Marginal Passages related to the redaction history of the Book of the Twelve Prophets
page was last edited:
2002-07-09
- Some introductory remarks from the commentary on Nahum
from Klaas Spronk. Especially interesting are his reflections on the order of the writings
of the Twelve (1.7). He
follows Jones hypothesis, that 4QXII(a), where Jonah follows after Maleachi, preserves
the oldest order.
- A passage dealing with Nah 3:15-17, where he comments on
Nogalskis analysis of these verses.
From Klaas Spronk: Synchronic and Diachronic Approaches of Nahum. In: Johannes C. de Moor
(ed.), Synchronic or Diachronic? OTS 34 (1995) 159-186.
- A note on the LXX-order of the Book of the Twelve (language:
French)
From Bogaert, Pierre-Maurice. "L'Organisation des grands recueils
prophétiques." The Book of Isaiah. Le Livre d'Isaie. Les oracles et leurs relectures
unité et complexité de l'ouvrage. Ed. Jacques Vermeylen. BEThL 81. Leuven: Leuven
University Press / Peeters, 1989, 147-153.
- Werner H. Schmidt made an important note in his article on the Deuteronomistic Redaction of
Amos (1965): He asked, whether it could be, that Hos 4,1 and Am 3,1
were edited by the very same redactor. Aaron Schart in his book "Entstehung des
Zwoelfprophetenbuchs" picked up and expanded this idea.
- Jeppesen, Knud: Because of You! An Essay on the centre of the Book of the
Twelve. In: In Search of True Wisdom, ed. Edward Ball, Journal for the study
of the Old Testament Supplement series 300. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic
Press, 1999, 196-210. ISBN 1-84127-071-7. In the
abstract I have extracted some
passages which appreciate Mi 3-4 as the centre of the Book of the Twelve.