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______. “Note on Serpent-cult at Palestine,”
Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement
61 (1928) 110. [Rowe argued that what has been seen as “two small rude bird figures” on a vessel from the “High Place” at Tell esSäfi are “figures of serpents in uraeus-form.” He offered the opinion that the two serpents may represent Nekhebit and Wadjet.]
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, ed. E. Ruckstuhl. SBAB 3. Stuttgart: Katholisches Bibelwerk, 1933; pp. 277–310.
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The Devil in Legend and Literature
. La Salle, 1ll.: The Open Court Publishing Company, 1931.
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. Ithaca, N.Y. and London: Cornell University Press, 1977.
______.
Lucifer: The Devil in the Middle Ages
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______.
The Prince of Darkness: Radical Evil and the Power of Good in History
. Ithaca, N.Y. and London: Cornell University Press, 1988.
______.
Satan: The Early Christian Tradition
. Ithaca, N.Y., and London: Cornell University Press, 1981.
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Asclepius and Jesus: The Form, Character and Status of the Asclepius Cult in the Second Century CE and its Influence on Early Christianity
. Harvard Divinity School, ThD, 1986.
Saladino, V.
Belser Kunstbibliothek: Die Meisterwerke aus den Offizien in Florenz, Antike Skulpturen
, trans. C. Galliani. Florence: Arte e Pensiero, 1983; see esp. “Persephone-Sarkphag” on pp. 38–39, “Asklepius” on pp. 52–53, and “Herakles als Schlangentöter” on pp. 76–77. [See the photograph (p. 39) of a sarcophagus of Persephone showing, in high relief, two raised serpents (without wings) pulling a chariot. Hades (Pluto) holds the dead Persephone (Proserpina). The marble work dates from the second century
CE
. It is in the Collection of Michelozzi. Also see the photograph (p. 53) of Asclepius holding in his right arm a staff with an entwined serpent. The white marble stature is a Roman copy that is based on a Greek original of c. 370
BCE
. It is in the Villa Medici in Rome. Finally, note the depiction of Hercules, as a child, fighting a serpent (p. 77). The art work, now in the Tribuna of Uffizien, is an Italian marble based on a Greek original of the third century
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.]
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______.
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. Ullstein Kunstgeschichte 7. WestBerlin: Ullstein Bücher, 1963; see esp. the depictions of the serpent in Eden on sarcophagi (Illus. 10, 11) and on the ceiling of a catacomb (Illus. 16).
Sauer, G.
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. Freiburg: Walter Verlag, 1992 [3rd ed.]; see esp. the Illus. on p. 10 [a diptych with Asklepios and Hygieia, God creating Adam with the serpent encircled around Adam (by Blake)], and p. 77 [Pesttaler showing the crucifixion on one side and Moses’ raised serpent on the other].
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Die Skulptur des Mittelalters
. Ullstein Kunstgeschichte 11. West Berlin: Ullstein Bücher, 1963; see esp. color photograph No. 4 [bishop’s miter in the form of a serpent) and Illus. 5 (the dragon-like serpent, with arms, in Eden].
Sauneron, S.
Un traité Égyptien d’ophiologie
. Bibliothèque générale 11. Cairo: Publication de l’Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, 1989 [a study of Pap. Brooklyn Museum, Nos. 47.218.48 and 47.218.85].
______.
Le Papyrus magique illustré de Brooklyn [Brooklyn Museum 47.218.156]
. Wilbour Monographs 3. Oxford, New York: Brooklyn Museum, 1970.
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Der Genius der Sonne und der Stab des Asklepios
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Expository Times
20 (1909) 562 [Sayce claims “that the serpent in Genesis is a symbol of the Babylonian god Ea.” More recently, the tendency is to look to Canaan for the source of the symbolism in Genesis.]
______. “Serpent Worship in Ancient and Modern Egypt.”
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______. “Symbole in Medizin und Pharmazie,”
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______. “Was hat die Schlange Asklepios mit ihm und seiner Funktion als Heilgott zu tun?”
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______. “Les fouilles de Ras-Shamra-Ugarit, quinzième campagne (printemps 1937),”
Syria
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The Bosom Serpent: Folklore and Popular Art
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. Stuttgart: Calwer, 1930; see esp. pp. 95–97.
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e
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. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1982.
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. Strassburg: Heitz, 1905.
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. Munich, Zürich, 1970.
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Der Basler Medeasarkophag
. Monumenta Artis Antiquae 3. Tübingen: Verlag Ernst Wasmuth, 1997. [Plate 58 depicts a cult vase from Lakisch with the symbol of the god Ningischzida, holding an upraised staff before which is an upraised and elegant serpent (p. 64). Plate 83 shows a stele of Tukultininurtas II from Terqa with the god holding up a serpent.]
Schmökel, H.
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. Grosse Kulturen der Frühzeit. Stuttgart: Gustav Kilpper Verlag, 1955.
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. Erlangen-Nürnberg: Instituts für Geschichte der Medizin der Friedrich-Alexander-Universität, 1990.
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. Jahrbuch für Antike und Christentum Ergänzungsband 34. Münster: Aschendorff, 2002; pp. 48–63.
Schoebel, G.
Le mythe de la femme et du serpent
. Paris, 1876. N.V.
Schouten, J.
The Rod and Serpent of Asklepios, Symbol of Medicine
. Amsterdam, New York, 1967.
______.
De Slangestaf van Asklepios als Symbool van de Geneeskunde
. Utrecht: Schotnus & Jens, 1963.
Schouten van der Velden, A. “Palästina Viper,”
Tierwelt der Bibel
. Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1992; pp. 150–51, with a color photograph.
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Paulys Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft
, 35. Stuttgart: J. C. Mezlersche, 1939; cols. 658–59.
Schuchhardt, W.-H.
Griechische Kunst
. Ullstein Kunstgeschichte 5. West-Berlin: Ullstein Bücher, 1964; see esp. Fig. 3 [Hercules with hydra], colored photograph 3 [raised cobras], Illus. 13 [gorgon with two serpents entwined as a belt], Illus. 64–66 [Pergamon friese], and Illus. 76 [Laocoon].
Schulmann, D. “The Serpent and the Sacrifice: An Anthill Myth from Tiruvärur,”
History of Religion
18 (1978) 107–37.
Schulz, R., and K. Sabri Kolta, “Schlangen, Skorpione und feindliche Mächte: Ein koptisch-arabische Schutzspruch,”
Biblische Notizen
93 (1998) 89–104.
Schulz, R., and M. Seidel, eds.
Ägypten: Die Welt der Pharaonen
. Cologne: Köne-mann Verlagsgesellschaft, 1997; see esp. p. 221 [the sun god in a bark pulled by two groups of men and following a serpent]; p. 437 [Horus holding two serpents in each hand], pp. 446–47 [the sun god pulled by four jackals and four cobra-kings, and riding in a bark supported by a large serpent].
Schulz, S.
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. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1957; see esp. pp. 104–9.
Schütz, J.
Serpens Antiquus: Die alte Schlange. Das ist: Der Sacraments Teuffel
. Eisleben: Andream Petri, 1580. [This work illustrates the denigration of serpent symbolism.]
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Die altgriech. Schlangengottheiten
. Berlin: Nauck, 1858.
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Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics
, ed. by J. Hastings. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark and New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1917 [1961]; vol. 9, pp. 499–501.
Seebass, H. “Biblisch-theologischer Versuch zu Num 20, 1–13 und 21, 4–9,*
“Altes Testament—Forschung und Wirkung: Festschrift für Henning Graf Reventlow
, ed. by P. Mommer and W. Thiel. Frankfurt and New York: Peter Lang, 1994; pp. 219–29.
Seel, O.
Der Physiologus: Tiere und ihre Symbolik
. Zürich: Artemis & Winkler Verlag, 1995 [7th ed.]; see esp. pp. 18–21 [concerning the asp and serpent], p. 77 [stork with a serpent]. [This work is primarily a Christian meditation.]
Seele, K. C. “Horus on the Crocodiles,”
Journal of Near Eastern Studies
6 (1947) 43–52. [Note the two thirteenth cent.
BCE
depictions of Horus controlling snakes.]
Seethaler, P. A. “Kleiner Diskussionsbeitrag zu Gen 3, 1–5,”
Biblische Zeitschrift
N.F. 23 (1979) 85–86.
Servier, J. “Le miroir du serpent,”
Spiegelung in Mensch und Kosmos
, ed. R. Rit-sema. Frankfurt am Main: Insel Verlag, 1988.
Sethe, K.
Amun und die acht Urgötter von Hermopolis: Eine Untersuchung über Ursprung und Wesen des Ägyptischen Götterkönigs
. Berlin: Verlag der Akademie der Wissenschaften and Walter De Groyter and Co., 1929; see esp. pp. 26–27, 55, 124.
______.
Imhotep, der Asklepios der Ägypter
. Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs, 1902.
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