A. Piquer Otero and P. A. Torijano Morales; Leiden: Brill, 2017), 34–55.

 

29. Michael Segal, “Daniel 5 in Aramaic and Greek and the Textual History of Daniel 4–6,” in IOSOT Congress Volume Stellenbosch 2016 (VTSupp 177; eds. L.C. Jonker, C. Maier, and G. Kotzé; Leiden: Brill, 2017), 251–284.

 

30. Michael Segal, “Harmonization and Rewriting of Daniel 6 from the Bible to Qumran,” in B. Goldstein, M. Segal, and G.J. Brooke (eds), HĀ-’ÎSH MŌSHE: Studies in Scriptural Interpretation in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature in Honor of Moshe J. Bernstein (STDJ 122; Leiden: Brill, 2017), 265-279.

 

31. Michael Segal, “Interpreting History in Qumran Texts,” in M. Kister, M. Segal, and R. Clements (eds.), The Religious Worldviews Reflected in the Dead Sea Scrolls: Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Symposium of the Orion Center for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Associated Literature (STDJ 127; Leiden: Brill, 2018), 212–244.

 

ARTICLES IN JOURNALS

32. Michael Segal, “Biblical Exegesis in 4Q158: Techniques and Genre,” Textus 19 (1998), 45–62.

 

33. Michael Segal, “1 Samuel 2:3: Text, Exegesis and Theology,” Shnaton 13 (2002), 83–96 (Heb.).

 

34. Michael Segal, “Numerical Discrepancies in the List of Vessels in Ezra 1:9-11,” Vetus Testamentum 52 (2002), 122–129.

 

35. Michael Segal, “The Literary Development of Psalm 151: A New Look at the Septuagint Version,” Textus 21 (2002), 139–158.

 

36. Michael Segal, “Law and Narrative in Jubilees: The Story of the Entrance to the Garden of Eden Revisited,” Meghillot 1 (2003), 111–125 (Heb.). (#1)

 

37. Michael Segal, “On the Meaning of the Expression תורה ותעודה in Jubilees,” Meghillot 5–6 (2007), 323–345 (Heb.). (#1)

 

38. Michael Segal, “The Text of the Hebrew Bible in Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls,” Materia Giudaica 12/1–2 (2007), 5–20.

 

39. Michael Segal, “The Responsibilities and Rewards of Joshua the High Priest according to Zechariah 3:7,” Journal of Biblical Literature 126/4 (2007), 717–734.

 

40. Michael Segal, “ויאר את הלילה (Exodus 14:20): New Light on an Old Problem,” Zeitschrift für Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft 120 (2008), 254–260.

 

41. Michael Segal, “‘מחברתי על ספר היובלות’: A Jubilee and a Half after the Publication of Prof. Chanokh Albeck’s Study,” Jewish Studies 45 (2008), 49–65 (Heb.).

 

42. Michael Segal, “Between Exegesis and Sectarianism: ‘Light and Darkness’ in Egypt and in Jerusalem According to 4Q462,” Meghillot 7 (2009), 129–143 (Heb.).

 

43. Michael Segal, “From Joseph to Daniel: The Literary Development of Daniel 2”, Vetus Testamentum 59 (2009), 123–149. (#‎3)

 

44. Michael Segal, “Text, Translation, and Allusion: On the Use of the Bible in the Theophany of 1 Enoch 1:5,” Catholic Biblical Quarterly 72 (2010), 464–474.

 

45. Michael Segal, “The Literary Development of the Story of Shechem and Dinah in Jubilees 30,” Meghillot 8–9 (2010): 227–241 (Heb.).

 

‎45a. Expanded and translated into English as “Rewriting the Story of Dinah and Shechem: The Literary Development of Jubilees 30,” in The Hebrew Bible in Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls (eds. N. Dávid et al.; FRLANT 239; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2012), 337–356.

 

46. Michael Segal, “The Literary Relationship between the Genesis Apocryphon and Jubilees: The Chronology of Abram and Sarai’s Descent to Egypt”, Aramaic Studies 8 (2010): 71–88.

 

47. Michael Segal, “The Chronological Conception of the Persian Period in Daniel 9,” Journal of Ancient Judaism 2 (2011): 283–303. (#‎3)

 

48. Michael Segal, “Rereading the Writing on the Wall (Daniel 5),” Zeitschrift für Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft 125 (2013): 161–176. (#‎3)

 

49. Michael Segal, Michael Segal, “The Hebrew University Bible Project,” Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel 2 (2013): 38–62.

 

50. Michael Segal, “Who is the ‘Son of God’ in 4Q246? An Overlooked Case of Early Biblical Interpretation,” in Dead Sea Discoveries 21 (2014): 289–312.

 

51. Michael Segal, “The Dynamics of Composition and Rewriting in Jubilees and Pseudo-Jubilees,” Revue de Qumran 26/104 (2014): 555–578.

 

52. Michael Segal, “The Text of Daniel in the Dead Sea Scrolls”, Meghillot 11–12 (in Hebrew; 2015): 171–198.

 

53. Michael Segal, E. Tov, W.B. Seales, C.S. Parker, P. Shor, Y. Porath, with an Appendix by A. Yardeni, “An Early Leviticus Scroll from En-Gedi: Preliminary Publication,” Textus 26 (2016), 30 pages

     

54. W.B. Seales, C.S. Parker, Michael Segal, E. Tov, P. Shor, Y. Porath, “From Damage to Discovery via Virtual Unwrapping: Reading the Scroll from En-Gedi,” Science Advances 2, e1601247 (2016).

      [Link: http://advances.sciencemag.org/content/2/9/e1601247.full]

 

55. Michael Segal, “Calculating the End: Inner-Danielic Chronological Developments,” Vetus Testamentum 68 (2018): 272–296.

 

56. Michael Segal, “Reconsidering the Relationship(s) between 4Q365, 4Q365a, and the Temple Scroll,” Revue de Qumran (forthcoming).

 

 

OTHER PUBLICATIONS:

57. Review of C.D. Elledge, The Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls, in Catholic Bible Quarterly 69 (2007).

 

58. Scientific Editor, The Dead Sea Scrolls (Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority, 2007).

 

59. “Jubilees,” in The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (eds. J. Collins and D. Harlow; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010).

 

60. Review of Molly Zahn, Rethinking Rewritten Scripture: Composition and Exegesis in the 4QReworked Pentateuch Manuscripts, in JSJ 44 (2013): 144–145.

 

ACADEMIC LECTURES:

1. Fiftieth Anniversary Dead Sea Scrolls Conference, Jerusalem 1997 (Pub. #13)

 

2. Orion Center Greenfield Scholars Seminar, Jerusalem 2000 (Pub. #14)

 

3. Evening in Honor of Prof. Shemaryahu Talmon, Department of Bible, Hebrew University (Pub. #33)

 

4. International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament Conference, Basel 2001 (Pub. #33)

 

5. World Congress of Jewish Studies, Jerusalem 2001 (Pub. #35)

 

6. Orion Center Seventh International Conference, Jerusalem 2002 (Pub. #15)

 

7. University of Haifa Bible Department Symposium in Honor of Prof. Alexander Rofé, Haifa 2002 (Pub. #36)

 

8. Hebrew University Institute for Jewish Studies Annual Conference, Jerusalem 2003 (Pub. #1)

Topic: “The Literary Development of the Watchers Story in Jubilees 5”

 

9. SBL Annual Meeting, Pseudepigrapha Group, Atlanta 2003 (Pub. #1)

Topic: “The Origin of Evil in Jubilees: Eden, Watchers and Mastema”

 

10. SBL Annual Meeting, Qumran Group, San Antonio 2004 (Pub. #‎16)

 

11. Series of 6 Lectures, Department of Religious Studies, Yale University, 2004–2005

Topic: The Book of Jubilees: Rewritten Bible, Redaction, Ideology and Theology (Pub. #1,2)

 

12. Orion Center Tenth International Conference, Jerusalem, January 2005 (Pub. #1)

 

13. University of Notre Dame, Department of Theology, CJA Colloquium, February 2005 (Pub. #1)

Topic: “The Watchers Story (Chapter 5) as an Empirical Model for the Literary Development of Jubilees

 

14. Nordic Qumran Symposium, École Biblique, Jerusalem, October 2005 (Pub. #‎37)

 

15. Haifa University, Fifth Annual Qumran Scrolls Symposium, May 2006 (Pub. #‎42)

 

16. Orion Center Greenfield Scholars Seminar, Jerusalem May 2006 (Pub. #‎40,‎42,‎44)

 

17. SBL International Conference, Edinburgh, Scotland, July 2006 (Pub. #‎39)

 

18. Invited Lecture, Italian Association of Jewish Studies. Ravenna, Italy, September 2006 (Pub. #38)

 

19. Eleventh Annual Orion International Symposium, Jerusalem, June 2007 (Pub. #20)

 

20. Invited Lecture, Fourth Enoch Seminar, Camaldoli, Italy (Pub. #17)

 

21. SBL Annual Conference, Aramaic Studies Group, San Diego, November 2007 (Pub. #‎43)

 

22. Colloquium in Honor of Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, Center for the Study of Christianity, Hebrew University, January 2008

Topic: Angelic Intercession in Daniel and the Additions to Daniel

 

23. Evening in Honor of Publication of M. Segal, The Book of Jubilees, The Van Leer Jerusalem Institute (Respondent to Prof. A. Shemesh, Prof. D. Dimant), January 2008

 

24. Hebrew University – University of Vienna Conference on the Dead Sea Scrolls, Vienna, February 2008 (Pub. #18)

 

25. Invited Lecture, International Symposium in Jerusalem; sponsored by the Georg-August-University, Göttingen, September 2008 (Pub. #‎21)

 

26. Invited Lecture, Notre Dame University (USA), Department of Theology, November 2008 (Pub. #47)

 

27. SBL Annual Conference, Qumran Section, Boston, November 2008 (Pub. #46)

 

28. Haifa University, Eighth Annual Qumran Scrolls Workshop, May 2009 (Pub. #45)

 

29. SBL International Conference, Dead Sea Scrolls Section, Rome, July 2009 (Pub. #45a)

 

30. World Congress of Jewish Studies, Urbach Postdoctoral Section, Jerusalem, August 2009 (Pub. #47)

 

31. Invited Lecture, Faculty of Theology, Georg-August-University, Göttingen, November 2009 (Pub. #47)

 

32. SBL Annual Conference, Pseudepigrapha Section, New Orleans, November 2009

      Topic: Angelic Intervention in Susanna and in Bel and the Dragon

 

33. Orion Center/Center for Christianity/Rothberg Overseas School/Pontifical Biblical Institute Miriam Sheffer Memorial Lecture, December 2009

Topic: Innerbiblical Interpretation in the Book of Daniel

 

34. Symposium in Honor of Prof. Emanuel Tov’s retirement, Department of Bible, Hebrew University, January 2010

Topic: On the Septuagint to the Book of Daniel (Pub. #‎3)

 

35. Symposium in Honor of Kyoji Tsujita, Department of Bible and Bible Project, Hebrew University, February 2010

Topic: Jerusalem in the Book of Daniel and Associated Literature

 

36. What is Bible? Conference (sponsored by University of Vienna and University of Landau), Landau (Germany), June 2010 (Pub. #22)

 

37. SBL Annual Conference, International Organization for the Study of the Septuagint, November 2010, Atlanta

Topic: Qumran Evidence for a Semitic Vorlage of LXX Daniel 4 (Pub. #‎3)

 

38. Workshop: “Bits and Bible: New Digital Approaches to Edit Biblical Texts”, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, March 2011 (Pub. #49)

Topic: The Hebrew University Bible Project: Past, Present, and Future

 

39. Workshop: “Narrative and Law in the Patriarchal Traditions: Hebrew Bible and Dead Sea Scrolls”, Lichtenberg-Kolleg, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, May 2011

Topic: Adam and Eve as the First Patriarchs: Law and Narrative in the Earliest Stories of the Hebrew Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls (Pub. #‎23)

 

40. University of Maryland, Jewish Studies Department, October 2011

Topic: Innerbiblical Interpretation in the Book of Daniel (Pub. #‎3)

 

41. University of Toronto, Department of Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations, October 2011 (Pub. #49)

Topic: The Hebrew University Bible Project: Past, Present, and Future

 

42. SBL Annual Conference, Qumran Section, San Francisco, November 2011

Topic: The Text of the Bible from Within

 

43. SBL Annual Conference, Daniel Consultation, San Francisco, November 2011

Topic: Reconsidering the Theological Background of Daniel 7 in Light of Innerbiblical Interpretation (Pub. #‎3)

 

44. Columbia University Hebrew Bible Seminar, New York, December 2011

Topic: The Textual and Literary Development of Daniel 4 (Pub. #‎3)

 

45. University of Chicago, School of Oriental Studies, February 2012 (Pub. #48)

 

46. University of Notre Dame, Department of Theology, March 2012

Topic: Discussion with Prof. James VanderKam about the Composition of Jubilees

 

47. Harvard University, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Department, March 2012 (Pub. #48)

 

48. Yeshiva University, Jewish Studies Colloquium, March 2012 (Pub. #48)

 

49. Hebrew University Bible Department Symposium, October 2012 (Pub. #48)

 

50. Orion Center Greenfield Seminar, Hebrew University, November 2012

Topic: The “Son of Man” from Daniel to the Gospels (with Serge Ruzer) (Pub. #‎3)

 

51. Haifa University Dead Sea Scrolls Workshop, April 2013

Topic: The Text of Daniel at Qumran (Pub. #52)

 

52. Bar Ilan University, Bible Department Seventh Annual Conference, May 2013

Topic: Between Jubilees and Pseudo-Jubilees (4Q225–227) (Pub. #51)

 

53. Hebrew University Institute for Advanced Studies, International Conference on Convergence and Divergence in Pentateuchal Theory, May 2013

Topic: The Dynamics of Rewriting the Pentateuch in Jewish Literature of the Second Temple Period (Pub. #51)

 

54. Orion Center 14th International Symposium, Hebrew University, May 2013

Topic: The Divine Figures in Daniel 7 and 4Q246 (Pub. #‎3,‎50)

 

55. Society of Biblical Literature International Meeting, St. Andrews Scotland, July 2013

Topic: The Prehistory of the Jewish Canon

 

56. World Congress of Jewish Studies, Jerusalem, July 2013

Topic: Introducing the Book of Daniel (Pub. #‎3)

 

57. International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies, Munich, August 2013

Topic: The Masoretic and Old Greek Versions of Daniel 4 (Pub. #‎3)

 

58. International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament, Munich, August 2013

Plenary Workshop on Critical Editions of the Hebrew Bible (Pub. #‎49‎3)

 

59. Yeshiva University Dead Sea Scrolls Seminar, November 2013

Topic: Who is the ‘Son of God’ in 4Q246? An Overlooked Case of Early Biblical Interpretation (Pub. #‎50)

 

60. Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Qumran/Pseudepigrapha Joint Session, Baltimore, November 2013

Topic: The Composition of the Book of Jubilees (Pub. #51)

 

61. Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Book of the Twelve Prophets/Textual Growth Joint Session, Baltimore, November 2013

Topic: Divergent Versions of Habakkuk 3

 

62. International Society for the Study of Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Conference (“Emotions in Prayer during the Second Temple Period”), Haifa, February 2014

Topic: Prayers and their Antecedents in the Book of Jubilees

 

63. University of Zurich, University Research Priority Program (URPP) Asia and Europe, March 2014

Invited Lecture: The Text of the Hebrew Bible from the Dead Sea Scrolls to the Medieval Codex

 

64. Haifa University Dead Sea Scrolls Workshop, May 2014

Topic: From Nebuchadnezzar to Antiochus in Ancient Jewish Sources

 

65. Hebrew University Institute for Advanced Studies, International Conference on The Pentateuch within Biblical Literature: Formation and Interaction, May 2014

Topic: What Happened at Mount Sinai? Scribal Hermeneutics from MT to SP to 4Q158

 

66. Society of Biblical Literature International Meeting, Vienna, July 2014

Topic: From Nebuchadnezzar to Antiochus: On the Reception of Daniel in LXX, Qumran and Targum Jonathan

 

67. Fifth International Wuppertal Symposium on the Septuagint (“Die Septuaginta: Orte und Intentionen”), Kirchliche Hochschule Wuppertal/Bethel, Germany, July 2014

Topic: Old Greek, Theodotion and MT of Daniel 6 (Pub. #25)

 

68. Symposium: Humboldt University – Harvard University – Hebrew University, Berlin, August 2014

Response to Bernd Schipper, Scribal Hermeneutics and Literary Development in the Book of Proverbs and in Qumran

 

69. Conference in honor of Fifth Centennial of the Complutensian Polyglot Bible: Editing the Hebrew Bible in the Variety of its Texts and Versions, Madrid, November 2014

Topic: Methodological Considerations in the Preparation of an Edition of the Hebrew Bible: Reflections on the Hebrew University Bible Project (Pub. #26)

 

70. Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, IOSCS Session, San Diego, November 2014

Topic: The Old Greek and Theodotion to Daniel 8

 

71. Orion Center 20th Anniversary Colloquium, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, January 28, 2015

Topic: The Woman from Proverbs in New (Theological) Garb: A Study of 4Q184 and 4Q525

 

72. Haifa University Bible Department Seminar, November 9, 2015

 

73. Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Invited Lecture, Special combined session of Aramaic Studies and Qumran, Atlanta, November 2015

 

74. Ben Gurion University Bible Department Seminar, December 15, 2015

 

75. Fifteenth Orion International Conference, Jerusalem, April 2016

 

76. Invited Lecture, University of Helsinki, May 2016

 

77. International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament Meeting (Triennial), Invited main paper, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, September 2016

 

78. Presentation, International Panel on The Hebrew Bible in the Making, Pontifical Biblical Institute, Rome, November 2016

 

79. 16th Annual Brenninkmeijer-Werhahn Lecture, Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome, November 2016

Topic: “Daniel’s Throne” and its Earliest Jewish and Christian Readings

 

80. Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Daniel Consultation, San Antonio, November 2016

Topic: Calculating the End: Inner-Danielic Chronological Developments (#55)

 

81. Bar Ilan University Bible Department Seminar, January 2017

 

82. Symposium in Memory of Prof. Samuel E. Loewenstamm, Department of Bible, Hebrew University, March 2017

Topic: The Evolution of the Watchers Tradition

 

83. World Congress of Jewish Studies, Jerusalem, August 2017

Plenary Session: Seventy Years of Discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls

Topic: On Writing and Rewriting in Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls

 

84. Fourth International Symposium on Jewish and Christian Literature from the Hellenistic and Roman Periods: Textual Plurality Beyond the Biblical Texts, University of Metz, October 2017

Topic: Reconsidering the Relationship(s) between 4Q365, 4Q365a, and the Temple Scroll

 

85. Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Qumran Section, Boston, November 2017

Topic: Possible pre-Qumranic Roots of raz nihye

 

86. Conference on The Formation of Biblical Literature, University of Haifa, December 2017

Topic: The Formation of the Apocalyptic Visions in Daniel