The Ancients - The Queen of Sheba
Episode Date: July 13, 2025A figure of wealth, wisdom, and global fascination - how did the Queen of Sheba become one of history’s most enduring royal icons?In this episode, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Jillian Stinchcomb t...o trace the enduring story of the Queen of Sheba — from her biblical debut to her roles in Islamic tradition and Ethiopian royal ancestry. Where might her true origins lie? Why has she become such a powerful cross-cultural icon? Discover how this once-minor figure became a legend spanning continents and religions.MOREThe Biblical Kingdom of Israel:https://open.spotify.com/episode/5SQM9TGIN1DHeFDkYAjuNbAncient Ethiopia: The Kingdom of Aksum:https://open.spotify.com/episode/2ogrAegnatj535vwYHesm6Presented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor and producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.LIVE SHOW: Buy tickets for The Ancients at the London Podcast Festival here: https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on/words/the-ancients-2/Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on
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Hey guys, Tristan here and I have an exciting announcement.
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Hey guys, I hope you're doing well.
I've just finished recording this episode all about the Queen of Sheba.
We finished recording the interview about half an hour ago.
I'm now standing outside getting a bit of fresh air.
But guys, I was blown away by this chat.
I had no idea just how many stories we have surviving about the Queen of Sheba, whether
that be in Islam, in Judaism or in Christianity. Our guest to brilliantly talk through all
of this is Dr Gillian Stinchcombe from Towson University. I love this chat, I really hope
you guys do too and let's get into it.
She's one of the most recognisable names from the Old Testament. The immensely wealthy
Queen from the South who came to quiz King Solomon on his wisdom.
The Queen of Sheba.
The Queen of Sheba story begins in the Bible but it soon stretched way beyond it.
From her potential historical roots in southern Arabia, to the Quran story about her, to becoming
the ancestor of the Ethiopian royal family, over the next hour we're going to explore
this enigmatic queen's tale over millennia. ancestor of the Ethiopian royal family, over the next hour, we're going to explore this
enigmatic queen's tale over millennia. This is the story of the Queen of Sheba with our guest,
Dr Gillian Stinchcoon.
Gill, such a pleasure to have you on the podcast today.
Thank you for having me.
Now, the Queen of Sheba, she feels like another of these almost top-ranking names when it comes to
Old Testament stories. She feels like a household name today, even thousands of years later.
Absolutely. But you'll find people know the name, but they will often say,
you know, I've heard of the Queen of Sheba, but I don't really know anything about it.
It is a bit of a mysterious name, isn't it? And yet it's also a name and a story attached to it that has evolved over the centuries,
and her importance differs depending on the century, and also depending on the faith as
well.
STACEY Absolutely.
She's kind of this rare figure.
She's a non-Israelite woman, but appears in the scriptures of Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam, and is described
positively in each of them. And that sort of non-Israelite, but still mentioned positively
by each of the faith traditions puts her in a really unique position for a variety of people
to have different understandings, I should say, about her.
A. Well, let's then delve into the enigmatic story of who the Queen of Sheba is. Let's start
with the Old Testament story. So where does the Queen of Sheba is. Let's start with the Old Testament
story. Where does the Queen of Sheba story occur in the Old Testament?
Yes. The Queen of Sheba story occurs in two different spots in the Hebrew Bible,
in the Old Testament, and they are both embedded in stories of Solomon's life.
Solomon's life story is told in two different parts of the Hebrew Bible. The
first is in the book of Kings, the first and second books of Samuel talk about the rise of David, the
rise of the Israelite monarchy, and Kings begins with Solomon and then tells the story of Kings
and Israel and Judah. And then there's the book of Chronicles, which is, I tell my students it's
like a recap episode. It tells the history of the world beginning with creation
up until the middle of the first millennium
before the common era, essentially.
And so it retells the story of Solomon's life.
So you get the Queen of Sheba story
in the first book of Kings, chapter 10, verses one through 13,
and then the second book of Chronicles, chapter nine,
verse one through 12,
and those stories are almost identical to one another. There's
the amount of variation you hear when your mom tells the same story over and over again.
Slightly different choices of language, but otherwise the same.
I know that with the Old Testament, with the Hebrew Bible, it's not as simple as the Book of
Genesis is at the beginning, so that was the oldest book written in the Bible. So do we have a sense which version of the Queen of Sheba story,
which one was written first and when it was written? the beginning. The books of the Hebrew Bible, they tell a continuous history actually from
the beginning of the world. So the book of Kings, Hebrew prose writing emerges eighth,
maybe ninth century BCE. Before that, you get inscriptions written in Hebrew, but you
really don't have people writing prose narratives in Hebrew. It's kind of like you can study
this French history emerges or French prose writing
emerges at a certain point in like the I think it's the 11th century, not a medievalist. Same
thing with Hebrew, it emerges like 9th maybe 8th century BCE is when prose writing is emerging,
and the Queen of Sheba's, the earliest Queen of Sheba story is the one in Kings, first book of
Kings, first one we found out about. Kings was probably mostly written in the 7th century BCE.
Most people link it with King Josiah. Many people do, I should say. It's debatable as dating anything
in the Hebrew Bible is. But Kings was edited in later centuries as well. So we get sort of first
draft 7th century. That's probably when the Queen of Sheba story is emerging. And then in terms of
Chronicles, Chronicles was written end of the Persian period, I would say, so a couple of centuries later. Kings is our
first version of it.
But regardless of which version we're using, both of them are writing at least a couple
of centuries after it was believed that King Solomon was reigning in Israel and Palestine
today.
Exactly. Solomon's rule would have been the 10th century BCE, and there just wasn't Hebrew prose writing
happening at that time period.
So all of our stories about Solomon and the Queen of Sheba post-date her by at least a
century or two, and so I like to think of them as memories of that point in the past.
They're written in the historical mode, of course, but it's not history in the same way
that modern history is built with evidence and stuff.
So let's explore the story of the Queen of Sheba in the Book of Kings, because I noticed that she takes up quite a few particular verses at the beginning of the Book of Kings.
Can you talk us through the story of the Queen of Sheba in the Old Testament?
It's just 13 verses in chapter 10. And these are emerging in the Book of Kings
when we're being told all about Solomon's reign,
which in the Book of Kings,
Solomon's reign is marked by having high highs
and really low lows.
And she is, you know,
Solomon is sort of like the best and worst
that Kings have to offer according to the ideology.
The Book of Kings has a surprisingly mixed
view of kings and kingship as an institution, I should say. And so, the Queen of Sheba appears
in Chapter 10. We've just been told in the Book of Kings that Solomon is really wealthy.
He's had really successful trade with Hiram of Tyre and a variety of other figures. He's
at the center of all these trade networks. And we're told at the beginning of chapter 10
that the queen of Shiva heard reports of Solomon's wisdom.
And so she came to find him.
She heard about him and decided to show up.
And when she showed up, she came with a train of camels
bearing spices and gold and precious jewels.
So she just basically showed up at his house
with a bunch of gifts, like a good house guest actually.
And she came to him with a number of questions
and quite intriguingly she comes to test his wisdom actually.
It says that quite explicitly she comes to test his wisdom
because that's what she's heard reports about.
He's famous for being wise, she comes to test him
and they have this great intimate moment together.
There is no question that she asks of him that he does not answer her.
And that's the first sort of three verses or so.
And then the story shifts and we're told then what it was she saw at Solomon's court.
She sees all the wonders of his court and then she speaks out loud, craze of his court.
And so she hears reports of him, comes to test him. And then
through her eyes and through her voice, the audience gets sort of confirmation that Solomon
is exactly as great as the text has been trying to tell us for the last 10 chapters. And you
know, she's, she's a stranger. She has, she has no, you know, dog in this race, right?
She's just, she just comes and she tells us
that he's exactly as great as these reports have been telling us. And then she gives him
a bunch of gifts. She gives him 20 talents of gold and so many spices, more spices than
had ever been seen. And we're told basically that Solomon was able to give her an equal
amount of gifts back that he was able to give back to her, which would have been the expectation in the Iron Age that when a monarch visits another monarch, you
exchange gifts with one another. This comes up in the Iliad and the Odyssey all the time
as well, which are written sort of around the same time period. So Solomon exchanged
gifts and then she goes back home. So it's a very discreet episode of her coming, hearing
reports of him and then coming to visit him and seeing she acts as a sort of witness to his greatness.
I was going to say, so it's one of the main purposes behind this particular story in the greater, as you mentioned, the narrative of the Hebrew Bible.
Is it almost an affirmation of how great Solomon is, but from an outside ruler coming to see him and then realizing it's not just people within his kingdom who realize how great it is.
to see him and then realising it's not just people within his kingdom who realise how great it is, it is also people who lived in kingdoms nearby who are recognising just how majestic this figure was.
STACEY That is absolutely right. And I would say it's not even just places nearby,
because Kirim of Tyre is nearby. Sheba is presumably a bit further, because she has to hear
reports of him. She's not a next-door neighbour. She lives a little ways over. And the other thing to really emphasize here is that she gives him 120 talents of gold.
Wow. More spices than had ever been seen. The text really underscores to us over and over and
over again that she's really wealthy. I like to joke that she's like the Mackenzie Bezos of her
day because it's so much gold that Josephus, writing in the first century CE,
a thousand years later, he's writing for a Roman audience and he reduces it to 20 talents
of gold, because it seems unbelievable that anyone would give 120.
It's like saying she came and gave him a gazillion dollars.
And Josephus says, it wasn't a gazillion dollars, it was a billion dollars.
It's still a crazy amount of money.
It's, you know, absurd wealth. So it's not just an outsider, it's a wildly wealthy outsider.
So that's the story in Kings, Jill, before kind of delving into the historical basis
behind it and the location of Sheba and so on. With the second story of the Queen of
Sheba in Chronicles, are there many noticeable differences
between the two? If we've already established that both of these two different stories are
written at different moments in history as well.
So in terms of differences between Kings and Chronicles, the differences in the stories are
not so much within the stories themselves. There's a couple of very slight differences. You know,
one version of it says there had never before been seen so many spices as she brought and another
one says since then nobody has ever seen as many spices as she brought, right? You know,
slight difference, but it really doesn't change the sort of force of the narrative or what's
trying to be communicated. What is different between Kings and Chronicles is that in the Book of Kings, as I mentioned,
Solomon has high highs and low lows.
Solomon is the person who builds the temple in Jerusalem.
He is incredibly wise.
He does all of these great things.
But in the Book of Kings, Solomon also quite famously worships foreign gods with his foreign
wives.
And we learn about that almost immediately
after the Queen of Sheba narrative.
Versus in Chronicles, Solomon has never done anything wrong
in his life.
He is just a sort of straightforward culture hero.
He doesn't do anything wrong.
And so in Kings, when the Queen of Sheba comes to visit,
it shows that Solomon has this reputation.
He's known by outsiders.
He's also very good with foreign women.
Maybe too good, because that ends up being his downfall
just a couple of chapters later.
Versus in Chronicles,
it's just sort of straightforwardly a witness.
So the difference is not within the stories,
but actually the context in which they're placed.
The Solomon of Kings is more fallible, let's say,
than the Solomon of Kings is more fallible, let's say, than the Solomon
of Chronicles.
I'm Professor Suzanne Olypscombe, and on not just the Tudors from History Hit, we do
admittedly cover quite a lot of Tudors, from the Ryers of Henry VII to the death of Henry VIII, from Amberlyn to her daughter Elizabeth I. But we also do lots that's not Tudors.
Murderers, mistresses, pirates and witches. Clues in the title really. So follow,
not just the Tudors, from a history hit wherever you get your podcasts. So it's quite interesting because we'll delve into later traditions as this chat goes
on where more details are added to Shiba's character.
From the original story, I guess the image conveyed to Shiba is that she's a rich
queen coming from far away to see Solomon and it's her wealth and her seeking of
knowledge and wisdom that is very much the main things that are emphasised about her. Yes. There is a potential implication of romance
in the intimacy of their meeting. She comes to him. There's a potential there, but it is not
explicit. Other people pick up that potential later, it becomes a major theme. So I just want
to note, it's not entirely absent, but it is more of a loud silence than anything else, I would say.
It's good to highlight that straight away because I feel now we've really kind of covered
the original story of the Queen of Sheba.
And now I get to ask about potential historical basis of this.
Could there have been a real Queen of Sheba?
The short answer is yes, absolutely.
Because we have an absence of evidence, but that is not evidence of absence.
We don't have contemporaneous evidence of the Queen of not evidence of absence. We don't have contemporaneous evidence
of the Queen of Sheba, but we also don't have contemporaneous evidence of Solomon either. And
there are some people who argue maybe Solomon didn't exist, but you know, by and large,
if it's not a barrier for us to think about Solomon, it's not a barrier for us to think
about the Queen of Sheba. And there are two locations that are really good potential sites
for where the Queen of Sheba might have been traveling from.
One of them is in Yemen, and it's a site called Saba, and there's actually a very old sort
of Iron Age, maybe even earlier temple there, which to this day is sometimes called Mahram
Bilqis, Temple of Bilqis, and Bilqis is the Queen of Sheba's name in Muslim tradition.
The other location very close to Yemen, just across the Red Sea, is Ethiopia,
which is where the Aksumite Empire was located. I know you guys had a podcast on the Aksumite
Empire a short while ago. And so both Ethiopians from Aksum and Yemenis both will claim the queen
of Sheba as their ancestor and frankly both have a solid
historical claim for it because she came via camel with a train of camels bearing heavy
spices. It seems like she came to Jerusalem from the south across the desert and we know
that in the southern Arabian peninsula there was a spice trade going from there up to Babylonia
and other regions from, I think
records go back into the third millennium BCE, and we have examples of that. And we
also have, not very often, but there is some evidence of queens ruling over this southern
Arabian peninsula. We don't know as much about them as we would really prefer, but the idea
that there was a woman ruling over a trade-based kingdom in the south who might have brought spices up north to Solomon,
that is a totally plausible historical scenario.
Mason I love the fact that you highlighted all of that,
Jill, because I remember doing something not too long ago on the Nabataeans and how, you know,
a few centuries after, of course, the Queen of Sheba and Solomon and so on. But of course, they were overseeing the trade routes of the spices and so on. So if she was
bringing gold, spices, incense, the main area of the world that you will look at is southern
Arabia or across the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden to what is Ethiopia today. It makes sense.
Yes, exactly. And Ethiopia and Yemen, especially in late antiquity, were sometimes ruled by the
same people. So one thing that's interesting actually in thinking about the sort of debate
about whether she was from Yemen or modern-day Yemen, modern-day Ethiopia actually, is it kind
of shows that the division of nation-states can sometimes be a bit arbitrary because they're
really not all that far away from one another. Jason Vale And just one other thing on that original
story before we go further forward in time. You mentioned there that she comes with camels.
Is it specifically said that it's camels and it's not horses or mules or donkeys or anything?
It is specifically camels from Arabia or further afield?
Stacey McNeil Well, it doesn't say from Arabia, but it
does say, the Queen of Sheba heard what was to be said about Solomon due to the name of the Lord,
and she came to test him with riddles. She came to Jerusalem with a very great train,
camels bearing spices, and lots of gold and precious stones. So yes, specifically camels.
And let's move forward because that is the original story, but as you've already mentioned,
there is a long afterlife to this story in many different religions as well. So when do we next hear of the Queen of Sheba? Is
it still in the Bible with the New Testament?
KS It is. So our New Testament sources are the next space where we hear about the Queen
of Sheba, specifically in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke. We get one line, one verse in each
of those Gospels and they probably got it from the same source,
probably the Q source, but it says that the queen
from the South who came to hear Solomon's wisdom
will be a judge of the men of this generation
at the end times.
So in this story, in the New Testament,
it's very, very brief.
It's very tantalizing actually.
Not as a historian. I really wish
there was more there, more to explore. But what we see is very interestingly, this figure from the
Solomonic past, from Israel's history, is being projected forward as a judge, what we call an
eschatological judge, a judge for the end times. And that is how she is imagined in this one very short, slightly
obscure verse in the New Testament. And that gets picked up in a variety of ways in later
centuries.
But do you think that reveals how if the New Testament and even sources like the Gospels
and also that other mysterious source of the Gospels, Q, is several centuries after the
original Queen Ash Sheba story is
written down. Even if it's just a brief mention, does it give us a little bit of an insight
into how the Queen of Sheba story was remembered over those intervening centuries?
Yes. It suggests, to my mind, I think in this time period, she's not the most prominent
character. She's not getting a lot of screen time, so to speak,
in there, but she's still someone recognizable. Notably too, in the Greek, it says the queen
of the South who came to hear of Solomon's wisdom. It actually doesn't even name her
the queen of Sheba, but this actually dovetails with what we've been saying on the podcast
actually that she probably came from the South because that's spices coming with camels etc etc. So it seems that they shared the sort of geographic
sense of where she was coming from with us and also that it shows how Israelite history
was used to sort of think about the future as well and how maybe different models, different
modes of thinking in that way were being utilised in that time period.
Angus Slight tangent, and just because we've recently released an episode all about the
Apocryphal Texts, the Gospels that don't make it into the Bible today, because there are so many
more stories in those Apocryphal Texts, does the Queen of Sheba pop up in any of those texts as well?
Shantarai Actually, no.
Angus No, not at all. Wow. No, and this is, yeah.
I was almost surprised by how absent she was in basically pre-Quranic materials.
When I started my dissertation, I thought that I was going to be uncovering all the
hidden stories that people just hadn't paid attention to with the Queen of Sheba, but
she really does not appear in those.
There are motifs that appear in medieval versions of the Queen of
Sheba that are coming up in the Testament of Solomon and some other places, but not
the Queen of Sheba herself, actually. It's only when we start getting into the Church
Fathers talk about her a bit, briefly.
ALICE Well, shall we cover these figures now before
we reach the Quran? Over the centuries, we've done the New Testament stories of the Queen
of Sheba, the brief mentions. Who are the next big figures that then mentioned the Queen
of Sheba?
STACEY So the next biggest one is Josephus, Plavius
Josephus, who was a Jewish historian and writer. He was a general during the Jewish revolt
against Rome. He was captured very early on because he was in charge of the area of Galilee that basically the Romans first came through, conquered it quickly. So he
was captured by the Romans. He was eventually taken in as a hostage
essentially by the Flavian family, lived out the rest of his life in Rome. And he
quite famously wrote our best account of the Jewish revolt against the Romans
called the Jewish Wars, Judean Wars, sometimes you'll see.
And he also wrote a history of the Jewish people
called the Jewish Antiquities.
And in the Jewish Antiquities, he has a story of Solomon.
And this is the story where he is,
in the Jewish Antiquities, Josephus is writing in Greek
for a Roman audience.
Romans would have known about the Jewish people
because the Jewish revolt, it was a big deal capital you know catapulted the space should entitles to new heights of fame actually the money taken from the Jewish temple in Jerusalem when the Romans destroyed it that actually funded the building of the Coliseum.
And you can even see their procession with the Menorah on the Arch of Titus today in the Roman form in Rome so So yeah, this big event in the late first century for the Romans. KS Exactly. And so Josephus, I wasn't there,
but it seems like he kind of capitalized on the interest that these events garnered. And he ends
up writing these accounts of the Jewish people for a Roman audience. And in the Jewish antiquities,
he is telling the story of Solomon and he is trying to portray Solomon as a culture
hero that would have been understandable to a Roman audience, would have been legible to them.
And so he tells the story of Solomon. Solomon wins all these riddling contests. He's extremely
wise. He's extremely wealthy. And Josephus describes the queen of Sheba. He doesn't call
her the queen of Sheba. He says that she is the queen of Egypt in Ethiopia,
who heard reports of Solomon's fame.
She was so interested.
He wanted, she wanted to see it with her own eyes
because eyewitnesses are better than merely hearing reports.
You know, he goes on, Josephus loves a digression.
And he, and so he describes her as the queen of Egypt
in Ethiopia and coming to visit.
And this, you know, makes sense.
As we've said, Sheba could very well have been in modern day Ethiopia.
It certainly fits within the Roman geographic imaginary where Ethiopia again is sort of south
of Egypt.
But when Josephus is saying that the queen of Egypt and Ethiopia came to visit Solomon,
in the Roman sensibility, Egypt was the wealthiest province in the Roman
Empire. It was the breadbasket, actually. They produced much of the wheat and food that people
would eat. So it's saying that she's extremely wealthy because she's the queen of Egypt.
And also by being the queen of Ethiopia, she's functionally the queen of the edge of the known
world. Famously, Roman geographers will often say like, oh, and once you get over here,
you get to Ethiopia and also India.
Like they don't seem to know the difference
between Ethiopia and India.
And it's basically because,
well, that's just the edge of the known world.
You don't actually need to know
that they're on different continents separated
by hundreds and thousands of miles.
But so he's saying basically,
this queen who came to visit Solomon
in the Roman sort of
imaginary, her status would have been built up by her being the queen of Egypt and Ethiopia.
And so that's a big addition that he makes.
And then as I also mentioned, he says, you know, she gave 20 talents of gold instead
of 120 talents of gold to try to make it like a little bit more reasonable, even if it's
still very extravagant.
But he basically follows
the plot of the stories that we find in the Hebrew Bible pretty closely.
Angus So very much using the word Ethiopia to
emphasise the distance, how far away she came from, and the name Egypt to emphasise the wealth to the
Roman audience. So it feels like Josephus, as you say, he's writing for a Roman audience. He's
trying to convey the majesty, the greatness, the extraordinary nature, he's writing for a Roman audience. He's trying to convey the
majesty, the greatness, the extraordinary nature of the Queen of Sheba in the Solomon
in the Jewish tradition by using terms and places that the Romans would be like, almost
like, they'd be gasping like, wow, in all, like, wow, she came from where? She was that
rich? It feels like that idea almost.
Yes, absolutely. And it's fascinating because it's clear the Queen of Sheba is like a tool
to make Solomon look greater, basically. These are the type of people who would admire him,
but absolutely she's trying to build them both up.
You mentioned also earlier that this is also when we see church fathers starting to talk
about the Queen of Sheba. Can you talk a bit about that?
So the Gospel accounts, let's put them second half, first century CE. Josephus is
writing in the 90s, like 95, 96 is when the Jewish antiquities tend to be dated. Church
fathers, the most important church father, or let's say the most robust discussion of
the Queen of Sheba by a church father is from a guy named Origen of Alexandria who was living in the 3rd
century, 265, or when some of his homilies are dated. He's from Africa, right? He's from Alexandria,
which is northern part of Egypt, culturally a very Greek place, but he himself is as an African
writer actually. And he cites Josephus explicitly when he says that the queen of Sheba was the queen of Ethiopia,
that she was also an African queen.
So this is the first time we get an African writer naming her as an African queen.
And for Origen, this matters because he understands the queen of Sheba to be the female speaker
in the biblical book of poetry, the Song of Songs.
Okay, okay.
So this can feel like it's a little bit left field,
you know, for people who know various texts of the Bible,
it's less surprising.
But so the Song of Songs is a very weird biblical book,
I would say, because it's really erotic love poetry.
You know, it talks about your breasts are like towers.
It has things that are, yeah, no,
it describes each
other's bodies and how they're, and it's a conversation between a man and a woman who are
very sexually interested in one another and, you know, they're young lovers. And so this was,
it's a beautiful bit of poetry. And for church fathers like Origen, it was a bit scandalous
and frankly, a bit weird too. Why is this book of love poetry included in Jewish scriptures?
Why does it matter?
For Origen, the reading was this is Origen read this allegorically, read the text allegorically
and for him it was a conversation between God and the Christian church, but it's also
a conversation between Moses and his Ethiopian wife.
And it's also a conversation between Solomon and the queen of Sheba because one line in the Song of Songs says, I am black and
beautiful. And so it's the woman describing herself as black. So that's
why Moses's Ethiopian wife and the queen of Sheba who is the queen of Ethiopia.
And Ithiops in Greek means literally burnt face. So it very much has to do
with, it signifies dark skin to people who are reading and writing in Greek in particular.
So in the Song of Songs, the female speaker within the poem says, I am black and beautiful.
Origen has a number of explanations for this and they don't.
The thing about allegorical reading is that all of these readings are true at the same time. That's how allegory works for Church Fathers. But one of these readings is
at the same time, that's how allegory works for church fathers. But one of these readings is the Queen of Sheba and Solomon. And this really is, I would say, one of the major starting points
of people reading Solomon and the Queen of Sheba as having a romantic relationship.
There was potential for that in the Hebrew Bible, but it's never made explicit. And by reading the
female and male speaker in the poem of Song of Songs as Solomon
and Queen of Sheba, it really underscores this idea that they had a romantic relationship
with one another.
Toby And this is all because Orojin is theorising
the Queen of Sheba to have been the author of that love poetry then, is it? So he's
theorising, he's saying that two plus two must equal four when it comes to this particular
story. So
it seems almost, as you say, with these early Church Fathers, it's always the trying to deduce stuff which is left a bit open-ended from the original stories.
STS-001-001 Absolutely. And I would say it's actually Solomon who's said to be the writer of
it. So she's a character basically within the poem.
CB- Got it. Thank you.
STS-001-001 Is how he reads it. Yes. Because Solomon,
he's also said to be the author of Proverbs, Song of Songs. There's a competition going between
David and Solomon as to the things that they author in later centuries. But yes.
And is the Song of Songs in the Old Testament today? If you got a Bible out today, it is
part of the official text? I had no idea. I had to have a look at that up.
LR – Yes, it sends a third section, or well, if you're reading a Christian or a Jewish Bible.
But in the Jewish Bible, it's in the section called the Writings. And so it's right near
Proverbs and Psalms, essentially, which are the other poetry collections in the Bible.
AL – And so do you think this reflects, because you mentioned already the importance of the
Queen of Sheba, let's say we're in the First Testament, with the Gospels being written in the first century,
she doesn't seem to be at the forefront at all. But if Origen is talking about her in
the third century, and this is time where you really start seeing the rise of Christianity,
particularly in the following century, in the fourth century, do you think by the time
of late antiquity that the Queen of Sheba's story has gained more popularity and more colour has
been added to it? BTK What I think actually is that by the time of Late Antiquity, the Queen of
Sheba's story has actually become a problem in a way that it wasn't previously. And the colour gets
added to it more in the Middle Ages than Late Antiquity. I think Late Antiquity is when the
problem emerges and then it gets sort of solved in later centuries. And I say that precisely because of the rise of Christianity,
because when Israel is a relatively small, not very powerful nation state that gets
conquered by the Babylonians and the Persians and then the Greeks and eventually the Romans,
there needs to be an external witness, someone coming from outside
Israel saying, Solomon really is just as great as everyone has said, et cetera, et cetera.
When Christianity emerges, and I think what's really important to remember, third, fourth,
fifth, sixth century, Christianity, even to this day, Christianity is not a monolith,
but there was a staggering variety of Christianities in late antiquity in ways
that shock students when you talk about Gnostic beliefs and all these other things.
A.C. Council of Nicaea and so on and all of that kind of stuff, yeah.
S.K. Exactly. And when Christians are claiming Solomon and all of a sudden Solomon isn't some
obscure culture hero from a marginal population, but instead is a central hero
of this past. All of a sudden, everybody is claiming Israel's past for themselves, right?
Christians, Jews, you know, a variety of groups. Eventually, Muslims also understand the Israelite
past as their own. And so when that's happening, all of a sudden, you don't need an external
witness to Solomon's greatness anymore. Everybody knows how great Solomon is. They actually want to claim him for
their own. So then what's the Queen of Sheba doing? Why is she even there? We
don't need her in the first place. And frankly, how could she come to test him
with hard riddles? How could she come and be as wealthy as him, maybe even wealthier
than he is, right? Before she's used to prove his status, but now his status is supposed
to be virtually incomparable. So how is it that in a lot of ways she's kind of his equal coming to
meet him on his own terms? And I think that's why we see so much development in the Middle Ages,
actually, is that her status at first was the thing that made her useful, and actually later
it's the thing that kind of makes her a problem. And notably, it's only after Christians and Muslims also start claiming the Israelite past
that we start to get stories of the Queen of Sheba maybe being like part jinn or part demon
or sort of monstrous in some way.
I'm Professor Suzanna Lipscomb, and on Not Just The Tudors from History Hit we do admittedly cover quite a lot of Tudors, from the rise of Henry VII to the death of Henry VIII, from
Anne Boleyn to her daughter Elizabeth I. But we also do lots that's not Tudors, murderers,
mistresses, pirates and witches. Clues in the title really. So follow Not Just The Tudors, murderers, mistresses, pirates and witches. Clues in the title really.
So follow not just the Tudors from a history hit wherever you get your podcasts. How does the Quran then contribute so centrally to this next step in the Queen of Sheba story?
So, I should say first, there are other Church Fathers besides Origen who mentioned the Queen
of Sheba, but it's very brief. It's always in passing. And in Jewish texts from the same
period, what we call Rabbinic texts, there's one mention of the Queen of Sheba and it's very brief, it's always in passing. And in Jewish texts from the same period,
what we call rabbinic texts, there's one mention of the queen of Sheba and it's someone saying,
she's not the queen of Sheba, it's actually the kingdom of Sheba who visited and it's
doing a little bit of a pun. But so there really was not very much interest in her.
The Quran emerges in the seventh century and a lot of audience members might know this,
but for those who don't, the Quran assumes that the listener knows a heck of a lot about the Bible and
the biblical past. It'll just introduce Abraham or Moses or Solomon as characters, and it
just assumes that the audience knows exactly who you're talking about. And so in the 27th
Surah of the Quran, we are told that Solomon and David had the ability to speak with animals.
They had the, yeah, they just had this ability.
They could speak with animals and also jinn and also demons.
And the Quran tells us that actually Solomon and David had armies that consisted not only
of human troops, but also jinn troops, animals, birds, demons, et cetera, et cetera.
There are parallels to this in other late antique traditions as well.
The Quran isn't unique in saying this, but it is the first scripture that says this.
And so it makes these assertions.
And then it says that one day, Solomon was sort of mustering his troops.
He was gathering all his troops up together, starting to do a roll call.
And there was one bird that is missing from his muster.
And he's really mad about it.
I mean, you know, the bird has essentially gone AWOL, right?
No military looks kindly on people going AWOL,
or birds in this case.
But the bird comes back and says, you know,
I have encompassed, I've understood,
I've seen something that you haven't seen.
There's this land called Saba where, you know,
gold sits in the streets like dung.
They worship the sun instead of God and also they're ruled by a queen. So it's a weird place for all these reasons. Topsy turvy. And so Solomon ends up writing the queen of Sheba a letter via this bird.
The bird acts as a sort of messenger between them, takes this letter to the queen of Sheba.
She reads the letter and they just immediately start having a comedy of errors with one another.
Solomon asked her to come muslimin, which means as a Muslim, but it also means in submission
because Islam is just submission to God's will.
So she reads him saying, come muslimin as come in submission to me.
And she says, oh, kings are always doing this.
They come into cities.
They make those who are most high into the lowest.
This is terrible.
What am I going to do?
She asks her advisors for help.
They're a little bit useless.
They just say, we'll do whatever you say.
So she decides to send him a bunch of gifts.
And in the Hebrew Bible, when they, when Solomon and the queen of Sheba exchange gifts, it's
a sign that their relationship
is really solid, that they respect one another.
When in the Quran, when the Queen of Sheba sends gifts
to Solomon, he thinks she's trying to bribe him.
And he's like, basically, why does she even think
she could bribe me?
I'm favored by God.
I don't need like paltry human gifts.
And so he says, basically, like, she's trying to bribe me.
What's going on here? He turns to he says, you know, basically like, she's trying to bribe me, what's going on here.
He turns to his djinn and say, you know,
basically, can you help me out with this?
One of his djinn ends up bringing the throne
of the queen of Sheba into Solomon's court
and disguising it.
And when she comes to visit, she is asked, you know,
do you recognize this throne?
And she says, it's as if it was my own.
So there's something there where she's able to sort of see
through the magic of the djinn and nobody's,
and it's frankly, it's not very well explained.
It's a very laconic story.
But then immediately after this attempt at a trick,
she goes into his court where he had a crystal floor,
a glass floor.
She steps into the court and he had a crystal floor, a glass floor. She steps into the court
and she thinks the glass floor is water and she lifts up her skirts revealing her legs.
And Solomon says, what are you doing? It's not water, it's glass. And she says, oh my goodness,
I've been so mistaken. I'm going to worship God alongside you. It's a very, it's kind of,
it's a very weird story,
but as someone who's read it many times at this point,
what I think happens is that she realizes
that she's made a mistake with this glass floor,
and it causes her to realize that she's also been mistaken
by worshiping the sun instead of the one true God.
And so her mistake with the glass floor
ends up being this point where all of a sudden
she converts essentially, she becomes a believer in the one God which.
What's not the case in the Hebrew Bible in the Hebrew Bible she says explicitly your God your God must be great to put you on the throne doesn't the ancient worlds.
Different countries you know different countries worship different gods.
Because in the ancient worlds, different countries worship different gods. But in the late antique world where the Quran emerged, all of a sudden monarchs all believe
in the God of Israel, right?
Different polities believe in the God of Israel, and so there's a bit more competition.
And in this case, she's a rare positive figure who converts to the worship of the one God,
you know, a sort of like pre-Muslim, we might say.
And this is not something that happens very often in the Quran. This is only a handful of people
end up doing this before the Quran because the Quran is the best witness and reason for
people to convert. So apologies for the length of that answer. So the significance of the
Quran in the story is that it retells the story of the Queen of Sheba's visit and it
inverts several elements that were present in the biblical story, right retells the story of the Queen of Sheba's visit and it inverts several
elements that were present in the biblical story, right? Gifts all of a sudden are a sign of bribery
instead of a sign of friendship. There's this new motif of there being glass crystal floors that
cause the Queen of Sheba to sort of lift up her skirts and reveal her legs. And all of a sudden,
she now worships the God of Israel. and these three new elements are sort of change everything after this and set the scene for the variety of changes that emerge in the middle ages.
Joe before I ask a bit more about that you did mention in passing there the gin I have heard the name the gin before but actually I don't quite understand completely what they are can you briefly explain what the gin are.
I don't quite understand completely what they are. Can you briefly explain what the Jin are? KS So Jin, in English, oftentimes we hear it as Genie, you know, sort of Aladdin situation.
But the sort of Disney version of a Genie in a bottle is unsurprisingly, doesn't really match
what our historical records say about them. So especially in, I should say, Middle Eastern folklore
generally, but especially in Muslim folklore is what I'm most familiar with. Jinn are beings. They're actually not dissimilar from humans, but humans are made
from earth, right? We know this from Genesis that Adam and Eve were made, well, not Eve,
but Adam was created out of dirt of the ground. Jinn are created of fire. That's their sort of
essential element. And so jinn are able to do magic, they have access to certain powers, and they are supernatural almost isn't even the right term for them, because they existed a parallel world in a world that is parallel to what's happening with humans.
But most of the time they don't interact. Only in very rare circumstances do you get something like Solomon has Jin who serve him under a very particular
terms of a contract, essentially. But yes, so Jin, imprecisely I would say, are supernatural
beings who are sort of born of fire and they make, but they're also kind of oftentimes
trickster figures who appear a lot in folklore.
So Jill, thank you also for explaining the story of the Queen of Sheba in the Qur'an
in so much detail. Because once again, like with the original story, it was really important
because it's such an important part in her evolution over the centuries. And the key
points as you've highlighted there, so the giving of gifts now seen as a sign of bribery,
the mistaking of the glass floor, the lifting up of her skirt showing her legs, and the
conversion to Islam,
to the one true God at the end of it. And you mentioned before that how it had seemed
as if the Queen of Sheba by the late antiquity had become a bit of a problem for early Christian
and Jewish writers. So how does the Quran story and this changing story of the Queen
of Sheba, how does it almost act as a board, a springboard,
for the development of the Queen of Sheba's story as we get into the medieval period,
and figures from all faiths trying to figure out how the Queen of Sheba no longer is a problem and
is actually beneficial in their eyes, I guess? STACEY Yeah, that's a great question. So some
of the Jewish traditions are maybe from the same time period. There's a bit of debate about which came first. I think that debate is a bit of a chicken or egg situation. It actually
just speaks to the fact that Jews and Muslims were sharing stories with one another. But so there's
these two Jewish checks, one's called Targum Shani to Esther. A Targum is an Aramaic translation,
Shani just means second. So it's just a second Aramaic translation of Esther. And in that story, Solomon controls
armies of birds and jinn and demons, just like the Quran. The queen of Sheba gets a letter from him,
comes to visit him. But in the Targumic story, when the queen of Sheba lifts her skirts and
reveals her legs, she reveals that her legs are very hairy. And Solomon tells her you are beautiful like a woman, but hairy like a man and hair is great on a man, but it's shameful on a woman.
Essentially, she becomes a joke, a bit of a laughing stock.
She confirms that Solomon, oh, you're just as wise as I heard.
She gives him a lot of gifts and she goes home, but it really sort of diminishes the sort of significance of that story.
But so much about that is quite directly parallel to the Quran.
In older scholarship, they'll say the Targumic story is the precursor to the Quran.
Like basically, it's what the Quran got its material from.
More recent specialists work on Targum suggests it's not that straightforward,
but that's not important for our purposes.
The other significant Jewish story that comes out in this one
is probably from the 9th or 10th
century from Baghdad, probably Islamic hit Milieu, to our earliest surviving parody written in Hebrew.
It's called the Alphabet of Bansira. And it has a lot of very smart schoolboy humor, which includes
like a lot of lewdness and jokes. And so one of the stories within that is that the Queen of Sheba came to visit Solomon
and she revealed her legs which were very hairy. And so Solomon invented a depilatory of arsenic
and lime, a nair, a hair removal cream, to remove the hair from their legs so that they could have
sex with one another. And in the alphabet of Bensira, there's nothing about wisdom.
There's no mutual respect that they're really concerned about. It's that she was hairy, and then they ended up
having Solomon found a solution so that they could be paramours, shall we say. So we get
some influence there, probably, even if the story sort of originated in Jewish tradition,
went into the Quran, I think there's a sort of back and forth that's happening with Jewish
and Muslim sources, especially Jews living in the Islamic world,
which was the majority of Jewish people surviving,
alive towards the end of the first millennium.
Starting in around the 11th century,
that is when the Quran actually becomes available in Europe.
This partly has to do with the Crusades and new circulation of materials.
Starting around that period, we start to see in Latin Christian sources, so European Christian
sources, stories about the Queen of Sheba came to visit Solomon and there was a pool
of water on the ground and she has to walk through the pool of water, for instance.
All of a sudden in Christian materials, you start to see, or maybe she walks over
a pool of water, you know, on a bridge that's over the pool of water.
But all of a sudden you start to see this association of water in or around the site
of her meeting with Solomon that didn't exist anywhere beforehand.
And I assume comes from Muslim and Jewish folklore that circulated and eventually worked
its way into
this medieval Christian tradition. That is the European sort of Christian side of it,
and we could talk more about the legends that that's associated with. But the other bit that
I think is significant here is also in the medieval period, there emerges a tradition in the
Ethiopic Orthodox Tawahedo Church, an Ethiopic tradition written in Gaea'ez.
It's a text called the Ka'ber Nag'az that was, it was written.
Early colophons, early marginal notes of early manuscripts say that it was translated in the 13th century from Arabic.
And the Ka'ber Nag'az tells the story of the Queen of Sheba visiting Solomon's court. It says that they have a child together. That child was Menelik I, who is the founder of what later became the Solomonic
dynasty. But that story, the Kaver Nagas in particular, it's translated from Arabic and the
Quran is the first and longest Arabic document. So anything written in Arabic is in some way
shows some influence of the Quran. That might be too bold of a statement. So in any case, the Ethiopian tradition also was influenced by Muslim tradition as
well. So these are what I would consider the two main threads of it. And they both show
indirect but definitely present influence of Quranic tradition.
Joe, we're running out of time, but I've got a couple more questions to ask. I mean,
first off, if we keep on Ethiopia, so the Keba Nagast, which is the sacred scripture of Ethiopia, isn't it? The Kingdom of Aksum
and following. But is that why you then get that strong association with the monarchs
of Ethiopia all the way down to Halle Selassie in the 20th century, claiming to be the descendants
of the Queen of Sheba? Is it because of that, the Kebra
Nagast and that story which emerges in the medieval period?
Yes. I should note that that is building on earlier traditions. The translation occurs
in the 13th century. The Arabic tradition is said to have been translated from Coptic,
which is a very, very old language. We know that the Queen of Sheba had been associated
with Ethiopia since Josephus in the
first century CE, and African writers had understood her as African from Ethiopia since the third
century with origin. And it could have been earlier as well. These are just our earliest written
sources. But yes, the version of the Kebernegast that we have, the Ethiopian tradition, is one
that emerges in the Middle Ages. And that is definitely the basis of the claims made by the Solomonic House, including and especially Haile Selassie.
And that descent from Solomon is why Haile Selassie was considered Rastafari, a messiah
in the Rastafarian movement.
Wow. We've got to get back to the hairy legs quickly then, because isn't there one
tradition where the Queen of Sheba, she doesn't just have hairy legs, she then becomes half
queen half beast.
It depends on the source that you read, but yes. So there is a Muslim version of the story written
by a writer named Al-Khabari, and he says that the jinn under Solomon's control were very nervous
that if he married the Queen of Sheba and had a child with her, that their child would then rule
over the jinn forevermore. So they really wanted to prevent a relationship between them because they were afraid that they would be
enslaved to their children, essentially, versus if they didn't have a child, then they would be free
of their contract upon Solomon's death. And so according to Altafari, the djinn told Solomon
that the queen of Sheba had donkey legs hidden underneath her skirts, essentially. And according
to Altafari, this is why they set up this crystal palace, actually,
is because it was meant to trick her.
The Quran has a loud silence.
Was it on purpose or not?
The Quran doesn't tell us, but Tabari says it was on purpose.
They set it up to trick her and she lifted her skirts and it wasn't donkey legs.
It was just that she was very hairy instead.
And that's where it sort of comes in.
But you also find there's a variety of traditions in the Latin Christian tradition will say that she maybe had
leprosy on her legs or that she had some sort of physical deformity on her legs. And when she walked
through the water to visit Solomon, in some versions of the story, the wood of the true cross,
which is the wood that eventually gets used in Jesus's cross, was floating in the water and it magically cured her legs.
There's a French statuary tradition that was lost during the French Revolution, but we have images drawn from people that show versions of the Queen of Sheba with goose feet under her legs.
And that seems to either be a tradition about her hiding goose legs, or maybe that is signifying the leprosy that
she was hiding under her skirts. But there is this idea, note there that her being an
animal by having sort of hairy mannish legs under her skirts, and then her having a physical
disability actually are all sort of tied together there, which sort of shows how one of the
interesting ways that humanity and human normativity can be constructed through a character like this.
GIL, we don't have enough time to explore all of these other stories. I know there's one with the Greek Orthodox tradition, isn't there, which links her back to the ancient Greek prophetess?
There's the Sibylian oracle and all of that. But it just shows, isn't it? It's not just Latin Christianity, Greek Orthodox Christianity, different ideas of the Queen of Sheba.
We've explored Islam and of course the Jewish tradition as well, and Ethiopic Christianity too. Do you think this diversification
in the story of the Queen of Sheba as the centuries goes on, do you think that is paramount?
Do you think that is central as to why her name remains so important? Why we know the
name the Queen of Sheba? Why it is a household name today? Do you think that's central to it? I do think so, but I think it reflects something even more
central, which is the fact that the Queen of Sheba, her story is marked by these loud silences all
around. We don't know where she's from. We don't know the questions that she asked Solomon. There's
a lot that we don't know. And she both affirms Solomon's greatness, right? That's what she's
done sort of from the
beginning. But she also stands as a sort of something outside of Israel, something outside
of Solomon. So even in the earliest version, she has this doubled function of someone who sort of
affirms traditional, let's say patriarchal, you know, order, but also on the flip side stands as
a symbol of a woman, female authority figure outside of Israel.
And the fact that she does both of those in the beginning,
I think is one of the reasons why we have such a multiplicity
in later centuries,
is people sort of wrestling with this central ambiguity
of her character and having a certain amount of freedom,
you'll find versions of the Queen of Sheba
where she affirms hegemonic power structures,
and you'll find versions of the Queen of Sheba where she affirms hegemonic power structures and you'll find versions of the Queen of Sheba where she is the sort of outsider who challenges
those power structures.
Those are both valid textual readings of our scriptural sources.
Gil, this has been so, so fascinating.
We've gone from the early first millennium BC or BCE, whichever you prefer, all the way
down basically to the present day.
She's such a remarkable figure.
Last but certainly not least, Gil, you have a new book coming out all about the Queen of Sheba?
I do, yes. It's called The Queen of Sheba Between the Bible and the Covered Maghast,
and I'm giving it to my publisher in just a couple of weeks.
Fantastic. Well, I'll keep an eye out for that when that finally does come out. Jill, it just
goes to me to say thank you so much for taking the time to come on the podcast today.
Thank you so much for having me on the podcast Tristan, this was a great experience.
Well there you go, there was Dr Gillian Stinchcombe talking through the story,
the legacy of the Queen of Sheba. I hope you enjoyed the episode, I loved exploring this story
of the Queen of Sheba and no doubt we'll be doing more episodes surrounding famous
tales from the Old Testament in the months and years ahead.
Thank you once again for listening to this episode of The Angels. Please follow the show
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