Samaritan High Priest - Biblioteka.sk

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Samaritan High Priest
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Family of the Samaritan High Priests, 1876. To the left is a scribe named Shalabi, to the right are Isaac the son of the High Priest Amram ben Shalma, then Abisha, the son of Amram's brother Pinehas, and finally Uzzi the son of the High Priest Yaacob ben Aaharon ben Shalma, the son of Amram's brother Aaharon.

The Samaritan High Priest is the high priest (kohen gadol) of the Samaritan community in the Levant. According to Samaritan tradition, the office has existed continuously since the time of Aaron, the brother of Moses, and has been held by 133 priests over the last 3400 years. However, the historicity of this claim is disputed. One account by Josephus suggests that its office holders are an offshoot of the Zadokite high priests of Jerusalem from around the time of Alexander the Great.[1][2] As of 2013, the incumbent high priest is Abdel V.

Office of the High Priest

Duties and responsibilities

The Samaritan High Priest has the following duties in the present:[3]

  1. He decides all religious law issues.
  2. He presides over the religious ceremonies on Mount Garizim.
  3. He validates all marriages and divorces within the Samaritan community.
  4. He annually publishes the liturgical calendar of the Samaritans.
  5. He confirms a joining of the Samaritan community.
  6. He appoints the Cantors and the Shechita of the community.
  7. He represents the Samaritan community to the outside world.

Lineage

Since 1623/24, the office of high priest has been passed down in a family traced back to Aaron's grandson Itamar. After the death of a high priest, the office passes to the oldest male in that family, unless he has entered into a marriage that disqualifies him from the high priesthood.[3]

It appears, based upon the larger gaps in time between high priests, that several names might be missing, or that there were long periods of vacancy between priests.

The continuous lineage of Samaritan High Priests, descending directly from Aaron, through his son Eleazar, and his son Phinehas, was however disrupted in the early 17th century. In 1624, Shalma I ben Phinehas, the last Samaritan High Priest of the line of Eleazar son of Aaron died without male succession, but descendants of Aaron's other son, Ithamar, remained and took over the office.[4]

There are four families within the house of Ithamar. The Åbtå order, descended from the 113th High Priest Tsedaka ben Tabia, which has held the office of the High Priesthood since 1624; the House of Phineas a.k.a. Dār 'Åder, descended from Fīn'ās ban Yīṣ'å̄q (Phineas ben Isaac); Dār Yīṣ'å̄q, descended from Yīṣ'å̄q ban Åmrām (Isaac ben Amram); and Dār Yāqob, descended from Yāqob ban Årron (Jacob ben Aaron).

List of Samaritan High Priests

Pummer's list

The following list gives the names and terms of office according to Reinhard Pummer.[5] Pummer uses a spelling for the name of the high priest that is based on the English Bible for the bearers of biblical names, while he chooses a more scientific transcription for the full name (last column). The traditional counting begins with the first post-biblical high priest Sheshai. It differs in order in some cases from the list prepared by Moses Gaster and Reinhard Pummer on the basis of the ancient Samaritan sources, and includes additional names (italics here).

Traditional Numbering High Priest Name Term Comments Civil name and life data
Aaron I. (אהרן) Biblical figure, brother of Moses. He is considered in the Torah to be the "ancestor of the legitimate Levitical-Aaronid priesthood."[6]
Eleazar I. (אלעזר) Biblical figure, son of Aaron and his successor as high priest.[7]
Phinehas I. (פינחס) Biblical figure, son of Eleazar. Because of his religious "zeal" he and his descendants are awarded a perpetual priesthood.[8]
Abishua I. (אבישע) According to Samaritan tradition, Aaron's great-grandson[9] is said to have written down a Pentateuch scroll that is first mentioned by Abū l'Fatḥ in the 14th century and, in a very poor state of preservation, is kept by the Samaritan community as a precious possession. The Abisha Scroll is considered the original of all Samaritan Torah scrolls.[10]
1 Sashai ben Abishua
2 Bakhi ben Sashai probably identical to the Jewish High Priest Bukki
3 Uzzi ben Sashai According to Samaritan tradition, Uzzi hid the tent sanctuary of the desert migration (Mishkan) in a cave at Garizim when the Israelites introduced the cult at Shiloh, which was illegitimate from the Samaritan point of view.[11]
4 Shashai II ben Uzzi
5 Bakhi II ben Sashai
6 Shembet ben Bakhi who served at the shrine to God at Shechem alone
7 Shalom I ben Shembet
8 Hezekiah I ben Shalom
9 Jonathan I ben Abiathar (ben Hezekiah?) According to Samaritan tradition, he is said to have been a contemporary of King David.[12] (2 Samuel 15:27), served as a messenger during Absalom's rebellion (2 Samuel 15:36, 17:17)
10 Jair I ben Jonathan
11 Daliah I
12 Jair II ben Daliah In his time the Jerusalem temple is said to have been built.[12]
13 Jonathan II ben Jair
14 Ishmael ben Jonathan
15 Tabia I This high priest is said to have been murdered by the Ishmaelites.[13]
16 Zedekiah I
17 Ahid
18 Jair III
19 Jehozadak
20 Zadok (צדוק)
21 Amram I. (עמרם)
22 Hilkiah or Hezekiah II
23 Amram II. (עמרם)
24 Akkub
25 Akkubiah I According to the Samaritan chronicler Abū l'Fatḥ (14th century), Aqabiah was a contemporary of Nebuchadnezzar II and thus of the conquest of Jerusalem by the Babylonians (587 B.C.).[14] He is said to have been led into Babylonian exile with the Israelites.[13]
26 Hillel I
27 Seriah He is said to have returned with his people from exile.[13]
28 Levi I. (לוי)
29 Netaniel I
30 Azariah In the 10th year of his high priesthood he is said to have been captured by the Chaldeans.[13]
31 Aabed-El I This high priest returned from exile; in his time the Samaritan community is said to have had 300,000 members.[13]
32 Hezekiah III
33 Hananiah
34 Amram III. (עמרם) His son is said to have married the daughter of King "Derus"; according to tradition, the Samaritans made a riot and killed both of them.[13]
35 Hillel II/Hanan This high priest is said to have married the daughter of the king of Assyria and to have been killed by the Samaritans.[15]
36 Hezekiah IV According to the Samaritan historian Abū l'Fatḥ, Hezekiah was high priest when Alexander III of Macedonia defeated the Persian king Darius.[16]
37 Daliah II
38 Akkub II
39 Akkubiah II
40 Levi II. (לוי)
41 Eleazar II
42 Manasseh the son-in-law of Sanballat the Horonite
43 Jair IV
44 Netaniel II
45 Joachim c. 4 BCE According to Samaritan tradition, Jesus of Nazareth was born during the tenure of Jehoiakim.[17]
46 Jonathan III c. 29 CE In his time Jesus is said to have been killed "in the cursed Shalem" (= Jerusalem).[15]
47 Elishama
48 Shemaiah
49 Tabia II
50 Amram IV. (עמרם)
51 Akabon I
52 Phinehas II
53 Levi III. (לוי) early 2nd century Emperor Hadrian (r. 117–138 CE) is said to have shown special favors to the Samaritans in the time of the high priest Levi III.[18]
54 Eleazar III
55 Baba I. (בבא) Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Samaritan_High_Priest
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Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.

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