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The Glosses in Ezekiel I-Xxiv

The Glosses in Ezekiel I-Xxiv THE GLOSSES IN EZEKIEL I-XXIV BY KENNETH S. FREEDY Toronto, Canada This paper proceeds from a traditio-historical approach to the book of Ezekiel which regards the tradition in its present form to be the result of a long and often complicated process of historical growth. The task of the tradition historian in this respect is threefold: (1) the development of acceptable standards of analysis by which the original nucleus of the tradition can be recovered from the present text; (2) the classification of the various strata of accretions that were added to the original in the historical continuum through which the tradition passed before reaching its final form; (3) the identification of those redactional connectives which hold the present tradition together. The glosses in Ezekiel are part of this traditio- historical endeavour and, by their nature, are susceptible to the kind of examination and classification to be undertaken in what follows here. The purpose of the present study, therefore, is to examine one aspect of the historical process in the accumulation of the tradition by reference to the glosses in the first collection of the book constitut- ing chapters i-xxiv. I In the strict sense, a gloss may http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Vetus Testamentum Brill

The Glosses in Ezekiel I-Xxiv

Vetus Testamentum , Volume 20 (2): 129 – Jan 1, 1970

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© 1970 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0042-4935
eISSN
1568-5330
DOI
10.1163/156853370X00011
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

THE GLOSSES IN EZEKIEL I-XXIV BY KENNETH S. FREEDY Toronto, Canada This paper proceeds from a traditio-historical approach to the book of Ezekiel which regards the tradition in its present form to be the result of a long and often complicated process of historical growth. The task of the tradition historian in this respect is threefold: (1) the development of acceptable standards of analysis by which the original nucleus of the tradition can be recovered from the present text; (2) the classification of the various strata of accretions that were added to the original in the historical continuum through which the tradition passed before reaching its final form; (3) the identification of those redactional connectives which hold the present tradition together. The glosses in Ezekiel are part of this traditio- historical endeavour and, by their nature, are susceptible to the kind of examination and classification to be undertaken in what follows here. The purpose of the present study, therefore, is to examine one aspect of the historical process in the accumulation of the tradition by reference to the glosses in the first collection of the book constitut- ing chapters i-xxiv. I In the strict sense, a gloss may

Journal

Vetus TestamentumBrill

Published: Jan 1, 1970

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