The Haberman Institute for Jewish Studies

Why Did Jewish Art Flourish in Late Antiquity?

04.23.2018 - By Haberman Institute for Jewish StudiesPlay

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Speaker:  Rabbi Lee Levine Program Series:  Rabbi Joshua O. Haberman Distinguished Scholar Series Location:  Ohr Kodesh Congregation, Chevy Chase, MD Date: November 21, 2017 The study of ancient Jewish art is a relatively new field fueled by ongoing archaeological discoveries. Only in Late Antiquity (third to seventh centuries CE) did Jewish art begin to flourish in a dramatic fashion. By the Byzantine era (fourth to seventh centuries CE), religious symbols, biblical motifs and even clearly pagan mythological motifs - especially the zodiac signs and the image of Helios - graced many synagogue mosaic floors in ancient Palestine.  This lecture focuses on the political, social and religious reasons for such a dramatic change, and likewise addresses the variety of ways Jewish communities, which were wholly autonomous and diverse, grappled with such developments.

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