Félix-Marie Abel (29 December 1878 – 24 March 1953)[1] was a French archaeologist, a geographer, and a professor at the
École Biblique in
Jerusalem. A
Dominican priest, he was one of the most prominent
bible scholars in the end of Ottoman era and British Mandate era.[2] His work "remains even today the authority on the Greek sources for Palestine", according to
Benedict T. Viviano.[3]
Biography
Abel was born in
Saint-Uze, in the
Drôme department, on 29 December 1878. He was educated at the Preparatory Seminary of
Valence.[4] He was ordained on 1 February 1897 at
Saint-Maximin.[1] In 1897 he arrived in Jerusalem to study in the École Biblique founded by
Marie-Joseph Lagrange;[5] Lagrange had recruited him (and
fr:Raphaël Savignac) to help him get "a clear grasp of physical environment and the cultural framework of the Bible". Abel graduated in 1900.[6] In 1905 he became a professor at the École Biblique teaching Church History, Greek, topography, archaeology, and Coptic; he served there until his death in 1953.[7] Starting in 1906, he served as guide to scriptural tours through Palestine, Phoenicia, and Syria.[4]
Work
He published a number of studies in various disciplines—linguistics, geography, and history. His Grammaire du Grec Biblique is a grammar of
Biblical Greek (1927).[6] Preceded by a volume on Palestine in the
Guide Bleu series of travel guides,[6][8] his Géographie de la Palestine (Paris, 1933–1938) treats the political, historical and physical geography from the most remote times until the Byzantine period.[7] The book has two volumes, the first a physical geography, and the second a historical geography.[8] The study supports, for instance, the theory of
William F. Lynch that the
Essenes lived in a set of small caves directly above
Ein Gedi (which Lynch had visited in 1848[9]), a theory later discredited by scholarship.[10][11] The topographical quality of his work was quite influential: according to
Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, "The ten maps he prepared have served as the prime, but often unacknowledged, source of much subsequent topographical identification".[12] In 1952 he published Histoire de la Palestine depuis la conquête d'Alexandre jusqu'à l'invasion arabe, a comprehensive history.[6] He also edited and translated the
Book of Joshua for the École Biblique's edition of the bible,[8] translated the
Books of the Maccabees and identified several battle sites of the
Maccabean Revolt and other places that related to
Hasmonean dynasty.[2]
He contributed articles to the Revue Biblique and the Catholic Encyclopedia.[13]
With
Louis-Hugues Vincent he published a number of works, the most famous of which are the three volumes of topographic-archaeological-historical studies on the city of Jerusalem. They worked together also at the excavations of
Emmaus, on research on the
Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron, and at the
Church of the Nativity.[14] With Savignac he argued that archeological remains beneath the
St. Stephen's Basilica, Jerusalem, which houses the École Biblique, were those of the basilica built by
Empress Eudocia in the 5th century CE, but not that this was also the site of the stoning of
Saint Stephen the Protomartyr.[15]
Bibliography, books
Vincent, L.-H., and F.-M. Abel. Jérusalem: Recherches de topographie, d'archéologie et d'histoire
Abel, F.-M. (1939–40). "La Liste des Donations des Baibars en Palestine d'apres la Charte de 663 H. (1265)". Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. XIX: 38–44.
^
abAuthor, No (March 31, 2015).
"Abel, Félix-Marie". Dictionnaire Biographique des Frères Prêcheurs. Dominicains des Provinces Françaises (XIXe-XXe Siècles) (in French).
ISSN2431-8736. Retrieved May 15, 2018. {{
cite journal}}: |last1= has generic name (
help)
^
abBar-Kochva, Bezalel (2000). "François-Marie Abel / על פרנסואה-מארי אבל". Cathedra: For the History of Eretz Israel and Its Yishuv / קתדרה: לתולדות ארץ ישראל ויישובה (97): 172–173.
JSTOR23404651.
^בן-אריה, יהושע; Ben-Arieh, Yehoshua (1999). "Non-Jewish Institutions and the Research of Palestine during the British Mandate Period: Part Two / המוסדות הזרים לארכאולוגיה ולחקירת ארץ-ישראל בתקופת המנדט: חלק ב". Cathedra: For the History of Eretz Israel and Its Yishuv / קתדרה: לתולדות ארץ ישראל ויישובה (93): 111–142.
JSTOR23404547.