religions
Editorial
Exploring Samaritanism—New Insights and Fresh Approaches
Reinhard Pummer
Department of Classics and Religious Studies, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada;
[email protected]
Citation: Pummer, Reinhard. 2021.
Exploring Samaritanism—New
Insights and Fresh Approaches.
Religions 12: 769. https://doi.org/
10.3390/rel12090769
Received: 19 August 2021
Accepted: 23 August 2021
Published: 15 September 2021
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4.0/).
“The Discovery of Samaritan Religion” was the title of an article published in 1972 by
one of the leading scholars of Samaritanism in the twentieth century, John Macdonald of
the University of Glasgow. At first glance, it may appear that the author wants to say that
there was a time when the Samaritan religion had disappeared from the scholarly horizon.
But what he actually means was that the “discovery of the true nature of Samaritan religion
is a very modern happening”1 . Knowledge about the Samaritans among Jews and Chris‑
tians was never lost, neither in the Middle East nor in Europe, where the New Testament
story of the Good Samaritan is particularly well known. What changed over the course
of centuries, and particularly in recent decades, is the understanding of Samaritan beliefs
on the basis of their own traditions, as found in their writings and oral traditions. Both
early Christian and rabbinic sources had preconceived notions of the Samaritans’ beliefs
and practices. Influenced by the biblical passage 2 Kings 17:24–42, many tended to see
the Samaritans as a Jewish sect that strayed from the true path of the Yahwistic religion
of Israel and practiced a syncretistic form of faith. But even if the Samaritans were no
longer accused of syncretism, they were still considered a sect of Judaism.2 However, this
view was eventually abandoned because scholarship gained a more nuanced understand‑
ing due to having better access to the Samaritans’ own literature, to new archaeological
discoveries such as the Dead Sea Scrolls and the excavations of Samaritan synagogues,
and, above all, of the temenos of what once was the Samaritan sanctuary on Mt. Gerizim.
Samaritan Studies: Prehistory—Early History—Contemporary History
The first European scholar to include the Samaritans in his research was Guillaume
Postel (1510–1581).3 In his Linguarum duodecim characteribus differentium alphabetum, intro‑
ductio (An Introduction to the Alphabetic Characters of Twelve Different Languages), published
in 1538 (Postel 1538), he reproduced and discussed the Samaritan alphabet, and on a voy‑
age to Constantinople, he acquired a grammar written in Samaritan characters but in the
Arabic language, the first Samaritan manuscript to enter Europe. In 1549–50, on a second
voyage to the Orient, he made a point to visit the Samaritans; they showed him a copy of
the Torah in the Samaritan script. In Damascus, the Samaritans made a copy of their Ara‑
bic Pentateuch for him. Although he notes that they have other chronicles and prophetic
writings of a fantastic and ridiculous nature, he characterizes them as practicing an irre‑
proachable cult, absolutely without any traces of the ancient idolatry.4
The first time a Samaritan text appeared in an occidental work was in 1598 when
Joseph Justus Scaliger (1540–1609) issued his second edition of his Opus de emendatione
temporum (Study on the Improvement of Time (viz. Chronology)) in which he included the
Samaritan Book of Joshua5 and two Samaritan calendars.6 He translated and commented on
the calendar and dealt with other subjects, refuting among others what the Jewish traveller
Benjamin of Tudela (1130–1173) said about them. In his Itinerary, Benjamin claimed that
the Samaritan alphabet lacks three letters, ה, ח, and ע, which the Samaritans replace with
א, which in turn proves that they are not descended from Israel because they cannot read
the whole law of Moses.7 Scaliger calls this a Jewish calumny and insists that they read ev‑
ery word like the Jews. They also did not falsify the script like the Jews but preserved the
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pure Mosaic characters, as had already been proven by Postel. Moreover, Scaliger under‑
lines that they once mixed idolatry with the worship of God, as stated in 2 Kings 17:29–32,
but now they have such an aversion against any idolatry that they seem to surpass the
Jews in this regard.8 Another avenue was opened by Scaliger, viz. the correspondence
between European scholars and the Samaritans. He sent two letters in Hebrew to Nablus
and Cairo, asking the Samaritans not only for details of their religious practices, but also
for copies of the Pentateuch, the Hebrew Book of Joshua, and a collection of their hymns.
However, he never saw the responses because he died before they arrived. This was the
beginning of the correspondence that was carried on by European scholars until the early
twentieth century.9 The final stage in the beginnings of Samaritan studies in Europe—their
Prehistory, as it were—was the edition of the Samaritan Pentateuch and the Samaritan Tar‑
gum by Jean Morin (1591–1659) in volume 6 of the Paris Polyglot that was published by
Guy Michel Le Jay in 1645.10 Copies of both works had been acquired by Pietro della Valle
(1586–1652) in Damascus in 1616. Of course, other authors also became aware of Samaritan
writings in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, as becomes clear from the numerous
works that refer to Samaritan subjects. To highlight only one publication from the eigh‑
teenth century, John Mawer’s Roma meretrix, published in 1737 (Mawer 1737), the title—too
long to quote here in its entirety—contained the following announcement: “With a prefa‑
tory discourse, address’d to His Grace, the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, Wherein is
occasionally asserted The Usefulness and Antiquity of the Samaritan Pentateuch, which
with the Samaritan Version is intended to accompany the Hebrew Text, with the Greek
and Ethiopic Versions, &c. in a New Edition of the Original Scriptures, whereof a large
Specimen is prepared for the Press”. In the Dedication, he notes, among others, that the
“Learned, in general, seem to have no just Notion” of the Samaritan Pentateuch. Following
in part Josephus’ story about Manasse—without saying so—he believes that the Samari‑
tan Pentateuch was the Pentateuch that Manasse, the brother of the Jerusalem high priest
Jaddua, took with him when he built the temple on Mt. Gerizim (cf. Ant. 11:302–325).
Mawer further underlines that the Samaritans preserved it ever since because they always,
without interruption, had a succession of Aaronite priests to this day.
To continue with the above terminology, the nineteenth (and early twentieth) century
can be called the Early History of Samaritan studies. A number of scholars visited the
Samaritan community in Nablus to study their religion firsthand, and in many instances,
the foundations for later studies were laid in this time. The number of publications on
Samaritan topics rose significantly. Among the most important scholars who contributed
to these foundations are the following (listed in alphabetical order): Adolf Brüll, Charles
Simon Clermont‑Ganneau, Arthur E. Cowley, Moses Gaster, Abraham Geiger, Wilhelm
Gesenius, Abraham Elijah (Albert) Harkavy, Moritz Heidenheim, Samuel Kohn, Adalbert
Merx, Adolf Neubauer, Julius Petermann, and Antoine‑Isaac Silvestre de Sacy.11 Some
of their works, such as the collection and edition of the Samaritan liturgy by Arthur E.
Cowley12 or the edition of the Arabic Book of Joshua by Th. Guil. Joh. Juynboll,13 to name
only two examples, have not yet been replaced with more recent editions. Of course, there
were also voices that, on the one hand, welcomed the availability of new primary sources,
but on the other hand pointed out that for the history of the Samaritans they are of inferior
quality to the writings of ancient ecclesiastical and secular historians. Moreover, it was
claimed that all the Samaritan sources date from the time when the Samaritans had reached
the end of their history, which came with the beginning of Christianity and the fall of
Jerusalem. It was said that when Jerusalem fell, the Samaritans lost their standing in the
world. Nevertheless, it was admitted that the primary sources are to be used to enrich
the more reliable historical sources from outside the Samaritan community. Such were
the views presented in the mid‑nineteenth century by Joseph Grimm (1827–1896) in his
book of 1854 Die Samariter und ihre Stellung in der Weltgeschichte.14 Twice, once at the end
of his Introduction and once at the very end of his book, he makes the prediction, well‑
known from other authors—older15 and newer16 —that the Samaritans are doomed. In
very drastic colors, he described the image which, in his opinion, they presented in his time:
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“ein Bild gewaltsamer Todeszuckungen, ohnmächtiger Reaction der letzten Lebensreste,
die heut zu Tage übergegangen ist in den Todesschlummer schmerzloser Betäubtheit!”.17
And finally: “So vegitieren die Samariter ihrem endlichen Erlöschen entgegen”.18
We now proceed to the Contemporary History. Building on the foundations laid in the
earlier period and expanding the horizon with new discoveries and methods, in the twen‑
tieth and twenty‑first centuries, great strides were made in the exploration of all aspects of
Samaritan history and traditions. Scholars have not only focused on the Samaritan Torah,
Targum, and the Samaritan Book of Joshua, but they have also studied Samaritan liturgical,
historical, grammatical, lexical, legal, midrashic, and other texts from different ages under
different viewpoints such as history, linguistics, theology, and others. A number of the
texts were edited and/or translated, and others are in preparation. They range from edi‑
tions of the Samaritan Pentateuch to a new edition and English translation of the midrashic
work Tibåt Mårqe and to a translation of classical Samaritan poetry of the fourth century,
to name only a few of the most recent works.19 A major contribution is the edition and
English translation of the important chronicle Kitāb al‑Tarīkh of Abū ʾl‑Fatḥ.20 Moreover,
spectacular discoveries of various caches of manuscripts, such as the finds in the Abū Shin‑
jeh cave in the Wadi Daliyeh,21 north of Jericho and the Dead Sea area,22 have brought to
light texts that have put Samaritan studies on a new footing. The second major contribu‑
tion to our knowledge of the Samaritan tradition was made by archaeology. The archae‑
ological discoveries range from inscriptions to synagogues and, above all, the temenos of
the Samaritan temple on the main peak of Mt. Gerizim, together with the remains of the
city surrounding the temple before its destruction in the second century BCE. It is in large
part thanks to archaeology that we can appraise anew Flavius Josephus’ account of the
Samaritans.23 Another field of research that recently has begun to play an important role
in Samaritan studies is the renewed analysis of the books of Kings, Ezra–Nehemiah, Chron‑
icles, and others. This has led to new and more nuanced insights into the relations between
the northern and southern Yahwists in biblical times. And finally, the newest addition to
the methods applied to Samaritan studies is that of the social‑scientific approach (social
and cultural anthropology) to the study of the contemporary Samaritan society; beginning
in the late twentieth and the early twenty‑first century, a number of articles, monographs,
and doctoral theses in this field have already been authored.24
To advance the study of the various aspects of the Samaritan tradition further, in the
mid‑1980s the Société d’Études Samaritaines (SES), was founded in Paris. It organizes
regular meetings of scholars to discuss new developments in the field. The first official
congress of the SES took place in 1988 in Tel‑Aviv. It was preceded by an international
Table Ronde in Paris in 1985 that was organized around the theme “Les manuscrits samar‑
itains. Problèmes et méthodes”. Proceedings were published for this Table Ronde as well
as for all congresses of the SES. So far, nine congresses have been held. The tenth congress
was planned for 2020, but due to the COVID‑19 pandemic, it had to be rescheduled and
is now due to take place in Budapest, Hungary, from 21–26 July 2022. (www.socsam.org;
Appendix A).25
Unsolved Issues and Research in Progress
Despite the remarkable progress of the field in recent decades, much remains to be
accomplished. In addition to the need for more editions and more translations of Samar‑
itan works into European languages, major questions are still unanswered and subject to
debate: When did the Samaritans as a separate Yahwistic community originate? When did
tensions between Samri(t)ans and Judeans first become identifiable in the Bible? Was it all
of Judah that came to regard the temple on Mt. Gerizim as being in illegitimate competi‑
tion with the temple in Jerusalem? What role did northern and southern Yahwists play in
the formation of the Pentateuch? The new search for answers to these questions in light
of the changed approaches to the biblical texts has brought about a closer relationship be‑
tween Samaritan studies and biblical studies, two fields which in the past went largely
their own ways.
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The issue of the time when Samaritans and Judeans separated has not yet found a
clear‑cut answer.26 It is closely linked with the question as to when tensions between the
two communities began. It appears now that they did not go back to the Persian period
(539–332 BCE) when each community lived in its separate province. Rather, the first signs
of tension appeared in the late fourth or in the early third century BCE when both lived
in the united province and had “to compete for the favor of the Ptolemaic and Seleucid
potentates”.27 But it was in the Hellenistic period when the conflicts came to the fore, as
a critical reading of Ezra–Nehemiah, Chronicles, and 2 Kings 17 shows. Still, even in the
late second century BCE, when the Hasmonean ethnarch and high priest John Hyrcanus I
(134‑104 BCE) destroyed the temple on Mt. Gerizim, there was no final break or “schism”,
as some scholars once called it.28 In the first century CE, Flavius Josephus depicted the
Samaritans in a negative light to contrast them with the Jews, whom he wanted to be looked
at sympathetically by the Romans.29 But even then no iron curtain had gone down between
the two branches of Yahwism.30 Gradually, the two branches developed their own views
of Scripture31 and their own liturgical, legal, linguistic, and historical traditions that set
them apart from the respective Other.
Another area that has been discussed anew is the matter of the Samaritan Pentateuch.
The past assumption that the Samaritans took over the Judean Pentateuch and made a num‑
ber of modifications is no longer accepted. But even the newer hypothesis that the Penta‑
teuch, compiled in Jerusalem, was from the beginning intended for both Yahwists in Judea
and Yahwists in Samaria, and that, to accommodate the Samarians, a number of conces‑
sions were made, such as the accounts of the Shechem covenant tradition in Deuteronomy
and in Joshua, is now questioned by scholars. Recent Pentateuchal research has shown
that the North was involved in the creation of the Pentateuch early on. Thus, it is no
longer believed that the Samaritans simply made redactional changes in “a more or less
predominantly Judean text”.32 Rather, the Pentateuch is seen as a heritage that is common
to Samaritans and Jews and dates from the time before the relationship between the two
Yahwistic communities began to deteriorate.33 It was probably completed in the second
half of the Persian period.34 What we do not know is how much time elapsed before the
additions were made that brought about the distinctive Samaritan Pentateuch.35
A special question is: what was the status of the temple on Mt. Gerizim in the Penta‑
teuch, especially in light of the cult centralization law (Deut. 12:4–7, 11–12, 13–14, 26–27)?.36
Without going into details here, some points are named. First of all, the Gerizim temple is
not mentioned as such in the Pentateuch or, for that matter, in any other book of the He‑
brew Bible. Only indirect or coded references to the Gerizim temple have been identified in
recent research.37 Harking back to a thesis first proposed in 1934 by Albrecht Alt,38 Heckl
believes that it is possible that the construction of the two parallel temples in Jerusalem and
on Mt. Gerizim was agreed upon by both northern and southern Yahwists and perhaps
mutually supported.39 Although these two temples probably were not the only Yhwh tem‑
ples in Palestine,40 they were the most important ones. Further research will have to take
these new hypotheses into account.
Exploring Samaritanism—From Antiquity to Today
The contributions to this Special Issue on Samaritanism address salient points in the
ongoing debate. They range from issues concerning the origin of the Samaritans, the
Samaritan Pentateuch, the temple on Mt. Gerizim, and the New Testament to the present
situation of the Samaritans in Palestine. They are discussed here in chronological order,
beginning with the problem of the origins of the Samaritans and ending with their contem‑
porary situation.
The vexed question of the origin of the Samaritans is the topic of Magnar Kartveit’s
article “Theories of the Origin of the Samaritans—Then and Now”. His aim in this contri‑
bution is not to discuss the origin of the Samaritans as such but rather to give an overview
of the different scholarly opinions on this issue. Thus, he presents the Samaritans’ own
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version and that of Flavius Josephus, considers whether it can be hypothesized that they
come from the city of Samaria, and discusses the contributions made by the discoveries of
the Qumran scrolls and the inscriptions found during the excavations on Mt. Gerizim and
on the island of Delos. He concludes that a combination of continuity and estrangement
dominates the scholarly field on the question of the origin of the Samaritans today and
foresees that this will remain the case for the time being.
The relationship between the Samaritan Pentateuch and the Jewish versions of the
Pentateuch is the subject of the chapter “The Samaritan and Jewish Versions of the Pen‑
tateuch: A Survey” by Ingrid Hjelm. The author describes the nature of the Samaritan
Pentateuch as seen by earlier as well as by contemporary scholars, gives an overview of its
distinctive contents, and discusses the various editions of it. Her discussions range from
the characteristics of and the major variants in the Samaritan Pentateuch to the question
of the right cult place according to the Samaritan view. A special section is devoted to
the editions and translations of the Samaritan Pentateuch—from the Abisha Scroll (whose
date of origin is disputed) to the first English translation, which was published in 2013.
In Bell. 1.63, Josephus claims that the Gerizim temple was “modelled on that at
Jerusalem”, and in Ant. 11.310. he has the satrap of Samaria, Sanballat, promise Manasseh,
the brother of the high priest in Jerusalem, to build for him a temple on Mt. Gerizim similar
to the one in Jerusalem. Furthermore, the excavator of Mt. Gerizim, Itzhak Magen, writes:
“We may conclude that the first‑phase temple at Mt. Gerizim was modelled on the Second
Temple in Jerusalem that was built by Zerubbabel during the Return to Zion period (Ezra
1:2–6; Chronicles 36:23)”.41 However, according to Magen, “in the second phase, in the Hel‑
lenistic period, an independent Samaritan tradition developed that, although influenced
by the temple in Jerusalem, no longer exactly imitated it”.42 Anne Katrine de Hemmer
Gudme in her article, “Was the Temple on Mount Gerizim Modelled after the Jerusalem
Temple?”, points out that, if that were so, it would strengthen the argument that the Ger‑
izim cult was derived from the cult in Jerusalem. Since Magen draws his comparison
mainly from the temple described in the Book of Ezekiel (40:1–42:20; 43:1–5, 13–27; 44:1–9;
46:1–12), she confronts the evidence of the finds on Mt. Gerizim with the texts in Ezekiel.
Apart from the fact that Ezekiel’s temple hardly is a dependable reflection of the Jerusalem
temple in the Persian period, she also underlines that the Mt. Gerizim finds from that pe‑
riod are insufficient to conclude that they show a similarity with the Jerusalem temple.
Benedikt Hensel presents what the title of his article announces, viz. new insights into
the early history of Samari(t)an–Jewish relations. Focusing on Ezra 4:1–5 and 6–23 as pars
pro toto, as it were, he argues that Ezra–Nehemiah and Chronicles contain the first signs
of anti‑Samaritan polemics in the Bible. In a correction of what he proposed in his book,
Juda und Samaria, he now dates the beginning of this confrontation in the late fourth to
early third century BCE as opposed to the late second/early first century BCE in his earlier
work. In the course of Judaism’s self‑discovery, its differences from the Samarians were
emphasized in a process that he calls “literary othering”. Ezra–Nehemiah seeks to under‑
line that the postexilic community, as opposed to the Samarians, is continuous with the
earlier monarchic period religiously, politically, and genealogically. Similarly, Chronicles
also underlines the continuity with the kingdom of Israel in contrast to the religious and
political discontinuity of the Samarians. In addition, it insists on the Jerusalem‑exclusive
interpretation of the Pentateuch, foreshadowing the eventual division into the Samaritan
Pentateuch and the Masoretic text. Hensel believes that such literary polemics did not mir‑
ror the lived reality since the material culture, as far as it is known, does not indicate that
the two communities in the Persian and Hellenistic periods drifted apart. But eventually,
i.e., in the second/first century BCE, the literary dispute led to the separation of Judeans
and Samarians—they became “Jews” and “Samaritans”, each with their own traditions
and practices.
Around 1962, an important find was made in the cave Mughâret Abū Shinjeh in Wadi
Daliyeh, a valley 14 km north of Jericho. It included bones of about 200 people, fragments
of manuscripts, coins, and bullae. Jan Dušek presents a succinct discussion of the impor‑
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tance of this find in his article, “The Importance of the Wadi Daliyeh Manuscripts for the
History of Samaria and the Samaritans”. It is likely that these manuscripts were brought
into the cave by inhabitants of the city of Samaria after the murder of Alexander’s gover‑
nor of Syria, Andromachus, in ca. 332 BCE. Most of the documents were written between
375 and 332 BCE, i.e., in the late Persian period, and witnessed by governors, judges, and
prefects. Most of the witnesses had Yahwistic names. On the basis of the data gleaned
from the Wadi Daliyeh finds, Dušek dates the foundation of the Yhwh sanctuary on Mt.
Gerizim to about the time between 424 and 407 BCE. Furthermore, he sees the Pentateuch
as a new document that was produced in the fourth century BCE, uniting the Yahwists in
Judah and in Samaria under the same Law and guaranteeing the coexistence of the two
sanctuaries on Mt. Gerizim and in Jerusalem. However, we cannot know whether this was
already the Pentateuch known from later times. The fact that among the Wadi Daliyeh doc‑
uments no religious texts were found—in contrast to the manuscripts found by the Dead
Sea—leads Dušek to hypothesize that in the fourth century BCE the Pentateuch was not
yet considered a precious religious object to be taken along by refugees in the flight before
their persecutors. A confirmation for this assumption lies, in his opinion, in the absence of
any discovery of biblical texts from the Persian period.
While it is—or at least was—commonly assumed that the Hasmonean period was
the time in which Samaritans and Jews parted ways, Jonathan Bourgel cautions against
categorical statements to this effect in his contribution “The Samaritans During the Has‑
monean Period: The Affirmation of a Discrete Identity?”. Beginning with a discussion of
the situation of the Samaritans on the eve of the Hasmonean revolt and at its outbreak,
he then details their fate during Hasmonean rule. Bourgel believes that the destruction of
the Mt. Gerizim temple and the surrounding city by John Hyrcanus in 111–110 BCE may
not have been an act of exclusion—John Hyrcanus may well have seen the Samaritans as
true Israelites—but the Hasmonean’s forceful attempt to integrate the Samaritans into the
Judean state, avert them from the Mt. Gerizim priesthood, and redirect their offerings
to the Jerusalem temple in which he was high priest. He then discusses the production
of the Samaritan Pentateuch since it is often dated to the Hasmonean period and since
some scholars believe that it contributed to the split between the two Yhwh‑worshipping
communities. However, the validity of the arguments in favour of such an assumption
are all questioned by Bourgel. Equally questionable, according to Bourgel, is the reading
of anti‑Samaritan polemics into certain Jewish writings of the second century BCE. There
probably were some, but this must not be exaggerated because it is not possible to be sure
whether the Samaritans are intended or not. With other scholars, Bourgel also questions
the accuracy of the hypothesis that the use of miqvaʾot was forced on the Samaritans by John
Hyrcanus after he had destroyed their temple. All things considered, the relationship be‑
tween the Samaritans and the Hasmoneans was not simply one of hatred and repudiation.
Nevertheless, in the end, the consequences of the treatment of the Samaritans by the Has‑
moneans did lead to a division between Samaritans and Jews, even though this does not
mean that all contacts were broken at that time.
In his contribution “The Ancient Samaritans and Greek Culture”, Pieter W. van der
Horst gathers the available evidence for the impact that Greek literature and practice had
on the ancient Samaritans in Palestine and in the diaspora. He tries to distil as much as
possible from the meagre evidence that has been preserved. To begin with, he points out
that the request by (some?) Samaritans (or Sidonians) to rename the Mt. Gerizim sanc‑
tuary Temple of Zeus Olympios or Xenios described in 1 Maccabees 6:2 and Josephus,
Ant. 12.257–264, is not so much evidence for Samaritan Hellenism as testimony to the
influence of Hellenistic culture on “liberal” and “orthodox” Samaritans, just like on the
Jews. Furthermore, the fragments of a poem by Theodotus (probably second century
BCE), that praise Shechem as “a holy city”, were, according to van der Horst, undoubt‑
edly written by a Samaritan. Another example is a fragment of the work of the historian
now called Pseudo‑Eupolemos, also probably from the second century BCE. Although it
contains nothing specifically Samaritan and, in fact, it is not known whether it derives
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from a Samaritan or Jewish author, it depicts Abraham as having been received in the
temple of the Most High on Mt. Gerizim. In van der Horst’s opinion, Pseudo‑Eupolemos
seems to have combined Gen. 12:7 and 14:18 and added that Abraham was received in
the temple on Mt. Gerizim in an attempt to claim priority for the temple on Mt. Gerizim
over the one in Jerusalem. The fragments of the so‑called Samaritikon, possibly a Samaritan
Greek version of the Pentateuch, as well as Greek inscriptions citing biblical texts in Greek,
are evidence that the Samaritans used a Greek translation of the Bible, although probably
not of their own making but an adapted version of the Septuagint. In addition, a number
of Samaritan inscriptions in Greek have come to light in both Palestine and the diaspora,
such as Delos (second century BCE), Thessalonica (fourth or fifth century CE), and Tyre
(fifth or sixth century CE). The Delos inscriptions attest that the Samaritans had embraced
Greek customs when they record the honoring of benefactors with crowns or wreaths and
inscriptions. In the fifth century CE, the Samaritan apostate, Marinus of Neapolis, became
head of the Athenian Neo‑Platonic Academy. The existence of a crypto‑Samaritan, Fausti‑
nus, in the Byzantine government service, as described by Procopius of Caesarea (sixth
century), is testimony to a thorough acquaintance with the Greek language and customs
by these Samaritans. For the Roman period, van der Horst assumes that the majority of the
Samaritans possibly understood and spoke Greek, similar to the situation among the Jews.
Analysing the well‑known New Testament passages dealing with Samaritans, Mar‑
tina Böhm in her article, “Samaritans in the New Testament”, underlines that in all cases
the reference is to the Samaritans as a religious, not just geographical or political, commu‑
nity. For lack of evidence, we cannot know what the attitude of the historical Jesus towards
the Samaritans was. Taking into account the recent results of a renewed understanding of
the history of the two Yahwistic Israelite faiths in the Persian and Hellenistic periods, Böhm
underlines that the Samaritans must have been more than an insignificant religious com‑
munity in New Testament times. The term Σαµαρῖται in this sense is found in Matthew,
John, and Luke‑Acts, but Paul may also have had the Samaritans in the religious sense in
mind even if during his time this term was not yet current. Rather, before 70 CE it was
above all the term ʾIσραηλῖται that included the Samaritans. Especially in the early dias‑
pora sources, the Samaritans were therefore, on the whole, undetectable. Such designa‑
tions as ʾIσραήλ, ʾIσραηλῖται, ʿΕβραῖαoι, σπέρµα ʾAβραάµ, and others should therefore
be closely examined so as to discern who is intended by them. Böhm then discusses in de‑
tail the classical Samaritan texts in the New Testament in view of their theological concept
of the Samaritans. She concludes that all New Testament texts involving the Samaritans
are anchored in historically accurate information about the Samaritans’ religious outlook.
In the last few decades, Samaritan studies have experienced a veritable boom even
though the number of specialists is still small in comparison to other fields. Among the
latest contributions is a new edition and English translation of one of the most important
Samaritan works, Tibåt Mårqe, a collection of interpretations (midrashim) of certain pas‑
sages of the Pentateuch. Abraham Tal in his article, “Tibåt Mårqe: A New Edition with En‑
glish Translation”, introduces the latest edition of the work that is based on a manuscript
that is older than any manuscript known previously. It was discovered by the Samari‑
tan scholar Israel b. Gamaliel Tsedaqa in the National Library of Russia in St. Petersburg
around the year 2000. Mårqe lived in the fourth century CE and used the Aramaic of the
time for his compositions. On this basis, it was determined that of the six books that now
constitute Tibåt Mårqe, only book one was authored by him. Called “The Book of Wonders”,
it is an amplified version of the story of the liberation from Egyptian slavery as recounted
in the book of Exodus. The other books date from later periods. They are written in late
Hebraized Aramaic and, some portions, in Neo‑Samaritan Hebrew. They deal with vari‑
ous texts of the Pentateuch. Apart from the linguistic aspects of the work, Tal presents his
new edition and translation with explanatory notes.
Indications of the possible existence of a Samaritan synagogue in Apollonia‑Arsuf/
Sozousa, located on the coast of central Israel between Caesarea and Jaffa, are discussed
by Oren Tal in his article, “A Samaritan Synagogue of the Byzantine Period at Apollonia‑
Religions 2021, 12, 769
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Arsuf/Sozousa?”. As the question mark after the title indicates, the available archaeologi‑
cal evidence is very scanty. What was found in the 2014 season of excavations is a Samari‑
tan mosaic inscription in Greek and Aramaic in Samaritan script. The Greek part includes
the typically Samaritan phrase “Only One God”. From the orientation of the relics of two
walls and the mosaic floor towards Mt. Gerizim, Tal concludes that the building once was
a Samaritan synagogue. He dates its construction tentatively to the fourth or fifth century
CE and its destruction to the late Byzantine or early Islamic period.
The Samaritans in rabbinic literature have been the subject of many studies. Most
focused on the Mishna, Tosefta, and the two Talmudim. As distinct from these works,
Andreas Lehnardt in his article, “The Anti‑Samaritan Attitudes as Reflected in Rabbinic
Midrashim”, investigates the subject in rabbinic biblical commentaries, the Midrashim,
that go back to the Amoraic period, i.e., from the third to the fifth centuries CE. In par‑
ticular, he analyses the passages in Midrash Genesis Rabbah, probably edited in the fifth
century, that involve discussions with the eminent Rabbi Meʾir who lived in the second
century. Lehnardt’s primary interest does not lie in the question of whether the dialogues
reported in this source are historical or not but what role the Samaritans played in the for‑
mation of the teachings of the rabbis. The analyses of these texts show that the Samaritans
and their religious views in Bereshit Rabbah are not what interests the rabbis. Rather, it
is the rabbis’ self‑definition that underlies the “dialogues”. The fictitious Samaritans are
shown to be inferior when it comes to the exegesis of the Torah. In their debates, some
passages make use of pagan scientific and philosophical arguments to counter the Samari‑
tan positions, i.e., arguments that are accessible to all humans. Thus, the “dialogues” were
used by the rabbis to give their own identity a clearer image.
Although, like the Jews, the Samaritans are a branch of Israelite religion, they are the
much smaller offshoot. As a consequence, traditions that are the same or similar in both
religions are commonly explained as borrowings from the larger offshoot by the smaller.
Steven Fine, however, proposes that, at least in the case investigated by him, the direction
of the borrowing was the opposite—from the Samaritans to the Jews. In his article, “‘They
Remembered That They Had Seen it in a Jewish Midrash’: How a Samaritan Tale Became
a Legend of the Jews”, he traces the path of a Samaritan legend from a medieval Samari‑
tan chronicle through early modern rabbinic literature to nineteenth and early twentieth
century Jewish scholarship. The story is known as the “Epistle of Joshua son of Nun” or
the “Shobakh Legend”. Versions of different lengths and detail are found in Samaritan me‑
dieval chronicles. The legend describes Joshua’s heroic fight against and victory over the
Armenians led by their king Shobakh. It was appended to Abraham ben Samuel Zacuto’s
Sefer Yuḥasin (Book of Lineage (of Jewish sages and their teachings)) which was originally
published in 1566 by the rabbi and scholar Samuel Sulam (Shullam). In his introduction to
the legend of Shobakh, Sulam states that he found it in the Book of Chronicles of the Samar‑
itans, although he adds the puzzling remark that “they remembered that they had seen it
[the legend] in one midrash of the Jews”. Unfortunately, it is not clear to whom “they”
refers. Fine, however, identifies several themes in the legend that point to a Samaritan ori‑
gin. Later, the story was included in Hebrew and Yiddish literature up to the nineteenth
and twentieth century.
The present‑day situation of the Samaritans as a small minority in a predominantly
Muslim society is discussed in Julia Droeber’s contribution “Avoidance as Inter‑Religious
Competence? Samaritans and Their Religious ‘Others’ in Nablus, Palestine”. Nablus is in‑
habited by Muslims, Christians, and Samaritans.43 The aim of Droeber’s article is to deter‑
mine the inter‑religious competence of the Samaritans in Nablus (Kiryat Luza) that allows
them to live peacefully with the members of the other two religions in everyday life. (For
various reasons, Samaritans in Ḥolon were not included in her research for this project). By
inter‑religious competences, she means the skills that are needed to deal with situations in
which different religions overlap, to understand what happens in such situations, and to
become able to deal with them. To ascertain what skills Samaritans may have acquired in
past encounters that may inform their present behaviour, she summarizes what is known
Religions 2021, 12, 769
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of the history of interactions between Samaritans and members of other religions from the
fourth century CE to the twenty‑first century. Droeber surmises that the historical expe‑
riences contributed to the development of tactics that make coexistence possible. For the
present, the living together is relatively peaceful which by a large measure is due to the
avoidance of frictions and the emphasis by the Samaritans on theological, social, and po‑
litical similarities with the majority group. However, this applies primarily to the public
sphere. In private, a hidden transcript exists that expresses the negative feelings and atti‑
tudes towards the members of the other communities that cannot be expressed in public.
But both the public and the private discourse have the maintenance of the peace as their
aim. Finally, Droeber points out that politics plays a major role in determining the inter‑
religious rapport in Nablus: “Representatives of all groups involved mention, in one form
or another, that there is a ‘common enemy’—Israeli occupation—that binds them together
in a shared struggle. It is reason and proof of the ‘brotherhood’ of Samaritans, Christians,
and Muslims in Nablus”. Thus, the sense of local identity is reinforced by the present
political context.
The contemporary Samaritans are also the subject of the article “From Religious to
Cultural and Back Again: Tourism Development, Heritage Revitalization, and Religious
Transnationalizations among the Samaritans” by Fanny Urien‑Lefranc. The article de‑
scribes and analyses the Samaritans’ ongoing attempts to define their identity and to adapt
it to the changing environments. The Samaritans are at the same time close to Judaism but
different from it, and as citizens of Palestine and Israel they are special. To themselves
and to the outside world they appear to be—and want to be seen as the guardians of an
ancient tradition whose religion and culture are closely woven together. Tourism plays
a large role in this process of renewed self‑identification. Every year large numbers of
tourists—Palestinians, Israelis, and foreigners—come to see the Passover sacrifice on Mt.
Gerizim and to observe the ceremony that is said to go back to biblical times. By their pres‑
ence, the spectators unwittingly legitimize the ritual as re‑enacting the biblical ceremony.
The Samaritans are seen by the media and the tourists as living witnesses to ancient bibli‑
cal history. The site of Mt. Gerizim plays a major role in the identity of the Samaritans. At
the same time, the Palestinian Authority chose it to defend the Palestinian identity by sub‑
mitting in 2012 a request to the UNESCO to include the mountain and the Samaritans on
the World Heritage List. As a reaction to this move, the Israeli State established an archae‑
ological park on the top of the mountain also in 2012 and insisted on the Jewish character
of it. As the then Israeli Minister of Protection and Environment said: the Israeli State
“will not waive [its] right to commemorate the Jewish heritage and to facilitate accessibil‑
ity to heritage sites”. The Samaritans, as active participants in tourism, developed means
through which they articulate and convey their image as keepers of an ancient heritage
and members of the authentic and discrete “Samaritan Israelite” culture. Among these
means are a choir that performs Samaritan religious songs at international cultural events
and a cookbook with Samaritan recipes. In addition, they use the Internet to find ancient
manuscripts, not to bring them home to Nablus, but to draw attention to them so that they
can be accessed by non‑Samaritans, who in turn can learn from them about the Samaritan
heritage. The newest phenomenon is the transnationalization of Samaritanism in the sense
that populations geographically far removed from Mt. Gerizim are attracted by the values
and the expressions of self‑identity of the Samaritans and want to become Samaritans, al‑
though not through formal conversion, which does not exist in Samaritanism, but through
adherence to Samaritan beliefs and practices. Urien‑Lefranc studied this phenomenon in
Brazil, where she found that the Internet and social networks play an important role in
it. The Samaritans in Palestine are of two minds in this matter. On the one hand, the
Neo‑Samaritans are looked at with curiosity and enthusiasm, but on the other hand, the
Samaritans in Palestine ask themselves whether Samaritanism should be based on ethnic‑
ity or whether it can be adopted by choice. For the time being, these new Samaritans help
to augment the visibility of Samaritans as an authentic and ancient tradition.
Summary
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As is clear from the contributions to this Special Issue, Samaritan studies have made
important progress in the late twentieth and early twenty‑first centuries. New answers to
age‑old questions are being put forth, and the methods of new fields of study are used to
explore the present situation of this religion whose members are living in a varied religious
and political environment and are doing everything in their power to survive and adapt
to the ever‑changing world around them.
Funding: This research received no external funding.
Conflicts of Interest: The author declares no conflict of interest.
Appendix A. Congresses and Proceedings of the Société d’Études Samaritaines
Table Ronde in Paris in 1985
Rothschild, Jean‑Pierre and Guy Dominique Sixdenier, eds. Études samaritaines.
Pentateuque et Targum, exégèse et philologie, chroniques. Actes de la table ronde: “Les
manuscrits samaritains. Problèmes et méthodes” (Paris, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire
des Textes, 7–9 octobre 1985). Collection de la Revue des Études Juives 6. Louvain‑Paris:
E. Peeters, 1988
(Although in effect being the first conference on Samaritanism, it was not counted as
a congress.)
Congresses of the SES
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
Tel Aviv, Israel: 11–13 April 1988
Oxford, U.K.: 6–10 August 1990
Paris, France: 12–16 July 1992
Milan, Italy: 8–12 July 1996
Helsinki, Finland: 1–4 August 2000
Haifa, Israel: 5–8 July 2004
Pápa, Hungary: 15–17 July 2008
Erfurt, Germany: 15–20 July 2012
Prague, Czech Republic: 31 July–5 August 2016
Proceedings
(1) Tal, Abraham and Moshe Florentin, eds. Proceedings of the First International Congress
of the Société d’Études Samaritaines, Tel Aviv, April 11–13, 1988. Tel Aviv: Chaim Rosenberg
School for Jewish Studies, Tel Aviv University, 1991
(2) and (3) Crown, Alan David and Lucy Davey, eds. Essays in Honour of G.D. Sixdenier:
New Samaritan Studies of the Société d’Études Samaritaines. Vols. III and IV: Proceedings of
the Congresses of Oxford 1990, Yarnton Manor, and Paris 1992, Collège de France: with
Lectures given at Hong Kong 1993 as Participation in the ICANAS Congress. University
of Sydney Studies in Judaica 5. [Sydney]: Mandelbaum Publishing, 1995
(4) Morabito, Vittorio, Alan D. Crown, and Lucy Davey, eds. Samaritan Researches Volume
V: Proceedings of the Congress of the SES (Milan July 8–12, 1996) and of the Special Section of
the ICANAS Congress (Budapest July 7–11 1997). University of Sydney Studies in Judaica 10.
[Sydney]: Mandelbaum Publishing, 2000
(5) Shehadeh, Haseeb and Habib Tawa, eds., with the collaboration of Reinhard Pummer.
Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress of the Société d’Études Samaritaines, Helsinki,
August 1–4, 2000: Studies in Memory of Ferdinand Dexinger. Paris: Librairie Orientaliste
Paul Geuthner, 2005
(6) Mor, Menachem and Friedrich V. Reiterer, eds., in collaboration with Waltraud Winkler.
Samaritans: Past and Present: Current Studies. Studia Judaica 53; Studia Samaritana 5.
Berlin; New York: De Gruyter, 2010
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(Includes the papers presented at the Samaritan Study Sessions at the International Meet‑
ing of the Society of Biblical Literature in Vienna, Austria, July 22–26, 2007)
(7) Zsengellér, József, ed. Samaria, Samarians, Samaritans: Studies on Bible, History and
Linguistics. Studia Judaica 66; Studia Samaritana 6. Berlin; Boston: De Gruyter, 2011
(8) Schorch, Stefan, ed. Samaritan Languages, Texts, and Traditions. Studia Judaica 75; Studia
Samaritana 8. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2021
(9) Dusšek, Jan, ed. The Samaritans in Historical, Cultural and Linguistic Perspectives.
Studia Judaica 119; Studia Samaritana 11. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2018
Notes
1
(Macdonald 1972, p. 141, my emphasis). In 1907, in his book The Samaritans, Montgomery (1907) dedicated his first chapter to
an account of the “Re‑Discovery of the Samaritans” in the late sixteenth century after the “dense darkness” of the Middle Ages.
2
For a discussion see (Pummer 2010).
Not Joseph Scaliger as many scholars, following Montgomery (1907, p. 3), believe.
3
4
Postel, Linguarum, C II b to C IVb. See (Robert 1988, pp. 16, 18).
5
Published later by Juynboll (1848).
6
(Scaliger 1598, Book VII); on Scaliger and the Samaritans see (Robert 1988, pp. 18–22).
7
See (Adler 1907, p. 21).
8
As recounted in (Robert 1988, p. 20).
9
For the correspondence in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries see (Delcor 1988). For the twentieth century see (Steindler
Moscati 2000).
(Le Jay 1645). On Jean Morin see (Auvray 1959).
10
11
12
Their works are listed in Crown and Pummer (2005).
(Cowley 1909). Selected prayers and hymns were published and translated into modern Hebrew by Ben‑Ḥayyim (1967).
13
(Juynboll 1848). The edition is based on a manuscript which Scaliger obtained from the Samaritans in Cairo in 1584 (see above).
An English translation was published in 1890 by Crane (1890), Chronicle.
14
See (Grimm 1854).
Golding (1928), calls his chapter on the Samaritans (pp. 126–36): “The Samaritan Doom”.
15
16
See, e.g., the title of the book by Callebaut (1990), Les derniers Samaritains. Russell’s (2014) book, Heirs to Forgotten Kingdoms,
counts the Samaritans among “Disappearing Religions of the Middle East”.
17
(Grimm 1854, p. 6) (transl.: an image of violent death convulsions, an utterly powerless reaction of the last remnants of life
which today turned into the death slumber of a painless daze).
18
(Grimm 1854, p. 196) (transl.: In this way the Samaritans vegetate towards their final extinction).
19
See the new critical edition of the Pentateuch that is being published under the direction of Schorch. So far, Genesis and
Leviticus have appeared: The Samaritan Pentateuch: Volume 1: Genesis (Schorch 2021) and The Samaritan Pentateuch: Volume 3:
Leviticus (Schorch 2018). Furthermore, see Tal (2019), Tibåt Mårqe, with Tal’s introduction to his new edition and translation in
this issue of Religions “Tibåt Mårqe: A New Edition with English Translation”; Lieber (forthcoming), Classical Samaritan Poetry
in Context.
For the English translation see (Stenhouse 1985). The edition, “Kitāb”, is Stenhouse’s (1980) Ph.D. dissertation and is available
as a microfilm. A continuation of the Chronicle was published by Levy‑Rubin (2002) under the title The Continuatio of the
Samaritan Chronicle of Abū l‑Fatḥ.
20
21
Among the recent publications are above all (Dušek 2007, 2020).
22
The publications dealing with the impact of the Dead Sea Scrolls findings on the study of the Samaritan Pentateuch are too
numerous to be listed here. Suffice it to refer to two of the most recent collective works, viz. Kartveit and Knoppers (2018), and
Langlois (2019).
23
The most important archaeological finds are due to the work of Yitzhak Magen. Among his many publications see (Stern
and Magen 2002; Magen 2007, 2008b; Magen et al. 2004; Magen 2008a, 2009, 2019). On Josephus and the Samaritans see
(Pummer 2009).
See above all (Ireton 2003; Schreiber 2014; Urien‑Lefranc 2019, 2020; Droeber 2013, 2018, 2020). Physical anthropology, espe‑
cially genetics, was the subject of numerous articles and monographs, primarily from the early to the late twentieth and the
early twenty‑first century. The main author in this field is and was Batsheva Bonné. For a recent article, see (Bonné‑Tamir et al.
24
Religions 2021, 12, 769
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2003). For the publications up to the year 2005, see the entries “Anthropology” and “Genetics” in the Subject Index of Crown
and Pummer (2005). Genetics is also the subject of the article by Oefner et al. (2013).
25
The website of SES is www.socsam.org. For the congresses and their published proceedings, see the Appendix A below.
26
Various theories have recently been discussed in Kartveit (2019b).
27
(Hensel 2020b, p. 9). The new perspective on the early tensions between Judah and Samaria was developed especially, but not
only, by Hensel and Heckl in a number of publications. For Hensel, see above all Juda and Samaria (Hensel 2016); “On the Rela‑
tionship” (Hensel 2019); “Ezra‑Nehemiah and Chronicles” (Hensel 2020a), and most recently the above mentioned “Yahwistic
Diversity” (Hensel 2018a); “Cult Centralization in the Persian Period” (Hensel 2018a) and “Debating Temple” (Hensel 2021).
For Heckl, see his book Neuanfang (Heckl 2016), published in the same year as Hensel’s book Juda and Samaria; and his article
“The Composition of Ezra‑Nehemiah” (Heckl 2018). See also the contributions in the collective work Yahwistic Diversity (Hensel
et al. 2020).
See the discussion in (Pummer Forthcoming; Bourgel 2019).
28
29
30
See Pummer (2009).
(Pummer Forthcoming).
31
For the difference between the Jewish and Samaritan canon see (Hjelm 2020); see also (Kartveit 2020, 2019a; Tov 2019).
32
(Hensel 2020b, p. 24, italics in original). See also most recently (Hensel 2021).
33
(Knoppers 2013, p. 188). See also (Hensel 2020b, p. 25). Heckl, too, emphasizes that “the Pentateuch was composed as a
foundational document for every Israelite of every time” and that “the priesthoods of the two shrines in Palestine [i.e., the
temples on Mt. Gerizim and in Jerusalem] were collectively involved in its composition and introduction” (Heckl 2020, p. 137).
See also (Bergsma 2019).
34
See, e.g., (Heckl 2020, p. 137; Houston 2014).
35
Underlined by Knoppers (2013, p. 189).
36
(Hensel 2018a; Römer 2018; Hensel et al. 2020). On the centralization formula see (Kartveit 2015).
(Hensel 2018b); Hensel analyses 2 Kings 17, 24–41 and 2 Chr 13 as examples for encoded mentions of the sanctuary on Mt.
Gerizim. See also (Hensel 2018a; Römer 2018; Hjelm 1999; Gallagher 2014).
37
38
39
(Alt 1934).
(Heckl 2020, p. 137).
40
See Hensel’s neologism in his chapter heading “Pluriformität und Polytemplismus in nach‑exilischer Zeit” (Hensel 2016,
p. 208).
41
(Magen 2008a, p. 149).
42
(Magen 2008a, p. 98).
43
In 2016, the city had a population of ca. 214.903; ca. 700 individuals were Christians in 2014, and presently ca. 440 individuals
are Samaritans.
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