From: owner-ane@ (ANE Digest) To: ane-digest Subject: ANE Digest V2000 #238 Reply-To: Sender: owner-ane@ Errors-To: owner-ane@ Precedence: bulk ANE Digest Sunday, August 20 2000 Volume 2000 : Number 238 ane Millenium paper Re: ane novel publication ane River Murat ane Ur-Utu bib request ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2000 12:11:29 +0200 From: "Walter Mattfeld" Subject: ane Millenium paper This year being 2000 Anno Domini in Christendom's calendar, has brought to the fore in the public's interest, the notion of a Millenium, a Thousand Year Age, which will see Christ's kingdom established on earth. The following paper attempts to identify how the notions of a Millenium arose from ancient Greek religious motifs of the "Pre-Christian" era, and an attempt is made to explain how these motifs were transformed by the Early Christians. I offer my paper via e-mail titled The Millenium, Christ's Thousand Year Reign on Earth (The Pre-Christian Origins of). Please do not direct your request to this list. Direct your request to: mattfeld@mail.pjsnet.com All the best, Walter Walter Reinhold Warttig Mattfeld Walldorf by Heidelberg Baden-Wurttemburg Germany ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2000 08:27:22 -0400 (EDT) From: Stephen Goranson Subject: Re: ane novel publication On related works, a rather interesting though not fully accurate review essay is: John Kissinger, "Archaeology as 'Wild Magic': The Dead Sea Scrolls in Popular Fiction," Journal of American Culture v. 21 n.3 (Fall 1998) 75-81. That could be usefully compared with: George W.E. Nickelsburg, "Currents in Qumran Scholarship: The Interplay of Data, Agendas, and Methodology" in The Dead Sea Scrolls at Fifty [1997 SBL proceedings] ed. Robert Kugler and Eileen Schuller (Atlanta: SBL, 1999) 79ff, and the following responses. best, Stephen Goranson goranson@duke.edu ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2000 11:57:20 -0700 From: "Michael S. Sanders" Subject: ane River Murat The River Murat is an important river in Turkey and yet all the experts so far consulted can find no reference to it in Assyrian, Babylonian, Hittite, Urartian etc. etc. records. A final plea, under what possible name(s) could this river have been referred to in antiquity? Hope everyone on this list is having a restful summer :-) Ever Mike Mike.Sanders@BibleMysteries.com http://www.biblemysteries.com "The Greatest thing you'll ever learn, is just to Love and be Loved in return" (Eden Ahbez) ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2000 12:58:30 -0700 From: "Kate" Subject: ane Ur-Utu bib request This is a multi-part message in MIME format. - ------=_NextPart_000_0011_01C009DD.2CBD4DC0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable I would much appreciate it if someone could point me to the correct = location of a paper by K. van Lerberghe that is short titled "New Data." = My footnote reads AfO 19 (1983) 280-283, but this is incorrect. =20 Replies can be sent directly to ktmccaf@ix.netcom.com.=20 Kate McCaffrey - ------=_NextPart_000_0011_01C009DD.2CBD4DC0 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
I would much appreciate it if someone = could point me to=20 the correct location of a paper by K. van Lerberghe that is = short=20 titled "New Data." My footnote reads AfO 19 (1983) 280-283,=20 but this is incorrect.  
 
Replies can be sent directly to ktmccaf@ix.netcom.com. 
 
Kate McCaffrey
- ------=_NextPart_000_0011_01C009DD.2CBD4DC0-- ------------------------------ End of ANE Digest V2000 #238 **************************** Back issues are available on the Oriental Institute World-Wide Web (WWW) site at: http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/ANE/OI_ANE.html