Health and the Origins of the Miqveh

IF 0.2 0 RELIGION
Benjamin D. Gordon
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Use of rock-cut stepped pools for immersion in harvested rainwater is first attested in Judean source material of the second century BCE and on archaeological record shortly thereafter. As argued here, the practice became widespread due to the impact of Greco-Roman ideas about health and well-being. Immersion of the body in water was seen in the Greek medical tradition as a beneficial activity; it balanced the humors, opened harmful blockages in the skin membrane, and helped facilitate unction. Once these ideas became widespread in Judea, local purification rituals followed, and began incorporating immersion in water. The rabbinic dichotomy between purification and cleansing was likely irrelevant for most Judeans in the late Second Temple period, who probably also saw immersion as beneficial for personal hygiene. For this reason, stepped pools nearly disappear from archaeological record with the rise of public bathhouses, which offered the convenience of large and well-maintained immersion pools in exchange for a fee.
健康和米克威的起源
使用岩石切割的阶梯式水池浸泡在收集的雨水中,这在公元前二世纪的犹太原始材料中首次得到证实,此后不久也有考古记录。正如这里所说的,由于希腊-罗马关于健康和幸福的思想的影响,这种做法变得广泛起来。在希腊医学传统中,将身体浸入水中被视为一种有益的活动;它平衡了体液,打开了皮肤膜中的有害堵塞,有助于促进功能。一旦这些想法在犹太广泛传播,当地的净化仪式也随之而来,并开始融入水中。拉比在净化和净化之间的二分法可能与第二圣殿后期的大多数犹太教徒无关,他们可能也认为浸泡有利于个人卫生。因此,随着公共澡堂的兴起,阶梯式水池几乎从考古记录中消失了,公共澡堂提供了大型且维护良好的浸入式水池的便利,以换取费用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
50.00%
发文量
17
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