Psalms of Asaph
12 psalms (Psalms 50, 73–83 in the Masoretic) attributed to ‘Asaph’; speculated to be a collection from the Asaphites (temple singers) or in the style or tradition of a guild named after Asaph
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Psalms of Asaph
Summary
Psalms of Asaph ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (67 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- Asaph, son of Berachiah is named after Psalms of Asaph[2].
- Psalms of Asaph's GND ID is recorded as 4143194-7[3].
- Psalms of Asaph's part of is recorded as Psalms[4].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 50[5].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 73[6].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 74[7].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 75[8].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 76[9].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 77[10].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 78[11].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 79[12].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 80[13].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 81[14].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 82[15].
- Psalms of Asaph's has part is recorded as Psalm 83[16].
- Psalms of Asaph's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02rrbgp[17].
- Psalms of Asaph's quantity is recorded as {'amount': '+12'}[18].
- Psalms of Asaph's described by source is recorded as Encyclopædia Britannica 11th edition[19].
- Psalms of Asaph's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'he', 'text': 'מזמורי אסף'}[20].
- Psalms of Asaph's LyricsTranslate ID is recorded as psalms-asaph-lyrics.html[21].
Why It Matters
Psalms of Asaph ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (67 views/month).[1] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22]