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Hananiah (Samaritan)

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by SnowFire (talk | contribs) at 18:55, 30 April 2023 (not sure this is really a stub - there's just almost nothing to say about this possible person other than that they maybe existed. Maybe should be merged into a "Samaria papyri" article? Also, I think the Hananiah in the Elephantine papyri is a different one...). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Hananiah ben Sanballat was a governor of Samaria under the Achaemenid Empire. He reigned during the mid fourth century BCE.

The scholar Frank Moore Cross was involved in the purchase and excavation of ancient papyri at Wadi Daliyeh, preserved by the dry climate. One of the papyri fragments he found included the line "before Hananiah governor of Samaria." Cross dated the line to around 354 BCE, and took it as evidence that someone named Hananiah was governor then, and was possibly the same person as "Hanan the prefect." He also hypothesized that the governorship of Samaria was hereditary, and that Hananiah was the son of "Sanballat II", a hypothesized other Sanballat. Cross's reconstruction has not been universally accepted, however.[1][2]

References

  1. ^ Frank Moore Cross, Jr. (December 1963). "The Discovery of the Samaria Papyri". The Biblical Archaeologist. 26 (4). Boston, United States of America: American Schools of Oriental Research: 109–121. doi:10.2307/3211040. JSTOR 3211040. S2CID 189256904.
  2. ^ Frank Moore Cross, Jr. "Aspects of Samaritan and Jewish History in Late Persian and Hellenistic Times." The Harvard Theological Review, Vol. 59, No. 3 (Jul., 1966), pp. 201-211.