DepthReading
Ancient Israel: A Brief History
Ancient Israel: A Brief History
When scholars
refer to "ancient Israel," they often refer to the tribes, kingdoms
and dynasties formed by the ancient Jewish people in the Levant (an area that
encompasses modern-day Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria).
Scholars draw
largely on three sources to reconstruct the history of ancient Israel —
archaeological excavations, the Hebrew Bible and texts that are not found in
the Hebrew Bible. The use of the Hebrew Bible poses difficulty for scholars as
some of the accounts are widely thought to be mythical.
Early history
The earliest mention of the word "Israel" comes from a
stele (an inscription carved on stone) erected by the Egyptian pharaohMerneptah (reign ca. 1213-1203 B.C.) The
inscription mentions a military campaign in the Levant during which Merneptah
claims to have "laid waste" to "Israel" among other
kingdoms and cities in the Levant.
The Hebrew Bible claims that the Jewish people fled Egypt as
refugees arriving (with some divine help) in the Levant. Whether there is any
truth to this biblical account is a point of contention among modern-day
scholars. Some scholars think that there was no exodus from Egypt while others
think that some of the Jewish people could have fled Egypt at some point during
the 2nd millennium B.C.
In his papers and lectures James Hoffmeier, an archaeologist and
professor at Trinity International University, points out that people from the
Levant did live in Egypt at different points in Egypt's history. He also notes
that the ancient city of Ramesses, mentioned in the exodus stories told in the
Hebrew Bible, does exist and archaeologists have determined that it flourished
for several centuries during the 2ndmillennium
B.C., becoming abandoned about 3,100 years ago.
King David
According to the Hebrew Bible a man named David rose to be
Israel's king after slaying a giant named Goliath in a battle that led to the
rout of a Philistine army. King David led a series of
military campaigns that made Israel a powerful kingdom centered at Jerusalem,
according to the Hebrew Bible.
After King
David's death, his son Solomon took over the kingdom and constructed what is
now called the First Temple, a place where god was worshipped. The temple was
located in Jerusalem and contained the Ark of the Covenant which, in turn,
contained tablets inscribed with the 10 Commandments.
Most of what
scholars know about King David comes from the Hebrew Bible although fragments
of an inscription found at the archaeological site of Tel Dan in 1993 mention a
"House of David." The fragmented inscription dates back over 2,800
years. Although the meaning of the words is debated by scholars many think that
it provides evidence that a ruler named David really existed.
However, a
number of archaeologists have noted that evidence for King David's supposedly
vast kingdom is scarce. Jerusalem, which was supposed to be King David's
capital, appears to have been sparsely populated around 3,000 years ago, says
Israel Finkelstein, a professor at Tel Aviv University.
"Over a
century of archaeological explorations in Jerusalem — the capital of the
glamorous biblical United Monarchy — failed to reveal evidence for any
meaningful 10th-century building activity," wrote Finkelstein in a paper
published in 2010 in the book "One God? One Cult? One Nation:
Archaeological and Biblical Perspectives" (De Gruyter, 2010). Finkelstein
says that King David's kingdom was likely a more modest state.
Over the past few years a 3,000-year-old site now called Khirbet
Qeiyafa has been excavated by a team of archaeologists. Located west of
Jerusalem, the site's excavators have been adamant that Khirbet Qeiyafa was
controlled by King David. They've even gone so far as to claim that they've found a palace
that may have belonged to King David. The excavators are currently
preparing their finds for publication.
Northern
& southern kingdoms
After the
death of King Solomon (sometime around 930 B.C.) the kingdom split into a
northern kingdom, which retained the name Israel and a southern kingdom called
Judah, so named after the tribe of Judah that dominated the kingdom. Accounts
in the Hebrew Bible suggest that grievances over taxes and corvee labor (free
labor that had to be done for the state) played a role in the breakup.
The Hebrew
Bible says that at the time of the breakup an Egyptian pharaoh named Shishak
launched a military campaign, carrying out a successful raid against Jerusalem
and taking war booty back home.
Egyptian
records say that around this time a pharaoh named Sheshonq I ruled Egypt and
launched a military campaign into the Levant, conquering a number of
settlements. However, it's unclear from the surviving evidence whether Sheshonq
I successfully attacked Jerusalem. Many scholars believe that Shishak and
Sheshonq are the same pharaohs, although the account of the military expedition
told in the Hebrew Bible may not be fully accurate.
Israel and Judah co-existed for about two centuries, often
fighting against each other. The last war they engaged in destroyed Israel but
left Judah intact. Before its destruction, Israel also fought against a
non-Jewish kingdom called Moab. A ninth century B.C. stele created by a Moabite
king who discusses the conflict between Israel and Moab is now in the Louvre Museum
in Paris.
Assyrian
involvement
Between the
ninth and seventh centuries B.C., the Assyrian Empire grew in size, conquering
an empire that stretched from modern-day Iraq to the borders of Egypt. As the
Assyrian Empire grew, it came into contact with both Israel and Judah. The
Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III claims that an Israeli king named Jehu was
forced to pay tribute to Assyrian King Shalmaneser III (reign 859-824 B.C.),
the obelisk is now in the British Museum.
The Hebrew
Bible states that during the rule of Israel's King Pekah (who reigned around
735 B.C.) the Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser III (745-727 B.C.) launched a
military campaign that led to the loss of several cities that Israel
controlled. As Israel's losses mounted, Pekah was assassinated and a new king
named Hoshea took control of what was left of Israel.
Accounts
recorded in the Hebrew Bible suggest that the Assyrian campaign against Israel
was part of a larger war in which Israel and Judah fought against each other —
the Assyrians siding with Judah and a kingdom named Aram siding with Israel.
Hoshea was
forced to pay tribute to the Assyrians, the Hebrew Bible says. He rebelled but
was crushed by Assyrian forces around 723 B.C. (the exact date is not clear).
The kingdom of Israel then came to an end, and its remaining territory was
incorporated into the Assyrian Empire. Many Israelites were deported to
Assyria. The Hebrew Bible says that Judah was the last Jewish kingdom standing
although it was forced to pay tribute to Assyria.
In 705 B.C.,
Sennacherib came to the throne of Assyria and, not long afterward, launched a
military campaign against Judah that culminated in the siege of Jerusalem in
701 B.C. Both the Hebrew Bible and cuneiform texts tell of the siege. The
Hebrew Bible says that Taharqa, a ruler who controlled both Nubia & Egypt,
marched against Sennacherib, something that may have helped end the siege. The
Hebrew Bible also says that at one point, "The angel of the Lord went out
and put to death a hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp. When
the people got up the next morning — there were all the dead bodies!" (2
Kings 19:35 and Isaiah 37:36)
The cuneiform
texts the Assyrians wrote also say that Sennacherib failed to take Jerusalem.
They don't specify why, only saying that Sennacherib trapped Hezekiah, the king
of Judah, in Jerusalem "like a caged bird" and that the Assyrian king
captured other cities that Hezekiah had controlled. The Assyrian texts claim
that Hezekiah paid an enormous amount of tribute to Sennacherib before the
Assyrian king went home.
Fall of Judah
& Babylonian exile
Ultimately, it wasn't the Assyrian Empire that destroyed Judah.
Nearly a century after Sennacherib's unsuccessful siege of Jerusalem, a Babylonian king named Nebuchadnezzar II conquered
much of Assyria's former empire and laid siege to Jerusalem, taking the city in
587 B.C., destroying the First Temple (along with much of the rest of the
Jerusalem) and deporting many of Judah's inhabitants to Babylonia. Both the
Hebrew Bible and cuneiform tablets written in Nebuchadnezzar II's time tell of
the events that took place.
The fate of the Ark of the Covenant, which contained tablets
recording the 10 Commandments, is unknown. Some ancient writers say the ark was
brought back to Babylon, while other suggest that it was hidden away. In the
millennia after the destruction of the First Temple a number of stories were
spun telling tales of the location
of the lost Ark.
In recent
years, a number of cuneiform tablets have emerged from Iraq revealing details
of the lives of Jewish deportees who lived at a village called āl-Yahūdu which means the
"village of Judea." Many of the tablets were purchased by private
collectors on the antiquities market, raising concerns that some of the tablets
may have been recently looted.
The tablets were "written by Babylonian scribes on behalf
of the Judean families that lived in and around āl-Yahūdu," wrote
Kathleen Abraham, a professor at the University of Leuven in Belgium, in a paper she wrote for an exhibition catalog,
"Light and Shadows: The Story of Iran and the Jews" (Beit Hatfutsot,
2011).
The
"tablets show that the exiles and their descendants had, at least to some
extent, adopted the local language, script and legal traditions of Babylonia a
relatively short time after their arrival there," wrote Abraham.
The
Babylonians were eventually conquered by the Persian Empire, and the Persian
king Cyrus the Great (died ca. 530 B.C.) gave the Jews permission to return to
Jerusalem.
The Hasmonean
Dynasty
The Persian Empire was virtually destroyed after a series of
stunning defeats inflicted on them by Alexander the Great,
who conquered an empire that stretched from Macedonia to Afghanistan.
After
Alexander's death in 323 B.C., his empire rapidly fell apart. One of his
generals, Seleucus Nicator, formed an empire that eventually controlled what
was ancient Israel. Called the "Seleucid Empire" by modern-day
historians, the empire was passed down through the Seleucid family line.
During the 2nd century B.C.,
the Seleucid Empire began to weaken and a line of Jewish rulers descended from
a priest named Simon Maccabeus was able to gain semi-autonomy and eventually
full independence from the Seleucids. This line of rulers is called the
Hasmonean Dynasty by modern-day scholars. By 100 B.C., the Hasmoneans had
managed to regain control of the territory that had once been controlled by
Israel and Judah and even some territory that those kingdoms had never
controlled.
However, the
Hasmonean success proved short-lived. As Roman power grew in the Mediterranean,
the Hasmoneans soon found themselves overmatched. The Roman general Pompey took
advantage of a Hasmonean civil war to launch a military expedition into lands
controlled by the Hasmoneans. Jerusalem fell to Pompey in 63 B.C. and from that
point on the territories that the Hasmoneans controlled were effectively under
Roman rule.
Herod the
Great
While the
Romans held sway over the former Hasmonean-controlled territories, they
preferred not to impose their rule directly. A number of rulers were allowed to
control the territories as client kings of Rome.
The most famous of the client kings was Herod the Great (lived
ca. 73 B.C. to 4 B.C.). Herod built what is today called the "second
temple" in Jerusalem, a replacement of sorts for the first temple which
was destroyed by the Babylonians in 587 B.C. Herod also constructed a series of
fantastic palaces at Masada.
Biblical
literature often vilifies Herod, claiming that he tried to seek out and kill
baby Jesus, perceiving the infant as a threat to his rule. One biblical story
claims that he killed all the infants living in Bethlehem in hopes of killing
Jesus. Scholars are generally skeptical of these biblical claims and doubt that
they actually happened.
Some scholars think that a group called the Essenes established
a retreat at Qumran during
(or shortly after) King Herod's time. It was at Qumran where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found in nearby caves in the
1940's and 1950's.
Rebellions
against Rome
In A.D. 66, tensions between the region's Jewish inhabitants and
Roman rulers came to a head. A rebellion started and culminated in A.D. 70 in
the siege of Jerusalem and the destruction of the second temple. Resistance
continued after the city's fall — the last major stronghold of the rebels was
at Masada; it didn't fall until A.D.
73 or A.D. 74, after a protracted Roman siege.
Masada's
defenders were part of a group that modern-day scholars often refer to as the
"Zealots." The ancient writer Josephus (A.D. 37-100) wrote that the
Zealots chose to take their own lives rather than surrender to the Romans. "For
the husbands tenderly embraced their wives, and took their children into their
arms, and gave the longest parting kisses to them, with tear in their
eyes" before they committed suicide, wrote Josephus.
Further
rebellions occurred over the decades. The final rebellion was crushed in A.D.
136. The ancient writer Cassius Dio (lived ca. A.D. 155-235) wrote that this
last rebellion led to the desolation of the Jewish population. He claimed that
Roman forces killed about 580,000 Jewish men.
"Five hundred and eighty thousand men were slain in the
various raids and battles, and the number of those that perished by famine,
disease and fire was past finding out … thus nearly the whole of Judaea was
made desolate," Dio wrote. (Translation by Earnest Cary, from volume VIII
of the "Loeb Classical Library" published in 1925). Archaeologists
are still finding treasure hoards buried by people who lived during the
rebellion.
In the
millennia afterward, the Jewish diaspora spread throughout the world. It wasn't
until the establishment of the modern state of Israel in 1948 that the Jewish
people had a homeland again.
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