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Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
Hebrew reclaimed from ancient picture-writing.Language meets image and meaning.John Lamb’s nineteenth-century investigation traces Hebrew characters back to pictorial roots and applies those original pictures to the interpretation of numerous words and passages in the sacred writings, with particular emphasis on the history of the creation and fall of man. Combining hieroglyphics comparative study with close attention to letter-form and etymology, Lamb offers readers a comparative philology reference that situates biblical linguistics study within the wider history of writing systems. The essays are both methodical and discursive: Lamb lines up pictorial parallels, examines phonetic correspondences and reads scripture through the lens of ancient writing systems to illuminate sacred text interpretation. For readers curious about Hebrew language origins or the intellectual currents of Middle Eastern antiquity, the book opens surprising connections between pictorial signs and script tradition while serving as a provocative biblical studies resource.Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today’s and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector’s item and a cultural treasure. Its historical significance is twofold: as a window into nineteenth century religious texts and as testimony to an era when scholars of ancient languages sought visual keys to meaning. Accessible and engaging for casual readers intrigued by creation and fall analysis and by how languages grow from pictures, it is also a useful companion for scholars, librarians and classic-literature collectors assembling comparative or historical holdings in the history of writing systems. Presented with care, the edition invites readers to judge Lamb’s evidence for themselves; as a historical artefact it yields insight into debates that helped shape modern biblical studies and the evolving understanding of script in Middle Eastern antiquity.