this issue
next article in this issue

Document Details :

Title: Exploring the Garden of Uzza
Subtitle: Death, Burial and Ideologies of Kingship
Author(s): STAVRAKOPOULOU, Francesca
Journal: Biblica
Volume: 87    Issue: 1   Date: 2006   
Pages: 1-21
DOI: 10.2143/BIB.87.1.3189024

Abstract :
The Garden of Uzza (2 Kgs 21,18.26) is commonly regarded as a pleasure garden in or near Jerusalem which came to be used as a royal burial ground once the tombs in the City of David had become full. However, in this article it is argued that the religious and cultic significance of royal garden burials has been widely overlooked. In drawing upon comparative evidence from the ancient Near East, it is proposed that mortuary gardens played an ideological role within perceptions of Judahite kingship. Biblical texts such as Isa 65,3-4; 66,17 and perhaps 1,29-30 refer not to goddess worship, but to practices and sacred sites devoted to the royal dead.

Download article