Francesca Stavrakopoulou | |
---|---|
Kapanganakan | |
Nasyonalidad | British |
Titulo | Propesor ng Bibliyang Hebro at Sinaunang Relihiyon |
Akademikong saligan | |
Inang diwa | Oxford University |
Tesis | King Manasseh and Child Sacrifice: Biblical Distortions of Historical Realities (2002) |
Akademikong gawain | |
Takdang-aral | Mga pag-aaral sa Bibliya |
Mga institusyon | University of Exeter |
Pangunahing interes | History of ancient Israel and Judah |
Si Francesca Stavrakopoulou ( /frænˈtʃɛskə ˌstævrækəˈpuːluː/; ipinanganak noong 3 Oktubre 1975) ay isang British na iskolar ng Bibliya. Siya ang Propesor ng Bibliyang Hebreo at Sinaunang Relihiyon sa University of Exeter.[1] Ang kanyang pinagtutuunan ang Kasaysayan ng Sinaunang Israelita at relihiyon nito.[2]
Siya ay palaging makikita sa mga palabas tungkol sa Bibliya at relihiyon sa BBC2 at Channel 4.[kailangan ng sanggunian] Palagi siyang nagbibigay ng mga pahayag tungkol sa historisidad ng Bibliya, mga kababaihan sa bibliya at mga pinagmulan ng mga tekstong ito.[kailangan ng sanggunian]
Ang kanyang ina ay isang Inglest at ang kanyang ama ay isang Griyego/ Siya ay isang ateista.[3] Siya ay nag-aral sa Godolphin and Latymer School at nanalo ng exhibition upang mag-aral sa Worcester College, Oxford.[4][5]
Stavrakopoulou's dissertation-based monograph, and her subsequent authored book-length publications are:
Stavrakopoulou's major journal articles and her authored book chapters include:
Quote: Given the important theological and narrative functions of the death and burial notices in emphasizing the continuity of the Davidic dynasty… variations [in the stated burial places] have proved problematic for many commentators.
Quote: For scholars of ancient Israel and Judah… the designation 'household religion' has particularly come to index a category of difference: on one level, it tends to be a label employed to describe and interrogate forms of religious practice that are distinct from religious activities associated with temples and other high-status religious sites. … On another (though related) level… the term… is also employed to designate a category of difference concerned with distinguishing the "real" religions of Israel and Judah from the somewhat caricatured biblical portrayal of 'ordinary' or 'normative' religious practice in these ancient societies.