Preface
Abbreviations
Introduction
Prophecy as Construct: Ancient and Modern Martti Nissinen, University of Helsinki
Prophecy in the Mari and Nineveh Archives Robert P. Gordon, University of Cambridge
Prophecy in K1285? Re-evaluating the Divine Speech: Episodes of Nabû Jason Atkinson, University of Edinburgh
Hosea and the Assyrians Hans M. Barstad, University of Edinburgh
Micah in Neo-Assyrian Light Bob Becking, University of Utrecht
Ištar and the Motif of the Cosmological Warrior: Assurbanipal’s Adaptation of Enuma Elish C. L. Crouch, University of Nottingham
The Post-722 and Late Pre-exilic Compositions Underlying the Amos-Text Graham Hamborg, Diocese of Chelmsford, England
Royal Cultic Prophecy in Assyria, Judah, and Egypt John W. Hilber, Grand Rapids Theological Seminary
Ecology, Theology, Society: Physical, Religious, and Social Disjuncture in Biblical and Neo-Assyrian Prophetic Texts Hilary Marlow, University of Cambridge
The Prophet Micah and Political Society David J. Reimer, University of Edinburgh
Prophecy in Israel and Assyria: Are We Comparing Apples and Pears? The Materiality of Writing and the Avoidance of Parallelomania Joachim Schaper, University of Aberdeen
“I Have Rained Stones and Fiery Glow on Their Heads!” Celestial and Meteorological Prophecy in the Neo-Assyrian Empire Jonathan Stökl, University of Leiden
Were the Neo-Assyrian Prophets Intercessors? A Comparative Study of Neo-Assyrian and Hebrew Texts Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer, University of Aberdeen
Isaiah: Prophet of Weal or Woe? H. G. M. Williamson, University of Oxford
Indexes
Index of Authors
Index of Scripture
Index of Other Ancient Sources