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Yigael Yadin (1917–1984)

Autor(a) de Masada

48+ Works 1,473 Membros 18 Críticas

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

(eng) Hebrew: יגאל ידין‎, born Yigal Sukenik (Hebrew: יגאל סוקניק)

Obras por Yigael Yadin

Masada (1966) 628 exemplares
The Message of the Scrolls (1850) 107 exemplares
The Story of Masada (1969) 97 exemplares
The Temple Scroll (1983) 12 exemplares
The Temple Scroll 3 Volumes (1983) 7 exemplares
Masada Revisited 1 exemplar
חצור 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Historical sites in Israel (1964) — Prefácio, algumas edições90 exemplares
Judaism in Stone: Archaeology of Ancient Synagogues (1979) — Prefácio, algumas edições50 exemplares
Israel's War of Independence 1947-1949 (1961) — Epilogue, algumas edições43 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome legal
Sukenik, Yigael
Outros nomes
Jadin, Jigael
Data de nascimento
1917-03-20
Data de falecimento
1984-06-28
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
Ottoman Empire
British Mandate of Palestine (1920-1948)
Israel
País (no mapa)
Israel
Local de nascimento
Jerusalem, Ottoman Empire
Educação
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (MA ∙ History and Archaeology ∙ 1945)
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Ph.D. ∙ History and Archaeology ∙ 1955)
Ocupações
officer (Israeli Army)
archaeologist
politician
Relações
Sukenik, Eleazar Lipa (father)
Organizações
Israel Defense Forces
Dead Sea Scrolls Editorial Team
Democratic Movement for Change (DASH)

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Yigael Yadin was a soldier in the Israeli army who rose to become Chief of Staff. He left the military at age 35 and devoted himself to archeology. He excavated some of the most important sites in the region, including Masada, the Qumran Caves in which the Dead Sea Scrolls were hidden, Hazor, Tel Megiddo, and Tel Gezer.
Nota de desambiguação
Hebrew: יגאל ידין‎, born Yigal Sukenik (Hebrew: יגאל סוקניק)

Membros

Críticas

 
Assinalado
Futuretobi | Feb 18, 2023 |
A thorough relating of the archaeological dig at Masada in 1963 and 1964. Profuse illustrations. Excellent review of the edifice and its history.
 
Assinalado
LindaLeeJacobs | 9 outras críticas | Feb 15, 2020 |
This is another book on Masada for young readers maybe middle school. Although I will say that this book is basically a small textbook which is about the archaeological dig they did several decades ago which allowed them to piece to piece together the history of Masada and that includes what happened to the Jews inside (and how they died). I think this is an interesting way to get kids into archaeology as well as it's much more interesting as it also says what it is like to be on a dig. If anyone has a book for adults on Masada, please let me know!… (mais)
 
Assinalado
melsmarsh | 1 outra crítica | Jun 23, 2018 |
Masada : Herod's fortress and the Zealots' last stand by Yigael Yadin (1966, 256 pages, read Oct 13-16)
translated from Hebrew by Moshe Pearlman

It was entertaining to read this and right afterward read a book that trashes it. It's something of a classic as the excavation of Masada was apparently second only the King Tut in hoopla, or whatever the right word is. Also this is a fun read full of terrific pictures, even if they are now almost 60 years old.

So, why is it trashed? Because the interpretation a purely imaginative - I can't call it Yadin's imagination, he simply confirmed the popular Masada myth. But he had no evidence to do so. In Yadin's version we have a story of Jews who did everything they could to stand up to Rome, and here made their last stand, finally committing mass suicide, thereby depriving Rome of a real victory and making of themselves heroes of legend. His evidence is Josephus and his archeology. The story was very inspiring to all concerned with Israel's creation, especially those fighting, who felt they could relate to the suffering on Masada. The site of Masada is now an almost mandatory destination of tourists, and used heavily in Israeli military ceremony.

But...well..see Josephus doesn't talk about Zealots on Masada. In his story they were murderous loons called the Sicari who freely killed other Jews and anyone else to get at supplies they might need. Josephus notes the hundreds of woman and children they massacred at a nearby community in Ein Gedi. Their mass suicide may have been a sign of their inability to fight, and hence a sort of giving up. They could have fought to the death instead... Of course Josephus was a Jewish traitor, who joined the Romans, so maybe he's not all that reliable. But, he's the only source. And Yadin praises his accuracy!

And..well...there is a ruined palace on Masada (supposed built by King Herod as an escape, if necessary) and there is a Roman siege wall, and ramp and the Roman camps are still there. But there isn't much evidence about the Sicari or Zealots or whoever they were. Someone was up there and the Romans got them...but there isn't really any archeological evidence about who they were. (A few scraps of scrolls were recovered by Yadin, and these are of biblical writing.)

The last critical complaint is that this book was Yadin's only major publication on his findings here. His complete findings were never published during his lifetime. That's weird and unprofessional.

But, still, the myth and artifacts together are quite entertaining, even if we don't quite know what any of this means.

Posted on my 2013 LT thread here: http://www.librarything.com/topic/160515#4354974
… (mais)
2 vote
Assinalado
dchaikin | 9 outras críticas | Nov 7, 2013 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
48
Also by
5
Membros
1,473
Popularidade
#17,440
Avaliação
3.9
Críticas
18
ISBN
46
Línguas
5

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