In Hebreo : the Victorine exegesis of the Bible in the light of its Northern-French Jewish sources /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Leyra Curiá, Montse, author.
Imprint:Turnhout, Belgium : Brepols, 2017.
Description:408 pages ; 26 cm.
Language:English
Ancient Greek
Hebrew
Latin
Series:Bibliotheca Victorina ; XXVI
Bibliotheca Victorina ; 26.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11603845
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Victorine exegesis of the Bible in the light of its Northern-French Jewish sources
ISBN:9782503575421
2503575420
9782503575438
2503575439
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 371-394) and indexes.
In English; includes textual excerpts in Greek, Hebrew or Latin, with parallels translation in English.
Summary:"In the twentieth century a number of scholars pointed to parallels between the 'in Hebreo' or 'secundum Hebreos' interpretations in the commentaries of Hugh and Andrew of St. Victor and comments in Latin sources and in twelfth-century Jewish writers of the Northern-French school (Rashi, Joseph Qara, Rashbam, and Beckhor Shor). The scholars suggested various hypotheses on the Victorines' direct or indirect knowledge of the Hebrew text of the Bible and the identity of the Jews on whom the Victorines reportedly drew. Montse Leyra's book offers a systematic work of comparative analysis between the Victorines' in hebreo interpretations and their parallels in the Latin and Jewish sources, and between these interpretations and parallel biblical readings in the textual traditions of the Vetus Latina, the Vulgate, and the Hebrew Masoretic Text. In her analysis, Montse Leyra discusses parallels that have gone unnoticed by previous scholars, identifies which sources were a direct source for the Victorines and which were transmitted via later, intermediary sources, and determines whether the Victorines took up textual biblical variants coming from the Vetus Latina and the Septuagint as literal translations of the Hebrew Masoretic Text or they were transmitting the Masoretic text itself. Finally, by studying the parallels of content and exegetical method between the 'in hebreo' interpretations of the Victorines and surviving interpretations of Rashi, Rashbam, Joseph Qarah, and Bekhor Shor, she ascertains whether we can actually identify and distinguish the exegetes of the Northern-French school whose works have been transmitted to us as direct sources of Hugh and Andrew from other Jewish exegetes of their time."--Back cover.

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Call Number: B765.H74 L49 2017
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