Difference between revisions of "Category:Zipporah (subject)"

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According to Jewish (Christian and Islamic) tradition, '''Zipporah''' was the wife of [[Moses]].
According to Jewish (Christian and Islamic) tradition, '''Zipporah (Tsipporah, Sephora)''' was the wife of [[Moses]].
 
<''Fiction'' : [[Zipporah (art)]] -- [[Zipporah (literature)]] -- [[Zipporah (music)]] -- [[Zipporah (cinema)]]>


== Overview==
== Overview==


==Zipporah in ancient sources==
==Zipporah, in ancient sources==


* [[Zipporah (sources)]] -- survey of ancient sources
* [[Zipporah (sources)]] -- survey of ancient sources


==Zipporah in Literature & the Arts==
==Zipporah, in Literature & the Arts==
 
Zipporah is a rare and unconspicuous subject in Literature & the Arts. She appears in narratives of the Exodus but without any distinctive role of importance. Only in contemporary time the rediscovery of female characters in the Bible has generated greater interest. For instance, the role she plays in [[The Prince of Egypt (1998)]] is far more conspicuous than in any previous film on the Exodus. Two recent novels has made her the protagonist of the narrative; see [[Tsippora (2003 Halter), novel]] and [[Seven Days to the Sea (2006 Kohn), novel]].
 
==Zipporah in Scholarship==


* [[Zipporah (arts)]] -- survey of fictional works
Zipporah is a literary character. The growing contemporary interest in fictional accounts has generated the first studies of the ancient traditions related to Zipporah.


Zipporah is a rare subject in Literature & the Arts. It appears in narratives of the Exodus but without any distinctive role of importance. Only in contemporary time the rediscovery of female characters in the Bible has generated some interest. For instance, the role she plays in [[The Prince of Egypt (1998)]] is far more conspicuous than in any previous film on the Exodus. Two recent novels has made her the protagonist; see [[Tsippora (2003 Halter), novel]] and [[Seven Days to the Sea (2006 Kohn), novel]].
* See [[Zipporah (research)]] -- survey of non-fictional works


==External links==
==External links==


*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipporah Wikipedia]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipporah Wiki.en]


[[Category:Index (database)]]
[[Category:Index (database)]]
[[Category:People (database)]]
[[Category:People (database)]]

Latest revision as of 01:42, 2 August 2017


According to Jewish (Christian and Islamic) tradition, Zipporah (Tsipporah, Sephora) was the wife of Moses.

<Fiction : Zipporah (art) -- Zipporah (literature) -- Zipporah (music) -- Zipporah (cinema)>

Overview

Zipporah, in ancient sources

Zipporah, in Literature & the Arts

Zipporah is a rare and unconspicuous subject in Literature & the Arts. She appears in narratives of the Exodus but without any distinctive role of importance. Only in contemporary time the rediscovery of female characters in the Bible has generated greater interest. For instance, the role she plays in The Prince of Egypt (1998) is far more conspicuous than in any previous film on the Exodus. Two recent novels has made her the protagonist of the narrative; see Tsippora (2003 Halter), novel and Seven Days to the Sea (2006 Kohn), novel.

Zipporah in Scholarship

Zipporah is a literary character. The growing contemporary interest in fictional accounts has generated the first studies of the ancient traditions related to Zipporah.

External links