TY - JOUR
T1 - Solomon the builder
T2 - The testament of solomon within byzantine imperial and apocalyptic culture
AU - Beshay, Michael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Johns Hopkins University Press.
PY - 2021/9/1
Y1 - 2021/9/1
N2 - The Testament of Solomon appears frequently in discussions of ancient magic and ritual, with few investigations of its place within the social and cultural histories of Late Antiquity and beyond. Analyses of the Testament’s textual history have occasionally stressed the priority of one or another medieval manuscript for the redaction in stages of the complete Testament. This article explores the traditions of Solomon’s authority relative to the activities of Byzantine emperors as a background to the development of specific Testament units. In particular, it argues that the erection of the “air-column” by Solomon and the demons (chapter 22 of McCown’s edi-tion) registers the architectural motifs associated with the construction of Byzantine monuments generally, and the apocalyptic legends surrounding Constantine’s porphyry column in particular. In doing so, this article dem-onstrates the utility and necessity of assessing the redaction of individual units across manuscripts prior to their assemblage into a full Testament in medieval manuscripts. It concludes by recommending new approaches to Solomon’s role as a ritual expert in the Testament in light of its engagement with Byzantine imperial and apocalyptic culture.
AB - The Testament of Solomon appears frequently in discussions of ancient magic and ritual, with few investigations of its place within the social and cultural histories of Late Antiquity and beyond. Analyses of the Testament’s textual history have occasionally stressed the priority of one or another medieval manuscript for the redaction in stages of the complete Testament. This article explores the traditions of Solomon’s authority relative to the activities of Byzantine emperors as a background to the development of specific Testament units. In particular, it argues that the erection of the “air-column” by Solomon and the demons (chapter 22 of McCown’s edi-tion) registers the architectural motifs associated with the construction of Byzantine monuments generally, and the apocalyptic legends surrounding Constantine’s porphyry column in particular. In doing so, this article dem-onstrates the utility and necessity of assessing the redaction of individual units across manuscripts prior to their assemblage into a full Testament in medieval manuscripts. It concludes by recommending new approaches to Solomon’s role as a ritual expert in the Testament in light of its engagement with Byzantine imperial and apocalyptic culture.
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U2 - 10.1353/jla.2021.0023
DO - 10.1353/jla.2021.0023
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85118212499
SN - 1939-6716
VL - 14
SP - 471
EP - 497
JO - Journal of Late Antiquity
JF - Journal of Late Antiquity
IS - 2
ER -