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Zion (journal)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zion
DisciplineJewish history and ethnography
LanguageHebrew
Edited byMichael Toch, Nadav Neeman
Publication details
Former name(s)
Zion: Me'asef
History1926-present
Publisher
The Historical Society of Israel and the Zalman Shazar Center (Israel)
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Zion
Indexing
ISSN0044-4758
LCCNhe67000477
JSTOR00444758
OCLC no.2106146
Links

Zion (Hebrew: ציון) is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering Jewish history and ethnography, printed in Hebrew and published since 1926 by the Historical Society of Israel and the Zalman Shazar Center. The journal was established by Yitzhak Baer and Benzion Dinur. The editors-in-chief are Michael Toch and Nadav Na'aman.

The journal was established in Jerusalem in 1926 as Zion: Me'asef, obtaining its current title in 1935. It covers all aspects of Jewish history, drawn from all the lands in which Jews lived - in Israel and in the Diaspora, from antiquity to the modern era, including emerging studies in historiography, review essays, and book reviews.

Abstracting and indexing

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The journal is abstracted and indexed in L'Année philologique, EBSCO databases, and Old Testament Abstracts.[1]

References

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  1. ^ "Zion". Information Matrix for the Analysis of Journals. 2020. Retrieved November 1, 2020.

Further reading

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  • Samuel Ettinger (1985), "'Zion', and Jewish Historical Research in our own Time," in: Zion (50), pp. 9–15 (Hebrew) (JSTOR 23559924)
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