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The Human and the Divine in History: Herodotus and the Book of Daniel is unavailable, but you can change that!

The Human and the Divine in History investigates the possibility that the author of Daniel knew and drew upon the Histories of Herodotus. Daniel uses and develops Herodotean concepts such as the succession of world empires, dynastic dreams, and the focus on both human and divine causation in explaining historical events. A comparative reading of these two texts illuminates Daniel’s theology of...

is well known among Greek historians beginning with Herodotus and appears to derive ultimately from the Persian sources on which Herodotus based his account (1.95).59 While Herodotus is the first writer whom we know to have written this succession of empires, it is not inconceivable that Daniel may have picked up this idea elsewhere, even perhaps from the same original Persian sources as Herodotus. Still, the fact that Daniel completes the sequence with a fourth kingdom—that of Greece—indicates that
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