Online Encyclopedia

BOOK OF JASHAR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 277 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BOOK OF JASHAR  , in
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Hebrew Sepher ha-yashar, a Hebrew composition mentioned as though well-known in Josh. x . 13 and 2 Sam. i . 18 . From these two passages it seems to have been a
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book of songs
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relating to important events, but no early collection of the kind is now extant, nor is anything known of it . Various speculations have been put forward as to the name: (I) that it means the book of the upright, i.e . Israel or distinguished Israelites, the root being the same as in Jeshurun; (2) that Jashar (w') is a transposition of shir Ow,
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song) ; (3) that it should be pointed Yashir (-c, sing; cf . Exod. xv . 1) and was so called after its first word . None of these is very convincing, though support may be found for them all in the versions . The Septuagint favours (I) by its rendering $7ri 13LSA%ov Toii evOovs in
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Samuel (it omits the words in Joshua); the Vulgate has in libro justorum in both places; the
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Syriac in Samuel has Ashir, which suggests a Hebrew
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reading ha-shir (the song), and in Joshua it translates " book of praises." The
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Targum on both passages has " book of the law," an explanation which is followed by the chief Jewish commentators, making the incidents the fulfilment of passages in the
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Pentateuch . Since it contained the lament of David (2 Sam. i . 18) it cannot have been completed till after his time .

If

Wellhausen's restoration of I Kings viii . 12 be accepted (from Septuagint I Kings viii . 53, iv OcAicu
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Tic ciSits) where the reference is to the
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building of the Temple, the book must have been growing in the time of Solomon . The attempt of Donaldson' to reconstruct it is largely subjective and uncritical . In later times when it became customary to compose midrashic
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works under well-known names, a book of Jashar naturally made its appearance . It need hardly be remarked that this has nothing whatever to do with the older book . It is an
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anonymous elaboration in Hebrew of the early
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part of the biblical narrative, probably composed in the 12th century . The fact that its legendary material is
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drawn from Arabic
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sources, as well as from
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Talmud,
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Midrash and later Jewish works, would seem to show that the writer lived in Spain, or, according to others, in south Italy . The first edition appeared at Venice in 1625, and it has been frequently printed since . It was translated into
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English by (or for) M . M . Noah (New York, 184o) .

A

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work called The Book of ...

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