Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Biblical Evidence for Marriage Gifts
- 2 Postexilic Evidence for Marriage Gifts
- 3 Anthropology and the Study of Marriage Gifts
- 4 The Social Structure of Ancient Israel from Iron I to the Babylonian Exile
- 5 The Social Structure of Palestine in the Second Temple Period
- Final Analysis and Conclusions
- Appendix: Marriage Gifts Among Judeans Living in Babylonia During the Sixth Century BCE
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index of Biblical and Other Ancient Sources
- General Index
5 - The Social Structure of Palestine in the Second Temple Period
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Biblical Evidence for Marriage Gifts
- 2 Postexilic Evidence for Marriage Gifts
- 3 Anthropology and the Study of Marriage Gifts
- 4 The Social Structure of Ancient Israel from Iron I to the Babylonian Exile
- 5 The Social Structure of Palestine in the Second Temple Period
- Final Analysis and Conclusions
- Appendix: Marriage Gifts Among Judeans Living in Babylonia During the Sixth Century BCE
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index of Biblical and Other Ancient Sources
- General Index
Summary
“The daughters of Israel are beautiful but poverty destroys their beauty.”
– R. IshmaelThe previous chapter examined the social structure of ancient Israel from the time of Israel's emergence to that of the Babylonian exile, and demonstrated that stratification grew markedly more pronounced in the region over the course of the several centuries preceding the exile. This chapter extends the analysis of social stratification from the latter time until the Roman period. The reason for separating these two chapters as such is quite obvious: Israelite society underwent many radical changes as a result of the destruction of the First Temple, the forced migration of Israel's elite to Babylon, and the general devastation wrought by the Babylonian military's incursions into Judah, incursions that left clear signs of damage at many sites. This chapter, however, does not focus on the exilic period itself, for in a longue durée study of this kind, seventy years is an exceedingly brief span of time, nor does it address all of the changes that the exile brought about, or – perhaps better – set in motion. As was the case with the previous chapter, it focuses instead on the issue of social stratification and on the following question: did the political and social changes of the postexilic period, which affected so many spheres of life in ancient Palestine, influence levels of social stratification as well?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Marriage Gifts and Social Change in Ancient Palestine1200 BCE to 200 CE, pp. 200 - 229Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010