TY - JOUR
T1 - Yosef bar el'asa artaka and the elusive jewish diaspora of pre-islamic Iran and central Asia
AU - Shenkar, Michael
PY - 2014/3/1
Y1 - 2014/3/1
N2 - The article discusses an inscription on an ossuary that probably once contained the bones of a woman brought from abroad for burial in Jerusalem by her son, nicknamed 'Artaka'. Based on his name, it is suggested that he came to Jerusalem from Parthiena or Bactria - at that time provinces of the Parthian Empire. If so, this inscription provides unique archaeological evidence connected with the Parthian Diaspora and its pilgrimages to Jerusalem. Moreover, this could be the earliest attestation of the later custom of reinterment in the Land of Israel. The only solid find connected with the presence of Jewish communities in the pre-Islamic Iranian world are the ossuaries inscribed with Jewish names that were excavated in the necropolis of Bayram Ali (7th-8th centuries ce). It is noteworthy that the custom of secondary burial in ossuaries, which existed in Jerusalem in the first century bce-first century ce, was also widespread in Central Asia, although the two are probably unrelated.
AB - The article discusses an inscription on an ossuary that probably once contained the bones of a woman brought from abroad for burial in Jerusalem by her son, nicknamed 'Artaka'. Based on his name, it is suggested that he came to Jerusalem from Parthiena or Bactria - at that time provinces of the Parthian Empire. If so, this inscription provides unique archaeological evidence connected with the Parthian Diaspora and its pilgrimages to Jerusalem. Moreover, this could be the earliest attestation of the later custom of reinterment in the Land of Israel. The only solid find connected with the presence of Jewish communities in the pre-Islamic Iranian world are the ossuaries inscribed with Jewish names that were excavated in the necropolis of Bayram Ali (7th-8th centuries ce). It is noteworthy that the custom of secondary burial in ossuaries, which existed in Jerusalem in the first century bce-first century ce, was also widespread in Central Asia, although the two are probably unrelated.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85032470919&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.18647/3162/jjs-2014
DO - 10.18647/3162/jjs-2014
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.systematicreview???
AN - SCOPUS:85032470919
SN - 0022-2097
VL - 65
SP - 58
EP - 76
JO - Journal of Jewish Studies
JF - Journal of Jewish Studies
IS - 1
ER -