The Ancients - The Biblical Kingdom of Israel
Episode Date: June 26, 2024The story of the ancient kingdom of Israel is a central part of the Old Testament. Famous for its kings like Saul, David and Solomon, the kingdom supposedly emerged in the southern Levant in the late ...2nd millennium BC. Most of what we know about this kingdom comes from the Hebrew Bible. But what does the archeology say? Are there any remains that might corroborate what the bible tells us?In today's episode of The Ancients, Tristan continues our Old Testament mini-series and interviews archeologist Felicity Cobbing. Together they delve into both the biblical narrative and the archaeological evidence in an attempt to answer some the questions that shroud the story of this biblical kingdom.Presented by Tristan Hughes. Edited by Aidan Lonergan. The producer is Joseph Knight, the senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.The Ancients is a podcast from History Hit.Enjoy unlimited access to award-winning original documentaries that are released weekly and AD-FREE podcasts. Get a subscription for £1 per month for 3 months with code ANCIENTS - sign up here.Vote for The Ancients in the Listeners Choice category of British Podcast Awards here.You can take part in our listener survey here.
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It's the Ancients on History Hit. I'm Tristan Hughes, your host, and today's episode,
the latest in our Old Testament miniseries, well it is all about the rise and fall of the ancient kingdom of Israel. Now,
this is a kingdom that supposedly emerged in the southern Levant in the late 2nd millennium BC and is central to some key names from the Old Testament, kings such as Saul, David and Solomon.
Most, if not all, of the information about this kingdom comes from the Hebrew Bible.
Most, if not all, of the information about this kingdom comes from the Hebrew Bible.
There is also archaeology, but as you'll hear, how this archaeology has been interpreted in the past to try and prove the existence of this kingdom, well, it is very problematic.
Today, we're going to explore both the biblical account and the archaeology
for the hotly contested topic that is the Kingdom of Israel.
To talk through all of this and more,
I headed to the Palestine Exploration Fund charity in Greenwich
to interview the archaeologist and author Felicity Copping.
Felicity, she has been on the podcast once before to explain all about Jericho,
its many layers of archaeology dating back 10,000 years to the Stone Age,
and of course, the biblical story.
That was a really great episode, so be sure to check it out after you've listened to this one.
I really do hope you enjoy.
Felicity, it is wonderful to have you back on the podcast today.
Thank you very much for having me back. You're more than welcome. And I mean, it is quite a topic we are talking about today.
The Kingdom of Israel. Now, first off, what do archaeologists and biblical scholars,
what do they mean when they say the Kingdom of Israel?
Well, in the first instance, they're referring to the period in the Bible after the
conquest of Canaan by Joshua and the Israelites, when the united monarchy under David is founded.
So you have this period of conquest of the introduction, let's say, of the Israelites into the land of Canaan. You have the reign of Saul,
who's an interesting character, I think it's fair to say.
As we're going to explore, yeah.
And then you have the apex of the storyline in the founding of the kingdom proper under David,
under David and then emerging butterfly-like into the wonderful empire of Solomon.
That is the biblical account, I should stress. That is what the biblical account says took place.
And in terms of date, well, this is a question. Most people would put these events between the end of the late bronze age and the emergence of the iron age so between the late 12th and the late 10th early 9th centuries bc
and in the storyline of the old testament and i know it's much more complicated than just a linear
narrative the old testament but this is following the death of Moses atop Mount Nebo.
The last chat we did together was all about Jericho and the archaeology of Jericho and
exploring the biblical story of Joshua.
And so this follows all of that in the account, isn't it?
This is where it's all leading to.
This is the whole point of that entire narrative right from the beginning right from Abraham onwards
this is where this narrative is leading to and we're going to be exploring the whole the kingdom
of Israel looking at the literature and then really interestingly the archaeology what is known
of the archaeology but you mentioned the biblical account is this our main literary source our only
literary source for the story of the
kingdom of israel oh yes absolutely it is our only source so we don't have another version
unlike the flood epic of course which we know now has quite a history and goes back an awfully long
way this is our only account of this story and the version that we have is one which I think is one that was touched
on in the episode on the Exodus. This was a conglomeration which was written down at some
point after those events, possibly quite a long time after any events. And so, you know, it's not like a straightforward historical account.
It's not like BBC News. It's a looking back at something rather than an eyewitness account.
And before, of course, because when this is set, this is before the Hebrew language,
the written Hebrew is written down. So is it like an oral tradition that they're building upon kind of thing well when the
writing the alphabetic script which we know as west semitic script emerges is something that's
really interesting and it's actually around for quite a long time um the first bit of evidence
we have goes all the way back to the middle bronze age oh wow okay yeah and it's some clever canaanite
writing something and instead
of the cuneiform tablets which are terribly terribly cuneiform script which is syllabic
in construction so every sound has to have another sign so shesho shi shashu all have to have
separate sounds this is based on the consonants that you make. And then you add back a few little indicators to indicate
the vowels. So instead of shesho, she, shashu, you have sh. And you reduce the number of signs down
to about 26, funnily enough. Well, thank you for clarifying that for me straight on the off.
And it was also very great hearing your answer just then, the references to our fantastic episode
with Irving Finkel on Noah's Ark and the
Flood, and with Dylan Johnson on Moses and the Exodus. So you've definitely done your homework.
I have indeed, yes.
And so we've highlighted that the Bible and the Old Testament is our main source
for the Kingdom of Israel. But talk to me a bit about the archaeology. Is there archaeological
evidence from the ancient Kingdom of Israel that we can use to add a bit more to this
story? The problem is, is that people assumed when they went out to excavate in 19th century,
20th century Palestine in Israel, Jordan, they went out assuming that they would find
the remnants of this narrative in the soil as they dug through it. And as we've heard,
that that isn't always the case. And that assumption is for some people an assumption.
And when that didn't happen, it was like, okay, that's not what we're getting. Never mind.
This is, we're getting something else. For some people, it's a need. And so there is a problem with the way in which archaeology has often been
carried out, particularly for the archaeology of this period, because they have a narrative
that they want to prove. And so they excavate and interpret, having already decided what they're going to find right it's a bit circular it's like
catch 22 you have a site which you excavate a large building which is obviously post late bronze
age we'll talk a little bit more about the chronology later and it's a large building
therefore it must be solomonic and so've already decided, you've already given an interpretation without allowing the archaeology itself a chance to reveal its true nature. And this is a problem
which has become so embedded in the way in which the archaeology has been interpreted,
that we now have a massive Gordian knot to unpick. This is so-called selective archaeology, isn't it?
It really is. It's hindered the discipline. Oh yes, and I have a colleague who calls it
text-impeded archaeology, and I get where they're coming from. And Felicity, a couple more background
questions before we really delve into the rise and fall of the Kingdom of Israel. First off,
the whole name Israel, do we know where it comes from? What's the story?
Israel? Do we know where it comes from? What's the story? Okay, well, in the Bible, Jacob,
who is one of the patriarchs, is renamed Israel by God. And Israel means one who prevails with God.
El is the Hebrew word for God. Right. And do we know when that word is first mentioned in the surviving archaeology? The first mention we have on it is on a remarkable object called the Maneptus stela,
sometimes also called the Israel stela because it contains this reference to Israel.
It's an incredibly passing reference.
It's actually not the main point of the whole inscription.
And this is a large stone inscription inscription a stela standing stone which was discovered by william flinders petrie at thebes
in 1896 so a long time ago right yes and it's dated to around 1209 1208 bce during the reign
of the pharaoh maneptah And it's talking about his overseas campaigns
against various troublemaking people elsewhere, mainly actually in Libya. That's the main focus
for the subject. But he also talks in passing right at the end about a campaign in Canaan.
And he kind of talks about various cities that he's laid to waste, Ashkelon, Geza,
and Yanoam. And right at the end, there is a reference to Israel. And it says,
Israel is laid waste, his seed is not. And people don't know what this means,
what kind of entity is therefore Israel, because it seems always personal. Rather than a city, some people believe that it's a reference to a people, a collective of some description.
But there's no firm knowledge about the kind of polity, if such a thing, or what kind of form that collective takes.
Exactly. There's no mention of a kingdom at that time, is there? Exactly.
And so this is right at the end of the 13th century BC, the Late Bronze Age. I've done
interviews in the past about the Bronze Age collapse. So Felicity, set the scene for us.
What does the world, this Near Eastern Levantine world, look like at that time?
Okay. Well, it's building up to a bit of an apocalypse. So what happens is that, I mean,
the Late Bronze Age is generally characterized by the
age of empires. I suppose you could say you've got the Hittite Empire in the north from Anatolia
and into northern Syria and southern Syria, actually. And then you have also the Mycenaean
Empire in the Aegean, and you have the Egyptian Empire, which is controlling parts of North Africa, Libya,
and also into Canaan and down into the Sudan as well. So you have this age of big stonking
empires and they're controlling pretty much everything. And all the local people just kind
of have to fall in with this reality. Things start to disintegrate, I think it's fair to say, in the 12th century. And the
reasons for that are complex and discussed often. Is there an element of climate change?
Was there some catastrophic event somewhere that meant that there were basically, you know,
really cold, nasty summers that meant that crops didn't grow and all of these places in terms of
their environment it only takes a few bad harvests to push people right to the edge and what seems
to happen is that during the course of the later part of the late bronze age is that these very
stable systems start to come under this immense strain, people start to move. And they move. First of all,
you find them, a group of people called the Sea Peoples, who appear as mercenaries in
the Egyptian army. That's a little bit earlier. But then something happens. And it's no longer
just the mercenaries kind of hanging around.'s their families and they're bringing everybody they're bringing the kids and everybody they're leaving
their own homes and wanting to move somewhere else and these sea peoples are really quite mysterious
we don't know that much about them they have all sorts of really cool names like the Equestrian, the Shekelesian, the Shardana,
and the most famous of all, of course, yes, the Pellicet.
And these are mentioned on the victory stealers and reliefs of pharaohs like Ramesses III.
He has a big battle.
He says that he destroys them, but actually I let them have this little bit of land on the coast.
Yeah, right.
Okay. They basically are the catalyst for the destruction of all of these empires. They
destroy cities all up and down the Levante coasts. Not all of them. We might come back to that.
They get inland as far as Meskene, Amar, which is on the Euphrates, and they destroy it. So this movement of people
has an absolutely catastrophic effect on all of these empires, and these empires basically
come to an end. They come to an end. Oh, they have to transform, don't they, as well?
They withdraw. It takes several centuries for quite a few of them to to be able to kind of revive in a different kind of form as as we see yeah that's
kind of going outside of the area yeah that's right then that yeah they so so their empire
however is it ceases you know and yeah dribbly but it does cease and so how does this all
correspond to then having the emergence of this new kingdom in the land of Canaan,
the kingdom of Israel? What is, first of all, the biblical account regarding the creation?
And then what might the archaeology suggest?
Okay, so in the biblical account, you have the conquest. You have Joshua coming in with his army
and the population of the Israelite nation coming into Canaan and laying waste to all these cities.
And, you know, I mean, it must have been horrible. If it really did happen, then it was horrible
because they kill a huge number of people. That isn't what the archaeology suggests. That kind
of destruction would leave a trace and you would see an evidence of that. The archaeology suggests something else is happening. You don't
need a conquest to explain the change in society that is going on once the Egyptian empire and its
structures and so on has kind of moved to one side, let's say. What you can see more of is what I would describe as a transitional period.
You don't have this administrative wealth generating engine of an empire to be part of
anymore. Things have changed quite radically. Things go back to a much more basic local
level operation. And we don't really know what that looks like. That's really important to
say. When archaeology has excavated in the past, we've imagined that we would find the evidence of
this united monarchy and so on and so forth. And so we've built kind of interpretations that include
this united monarchy problem with
that is that it doesn't necessarily reflect this what's actually being found and so we have a
problem because we have to unpick a previously constructed interpretation to try and understand
the archaeology that we really do have that's a very hard job yeah it's a very hard job
and it's going to be how we kind of approach today's episode because we can kind of go through
various peoples like saul david solomon and then look at the archaeology too first than that the
literature and then the archaeology so we've covered the arrival of the israelites how they're
mentioned in the bible but also what the archaeology has been suggesting. Of course, arrival is very different
to the creation of a kingdom, which of course needs a king. So if we start with the biblical
account first, what's the story behind the creation of the kingdom of Israel at that time,
following the demise of these great empires in the region?
Well, it comes back quite slowly. And in this respect i i do wonder if there is some sort of
element of a reality in the narrative because it's it's you know trying to get the tribes
together trying to get them to behave and tribes of israel the tribes of israel sorry yes i should
say and trying to get them to kind of coalesce a little bit more because they're all a little bit
kind of out there and doing their own thing and And I do wonder whether this doesn't reflect what we're beginning to see
archaeologically a little bit. And King Saul is the first appointed king of this emergent kingdom.
And he's an interesting character. And I wonder in a way, he's a bit like Uther in the Arthurian legend.
You know, he's deeply flawed, but necessary for the story. You can't get suddenly to everything
being wonderful without having this transitional period. He does actually a lot of the hard work,
but he's such a flawed personality. And I think that when you're dealing with a place in reality, which has been depleted of many of its institutions, its structures, its resources, it's going to be messy.
And I think that's actually partly what's reflected in this messy narrative at this point in the biblical texts.
And does the archaeologyology kind of going back there
because when you mentioned the tribes of israel i felt i should also ask this does the archaeology
from that time just before saul does it suggest a continuation with the people who were living in
that region before or would it affirm this idea that these israelites they were people who came
in to the save the world from outside the The archaeology is very, very clear that these are the same people.
These are Canaanites.
Interesting.
There's no material difference between them from the late Bronze Age to this transitional period.
We've decided to call them Israelites.
That's really important.
We actually also decided to call their predecessors Canaanites.
What they call
themselves have an only nose. Lost in the mists of time, I'm afraid there. But these are the same
people reacting to change circumstances. And with the rule of King Saul, first of all, going to King
Saul now, I mean, do we know much? I mean, how is he portrayed in the biblical account? You say he's
quite a flawed character.
Yeah, he kind of drinks too much
and he throws beers and stuff around, doesn't he?
You know, you don't necessarily want him around your kids.
But yeah, he's a man who's got this huge job to do
and he's not quite up to it, isn't he?
That's how I think of Saul.
And he's the first appointed king.
And he's necessary.
He adopts David. and that's his real
role, is to bring the kind of one true king, going back to that Arthurian analogy, into the story.
But interestingly, he's an adopted son. He's not of the same line. And I don't know why that's
something that's important, if it is is important but it's an interesting little thing
there and this aligns with the david versus goliath story isn't it and him beating goliath
the philistine and then realizing yes i will adopt you as my successor yes and time frame that we're
talking about so this is following the bronze age collapse i mean with king saul roughly if we're
looking at the biblical narrative would this be around the 11th century BC? Yeah. So from the middle to the latter part of the 11th century.
Right. The reason I ask that, because you've already mentioned how it seems during the reign
of King Saul, he's the first king, this kind of quite complex character, an Uther-like character,
and it's a time of transition. Is that reflected in the archaeology at all? Does it look like a
kingdom at this time, the whole tribes? What is the archaeology at that time in the archaeology at all? Does it look like a kingdom at this time, the whole tribes?
What is the archaeology at that time in the 11th century revealing?
There's nothing like a kingdom going on.
I mean, actually, this is a bit of a point.
How do you know you've got a kingdom archaeologically?
If you've got no inscriptions, nobody's saying,
welcome to the so-and-so and this is the kingdom of such
and such and what have you, and I am king so-and-so. If you don't have any of that, how do you know?
How is it different from a city-state in the previous era? We don't know. What we do have
is a lot of regionality. So things, it depends where you are in the land as to what's going on and our
interpretation of that at the moment is changing pretty much all the time and how so so what are
we thinking is it are there any kind of large-scale settlements at that time cities that are
inhabited to a large degree or is it smaller farming settlements? I mean,
what's the current thinking about the whole, the social makeup, the landscape of Canaan at the time
that Saul is supposedly ruling? I think it's very, very dispersed. We have to recognize that this
Saul character is not an historical character, okay? He's mentioned in the Bible, and that is
it. We have no other evidence for Saul. and archaeologically once you're you've kind of said okay well maybe we shouldn't be trying to
shoehorn this material into a solomonic narrative quite so hard when you actually look at it there's
nothing definitive at all and it's terribly terribly. We don't know what the political affiliations of people
were. We don't know how they were operating. Certainly, there's nothing to indicate a kingdom.
There's nothing to indicate any kind of polity that we can describe. It is as fluid as that.
There are, sometimes a bit later, we get larger larger buildings and that's possibly suggesting that
something is beginning to coalesce a little bit more.
But it's anyone's guess is the answer.
I mean, what kind of archaeology is there dating to that time?
Well, another question is how do we know it dates to this time?
Because we've shoehorned so much archaeology into a Solomonic narrative.
Now, what does the 11th and 10th century
look like we don't actually know that's part of the problem it's like okay Kathleen Kenyon's
excavations at Jericho back in the 1950s she wasn't quite the first person to say hmm there
might be the odd problem here but she was it was kind of like that's when the ball really got
rolling and it was like the first brick of archaeological jenga she took that brick out and since then the whole structure of this
narrative has kind of fallen apart and it means that we've got to re-look at the archaeology
that's been done that's really hard in itself and that that's at these big sites like Hatzor and Megiddo and Geza and Jerusalem most
of all and what a lot of people are doing now and I think it's a sensible approach actually is say
okay well let's just leave those big sites to one side because it's just too complicated and
you know horrific and help and let's start some new excavations
at smaller sites to kind of get an idea about what's happening in different parts of the country
i think we're going to explore a couple of those archaeological examples as we go along but let's
go back to the biblical account first of all and then explore the archaeology because i said there's
no evidence for saul but he's an important
figure in this whole narrative of the kingdom of israel and who is this this figure who he adopts
who succeeds him this this true king figure that is well known name to all of us today king david
now felicity what is his story okay well he's quite a quite a lowly chap isn't he he's, he's quite a lowly chap, isn't he? He's a shepherd. King David starts off as a shepherd boy, and he is, however, a beautiful person, I think it's fair to say, in the biblical story. And he comes to the attention of Saul. He is remarkably brave.
David versus Goliath. David versus Goliath, indeed. I mean, you know, that took some chutzpah, I think it's fair to say.
And it's the classic story, isn't it, of somebody very modest having the power,
because they are favoured by God, to overcome this great power. And that's when he comes to
the attention of King Saul, and he is adopted as his
heir. Thank you. Find your push. Find your power. Peloton. Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca.
And what do we know about his rule himself? So when Saul dies and David becomes the king,
because what I remember is it's him who conquers Jerusalem, isn't it?
It's this kind of central part of the whole narrative.
That's right, yes.
He invades what they call the Jebusite city.
And there's quite a detailed description in the Bible
of how they come up through the water system into the palace and destroy.
Through the systems?
Yes.
Well, not through the systems, through water tunnels in Jerusalem.
And then he founds his capital at Jerusalem and founds, of course, that's where the tabernacle is put. And it falls to his
son Solomon to build the first temple there. This is all the biblical narrative, I should
just remind everyone. So his role is really really formative david is is the
character who who succeeds where saul has failed so he succeeds where saul has failed as his
successor and there are all of these great stories surrounding him as he is well he is one of the
most titanic figures from the old testament and now let's go to the archaeology side of things
because i do have in my notes like the tell dan steele so do's go to the archaeology side of things, because I do have in my notes,
like the Tel Dan Steeler. So do we actually have some archaeology for at least a figure,
perhaps called David? I mean, what's the story behind this?
Okay, so the Tel Dan inscription is something that was discovered in 1993, 94. It's an inscription which was discovered twice in a way because it was fragmentary and it
was in a secondary context so that means it wasn't in its original context. It was fragments of stone
that had been reused in both the paving of a plaza and in a wall. One was found in one season and one
was another bit was found in the next season.
And I mean, it was really exciting. Everybody got very excited and some people got very cross.
And what's on the inscription is the description of a campaign which sees Jehoram, the son of Ahab, killed.
And he's a much later king, isn't he?
That's right.
Yeah.
Along with Ahaziah, who is the king, and this is the important bit,
king of the house of David.
Right.
Beat Da'ud.
Now, when it was discovered, of course, everybody went a bit silly.
Some people said, know, said,
this is proof that the biblical narrative is true. Every word is true. And other people said,
nonsense, it's a fake. And fur flu, I think it's fair to say. Yeah. So it was quite controversial.
But it is accepted by, I think, most people now that this is a genuine artifact,
and the inscription is a genuine inscription.
It's not been faked up.
It wasn't put there by some scurrilous archaeologist trying to make a name for themselves.
It's a genuine thing.
And this is a genuine reference.
The question is, what does it actually mean?
House of David, what does that mean?
The question is, what does it actually mean?
House of David, what does that mean?
Now, the way in which various polities of the time refer to themselves is as house of. So in Syria, you have at the time Abit-Adini, house of Adini, Abit-Agusi, house of Agusi.
And there are various other ones as well.
So this is a possible indicator that you have a king
of the house of David, that it's referring to the kingdom effectively. It's a way of referring to
the kingdom. House of David, does that mean that there was a dynastic founder called David? That's
a possibility and I think, you know, it's a very reasonable possibility.
The other interpretation which has been offered by some people is that house of David, not so
much in this context, perhaps in reference to another context, is house of David could also
mean a place. Because if you think about it, beat is the same word as Beth. How many places
in Israel and Palestine do we know with the word
Beth in the front? Well, Bethlehem, of course. Bethlehem, Beth Shemeth, Beth Saida, Beth Haran,
Beth El. You have so many. So that's not an impossibility either. It could be, yes, King
David of House of David, Beth, you know, Beit Daoud being the place it came from. So we have a range of possibilities,
I think it's fair to say, as to what this reference actually means.
Can it at least show us that the name David, I mean, the word David was important at that time
in whatever state, whatever form the kingdom of Israel was, this united monarchy, whatever it was,
was at the beginning of the first millennium BC that the name David was important?
Well, it was important enough to be put on the Dan Steeler, which dates to around 870 to 750 BC.
How long ago that can be put back is another matter entirely. We can't extrapolate more than that.
So basically, at the end of the day, kind of like Saul, King David, well, at least there's a little
bit of archaeology to talk about with King David, but he is still, it's very much up for debate with
the surviving archaeology and just having the biblical account as to kind of whether he's a
real figure or a mythical figure. I think that the, again, the Arthurian
allusion is not a bad one in the sense that after the withdrawal of the Roman Empire in Britain, in ancient Britain, you had again a bit of a mess going on.
And it's not an impossibility that there was one chieftain who was a little bit less of a mess than all of the others.
And then from that beginning develops this incredibly elaborate tale, which involves magic and the coming of a new religion and all sorts of things going on in there. And I think you've got something similar happening, perhaps, with David that you have, you know, the empires have gone.
You've got this transitional period.
period perhaps there was one tribal leader who was a little bit more functional had his you know head screwed on better than some of the others that begins the start of this idea of a coalescence
because it is so interesting because i always and it's like the moses and the exodus story of the
ark of the covenant all those trying to explore whether there is that kind of a kernel of truth
at the epicenter of these stories that have become so mythologized and then it's normally always there is so it is interesting to kind of speculate
but it is but it is speculation and it's fun to speculate but we should also remember that
the evidence that we have it is incredibly limited absolutely well moving on from david
who is this figure in the biblical account who succeeds David as king of this united monarchy of the kingdom of Israel?
So this is Solomon.
Solomon.
Solomon.
Solomon's really where it's at, isn't he?
I mean, you know, he's grand.
He's top bling.
He's rich.
He can get all the ladies.
As the Queen of Sheba turned.
As the Queen of Sheba turned. As the Queen of Sheba turned. That's quite an interesting story in some ways in terms of the establishment of trade on the incense trail and so on.
Maybe.
Who knows?
Because she was said to be from Yemen or Ethiopia, isn't it?
Yeah, I mean, the Ethiopians say she was Ethiopian, but I think that most people would put the ancient kingdom in the Yemen.
This is where links do seem to start to be emerging.
It's very difficult though, because the archaeology of the Arabian Peninsula is a bit of a closed book.
It's beginning to get a little bit more furnished, but it would be great to know much,
much more about that. But Solomon in the biblical account, he's the man at the centre, isn't he?
He's got the wealth, he's got the looks, he's got the lavish the center isn't he he's got the wealth he's got the looks he's got he's got the lavish buildings isn't it this is kind of like an an apex time
in the story of the kingdom of israel i bet his beard was well oiled you know yeah he's the apex
and he's the person who founds the first temple in jerusalem and he's known as being incredibly wise and he's the great leader and this is this is the period of
the most influence and power and wealth of this united monarchy this is time of prospering cities
as well and that so and this would date to about the 10th century the beginning of the first
so we're now into the 10th century yeah so that's interesting if the biblical account describes all this kind of a very prosperous
kingdom got to ask then what does the archaeology reveal about 10th century canaan about the
southeast levant at that time what does it show does it show great cities and prosperity well
initially when everything was being first excavated in the 19th and 20th centuries, that's exactly what they said they were finding.
Six-chambered gateways, casemate walls, grand cities, evidence of Solomon absolutely everywhere, stables at Megiddo, all sorts of interesting and wonderful things.
However, as time went on and, you know, Kathleen Kenyon pulls out her first Jenga brick, people started looking at the material culture itself and saying, hang on a minute, we're finding the same material culture that we're associating with a different date somewhere else as we're associating with Solomon here. The two can't be both true. One has to be wrong. And that really was the crunch question,
because pottery is kind of like your best dating tool. It changes quite frequently. It changes,
you know, as people's lives gradually change, so does the pottery form change. And it's a great indicator of all sorts of things where people are getting their trade from, if the clay can be sourced from somewhere else. But also stylistically,
it's how archaeologists have really kind of pieced together a chronology. So to have a pot style
associated with both King Solomon in the 10th century and King Omri in the 9th century is just not going to happen.
It's not going to work. One of them is wrong. And the more people have excavated, the more
they've realized that what people were looking is the wishful thinking of past archaeologists
imposing their desire for this narrative to be correct onto the archaeology and sometimes
confusing layers of buildings together so that you would create structures that didn't actually
exist. So your casemate wall might actually be the remnants of three or four city walls
that didn't have that plan or design at all
and dating to very different periods.
But because the need for the person doing the excavating and interpreting the archaeology
was so great to have this narrative guiding them all the way, trowel in one hand, Bible
in the other, it becomes kind of shoved into this pre-existing story.
And you mentioned Megiddo earlier so origins of the
word armageddon and where the end of the world is supposed to happen is this a good case example of
that or is there yeah i mean and there are others as well hatsor is a big one and jerusalem itself
most importantly and so a lot of people i mean megiddo has been extensively excavated by lots
and lots of people over many many years but a lot of people have I mean, Megiddo has been extensively excavated by lots and lots of people over many, many years.
But a lot of people have kind of said, OK, well, let's back away from these sites and go and dig elsewhere to try and find out a little bit more what's going on in the hinterland and other sites and so on.
The answer is, is that we really don't know what was going on in the 10th century.
This Solomonic empire has kind of disappeared.
in the 10th century, this Solomonic empire has kind of disappeared. The other thing I think it's important to say is that there's no reference to Solomon in any historical document. The Bible,
again, is the only source. Now, for such an important kingdom with such wealth, such power,
such influence, you'd expect to find the odd trace wouldn't you here and there in the
egyptian records he marries pharaoh's daughter apparently well you wouldn't know is it not
mentioned in egyptian records either it is very interesting because i was hoping at least there
might be an archaeological site where there is concrete evidence from 10th century but i say so
but actually when that evidence has been reviewed again it's either
it's it's later or the layers have been confused exactly it's very very problematic there is
nothing there to suggest this incredibly powerful local superpower basically do you think evidence
i think it's the impossible question because of course as you said when excavations are being
done in the hinterland now in these new places that with new techniques and less of that kind of selective archaeology
focusing that there could in future be the uncovering of archaeology that dates to that
time that can reveal more and kind of either corroborate or contrast the view depicted in
the bible of this being an incredibly prosperous kingdom at that time i think what we will what is
certain is that if people excavate very very carefully and very honestly and take care not
to get sidetracked down a biblical rabbit hole let's say that the 10th century will emerge of
course it will it's there it's just we don't know how to deal with it,
how to place it, how to characterise it,
and how to look for it
when all the previous excavations
have muddied the water so much.
That's the difficulty.
But I think that if, as I say,
with all those caveats,
and it is a massive caveat
because people are still very much in love with
the idea of a solomonic kingdom so yeah in time we'll see the 10th century emerge so when do we
start to see quite solid archaeological evidence dating to a time that we can say ah it was this
century or that century emerging in that period of world, and from that archaeology getting a sense
of what, if historical, this kingdom looks like at that time.
I think really you're looking at the very end of the 10th century,
the beginning of the 9th century, before we're going to get a handle on anything.
So Felicity, we've covered the issues we've tackled in this period, but let's look at the
exciting part as well i mean what is
archaeology actually starting to reveal about what this area did look like let's say the 10th century
supposedly at the time of the kingdom of israel okay well it's really really interesting and
becoming more interesting as more people do more really good work and it's extremely regional as i
said earlier so what's happening in the south at sites like
tell al-hessi is different from what's happening a little bit further north at sites like beth
shemesh or in the jezreel valley and this is i think crucial to understand that one site isn't
going to tell you what's happening in another part of the country it's going to tell you what's
happening at that site and that's it so let's look at Tell el-Hessi and then Beth Shemesh further north
and what the archaeology is revealing about that.
So at Tell el-Hessi, they have, in the 10th century,
they have what looks like quite a large building.
And there's a certain amount of continuity
in terms of a sizable investment
between the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age periods, which is this
timeframe that we're talking about. And these large buildings are, the excavators describe
them as tripartite buildings. So they're not dissimilar from what was characterized at Megiddo
as stables in that kind of Solomonic biblical tradition. You think of Solomon's stables and
his huge tarot army and so on. The excavators at Tell el-Hessi, their interpretation of their site
is that it is a kind of pastoralist hub. And this is true in other eras as well. And it retains this
kind of character throughout history. And that's because it's got some really interesting geology going on, which makes agriculture very, very difficult. Agrarian agriculture,
really impossible because of the strange geology, sorry, that's going on there.
And so what it becomes is this place where stock, animal stock is collected, and the product of that animal stock is perhaps dispersed in different parts
of the country. They have also done a bit of a regional survey and they've excavated at some
regional sites as well to see if there's a connection between Hesi itself and some of
these smaller sites. And one of these sites has, they've revealed, has got lots of
bulli there. These are little stamps and little kind of administrative notes, I suppose you could
call them. And they wonder if it's not part of a kind of way station and transferring of goods,
animals, perhaps part of a postal network but they're all very hypothetical they also describe
potential connectivity even further afield with the copper mines in timna and wadi feynan in jordan
oh yes that's not far from petra isn't it that's right and our understanding of the development of
these resources in this formative period is also part of the story. Again, because
we were squeezing them into a narrative, we didn't necessarily see them for what they are. And so now
we're trying to work out what's going on in this formative period. And not necessarily related to
a kingdom as such, but copper mining starts to begin to emerge in the Wadi Arava, which is the
region that we're talking about,
the part of land that runs from the Dead Sea down to the Red Sea.
These copper mines seem to begin to really kind of start making a mark.
That's interesting.
So although you said the archaeology can't really attest whether it was a kingdom,
because it's difficult to identify a kingdom
unless you see a palace or something like that.
What it is revealing, for instance, one thing,
is how connected this area of the world was. potentially so and they don't know to what degree the
excavators call it a polity that's how they describe it they don't attach any more meaning
or idea about where the center of this polity was whether hessy was the center or whether
another place was the center and hessy is is a kind of this kind of
pastoral hub that is in a sense also because they're looking at this building and saying this
is a big building and they characterize that big building as possibly a place where either a
warehouse maybe or perhaps a place where animals could be sheltered there's a problem with that
interpretation though and the same reason why it didn't work as a stables and that is there's only perhaps a place where animals could be sheltered. There's a problem with that interpretation,
though, and the same reason why it didn't work as a stables, and that is there's only one entrance.
And, you know, if you've got a lot of valuable stock, you need more than one entrance,
because if there's a fire, they need to be able to be evacuated fast. So my money is on it being
a storeroom. These are storerooms for wools and meats and what have you. The other
thing that they throw into the fire is again that incense trade as being another connection
that may be emerging in this period. And again, is that the point of the Queen of Sheba story?
It's not that there was this grand king and this wonderful queen.
It's the point that there is the emergence of a relationship
between these two geographical regions.
So we've done Tallahassee.
Now tell me what's been happening at Beth Shemesh as well.
Okay, so Beth Shemesh is a bit further north,
and it's right on the border between the Canaanite realm
and the Philistine realm.
So you remember back in the 12th century,
we had these palisades, the Philistines. Well, they did settle and they formed this enclave
on the coastal region of Palestine, which is probably where the name Palestine comes from.
And their cities are at Gaza and Gath and Ashdod and Ashkelon and so on. And archaeologically,
they are very distinctive with an Aegean origin,
probably even you could say Mycenaean or elements of Mycenaean. And there they stay. And at Beth
Shemesh, what you have, what the excavators have interpreted is really, I think, fascinating.
Previous excavators saw it as a place which was dominated by the Philistines. But now they're
saying, no, no, that's not what we're're seeing we're seeing a canaanite population with its canaanite material culture
sort of kicking back against this regional power the philistines and making themselves
culturally distinct from the philist. And this is what becomes really
interesting because they change their habits to do so. Specifically, they stop eating pork.
And why is that important?
Because the Philistines ate a lot of pork. So it's kind of like a marker. It's like a cultural
marker. And they're saying, we're not Philistines. How are we going to demonstrate we're not Philistines? Let's change our eating habits. I don't know. Maybe
they've got it wrong as well. But there is a sudden absence of pig bones from the records,
whereas in previous periods of occupation, pigs are part of the menu. So there is a change. But
everything else, the material culture otherwise, remains Canaanite.
It's not like there's a new bunch of people coming in with their different set of material cultural parameters.
It's the same people, but they are changing their habits.
So it's so interesting.
And just kind of to repeat what I said earlier.
So although the archaeology is not yet revealing information about a potential kingdom and figures like Solomon,
it is nevertheless revealing more about the whole
landscape of Canaan at that time. Exactly. And it's much, much more interesting, I think, anyway,
because, you know, all sorts of different things are happening. It's a period of change, of
transition. And these are the periods which are the hardest to understand, but they're also
the ones that are really exciting. Well, keeping on the hardest to understand, but they're also the ones that are really exciting.
Well, keeping on the change and transition, but going a bit back to the biblical account now,
but still we're moving on. So we've gone on from the time of Solomon, but it was interesting,
you talked about that variation that there is too. So talk to me to this great schism that
follows Solomon, and then you do seem to get variation in kingdoms in the biblical account.
It's almost like kind of a north and a south almost.
Yeah. So following the death of Solomon, there's no one ruler to take over from him. So there's a
bit of a fisticuffs, I suppose you could say. And various important people kind of come out of this.
important people kind of come out of this. And one of those is Omri, who I think was a general in Solomon's army. So he wasn't related to that Davidic line. So yes, I mean, the biblical account
is full of all sorts of characters who we have absolutely no evidence for at all. And in the
divided kingdom of Israel, we have kings like Jeroboam and Nadab and Basha and Elah and so
on and in the southern kingdom of what's called Judah which is based in Jerusalem we have kings
like Rehoboam and Abijam I like that one and Asa and Jehoshaphat and we don't have anything in any
historical record or historically attested document to
suggest that any of these people actually ever existed.
Things start to firm up a little bit, a bit later, with Omri in Samaria, king of the northern
kingdom of Israel.
And he is mentioned on the Mesha Stele.
Well, a replica that you've got here at the Palestine Exploration Fund.
I mean, talk to me through this
because this is really exciting.
This is when a biblical king
is shown on an archaeological object.
Talk me through it.
So the Mesha Steeler was,
I think one can say,
I hate saying discovered.
It was there and the people
who lived there knew about it.
It was, the West was made aware
of this
object in around you know in 1868 there was a traveling missionary called pastor joseph klein
who was with the christian mission based in jerusalem and he was being extremely brave
and intrepid and going to transjordan and his hosts the local tribe at a site called Debarne, told him about this stone
and said it's got an inscription on that we can't decipher. Would you like to come and see it? And so
they went off to have a look and he made a quick sketch and then told the Prussian consulate
in Jerusalem about this find and the Prussian consulate contacted Constantinople to basically
lay claim to this artifact. What became clear when various people went to have a look was that there
was a reference to Omri, king of Israel, on this stela. Unfortunately the stone got broken. It was
intact but it got broken. And so
what we have now are fragments. But from what we can tell, the stela was erected at Dibban by
King Mesha of the Moabites. And it describes... And the Moabites, that's northern Jordan today.
Yeah, central Jordan. So around Moab is kind of where kerak is if
anyone's familiar with jordan kerak madiba that kind of area the inscription details a kind of
period in which the moabites are subjugated to the israelites to the kingdom of israel
and their god chemosh was angry with them and so allowed them to be subjugated. But then Chemosh relented and
their star came into ascendance. And so King Mesha took his lands back from Omri. And this is what it
says. So it's really exciting stuff. And people got very, very excited about it because this was the first time ever that a character in the bible was confirmed
as historically real from a non-biblical source so you have both mesha and omri and do you have
then do you have on that steeler does it so it says king omri does it also say that he is the king
of israel of the northern kingdom?
Yes, it does.
And it also mentions the Israelite god Yahweh.
Aha, so there we go.
So although there's no evidence of the United Kingdom,
there is evidence of this northern kingdom of Israel following the division.
That's right.
We've got much more to hang some hooks on
in terms of the character and nature of what's going on.
And in a way, it makes sense. If you think about it in terms of the character and nature of what's going on. And in a way, it makes sense. If you
think about it in terms of just what happens, when you have a society which has been controlled by
outside empires for a long time, and those outside forces disappear, you're going to have a period of
confusion, of transition, before anything solid sort of emerges
and so it makes sense actually for there rather than having this amazing kingdom burst into
fruition from absolutely nothing well that doesn't make any sense really but it does make sense a
little bit later for smaller kingdoms to start coalescing and emerging and that kind of goes
in the same period as the emergence of the kingdoms in transjordan like moab like amon and
like edom further to the south as well although edom is a little bit of a strange one we're not
quite so sure what's going on there either and is it the same for the kingdom of judah as well so
this time
we're starting to see a bit more archaeology relating to these particular entities? Or is
the Mesha Stele a unique example almost from this time? Well, it is a unique object. There's no doubt
about it. In terms of what's going on in Jerusalem, we still don't know. There are people who think
they know very clearly what's going on in Judah, in Jerusalem. But at this particular point, we really honestly don't know. The archaeology is incredibly confusing.
Probably the most confusing place in the world, I would say, at the most confusing time.
So we don't have any evidence of any king of Judah until a little bit later. So we have Jehoram on that Dan Steeler a little bit later. And he's dated to
around 849 to 842 BCE, roughly. I think it's important though to mention that the question
of whether the king, the house of David or David is mentioned on the Mesha Steeler has always been
a question because the
biblical account refers to the the battles between mesha and david not mesha and omri oh right so
people have always been looking for it and because it's fragmentary of course there's always this
you know how are we ever going to know well scientific methods have advanced an awful lot, particularly, you know, really kind of scientific photography methods.
And some extremely learned epigraphers have been looking at the Mesha Stela, the original,
along with the only copy of the complete inscription that was taken,
which was done in rather a hurry before the guy got a spear in his leg,
back in 1869 thereabouts. And the copy is not great. This is the problem. It was done in a hurry.
The scholars believe they have identified a reference to the House of David on that,
which, if so, is really, really interesting. But that's all we can say about it. Again,
we have the same thing
as they had mentioned in the dan inscription that we don't have any context necessarily for
what the house of david means if it's a dynastic kingdom you know referring to a kingdom or whether
it's a place or whatever what ultimately happens then to the kingdom of israel and i guess also
to the kingdom of judah because i believe the end of those kingdoms it's kind of interlinked. Yeah I think it's called the Assyrians.
So unfortunately this coalition of indigenous city-states which face the Assyrians at the
Battle of Karkur and hold them off for a while that only lasts a few years and eventually samaria finally falls to shamanes of the fifth in 722 bce
and it's 701 bce that we have the fall of jerusalem and that's brutally that is the end
of the kingdom of israel and the kingdom of judah sort of they continue as a kind of vassal state
this is the way it works under the assyrians so you have a whole
series of kings who are basically the in the pay of of the assyrians they're their client kings
much as you had in the egyptian empire when you had city states with client rulers acting before
this how you do business it's how you run an empire you don't you know you don't remove everyone you keep your decent people to do the work you keep your administration in place
and the guests mentioning cunair form texts and stuff like that we have the names so we have these
people and then there is a much bigger catastrophe that happens to jerusalem which is the siege and
fall of the city to the babylon, to Nebuchadnezzar.
And that's really kind of putting the nail in the coffin. And again, it still continues as
a vassal state within the Babylonian empire, but it's not the kingdom of Judah anymore.
And it's by that time, you know, the early 6th century and a time like that. So several centuries
on from this idea of the united monarchy, then even figures like omri and ahab that's
then they are looking back at these figures almost you know is of a time before the great catastrophe
so it's no surprise that then they become the great focus of these stories at the center of
the old testament yeah and i think it's very um probable that the people who are writing these
narratives down were the kind of scribal class of people
who were taken into captivity to Babylon.
And there they had, as was described in your previous podcast,
access to all sorts of resources, all sorts of traditions.
And they wanted also to create a narrative
that reflected them and their experience and their people.
I mean, well, Felicity, this has been absolutely fantastic.
It's been a massive topic.
So congratulations for being able to get through so much of it.
It just goes to me to say thank you so much
for taking the time to come back on the podcast today.
Thank you very much.
Well, there you go.
There was Felicity Cobbing approaching this very complicated, complex topic
that is the rise and fall of the Kingdom of Israel, the latest in our Old Testament Hebrew
Bible miniseries this June. Stay tuned. We have one more episode to go and it is a fantastic one,
so you will not want to miss it. If you have enjoyed this episode and you'd like similar ones,
then I
would recommend that you listen to the rest of the episodes in this mini-series. We've explored the
Mesopotamian origins to the Noah's Ark story, we've looked at the Moses and the Exodus story in detail,
and also the mystery of the Ark of the Covenant. Those were great episodes, so do definitely check
those out in the Ancients Archive. Go listen on Spotify. Last thing from me, wherever you are listening to the Ancients,
make sure that you are subscribed, that you are following the podcast, so that you don't miss out
when we release new episodes twice every week. That's enough from me, and I will see you in the
next episode.
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