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Abishag: Administrator of King David’s Household (Hebrew Bible Monographs)

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Overview

Following Daniel Bodi’s previous monographs on the three wives of King David-Michal, Bathsheba and Abigail-here is a fourth one on Abishag, the last woman in his life. It has not been recognized before how decisive a role she played as a palace administrator in David’s final political crisis, Adonijah’s coup d’état, and Solomon’s proclamation as king.

Hitherto, Abishag has been given androcentric readings. Her position as administrator has been demoted to that of a mere housekeeper, bedfellow or even hot-water bottle. Some rabbinic authors transformed her into an androgynous being, claiming an intersex person warms better than a young female virgin. In fact, the term for Abishag’s office as sōkenet is nothing but the feminine form of sōken ‘palace steward’, a well-known functionary across the Semitic world. Much more than a simple housekeeper, Abishag wields administrative power with a legal role as a witness in Solomon’s appointment.

Exploring further the role of women at royal courts, Bodi also offers a comparative analysis of the famous queens who played a role in the royal succession as kings’ mothers in Egypt, Mari, Hatti, Ugarit and Assyria. Solomon’s appointment as David’s successor results from a palace putsch, executed with cunning and craftiness, which are to be understood as archaic forms of wisdom in the Hebrew Bible, classical Greece and the ancient Near East.

The stories of David’s wives-and of Abishag-together form a Hebrew document in the style of an Advice to a Prince. An interesting comparison is drawn between David’s four wives and the four females Odysseus encounters in Homer’s Odyssey: Circe, Calypso, Nausicaa and Penelope. Strikingly, the Hebrew version of the Advice to a Prince and the Homeric Epic were being written at roughly the same time, the end of the eighth century bce.

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  • Explores the role of women at royal courts.
  • Focuses on Abishag, the last woman in the life of King David.
  • Shows how Abishag wields administrative power with a legal role as a witness in Solomon’s appointment.
  • Abbreviations
  • Abisag—a Poem by Rainer Maria Rilke (1905/6)
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1 Abishag in the Hebrew Narrative (1 Kings 1 and 2)
  • Chapter 2 Abishag as the Administrator of King David’s Household, Hebrew sōkenet, West-Semitic sākinu and Akkadian šākin bīt
  • Chapter 3 Adonijah’s Coup d’État
  • Chapter 4 Where’s the Oath?
  • Chapter 5 Adonijah’s Chariot and Horsemen and Solomon’s She-Donkey: The Donkey as the Hebrew Royal Symbol in Light of Amorite Customs
  • Chapter 6 The Role of the King’s Mother (gebîrâ) in Royal Succession (1 Kings 2)
  • Chapter 7 The King’s Mother in the Ancient Near East (Egypt, Mari, Ḫatti, Ugarit, Assyria)
  • Chapter 8 The Four Wives of King David and the Four Women of Odysseus
  • Chapter 9 The Stories of David’s Wives as a Hebrew ‘Advice to a Prince’ (Fürstenspiegel)
  • Chapter 10 Cunning and Craftiness as Archaic Forms of Wisdom, in the Hebrew Bible, Classical Greece, and the Ancient Near East
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index of References
  • Index of Authors

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    $56.99

    Digital list price: $110.00
    Save $53.01 (48%)

    Gathering interest