The Land of Israel during the Byzantine Period (324-638 CE)
The lamps of Edom [Christianity] burn bright, the lamps of Zion [Judaism] are extinguished.–Yannai, sixth century synagogue poet.
The transformation of Christianity from a despised and outlawed cult into the official religion of the Roman Empire had profound significance for Jews and gentiles alike. In the centuries after Constantine’s conversion to Christianity in 324 CE, the ancestral religions of Rome were persecuted, destroyed and declared illicit. The great temples of the empire were pillaged, burned, dismantled and on occasion rededicated as churches for the (sometimes) compliant masses. The Christianization of the Roman Empire is one of the most gruesome example of government-sponsored cultural annihilation in western history.
Jews fared far better in this new Christian empire than polytheists did. At first, the maintenance of Judaism was based upon their positive legal status under Roman law. Being an ancient and licit religion, Judaism was protected from Christian persecution. However, as the fifth and sixth centuries wore on, these protections began to slip, as synagogues were destroyed and rededicated as churches under Christian sponsorship, while the government did little or nothing to protect them.
Christians had reason to preserve Jews. St. Augustine formulated that, as the living examples of the “Old Covenant” that God had made with the ancient Israelites, Jews should be treated as remnants of a failed covenant that had been supplanted by the New Covenant of Christ. In a way, Jews were thus anthropologically interesting. This colonial approach towards Jews had theological underpinnings. For instance, according to St. Augustine, the continued existence of the Jews, maintained in an intentionally wretched state, was continuing proof of their rejection by God.
Despite being persecuted, Jewish culture seems to have thrived under Christian Rome, at least in the Land of Israel. Synagogue buildings continued to be constructed throughout Jewish areas of Palestine, often with beautifully decorated mosaics and polished stone seven-branched menorahs. The construction of these buildings had much in common with nearby churches, which came to dominate the Jewish homeland as Christians established their Christian Holy Land and strengthened the economy of Palestine. Jewish literary composition also thrived, though the age of the great and well known Rabbinic scholars passed, and rabbis did their work mainly in anonymity. The exception is a group of sixth century virtuoso synagogue poets, Yose son of Yose, Yannai, Qalir and others, who wove the Hebrew language artfully into new and energized liturgical poetry (piyyutim). Homiletical interpretation of Scripture also continued apace, leading to the composition of new collections of homilies (midrashim) and Aramaic translations of Scripture (Targumim).
In the space created between Christian persecution of polytheists and the grudging toleration of the people of the “Old Testament,” Judaism thrived under difficult circumstances that presaged the Christian Middle Ages. As one synagogue poet Yannai put it, “The lamps of Edom [Christianity] burn bright, the lamps of Zion [Judaism] are extinguished.” Yannai’s lament, however, was only for the moment. His community expected messianic redemption, and with it the defeat of Christian Rome. In the end, redemption seemed to come from the East, with the Persian invasion of Palestine in 616 CE and finally the Islamic conquest in 632 CE.
Overview
Artifacts
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- Nag Hammadi Library, 3rd-4th century CE
- Capernaum Synagogue, 3rd-4th century CE
- Akeptous Inscription, 3-4th century CE
- Fragment of the Book of Revelation, 3-4th century CE
- Prayer for Salvation to the One God, 3rd-4th century CE
- Hammat Tiberias Synagogue Mosaic, 4th century CE
- Earliest Monk Cells, 4th century CE
- Codex Theodosianus, 4th century CE
- Roman Sarcophagus Depicting the Christian Passion, 4th century CE
- Gold-Glass Bases, 4th century CE
- Diademed Woman, 4th century CE
- Khirbet Susiya Synagogue Mosaic, 4th century CE
- Hammat Tiberias Menorah, 4th-5th century CE
- Meroth Synagogue, 4th-5th century CE
- Meroth Amulet, 4th-5th century CE
- Coin Hoard from Meroth, 4th-5th century CE
- Byzantine Church of the Annunciation, 4th-5th century CE
- Burial Inscription, 4th-5th century CE
- Christian Seal Ring, 4th-6th century CE
- Corinth Synagogue, 4th-6th century CE
- Two Lead Foil Magic Amulets, 4th-6th century CE
- House of Eusebius, 4th-7th century CE
- Edict of Milan, 313 CE
- Bishop Cyril, 315–386 CE
- Greek Epitaph, 319 CE
- Revocation of Law Preventing Jews from Holding Public Office, 321 CE
- Coin of Helena, 324/5 CE
- Church of the Holy Sepulchre, 325 CE
- The True Cross in Rome, c. 325 CE
- Church of Eleona, 326-333 CE
- Church of the Nativity, 333 CE
- Pilgrim of Bordeaux, 333 CE
- Coin of Constantine, 330 CE
- Constantius’ Slave Laws, 339 CE
- Gold Hoard from Caesarea, 344-395 CE
- Codex Vaticanus, 350 CE
- Codex Sinaiticus, 350 CE
- War against Gallus, 351-352 CE
- Augustine, 354-430 CE
- Qazrin Coin Hoard, 361–363 CE
- Letter from Julian to the Jews, 363 CE
- The Good Shepherd, 5th century CE
- Sepphoris Synagogue Mosaic, 5th century CE
- Sepphoris Inscription, 5th century CE
- Octagonal Church, 5th century CE
- Martyrius Monastery, 5th century CE
- Mary’s Tomb, 5th century CE
- Isaiah Inscription on the Western Wall, 5th century CE
- Codex Alexandrinus, 5th century CE
- Christian Oil Lamp, 5th-6th century CE
- Nile Celebration Mosaic, 5th-6th century CE
- Gaza Church, 5th-6th century CE
- Sacred Horseman, 5th-6th century CE
- Glass Vessel Decorated with Crosses, 5th-6th century CE
- Cotton Genesis, 5-6th century CE
- Temple Mount Mosaic, 5th-7th century
- Eucherius Describes the Church of the Apostles, c. 400 CE
- Eudocia Inscription, 408-450 CE
- Ein Gedi Synagogue- “Peace upon Israel,” 450 CE
- Hammat Gader Synagogue, 450 CE
- Epitaph of Maron son of Kaioumos, 456 CE
- Mar Saba Monastery, 439 CE
- Epitaph of Lucia, Daughter of Peter, 461 CE
- Coin Hoards from Ein Gedi, 498-565 CE
- Jesus Seal, 6th century CE
- Horvat Bata Cross, 6th century CE
- Bread Stamp Inscribed “The Way of the Lord,” 6th century CE
- Gaza Synagogue Mosaic, 6th century CE
- Petra Papyri, 6th century CE
- Samaritan Castra, 6th century CE
- Relief from Hanita, 6th century CE
- Capital Decorated with a Menorah, 6th century CE
- Capital Decorated with a Cross, 6th century CE
- Kissufim Mosaic, 6th century CE
- Justinian Icons from Sinai, 6th century
- Vulgate Gospels, 6th century CE
- Gold Coins, 6th-7th century CE
- Magic Bowl, 6th-7th century CE
- Mosaic Inscription, 6th-7th century CE
- Bronze Censer Bowl, 6th-7th century CE
- Rehov Synagogue Mosaic Floor, 6th-7th century CE
- Babylonian Talmud, c. 500 CE
- Chaldean Inscription, c. 500 CE
- Mosaic of Justinian, 527-565 CE
- Madaba Map, 527-565 CE
- Hagia Sophia, 532 CE
- Nea Church, 543 CE
- Emperor Phocas Coin, 602-610 CE
- Gold Coin Hoard, 610-613 CE
- Sassanian Conquest of Jerusalem, 614 CE
- Tombstone from Zoar
- Byzantine Gold Ring
- Oil Lamps with Greek Inscription
- Arch of the Hurva Synagogue
- Manger Square Church
- Glazed Bowls
- Arbel Synagogue
- Byzantine Avdat
- Bronze and Wood Cross
- Christograms
- Byzantine Chapel at Masada
Articles
- Jews and the Early Christian Church, 4th and 5th Centuries, Richard E. Rubenstein, Aristotle’s Children, Harcourt Books, 2004.
- Digging the Talmud in Ancient Meiron, Eric M. Meyers and Carol L. Meyers, BAR 4-02, Jun 1978.
- “What Is the Talmud?” BAR 4-02, Jun 1978.
- Saving the Mt. Sinai Mosaics, George H. Forsyth and Kurt Weitzmann, BAR 4-04, Nov-Dec 1978.
- The Marvelous Mosaics of Kissufim, Rudolph Cohen, BAR 6-01, Jan-Feb 1980.
- Books in Brief- The Discovery of Dura-Europos, A. Thomas Kraabel, BAR 6-04, Jul-Aug 1980.
- Books in Brief- The Synagogue- The Excavations at Dura-Europos, Final Report, BAR 6-04, Jul-Aug 1980.
- A Tale of Two Talmuds, BAR 17-02, Mar-Apr 1991.
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