Null Quarterly BIBLICAL REVIEW published under the direction of the professors o…
Description

Quarterly BIBLICAL REVIEW published under the direction of the professors of the Ecole Pratique d'Etudes Bibliques established at the Dominican convent of Saint-Etienne in Jerusalem. Complete collection from Volume 1 of 1892 to Volume 88 of 7-1881 + 2 volumes of tables from 1892 to 1968, i.e. 90 volumes, bradel, brown half-percaline, smooth spine, cold-edged gilt title and tomaison, marbled boards, green endpapers, black speckled edges, from Volume 89 of 1982 to Volume 100 of 1993, the years are in paperback. All in very good condition. Archaeology, history, oriental languages, philology, religions from biblical origins. The period 1947 to 1960 was marked by the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the subsequent excavations undertaken by R. de Vaux at Qumran. The preliminary reports of the School's other excavations, notably Tell el-Far'ah, were published in exclusivisté by the Revue Biblique. This was the "archaeological" era of the Revue Biblique, but also, in exegesis, that of the theological fallout from the Second Vatican Council and the biblical revival, which led to a revival of research, evident in the magazine. (source revue biblique)

564 

Quarterly BIBLICAL REVIEW published under the direction of the professors of the Ecole Pratique d'Etudes Bibliques established at the Dominican convent of Saint-Etienne in Jerusalem. Complete collection from Volume 1 of 1892 to Volume 88 of 7-1881 + 2 volumes of tables from 1892 to 1968, i.e. 90 volumes, bradel, brown half-percaline, smooth spine, cold-edged gilt title and tomaison, marbled boards, green endpapers, black speckled edges, from Volume 89 of 1982 to Volume 100 of 1993, the years are in paperback. All in very good condition. Archaeology, history, oriental languages, philology, religions from biblical origins. The period 1947 to 1960 was marked by the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the subsequent excavations undertaken by R. de Vaux at Qumran. The preliminary reports of the School's other excavations, notably Tell el-Far'ah, were published in exclusivisté by the Revue Biblique. This was the "archaeological" era of the Revue Biblique, but also, in exegesis, that of the theological fallout from the Second Vatican Council and the biblical revival, which led to a revival of research, evident in the magazine. (source revue biblique)

Auction is over for this lot. See the results