Editorial Board
Editors: Willem F. Smelik (London), Bas ter Haar Romeny (Leiden)
Bibliographic Editor: Jan-Wim Wesselius (Kampen)
Editorial Board
Philip S. Alexander (Manchester), Tjitze Baarda (Amsterdam), Moshe J. Bernstein (New York), Pier Giorgio Borbone (Turin), Bruce Chilton (Annandale-on-Hudson), Johann Cook (Stellenbosch), Luis Díez Merino (Barcelona), Beate Ego (Osnabrück), Paul V.M.Flesher (Laramie,WY), Robert Gordon (Cambridge), John F. Healey (Manchester), Alberdina Houtman (Kampen), Konrad D. Jenner (Leiden), Jan Joosten (Strasbourg), Rimon Kasher (Ramat-Gan), Stephen A. Kaufman (Cincinnati), Geoffrey Khan (Cambridge), George A. Kiraz (Piscataway, NJ), Alessandro Mengozzi (Bergamo), Christa Müller-Kessler (Jena), W.Th. van Peursen (Leiden), Michael Sokoloff (Ramat-Gan), Abraham Tal (Tel Aviv), David G.K. Taylor(Oxford)
Abstracting & Indexing
American Humanities Index
Dietrich's Index Philosophicus
International Bibliography of Book Reviews of Scolarly Literature
Internationale Bibliographie der Zeitschriftenliteratur aus allen Gebieten des Wissens / International Bibliography of Periodicals from all Fields of Knowledge
New Testament Abstracts
Old Testament Abstracts
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Aramaic Studies: the leading journal for Aramaic language and literature
The journal brings all aspects of the various forms of Aramaic and their literatures together to help shape the field of Aramaic Studies.
The journal, which has been the main platform for Targum and Peshitta Studies for some time, is now also the main outlet for the study of all Aramaic dialects, including the language and literatures of Old Aramaic, Achaemenid Aramaic, Palmyrene, Nabataean, Qumran Aramaic, Mandaic, Syriac, Rabbinic Aramaic, and Neo-Aramaic.
Aramaic Studies seeks contributions of a linguistic, literary, exegetical or theological nature for any of the dialects and periods involved, from detailed grammatical work to narrative analysis, from short notes to fundamental research. Reviews, seminars, conference proceedings, and bibliographical surveys are also featured. All contributions submitted to Aramaic Studies are subjected to peer review.
While almost every script of the relevant languages can be printed, Aramaic Studies encourages its authors to provide modern translations of quotations in any of these languages for the benefit of a wide readership, including biblical exegetes and historians whose field of expertise is not Aramaic.
The bibliographic section is sustained by the Semitic Institute at Kampen and the Peshitta Institute at Leiden.
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