Category:Ahiqar (subject)
According to Near Eastern traditions, Ahiqar / Ahikar was an Assyrian sage, whose deeds and sayings are narrated in the Story of Ahiqar.
Overview
The narrative says that Ahikar was chancellor to the Assyrian kings Sennacherib and Esarhaddon. Having no child, he adopted his nephew Nadab/Nadin, who ungratefully plotted against him. Ahiqar survived the ordeal and was rehabilitated.
Ahiqar is a well known figure in the literatures of the entire ancient Middle East (including Greece), and penetrated Jewish culture as well. A copy of the Story of Ahiqar was found in the ruins of the Jewish Temple of Elephantine. In later times, in the Book of Tobit, it became possible to imagine Ahiqar (Achiacharus) as a Jew, the nephew of Tobit, serving (like Nehemiah or Daniel) at the court of the foreign king in Mesopotamia.
Ahiqar in ancient sources
- Ahiqar (sources) -- survey of ancient sources
References
- Ahiqar / Jerome A. Lund / In: Dictionary of New Testament Background (2000 Evans & Porter), dictionary, 18-19
- Ahikar/Ahiqar / James C. VanderKam / In: The Anchor Bible Dictionary (1992 Freedman), dictionary, 1:113-115
External links
Pages in category "Ahiqar (subject)"
The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
1
- Untersuchungen zum Achiqar-Roman (1913 Nöldeke), book
- Das Märchen vom weisen Achiqar (1917 Meissner), book
- أحيقار : حكيم من الشرق الأدنى القديم (Ahiqar: Sage of the Ancient Near East / 1962 Furayḥah), book
- חכמת אחיקר : סורית וארמית (The Wisdom of Ahiqar: Syriac and Aramaic / 1965 Goshen-Gottstein), book
- The Aramaic Proverbs of Ahiqar (1983 Lindenberger), book
- Die Sprache der Ahiqarsprüche (1990 Kottsieper), book