It looks like you're offline.
Open Library logo
additional options menu

MARC record from Internet Archive

LEADER: 13019cam a2200433Ii 4500
001 ocm04782632
003 OCoLC
005 20200617075242.2
008 790326s1952 miu 000 0 eng d
010 $aa 53009933
040 $aSTS$beng$cSTS$dOCL$dOCLCG$dWY@$dSGB$dOCLCQ$dHNW$dOCLCF$dOCLCA$dOCLCO$dAQ3
035 $a(OCoLC)04782632
050 0 $aBS1140$b.K
082 04 $a221.61
049 $aMAIN
100 1 $aKeil, Carl Friedrich,$d1807-1888.
245 10 $aManual of historico-critical introduction to the canonical Scriptures of the Old Testament /$cby Karl Friedrich Keil ; translated from the 2d ed., with supplementary notes from Bleek and others, by George C.M. Douglas.
246 18 $aCommentaries on the Old Testament
246 3 $aIntroduction to the canonical Scriptures of the Old Testament
260 $aGrand Rapids :$bW.B. Eerdman,$c1952.
300 $a2 volumes ;$c23 cm.
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
505 0 $aV. 1. Rise, growth, prime, and decay of the Hebrew literature -- The languages of the Old Testament -- The five books of Moses, or the law -- The prophetical historical books -- The prophetical predictive books -- The poetical writings.
505 0 $aVOLUME ONE. PREPARATORY -- FIRST PART Origin and Genuineness of the Canonical Writings of the Old Testament -- FIRST SECTION of the Old Testament Literature in General -- CHAPTER I RISE, GROWTH, PRIME, AND DECAY OF THE HEBREW LITERATURE -- 4. Beginnings of the Practice of Writing among the Hebrews -- 5. The Hebrew Literature in the Age of Moses -- 6, 7. Development of the Hebrew Literature after Moses till the Time of David; under Solomon and the Kings until the Exile -- 8. Decay and Termination of the Hebrew Literature after the Exile -- CHAPTER II THE LANGUAGES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 9. Name and Origin -- 10. General Character of the Shemitic Languages -- 11, 12. The Aramaic Language; the Arabic -- 13, 14. The HEbrew Language, its Age and Character; its Course of Development -- 15-17. The Language of the Age of Moses; of the Age of David and Solomon; of the Age of the Exile -- 18. How the Hebrew died out as the National Language -- SECOND SECTION ORIGIN AND GENUINENESS OF THE INDIVIDUAL BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 19. General Classification of these Books -- FIRST DIVISION THE FIVE BOOKS OF MOSES, OR THE LAW -- 20, 21. Names and Division: Contents of the Five Books -- 22, 23. Aim and Plan: Sources of Information, or Documents, in the Pentateuch -- 24, 25. Nature of the imaginary Fundamental Document: Basis od the Hypothesis of Supplements; the Divine Names -- 26, 27. The Marks by which the two Documents are said to be distinguishable: Contradictions and varying Legends; Difference in the Circle of Ideas, and in the usus loquendi -- 28-30. Relation of Deuteronomy to the Earlier Books; in respect of its Contents, and of its usus loquendi -- 31. The Historical Point of View of the Laws in Deuteronomy -- 32, 33. Unity of the Pentateuc; its Author -- 34, 35. Historical Testimonies to the fact that Moses composed the Pentateuch; Testimony of the Synagogue and the Christian Church -- 36. Assaults upon the Genuineness of the Pentateuch, and Defences of it -- 37-39. Objections to the Genuineness: its Unhistorical Character; Traces of a Later Age; remaining General Objections -- SECOND DIVISION THE PROPHETICAL WRITINGS -- CHAPTER I THE PROPHETICAL HISTORICAL BOOKS -- 40. Peculiarity of the Historical Books composed by the Prophets -- 41-45. The Book of Joshua: Name, Contents, and Object; Independence and Unity of the Book; Date of Composition; Sources of Information, and Historical Character -- 51-55. The Books of Samuel: Name, Division, Contents, and Object; Composition and Unitiy; Date and Author; Sources of Information; Historical Character -- CHAPTER II THE PROPHETICAL PREDIVTIVE BOOKS -- 61. The Position of Prophecy in the Theocracy -- 62. Nature of Prophecy in reference to Subject-matter and Form -- 63. The Literature of the Prophecies -- A. THE GREATER PROPHETS -- 64, 65. Isaiah: his Person; Contents and Arrangement of his Book -- 66-70. Date of Composition and Genuineness of ch. i.-xii., xiii.-xxvii, xxviii.-xxxv.; upon Ch. xxxvi.-xxxix -- 71, 72. Date of Composition and Genuinesess of Ch. xl.-lxvi.; Origin of the Book of the Prophecies of Isaiah -- 73-76. Jeremiah: his Person; Contents and Structure of his Book; Genuineness and Integrity of his Prophecies; Origin of his Book -- 77-80. Ezekial: his Person; Contents and Arragnement of his Book; Genuineness of his Prophecies; Origination of his Book -- B. THE TWELBE MINOR PROPHETS -- 81. Collection and Arrangement -- 82, 83. Hosea: his Person; his Book -- 84, 85. Joel; his Person, his Age; his Book -- 86, 87. Amos: his Person; his Book -- 88. Obadiah: Contents and Date of his Prophecy -- 89, 90. Jonah: Contents and Character of the Book; Author and Date of the Book -- 91, 92. Micah: his Person; his Book -- 93, 94. Nahum: his Person; his Book -- 95, 96. Habakkuk: his Person and Age; his Book -- 97, 98. Zephaniah: his Person; his Book -- 99, 100. Haggai: his Person; his Book -- 101-103. Zechariah: his Person; Contents of his Book; Genuineness of Ch. ix.-xiv. -- 104, 105. Malachi: his Person and Age; his Book -- THIRD DIVISION THE HAGIOGRAPHA, OR HOWLY WRITINGS -- 106. Classification of them -- CHAPTER I THE POETICAL WRITINGS -- 107, 108. Hebrew Poetry: its Character, its Species, its Form -- 109-114. The Psalms: Titles; Contents and Divisions; Superscriptions, and Notes appended; Authors; Age of the Anonymous Psalms; Origin of the Collection -- 115-119. The Proverbs of Solomon: Names and Character; Contents and Component Parts; Author of ch. i.-xxxix., and of the Appendices Ch. xxx. xxxi.; Origin of the Book -- 120-123. The Book of Job: its Idea, its Contents, its Arragnement; Matter and Form of the Poem; its Age and Author; its Unity and Integrity -- 124, 125. The Song of Songs: its Name, Contents, and Form; its Author, and the Date of its Composition -- 128-130. The Book of Ecclesiastes: its Name and Charcter; its Contents, Plan, and Object; its Author, and the Date of its Composition.
505 0 $aVOLUME TWO. FIRST PART -- SECOND SECTION; THIRD DIVISION (continued) -- CHAPTER II -- 131-134. The Book of Daniel: the Person of the Prophet; Contents and Unity of the Book; its Genuineness; objections to the Genuineness -- CHAPTER III THE HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE HAGIOGRAPHA -- 135. Character of these Books -- 136, 137. The Book of Ruth: its Contents, Object, and Historical Character; its Author, and the Date of Composition -- 138-142. The Books of the Chronicles: Name, Division, and Contents; Relation to the other Historical Books; the Object; the Sources; the Author, and the Date of Composition -- 143, 144. Historical Character of the Chronicles in those Sections in which they are parallel with the Books of Samuel and kings, and in the Narratives which are peculiar to themselves -- 145-147. The Book of Ezra: its Contents and Component Parts; its Unity and Independence; its Author and its Credibility -- 148, 149. The Book of Nehemiah: its Contents and Component Parts; its Genuineness, Integrity, and Crediblity -- 150-152. The Book of Ester: its Contents and Object; its Historical Character; its Author, and its Date of Composition -- THIRD SECTION HOW THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON ORIGINATED -- 153. Collections of the Sacred WRitings at times earlier than the Exile -- 154, 155. Collection of the Old Testament after the Exile; Close of the Collection -- 156. Names, Divisions, and Enumerations of the Scriptures of the Old Testament -- SECOND PART HISTORY OF THE TRANSMISSION OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 157. General Survey -- FIRST SECTION PRESERVATION AND CULTIVATION OF HEBREW PHILOLOGY -- 158. The Transmission among the Jews of the Hebrew as a Dead Language -- 159. The Philological Cultivation of the Hebrew Language among the Jews -- 160, 161. The Study of Hebrew among the Christians until the Reformation; and thence down to Present Time -- 162. Aids to the Investigation of the Hebrew Language -- SECOND SECTION PROPAGATION AND DIFFUSION OF THE CANON OF THE OLD TEASTAMENT -- FIRST DIVISION PRESERVATION AND PROPAGATION OF THE HEBREW CANON BY MANUSCRIPTS -- CHAPTER I HISTORY OF THE EXTERNAL FORM OF THE TEXT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 163. The Original Form of the Old Testament -- 164. The Changes in the Hebrew Written Characters -- 165, 166. The most Ancient System of Vowel Marks; how the Masoretic Vowel System came into Existence -- 167, 168. Divisions of the Words and of the Sense by Open Spaces and Paragraphs; Verses, Chapters, and Ecclesiatical Pericopae -- 169. The Masoretic System of Accents -- CHAPTER II THE MANUSCRIPTS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 170-173. Their General Nature and Character; Synagogue Rolls; Private Manuscripts in the Chaldee Square Character, and in the Rabbinical Character -- SECOND DIVISION DIFFUSION OF THE OLD TESTAMENT BY MEANS OF THE ANCIENT VERSIONS -- 174. Value and Classification of the Ancient Versions -- CHAPTER I GREEK TRANSLATIONS -- 175. The Alexandrian Translation; its Origin and Nature -- 176. The other Ancient Greek Versions -- 177, 178. History of the Septuagint to the Time of Origen, and afterwards -- 179-184. Versions derived from the Septuagint: the Itala; Syriac Mediate Translations; the Ethiopic; the Egyptian; the Arabic Mediate Translations; and others -- 185. The Versio Veneta -- CHAPTER II ORIENTAL TRANSLATIONS -- 186-190. Chaldee Paraphrases (Targums), their Origin; that of Onkelos; that of Jonathan ben Uzziel; the Jerusalem Targum on the Pentateuch (Pseudo-Jonathan); those on the Hagiographa -- 191, 192. The Syriac Peshite: Versions derived from it -- 193. Arabic Translations from the Original Text -- 194, 195. The Samaritan Version of the Pentateuch; Greek and Arabic Translations from it -- 196. Persian Translation of the Pentateuch -- CHAPTER III THE LATIN VULGATE, AND THE VERSIONS DERIVED FROM IT -- 197-200. Its Origin, its Nature and Character, and the Ecclesiastical Recognition given to it; its Fortunes until the Invention of Printing; history of its Printed Text; Versions derived from it -- THIRD SECTION THE CRITICAL TREATMENT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- FIRST PERIOD HISTORY OF THE CRITICISM OF THE UNPRINTED TEXT -- 201. How various Readings of Errors came to exist in the Text -- 202. Nature and Condition of the Text before and at the Closing of the Canon -- 203. How the Text took firm Shape in the Age of the Sopherim -- 204. The Samaritan-Alexadrine Text -- 205, 206. The Hebrew Text in the Talmudic and in the Masoretic Periods -- 207, 208. The Masora; Subsequent Fortunes of the Unprinted Text -- SECOND PERIOD HISTORY OF THE PRINTED TEXT -- 209. The Principal Editions of the Old Testament -- 210, 211. Critical Apparatus: the Transactions respecting the Integrity of the Masoretic Text -- FOURTH SECTION THE EXXLESIASTICAL AUTHORITY AND TREATMENT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 212. The Character of the Old Testament in general -- FIRST DIVISION THE DOCTRINE OF THE CANON OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 213. The Idea of the Canon -- CHAPTER I HISTORY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON AMONG THE JEWS -- 214. The Palastine and Alexandrian Canon -- 215. The Samaritan Canon -- CHAPTER II HISTORY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON IN THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH -- 216. The Views of the Ancient Church as to the Authority of the Old Testament Canon, and the number of Books Comprehened withing it -- 217. Protestant and Neo-Catholic Canon -- 218. The more recent Views with reference to the Canon of the Old Testament -- SECOND DIVISION THE HERMENEUTICAL TREATMENT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT -- 219. In general -- CHAPTER I THE HERMENEUTICAL TREATMENT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT AMONG THE JEWS -- 220-222. The Hermeneutical Procedure of the Talmudists, and of the Rabbins who explained the Scriptures; that of theHellenistic and Alexandrian Jews; that of the Karaites and of the Kabbalists -- CHAPTER II THE HERMENEUTICAL TREATMENT OF THE OLD RESTAMENT IN THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH -- 223-225. In the Ancient Church till the Reformation; in the Protestant Church; in the Roman Catholic Church -- IDEXES -- I. Passages of Scriputre Illustrated or Explained -- II. Principal Subjects
590 $bArchive
630 00 $aBible.$pOld Testament$vIntroductions.
630 07 $aBible.$pOld Testament.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01808092
650 0 $aHebrew literature$xHistory and criticism.
650 7 $aHebrew literature.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00954363
655 7 $aCriticism, interpretation, etc.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01411635
655 7 $aIntroductions.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01423833
700 1 $aBleek, Friedrich,$d1793-1859.$tEinleitung in das Alte Testament.
776 08 $iOnline version:$aKeil, Carl Friedrich, 1807-1888.$tManual of historico-critical introduction to the canonical Scriptures of the Old Testament.$dGrand Rapids : W.B. Eerdman, 1952$w(OCoLC)959094809
994 $a92$bCST
976 $a10011320323
976 $a10011436950