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Solomon Temple and other frauds
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/solomon_qa.shtml

 

King Solomon's Tablet of Stone

Questions and answers about the discovery of King Solomon's Tablet of Stone.

Programme summary

Programme transcript

What was the Temple of Solomon?

According to the Bible, it was the Israelites' first permanent 'house' of God, built specifically to house the Ark of the Covenant. The Ark, a gold covered wooden chest containing the Ten Commandments, had originally been carried by the chosen people and Moses through the desert.

When they arrived at the promised land of Canaan, they kept the Ark at the heart of the tabernacle, a tent-like structure regarded as God's dwelling place on Earth.

After King Saul unified the Israelites, they settled in Jerusalem under his successor David. It was David's son Solomon who built the luxurious temple, now known as the Temple of Solomon. Eventually it would become the Israelites' only legitimate place of worship.

In Jewish history this time is known as the First Temple period, and begins at around 1,000BC.

What evidence is there that the Temple of Solomon existed?

The only evidence is the Bible. There are no other records describing it, and to date there has been no archaeological evidence of the Temple at all. What's more, other archaeological sites associated with King Solomon - palaces, fortresses and walled cities that seemed to match places and cities from the Bible - are also now in doubt.

There is a growing sense among scholars that most of these archaeological sites are actually later than previously believed. Some now believe there may be little or no archaeological evidence of King Solomon's time at all, and doubt that he ruled the vast empire which is described in the Bible.

Why did the appearance of the stone tablet, the Jehoash inscription, cause such a sensation?

Inscriptions from the First Temple Period are extremely rare. In fact only one other royal inscription from this period has been found in Israel. The 'House of David' Victory Stele, now in the Israel Museum, contains the only reference to Solomon's father David which exists outside the Bible.

The Jehoash inscription appeared to be of even greater importance, offering the only known archaeological evidence for Solomon's most celebrated building. It also seemed to corroborate some verses in the Bible which mentioned the Temple. The description of repairs to the Temple carried out by King Jehoash corresponds closely to Kings 2 Chapter 12. This gave the Inscription potentially enormous significance.

Why did the authorities set up an inquiry?

Although the Geological Survey of Israel concluded that the Jehoash Inscription was genuine, there were a number of issues that worried archaeologists, philologists and the police.

The lack of any authenticated provenance was a major problem. No one could demonstrate where the inscription had been found, and for reputable museums that raised significant doubts. Moreover, some scholars were raising questions about the language of the inscription. Was it consistent with the Hebrew of the First Temple Period?

For the police it was a matter of law. Under Israeli law any ancient artefact discovered after 1978 belongs to the state. So if this stone was genuine and had been recently unearthed, then its sale was illegal. And if it was after all a fake, then the police wanted to find out how and where it had been produced.

Also causing concern was the discovery of a link between the inscription and another Biblical antiquity which had surfaced in Israel and enjoyed similar acclaim. This artefact was hailed as the ossuary - or bone box - of Jesus' brother. Its ancient Aramaic inscription read, 'James, Son of Joseph, Brother of Jesus', and caused a similar worldwide sensation.

It was displayed for the general public in Canada, in the Royal Ontario Museum and the exhibit received almost half a million visitors. Intriguingly, its owner was the same man who was handling the Jehoash Inscription. This coincidence prompted the Israel Antiquities Authority to set up an inquiry to examine both artefacts.

How did the discovery of marine fossils in the patina finally prove that the stone and the ossuary were fakes?

The patina is a layer on ancient stone which builds up over time as the stone reacts chemically with the soil, air or water it touches. An object which has been buried, as the Jehoash Inscription was said to be, will form a patina with the chemical signature of the soil around it. In the Judean hills around Jerusalem, the limestone in the rocks will produce a patina composed mainly of calcite (calcium carbonate).

Although chemically the patina on the Jehoash inscription and the ossuary corresponded very closely to a natural patina from Jerusalem, investigators were astonished to discover that in both cases it contained microfossils of marine organisms called foraminifera. These occur naturally in chalk, a calcium carbonate rock which is produced at the bottom of the sea, but these fossils do not dissolve in water and so cannot occur in a calcium carbonate patina. It was clear to investigators that the patina must be an artificial chemical mix in which chalk had been ground up to produce the required calcium carbonate. The marine fossils were a clear indication of the technique the forgers had used.

Why did investigators conclude that the stone probably came from a crusader castle?

Royal monumental inscriptions were sometimes written on black, rectangular-shaped, basalt stone. The forgers clearly knew this and chose a stone which was black. But mineralogical tests showed they had made a mistake. The tablet was not basalt but the unusual stone greywacke. This type of stone is not native to Israel, and would certainly not have been found in Judah (modern Jerusalem) during the reign of King Jehoash.

In fact, the closest source for the low grade metamorphic greywacke used for the tablet is western Cyprus. Assuming the forgers would not have gone so far afield to obtain a stone tablet, investigators concluded that this Cypriot stone must have been found locally. But why would a stone from Cyprus have been found in Israel?

There seemed one obvious possibility. During the Crusades stones were used as ballast on ships. They were frequently collected from one Crusader port, including Cyprus, and used by them for construction elsewhere. The Fortress of Apollonia, only 15 kilometres up the coast from Tel Aviv, was built by the Crusaders and part of it still stands today. It contains all sorts of exotic rectangular stones - including greywacke.

It seems very probable that the forgers took one of these stones, or one from another Crusader building, knowing it to be old and weathered, and already cut to a rectangular shape. It was also the right colour, and they may never have realised their error: that the stone they had chosen would not have been found in Israel in Biblical times.

What effect has the discovery of this elaborate fake had on the world of archaeology?

Police now suspect that artefacts produced by the same team of forgers may have reached collections and museums all over the world. The same investigators have found many other objects to be fakes. Some Israeli archaeologists are concerned that the whole archaeological record has been seriously contaminated and distorted by the forgers' activities.

They are now suggesting that everything which came on to the antiquities market in Israel in the last 20 years without a clear and unambiguous provenance should be considered a fake unless proven otherwise.



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JEWISH TEMPLES NEVER EXISTED, SAYS TOP PALESTINIAN NEGOTIATOR

Official leading peace talks claims Israel trying to 'invent' historical Jerusalem link

Published: 11/06/2008author-imageAARON KLEIN

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2008/11/80382/#OpxBXl3FZ6hZx5QI.99JERUSALEM – The Jewish Temples never existed and Israel has been working to “invent” a Jewish historical connection to Jerusalem, the chief Palestinian negotiator asserted.

Ahmed Qurei, the Palestinian Authority official leading all peace talks with the Jewish state, made the controversial statements in a small media briefing Wednesday attended by WND as well as by a Palestinian media outlet and an Arab affairs correspondent for a major Israeli newspaper.

 

But the Israeli publication decided not to print Qurei’s comments, while the Palestinian publication, the Al-Ayam daily newspaper, made news of the remarks.

Qurei said “Israeli occupation authorities are trying to find a so-called Jewish historical connection” between Jerusalem and the Temple Mount, “but all these attempts will fail. The [Temple Mount] is 100 percent Muslim.”

 

“The world must be mobilized against all these Israeli attempts to change the symbols and signs of Jerusalem,” he said. “There is nothing Jewish about the Al Aqsa Mosque. There was no so-called Jewish Temple. It’s imaginary. Jerusalem is 100 percent Muslim.”

Continued Qurei: “The Arab world is called to interfere to stop the Israeli plans in Jerusalem, to stop the Israeli attempts to create a Jewish character to Jerusalem and the Al Aqsa mosque. Also to the Old City, which is the first step in the war to defend Jerusalem and Al Aqsa.

“They are competing against time in order to create facts on ground in the surrounding the imaginary Temple,” Qurei added.

The chief Palestinian negotiator was reacting to the reopening last month of a long-closed synagogue just 100 meters from the Temple Mount. The holy structure, located in what is now known as the Muslim Quarter, was abandoned in 1938 in the wake of extreme Arab violence targeting Jews. At the time, thousands of Jews lived in the Quarter. The synagogue is closer than any other Jewish house of prayer to the Temple Mount.

Qurei, who is considered moderate by U.S. and Israeli policy, has been leading talks with Israel initiated at last November’s U.S.-sponsored Annapolis Summit, which seeks to create a Palestinian state, at least on paper, before President Bush leaves office. Israel is widely expected to offer the Palestinians near complete control of the West Bank and significant control of undisclosed parts of eastern Jerusalem.

Holiest site

The Temple Mount is the holiest site in Judaism. The First Jewish Temple was built there by King Solomon in the 10th century B.C. It was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C. The Second Temple was rebuilt in 515 B.C. after Jerusalem was freed from Babylonian captivity. That temple was destroyed by the Roman Empire in A.D. 70. Each temple stood for a period of over four centuries.

The Jewish Temple was the center of religious Jewish worship. It housed the Holy of Holies, which contained the Ark of the Covenant and was said to be the area upon which God’s shechina or “presence” dwelt. All Jewish holidays centered on worship at the Temple. The Jewish Temple served as the primary location for the offering of sacrifices and was the main gathering place for the Jewish people.

According to the Talmud, the world was created from the foundation stone of the Temple Mount. The site is believed to be the biblical Mount Moriah, the location where Abraham fulfilled God’s test to see if he would be willing to sacrifice his son Isaac.

Jewish tradition holds Mashiach, or the Jewish Messiah, will return and rebuild the third and final Temple on the Mount in Jerusalem.

The Kotel, or Western Wall, is the one part of the Temple Mount that survived the destruction of the Second Temple by the Romans and stands today in Jerusalem.

Throughout all notorious Jewish exiles, thorough documentation shows the Jews never gave up their hope of returning to Jerusalem and re-establishing their Temple. To this day, Jews worldwide pray facing the Western Wall, while Muslims turn their backs away from the Temple Mount and pray toward Mecca.

The Al Aqsa Mosque was constructed around A.D. 709 to serve as a shrine near another shrine, the Dome of the Rock, which was built by an Islamic caliph.

About 100 years ago, the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem became associated with the place Muslims came to believe Muhammad ascended to heaven. Jerusalem, however, is not mentioned in the Quran.

Islamic tradition states Muhammad took a journey in a single night from “a sacred mosque” – believed to be in Mecca in southern Saudi Arabia – to “the farthest mosque,” and from a rock there ascended to heaven to receive revelations from Allah that became part of the Quran.

Palestinians today claim exclusivity over the Temple Mount, and Palestinian leaders routinely deny Jewish historic connection to the site, but historically, Muslims did not claim the Al Aqsa Mosque as their third holiest site and admitted the Jewish Temples existed.

According to research by Israeli author Shmuel Berkovits, Islam previously disregarded Jerusalem. He points out in his book “How Dreadful Is this Place!” that Muhammad was said to loathe Jerusalem and what it stood for. Berkovits wrote that Muhammad made a point of eliminating pagan sites of worship and sanctifying only one place – the Kaaba in Mecca – to signify the unity of God.

As late as the 14th century, Islamic scholar Taqi al-Din Ibn Taymiyya, whose writings influenced the Wahhabi movement in Arabia, ruled that sacred Islamic sites are to be found only in the Arabian Peninsula and that “in Jerusalem, there is not a place one calls sacred, and the same holds true for the tombs of Hebron.”

It wasn’t until the late 19th century – incidentally when Jews started immigrating to Palestine – that some Muslim scholars began claiming Muhammad tied his horse to the Western Wall and associated Muhammad’s purported night journey with the Temple Mount. A guide to the Temple Mount by the Supreme Muslim Council in Jerusalem published in 1925 listed the Mount as the site of Solomon’s Temple. The Temple Institute acquired a copy of the official 1925 “Guide Book to Al-Haram Al-Sharif,” which states on page 4, “Its identity with the site of Solomon’s Temple is beyond dispute. This, too, is the spot, according to universal belief, on which ‘David built there an altar unto the Lord.’”

 

 


To interview Aaron Klein, contact M. Sliwa Public Relations by e-mail, or call 973-272-2861 or 212-202-4453.


Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2008/11/80382/#OpxBXl3FZ6hZx5QI.99



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King Solomon's Tablet

http://encyclopediaegypt.com/israel/s-temple.htm

National Geographic

heb-org.jpg

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I took this transcript from closed capturing. Some times words are goofed up if you see any errors, let me know and I will fix them before I finish this page.

The transcript is cook because you have time to study, but the video is great. If you live here in the USA you may be able to borrow this from the library.

Most of National Geographic videos can be purchased from their site.

If you want a lesson on fake artifacts, this "Jewish" cat exposed some of their tricks.

Red = I am not sure what these words are.

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This video shows how "Jews" concoct fake artifacts and sell them to gullible people for thousands, hundreds of thousands.

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Narrator: An archaeological bombshell, one that might solve one of the greatest biblical riddles of time. Did the temple of Solomon really exist? Archaeologists and scholars explore, king Solomon's tablet. In Jerusalem during the summer of 2001 a secret meeting took place that would shake the world of archaeology. Boaz Gaon: The story starts when this very renowned professor receives a mysterious phone call from a person by the name of Izak Tsur. He's asked to meet him with another renowned professor. This person appears with a briefcase. He opens up the briefcase and very dramatically takes out this beautiful black stone with an inscription on it. They look at the stone and it's beautiful, it's important, they're amazed.

Narrator: The mysterious stranger was a private investigator. And the inscription on his black stone was in ancient Hebrew. What it revealed was a wonder. For the inscription seemed to answer one of the great questions of archaeology. That nearly 3,000 years ago, in the center of Jerusalem, there really had existed the place the bible calls, "the house of the lord," the magnificent temple of Solomon. Professor Hurowitz: The biblical tradition tells that when Solomon built the temple and dedicated it, the first thing he did was he brought into the temple the ark of the covenant.

Narrator: The temple was built to house the ark of the covenant the shrine containing the ten commandments the word of god written in stone. The bible describes the temple of Solomon in awe-struck terms. The main room was paneled with cedar and overlaid with fine gold. The king also ordered his workers to make two winged cherubim and cover them with gold. Professor Hurowitz: According to the biblical story, the temple in Jerusalem lasted from the time of Solomon in the 10th century until it was destroyed in 586 BC by the armies of king Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon.

Narrator: And that has been the source of the mystery ever since. For even though the bible describes Solomon as the grandest of the old testament kings with a mighty empire, no physical trace of him, his empire or his temple has survived. The bible said Solomon's temple stood on mount Moriah, in the heart of Jerusalem. Today one of Islam's holiest mosques stands there. At its edge is the western wall, where Jews from around the world come to offer their prayers. But this wall was never part of the temple of Solomon. It was actually built almost a thousand years after Solomon. With this lack of evidence, some archaeologists began to doubt much of the Solomon story. Professor Finkelstein: There are a few pottery shells from the 10th century on the ground, a wall here and there maybe, but nothing monumental. We are left with no archaeological evidence for the great kingdom of Solomon. We are left only with the text, and the text was put in writing relatively late.

Narrator: But all that was before the discovery of the stone. A few months after the private investigator revealed the stone in the Jerusalem hotel, he took it to one of the country's leading scientific establishes the geological survey of Israel. Here, experts were asked to determine the stone's authenticity on behalf of its anonymous owner. One of the first things scholars noticed was that the stone was black, like Israel's only other royal inscription from the same period. Then they looked at the wording of the inscription.

This described detailed building repairs to a temple carried out by a king Jehoash, who had lived a century after the time of Solomon, while his temple still stood. The bible describes similar repairs to the temple of Solomon, carried out by king Joash. The passage in kings 2, chapter 12 begins by describing king Jehoash raising money for the repairs. Professor Hurowitz: "Jehoash said to the priests, all the money, current money brought into the house of the lord as sacred donations, have it donated for the repair of the house."

Narrator: Similarly, the inscription showed Jehoash raising money for repairs . Professor Hurowitz: "I Jehoash son of Ahaziah king of the land ofJudah, when the vow of each person in the land and in the desert was fulfilled to give silver of the holy offerings aplenty."

Narrator: Then, when the money was raised, the bible continues. Professor Hurowitz: "They in turn shall strengthen the damage in the house wherever damage may be found."

Narrator: And the stone said. Professor Hurowitz: I repaired the construction and I made the repairs in the temple and the walls all around.

Narrator: Professor Hurowitz was sure the stone and the bible were describing the same events. Professor Hurowitz: I think that we're speaking about the same royal act of repairs in the temple and the language is also rather similar.

Narrator: So, according to both the bible and the stone, king Jehoash first raised the funds and then repaired the temple of Solomon, one hundred years after it was built. But the scientists at the geological survey still needed to be absolutely sure that the stone could have come from the temple of Solomon. So the geologists subjected it to rigorous tests. Using a scanning electron microscope, they set out to determine its authenticity. First they looked at the patina a thin surface layer that forms over time on the outside of a rock or stone. Dr. Ayalon: If we see in this sample we have a very thin brown layer, about 1 mm thick, that covers the sample.

Narrator: The formation of a patina is caused by the interaction of chemicals in air, water or soil, with h minerals in the stone itself. Dr. Ayalon: In this one, we see the brown and we can see that it may be thicker or thinner, but it covers all around and, goes all around the sample.

Narrator: A patina develops slowly and may take thousands of years to form. The geologists studying the stone found that the patina was continuous across the front of the stone and crucially within the inscribed letters. They concluded the inscription must have been carved in the distant past. Next, the geologists analyzed the chemical make-up of the patina. They were looking for calcium carbonate and other chemicals, which would tell them if it had formed in the Jerusalem area. Dr. Ayalon: They found that the trace elements like strontium, iron, magnesium, and other elements that are in the calcium carbonate, they were exactly the same proportions as in the patina in the Jerusalem area.

Narrator: The patina tests indicated that the stone came from Jerusalem and that the inscription really was very old. The big question now was, how old? Although it was impossible to date the stone itself, remarkably, within the patina there were minute particles of charcoal and these could be carbon dated. The results were conclusive: They were 2,300 years old, so the carving beneath the patina had to be even older. Here seemed to be no doubt the stone came from the Jerusalem area, and the inscription was thousands of years old. And there was one last discovery that reinforced the conclusion that it came from the temple of Solomon.

The patina contained tiny flecks of gold, just what one might expect from a stone that had been through a fire in a temple lined with gold. In January 2003 the geological survey officially pronounced the stone to be genuine. Finally, the existence of Solomon's magnificent temple might be confirmed. And the implications were staggering. If the temple existed, the legend of king Solomon was true. And if that legend were proved to be true, an extraordinary section of the bible could be verified as history. Coming up next. Where was this relic discovered?

You don't have t for millions of people of different faiths the authentication of the stone tablet was a fantastic affirmation of their belief. Here was a remarkable archaeological find that correlated almost word for word with a biblical episode that happened nearly 3,000 years ago. But for the stone itself, the next stage was to find a fitting home. And one place seemed ideal: The Israel museum in Jerusalem. This remarkable museum is home to a stunning collection of biblical antiquities. They have the dead sea scrolls, the most important biblical manuscripts in existence. They also have one of Israel's only other royal inscriptions from close to the time of Solomon, the 'house of David' stele. This is thought to be the only reference to Solomon's father, David, that exists outside the bible.

The stone would be a fitting companion for these priceless artifacts. With its authenticity apparently confirmed the stone was offered for sale to the Israel museum. The price was rumored to be high. But before the museum would part with several million dollars, it wanted to know just one more thing, where exactly had the stone been found? The bible said that Solomon's temple had been situated on Jerusalem's temple mount. So the stone must have come from there originally. James Snyder: If an object is excavated then you have a much simpler time verifying its authenticity because you are taking it from its source of excavation.

Narrator: However, there are no official excavations on the temple mount, because it is home to one of Islam's holiest shrines, the dome of the rock. The whole area is politically far too sensitive for archaeology. Still, rumors said the stone had been found in rubble left from recent illegal building projects being carried out on the temple mount. But James Snyder needed more than rumor. He wanted the full story of the stone after it had been found. James Snyder: You want to be able to track the history of the object from the time of its excavation, if it is possible to do so, through its history of ownership until it comes to you.

Narrator: It was then that the saga of the stone became very mysterious indeed. Just when the museum wanted to do their own checks, both the private investigator who had first revealed it, and the stone, disappeared. So Amir Ganor an investigator with the Israeli antiquities authority was called in. For nine months he searched for the man who had first taken the stone to the Jerusalem hotel. Amir Ganor: We traveled all over Israel from the north to the south. That detective was a very wily person, he left us very few clues. In the end we found him in an office in Ramat Gan and he told us that he'd been hired by Oded Golan.

Narrator: Oded Golan is a businessman and renowned collector, owner of one of Israel's largest private collections of antiquities. He explained that he wasn't the owner of the stone and that he didn't know where it was. He had just been involved as a middleman. Oded Golan: Sometime during 1999 I was called by a very reliable Palestinian dealer that I knew for many years who ask me to assist him in selling an inscription. It seemed to be very interesting and I was ready to assist him only under one condition, that it will be offered only within Israel and to a museum in Israel after they will authentic it.

Narrator: Golan said that the owner hadn't wanted to be identified, which was why he'd hired a private detective. However, the owner had since died and his widow had the stone. But she was somewhere in the occupied territories and Golan didn't know how to contact her. But Oded Golan did offer one vital piece of information, where the stone had been discovered. Oded Golan: It was found very near to the eastern wall in the Muslim cemetery in old Jerusalem outside the temple mount.

Narrator: It was stunning news. Golan claimed that the stone had been unearthed just yards from where the bible said that Solomon's temple had once stood. But then, the story of the stone took another remarkable turn. The reason, another, ancient biblical artifact. Something called an ossuaryor bone box. Jewish families once used ossuaries to store the bones of the dead in caves and burial chambers. They were commonly used in Jerusalem, and can still be found in caves today.

In 2002, one very special ossuary appeared. Inscribed on the side were the words 'James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus.' It was heralded as the first physical evidence of the existence of Jesus Christ and caused a worldwide sensation. It was displayed for the general public in Canada in the royal Ontario museum, and the exhibit received almost 100,000 visitors. And strangely, the owner was Oded Golan. Journalist Boaz Gaon foundGolan's connection to both the stone and the ossuary just too good to be true. Boaz Gaon: As soon as we made the link we knew that something is sort of very strange here because the same collector seemed to be linked to these two incredibly dramatic artifacts. It either was an extremely wonderful stroke of luck or something very suspicious.

Narrator: The Israeli authorities were also suspicious, they raided Golan's apartment and storehouses. There they found the ossuary, perched on a toilet. And they also unearthed the elusive stone. Could this find be a fake? When king Solomon's tablet returns. With the artifacts now in their possession, the authorities set up a committee of linguists and scientists, to determine once and for all the authenticity of the ossuary and the stone. Victor Hurowitz, Israel's leading expert on royal building inscriptions, was asked to examine the writing on the stone. Professor victor Hurowitz: The language and therefore the style of the inscription is biblical Hebrew. It's eloquent, it's elegant, it's charming. I enjoy reading it.

Narrator: But examined it more closely he found something that didn't quite make sense. It was all to do with the key phrase, "I made repairs to the temple" or in Hebrew, "bedek a baied ." Professor victor Hurowitz: The main problem in this inscription is this expression "bedek a baied." In one word, this is an anachronism.

Narrator: According to professor Hurowitz, "bedek a baied," had a different meaning in the time of the temple of Solomon then the meaning it has today. In modern Hebrew it means to repair, but in ancient Hebrew it meant the exact opposite, to damage. S it's use in this inscription made no sense at all. Professor victor Hurowitz: "Bedek a baied," which means, if I translate, "I made damages to the temple." Now this in a royal building inscription, where the king is taking pride in what he's done in the temple repairs, to say that he damaged the temple is absolutely ridiculous.

Narrator: Victor Hurowitz now had real doubts that the stone had been inscribed in the time of Solomon's temple, almost 3,000 years ago . Professor victor Hurowitz: Unfortunately for the author, where it gets to the main part of the inscription and says i made the bedek a baied, he fouled up and he put in modern Hebrew.

Narrator: But not everyone agreed with Hurowitz's interpretation. Professor Chaim Cohen is another expert in ancient Hebrew. He believes that there re so few texts discovered from the time of Solomon that no one can be sure how the language was used 3,000 years ago. It was simply the way the stone had been found that made everyone suspicious. Professor Chaim Cohen: Had the inscription been found in controlled archaeological excavations it would have prompted scholars to say that now we must re-look at the way we've been seeing the vocalization in our Hebrew bibles to date. If it is a forgery, then the forger must have been a near genius as far as the level of sophistication that we find in this inscription.

Narrator: The linguistic evidence was inconclusive. There was still no reason to doubt that the stone had come from the temple of Solomon. Everything now hinged on the investigations of the scientists on the committee. The focus of their attention was the patina, the weathered layer on the outside of the stone; especially the charcoal particles that had been dated to 2,300 years ago. It was this that had convinced the scientists who had carried out the original analysis. Elisabetta Boaretto was asked to re-date these particles. Dr. Elisabetta Boaretto: The radiocarbon age was 2,250 plus/minus 40 years. This is a very nice precise age, and calibrated this corresponded to an interval in time that goes from 200 BC, before Christ, to 390 BC.

Narrator: Her results seemed to confirm the original research, the charcoal in the patina was very old. But, it was theoretically possible for someone to have to taken charcoal from another source and added it to the patina. For Dr. Boaretto, the only way to be absolutely sure of the stone was to look again at the patina in which the charcoal was embedded. Science uncovers the final clue. When king Solomon's tablet continues on national geographic channel presents.

One of Israel's top archaeological investigators, Yuval Goren was charged with verifying the age of the relic. Goren, a professor of archaeology at Tel Aviv university and a geologist, has a detailed knowledge of both biblical archaeology and the rocks of the Jerusalem area. Prof Goren: This patina on the back of the stone is, actually it was very tightly connected to the stone. We needed a little chisel and a hammer to peel off small samples of the patina.

Narrator: This appeared to be a natural patina. But then professor Goren examined it under the microscope. He expected it to be made of calcium carbonate, which is local to the temple mount. But what he saw was this, a patina made only of silica. This could not have formed in Jerusalem. Puzzled, professor Goren turned his attention to the patina covering the inscription on the front of the stone. Here, he did find calcium carbonate, just as one would expect of a patina formed in Jerusalem. But now there was a new mystery, how could the patina on the front of the stone be different from that on the back?

The answer began to emerge as professor Goren sampled the patina from within the carved letters. Strangely, it didn't seem to be bonded to the stone in any natural way at all. Prof Goren: The patina is very loosely connected to the stone. Here we can see how it reacts to me scraping it with a match stick and you can see that it easily peels off the letters as opposed again to the patina on the back side.

Narrator: And when he studied the patina on the front of the stone in detail he found something else even stranger, tiny marine fossils, called forams. Prof Goren: Within the patina they are quite common, here we can see one, and here we can see another two.

Narrator: These fossils could only be found if the patina formed beneath the sea. And the temple of Solomon was nowhere near the sea. Prof Goren: Of course one can't expect to find such fossils of plankton, of marine organisms, in patina that is created in the land environment.

Narrator: This was now a complete mystery. It seemed impossible for a patina from a temple built in Jerusalem to contain the fossils of sea creatures. Then came, the most telling detail of all. Prof Goren: When the letters are cleared, the inner part of the letter is exposed d and as you can see here it is very freshly cut, you can see even the little lines, the little parallel lines of the chisel, or even maybe some drill, some electric bit or drill with which the letters were engraved, which is of course very unusual for ancient inscriptions.

Narrator: So he put it all together, the inscription had been recently carved. There were two different patinas. And the one on the front contained marine fossils, impossible if it had formed in Jerusalem. He concluded the patina on the front of the stone was artificial, a mixture to which gold and iron age charcoal had been added by hand. Prof Goren: And therefore I believe that the stone, or not the stone of course, but the inscription is not genuine.

Narrator: Alarmed Ywh he'd found with the stone, professor Goren turned his attention to the James ossuary. Again he found a similar story, a freshly cut inscription with an artificial patina applied over the top. On the 18th of June 2003, the Israeli authorities delivered their conclusion. Dr.Dahari: Good day to you, to all of us. The patina in the letters in both items is a modern forgery covering the letters. The conclusion is that the two inscriptions are modern inscriptions. This is a forgery, totally, without any doubt about it.

Narrator: The two most important biblical finds in a generation were proven to be fakes. There as no archaeological proof for the existence of Jesus Christ. There was no evidence for the existence of the temple of Solomon. Unraveling the forgery. When king Solomon's tablet continues. There was now outrage in the world of Israeli archaeology.

How had the forgers succeeded in fooling some of the country's top scholars? How had they managed to pull it off? Yuval Goren, whose work had helped expose the forgery, was determined to find the answers. Prof Goren: Forgeries are a contamination of science, of archaeology as a science. Science is being biased, history is being biased, archaeology is being biased, and there is, the more sources like that appeal, forged, fake sources like that appeal, of course science is more distorted.

Narrator: He began his investigations with the black stone itself. His analysis showed stone was of a rock type that was not indigenous to Israel. He knew to make an inscription the forgers had needed an old black rock already cut to a rectangular shape, and he thought he'd worked out how they had acquired it. Just up the coast from Tel Aviv is an old crusader fortress. The stones in its walls have already been cut to shape. Some of them are black. And many are not local, the crusaders brought them here.

Prof Goren: Ships that used to come to this place were loaded sometimes with ballast stones, to hold them balanced, and then they used to unload them, and so these stones were in many cases reused for buildings. This stone is a dark stone, it's obviously not a local stone to this area, which is already carved, it was probably carved to its rectangular shape in order to place it as the dressing of this wall, and so somebody coming to such a place could find dark stones like that, that are already made up to a rectangular flat shape.

Narrator: Professor Goren was now certain: The stone used for the inscription must have come from this, or a similar, crusader fort. But for the forgers, getting hold of an old stone of the right shape was just the first step in making an inscribed tablet capable of fooling the experts. The team of forgers must have included a scholar of ancient Hebrew, to write the elegant inscription.

Then they would have needed a master stone carver who could inscribe it. But above all, the thing they had to get right, was the patina. Just how had it been possible to concoct a mixture that had convinced Israel's top geologists that it was an ancient patina from Jerusalem's temple mount? To solve this puzzle the investigating authorities brought in geochemist Avner Ayalon. He dissolved samples of the patina in acid to produce a gas containing different types of oxygen atoms called isotopes.

Each isotope has its own unique atomic weight, and the quantity of each isotope in the gas can be determined using a mass spectrometer. Measuring the ratio of these different isotopes tells doctor Ayalon the temperature at which a patina has formed. His results were revealing. The patina on both the inscription and the ossuary had formed at temperatures far too hot for them to have occurred naturally. Dr. Ayalon: The temperature which I calculated, 40 to 50 centigrade, for sure, it is much higher than natural temperatures that prevailed in the Jerusalem area in the last 3,000 years.

Narrator: This high temperature as high as 120 degrees Fahrenheit gave Dr. Ayalon a clue as to how the patina had been formed. He believes the ingredients of the patina must have been ground up, with hot water being added to help them dissolve. One of the crucial ingredients was chalk. It was this that had provided the calcium carbonate for the patina. It also explained why forams had been found. They are very common fossils in chalk.

The patina mix also included a little bit of soil from the Jerusalem area, some gold and some iron age charcoal. These were masterly touches introduced by someone who knew exactly what would convince the experts. In the summer of 2003, after one of the biggest archaeological investigations in Israeli police history, Oded Golan was taken into custody. It was then that investigators realized they could be dealing with more than just the stone and the ossuary. When police searched Golan's apartment they found a hidden workshop filled with tools and half made artifacts.

There was this large dark stone, very like the stone used for the temple of Solomon inscription. Then there were these tools, including a drill and drill bits. And there were also boxes of soil that could be used in a fake patina. But what was most suspicious were the artifacts. Some were in the early stages of preparation, like this casting for a bronze statue. And some appeared finished, like these royal seals, or bullaeBoaz Gaon: What happened was that the Jehoash inscription revealed this Pandora's box filled with antiques and artifacts that have been sold to various museums and various collectors for various very large sums of money during the past 10 or 15 years.

Narrator: The implications of this were immense. Collectors around the world had paid thousands of dollars for supposedly ancient seals, painted pottery shards and other artifacts that came through Oded Golan's associates. Dozens of these items have now been examined by professor Goren, and all have been revealed to be forgeries. Police now suspect that artifacts made by the same team of forgers have found their way into leading museums around the world.

Boaz Gaon: The interesting question is now, from the list of artifacts that are currently shown in various museums in Israel, in London, in new York, in Paris, are they fake? Are they authentic? If Oded Golan was linked to any of them does that mean that they are forged? And this is going to be dramatic. Professor Finkelstein: Everything which came to the market in the last 20 years or so, things which did not come from an excavation, should probably be considered a fake unless otherwise proven.

Narrator: It is a deeply shocking revelation. And beyond that, there is something even more disturbing. The forgers were playing on the desire of millions of people to see the bible confirmed as history. It is an immensely cruel and cynical thing to have done. And for those in search of Solomon and his great temple, it means their goal is as far away as ever.

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Transcript words not found in the common dictionary:

Ahaziah, Amir, Avner, Ayalon, Boaretto, Boaz, Chaim, Cohen, Dahari, Elisabetta, Finkelstein, Gan, Ganor, Gaon, Golan, Golan's, Goren, Hurowitz, Hurowitz's, Izak, Jehoash, Joash, Judah, Moriah, Nebuchadnezzar, Oded, Ramat, Snyder, Tsur, Yuval, Ywh, aplenty, baied, bedek, bullae, forams, geochemist, ossuaries, ossuary



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http://prophetess.lstc.edu/~rklein/Doc6/dsmyth.htm

King David and King Solomon: History or Myth 

Contents Updated: Monday, October 11, 1999

David appears in Egypt?

King David, the killer of Goliath, the Philistine giant, and founder of the Jewish state, is such a part of our own mythology of the western world after 2000 years of enforced reading of the Hebrew scriptures we have in the Christian Old Testament, that it might surprise people to know that the main evidence we have that he ever lived is… the Jewish scriptures! Philip R Davies of Sheffield University says bluntly, "King David is about as historical as King Arthur."

Surely this is a surprise, after all David is supposed to have become a noted person in the Ancient Near East, setting up what was briefly a substantial empire stretching from Egypt to Anatolia under his son King Solomon. Surely then, the records and correspondence of nearby nations must have said more about him, and the evidence left in his own country must have been substantial. In fact, the evidence outside the bible of most of what is in it is hard to find. The bible is the only written source concerning the so-called United Monarchy, and so it is the source of any historical presentation of the period. No one until recently has been bold enough to question the bible!

So far, archaeology has confirmed the existence of only the following kings of Israel and Judah: Omri, Ahab, Jehu, Jeroboam II, Pekah, Hoshea, Ahaz, Hezekiah and Manasseh—a mere nine out of 43, or ten if David is included. Many are minor figures in a minor country but David was the founder of an empire and a house that supposedly still could be traced a thousand years later. More of even the minor figures might have been expected to have been mentioned in Egyptian, Assyrian and Babylonian records.

Recently, some "scholars" of biblical "history" claim that archaeological discoveries verify that David, king of Israel, was historical. The name of king David has been found on an Egyptian inscription from the tenth century BC. In conventional terms, in the 15th century BC, Pharaoh Thutmose III initiated the practice of carving on the walls of the great temple of Amun in Karnak, Upper Egypt, the names of territories he conquered, or over which he claimed dominion. The last of the Egyptian rulers to follow this custom was the tenth-century BC pharaoh Sheshonq I, who biblical scholars believe is the Pharaoh Shishak of the Bible (1 Kings 14:25 and elsewhere). Sheshonq campaigned in Palestine in 925 BC. In the following year, he had a vast triumph-scene, including over a hundred place-names, carved on the exterior south wall of the temple of Amun.

Kenneth Kitchen of the University of Liverpool, says David is the likely reading of a name in Sheshonq's hieroglyphic list. Yet, even if genuine, this is only the third time king David has been found mentioned in ancient inscriptions. Chronological revisers place Sheshonq almost 200 years after Kitchen's date, so even if the appearance is true, it is not close to the time of the biblical David, but 300 years later, time for legends to be arising.

Kitchen jeers that this dating of Shoshenq puts David in the middle of the long and successful career of Rameses II, and to extend his empire to the Euphrates, David would also have been up against Hattusil III of the Hittites, who concluded a peace with Rameses with whom he had been warring for a long time. Thus the land between, Palestine, would have been hardly the place to found an empire. Kitchen asks:

Is it even remotely conceivable that these two formidable rulers should just sit idly by, cowering with armies in mothballs, while some upstart prince from Jerusalem's hills calmly carved out three-quarters of their hotly-disputed territories (and revenues) for himself? This is sheer fantasy…

"It's the way you tell 'em." Er, no. But Kitchen cannot even begin to imagine that David is a mythical and not a real man. In fact, the abolition of Jewish mythical history and its consequences in Egyptian Chronology brings Merenptah within a few decades of Omri, the historical founder of Israel. His boasting stele, conventionally dated to about 1200 BC, would better be put about 950 BC. He was putting down the Israelites, it seems, but not long after, they succeeded in forging their own little kingdom under Omri. 

Lack of Sure Evidence that David Existed

Much vaunted as the clearest is in the ninth century BC Tel Dan inscription found in fragments of a monument in 1993 by Israeli archaeologist Avraham Biran. Needless to say, information about the place of discovery of the first Tel Dan fragment is contradictory. Was it part of a wall or part of the adjacent pavement?—important information for dating since the pavement seems to be older than the wall. R Chapman says the stele, historically dated to 825-800 BC, came from a level conventionally dated to the 10th or 11th centuries BC. If so, Israelite dates will have to be reduced by two centuries, making David a contemporary of Jehu—unless he is a myth, that is.

Written in Aramaic, the find seems to be a victory stele celebrating the victory of an Aramean king over Judah and Israel. It does not speak of David but to bytdwd, interpreted as Beit David or the House of David. The supposed name of David in the Egyptian inscription is a hundred years earlier, less than 50 years after David's death.

The Tel Dan fragments are suspiciously fresh in their clarity. Unlike other old stelae in which the cuts are damaged, there seems little sign of such natural wear even though the monument had been broken into pieces and incorporated into a wall where it had lain weathering for almost three millennia.

The stone was reused in a temple complex that was destroyed about 733 BC by the Assyrian, Tiglath Pileser III. Pottery suggests it was put in place in the wall about 850 BC. It could only have been written by Aramaeans then destroyed by Israelites in this time if it had a short life of only a decade or so (Omri to Ahab). Yet the palaeographic date is a century later according to Professor Giovanni Garbini.

Garbini notes several other anomalies in the language of the text all of which suggest to him that a forger has been at work, though he does not suggest it is the archaeologist. Why does it speak all about Israelites though it is an Aramaic inscription? Hadad is mentioned once but Israel three times and, of course, bytdwd too. That it is written as one word by an Aramaean is odd. For a small fragment, it is peculiarly informative when such stelae are usually hard to place and interpret. Garbini considers these peculiarly fortunate elements as not conducive to accepting it as genuine.

Even the content is strangely parallel to the Moabite inscription as if it formed a template, except that no suitable towns in Dan were known to replace the towns of the Moabite stone. There are other similarlities with the Zakur inscription, that the style seems to copy, even down to punctuation.

Garbini summaries: It isn't the first time that we have been faced with epigraphic forgeries, all characterised by a precise ideological matrix: that of giving an extra-biblical foundation to the facts and people found in the Old Testament, when its essentially religious and ideological nature does not necessarily entail that those people and events described there really occurred in history, as we conceive history now. It is unlikely that it is by chance that the production of epigraphic forgeries has intensified in inverse proportion to the progressive decline of Albrightian optimism regarding the confirmation that facts provided by "biblical archaeology" bring to the text of the Bible.

The French palaeographer, André Lemaire, claims an even less clear reference to the House of David in the long-known (discovered in 1868) but still not completely deciphered stele of king Mesha of Moab (also called the Moabite Stone), which is contemporaneous with the Tel Dan Stele. This also might refer to theHouse but the reading is unclear. Worse, the reading of David depends on a reconstruction of the initial letter of the name. It is likely to be d but no one can be sure—except Lemaire! House of David could mean, not a dynasty, but those (people) who owe allegiance to the God David and worship him at his temple (house). In a similar way, Israel could be an Egyptian word meaning sons of the God El.

The new evidence from Sheshonq's lists is that a place name in the lists is h(y)dbt dwt. The first word means "highland" or "heights." The question is how we should read the second term, dwt.

The first letter is d. The second letter seems to be w, the equivalent of the Hebrew letter waw, which can be read as the vowel o or as the consonant v. Both usages are found in the Sheshonq list (and in Hebrew generally). The third letter is clearly a t. Thus the word could theoretically be read doot or dvt enunciated as davit. Neither makes any sense except as a proper name.

Could the reading davit really be "David?" Kitchen makes the case that it can—and that it is. He has found a reference in another Semitic language in which treplaces the final d in the name of King David. This occurs in a sixth century AD Ethiopic inscription from South Arabia. The reference is unmistakably to the Biblical king David. It appears in a victory inscription by an Ethiopic ruler from Axum who had invaded South Arabia. In celebrating his triumph, the ruler cited two psalms (19 and 65) and named David in this connexion. David is spelled Davit exactly as in the Sheshonq list.

Kitchen explains that the mention of the "Heights of David" makes sense in the Sheshonq list of toponyms. Before he became king, David was a fugitive active in this area. He fled from King Saul and was joined by his fellow tribesmen and fugitives until he had a force of 400 men. His first stop was at Philistine Gath, whose ruler he would later serve. From Gath, David went to Mizpeh of Moab. From there he returned to Judah, by which time his force had increased to 600 men. He roamed about in the wilderness of Ziph, including the Hill of Hachilah, in the wilderness of Maon, in the wilderness and heights of Engedi, near the Dead Sea, and in the Arabah, the valley south of the Dead Sea, always escaping from Saul's men. Finally, David made an alliance with the Philistine king of Gath, who gave David the city of Ziklag (1 Samuel 21-30). No one knows were Ziklag was, but it must be near the Negev if not in it.

The eleven rows of Sheshonq's list of conquests is divided into three main sections, differentiated geographically. The apparent reference to David occurs in the second block of rows which are sites in south Judah and the Negev. Another name in this row is "the Terrain of Tilwan (or Tilon)." So "the Heights of David" seems to follow this structure. However, for a long time scholars thought they also saw a "field of Abraham" in the list but that is now rejected. Interpretations are far from certain.

Nevertheless, Kitchen thinks it is not surprising that a place in this region would be named the "Heights of David," given David's importance and his association with the place. Kitchen concludes:

I do not claim certainty, but there is at least a high degree of probability. David here is nothing too spectacular.

David as Legend

That then is a summary of the latest and earlier bits of archaeological evidence for the existence of king David. Because the saga of David occurs in the Holy Book it has rarely been understood as anything less than true history, but the curious lack of concrete evidence for such an amazing soldier casts doubt upon its historical truth.

The situation is quite like that of Jesus—everyone believes it is true yet the evidence amounts to some books written by people with a keen interest in propagating the truth of the myth. Indeed the bible is full of similar myths unsupported by historical or archaeological evidence that no "scholars" bother to question because they are committed religionists, bound by their own faith, fears and paymasters.

There is no unequivocal evidence outside the scriptures for Moses and the events of Mount Sinai where he received the Ten Commandments; none even for the flight from Egypt by the Israelites; none for a battle of Jericho where the walls came tumbling down because any town there at the time had no walls; indeed none for the military conquest of Canaan.

Not that David is necessarily purely mythical. He is possibly a legend rather than a myth, but either way, his exploits are much larger than his life. This is typical of myth and legend. No one knows who king Arthur was, yet volumes of astonishing mythology have been built around this romantic figure. The same applies to William Tell and Robin Hood, both likely to be entirely mythical figures of romantic legend. If there is a real man at the core of any of these myths, he has been quite hidden by all that has accreted about him.

Isn't it likely that David is the same? Possibly some Hebrew bandit, got a local name for himself and songs were written about him. Over the years the songs and the exploits grew and the central figure achieved god-like proportions. Perhaps, he began as a god, then became personified, just as the Hebrew Almighty God was also much more human in the ancient stories than the more refined Ormuzd figure of the post-exilic Jewish Priesthood.

Hershel Shanks in Biblical Archaeology Review tells us that few scholars take seriously the suggestion by Philip Davies that dwd in the Dan stele should be readDood, referring to a hitherto unknown deity. Kenneth Kitchen, the discoverer of the putative Egyptian reference to the Heights of David treats the suggestion in the bent scholar's typically puerile manner:

Surely the time has now come to celebrate Dod's funeral—permanently! There is not one scintilla of respectable, explicit evidence for his/her/its existence anywhere in the biblical and ancient Near Eastern world. No ancient king ever calls himself beloved of Dod; no temple of Dod has ever been found, and clearly identified as such by first-hand inscriptions. We have no hymns to Dod, no offering-lists for Dod, no published rituals in any ancient language for Dod, no statues of Dod, no altars, vessels, nor any other ritual piece or votive object dedicated to Dod as a clear deity. Why? Because he/she/it never existed in antiquity ... Dod is a dud deity, as dead as the Dodo—so let's dump him/her/it in well-deserved oblivion, now and henceforth!

Doubtless this is the attempt of a clever man to be funny, but in truth it shows him up as a fool. Davies's proposal is not stupid and is probably the true explanation of the legend of David, and everything that Kitchen says to disparage Dod can be applied to David if the scriptures are taken to be romance not history.

Kitchen takes advantage of the silly sound of Dod, which we will inevitably pronounce with a short vowel, like the surname of another puerile comedian from Liverpool called Ken. The vowel represented by w is long, an oo sound, doubtless the reason we call it double u which is uu pronounced oo. We find it in English in words like who which is pronounced oo, or in woman which is really the same word as human or ooman (cf Italian Uomo). So, the word dwd is not dod but dood.

Kitchen is a great Egyptologist and knows of no temple to the god, Dood, anywhere in the ancient near east, evidently giving no thought to the possibility that the Israelites or Canaanites who wrote about their hero or god, Dood, might have been pronouncing in their own fashion the name of a god known by a different pronunciation elsewhere. Since the scene is not far from Egypt and the area, as Kitchen points out, was often under Egyptian occupation, perhaps the god, Dood, was originally Egyptian.

The Egyptian god who immediately springs to mind with a similar name is, in Greek form, Thoth or originally Djehuty. The th is close in pronunciation to d and the Egyptian tells us it is hard rather than soft as the Greek suggests. We pronounce the vowel short but the Egyption tells us it was long—hu. The final consonant, from the Egyptian, is less lisped than the Greek suggests. It was probably pronounced as "jude" or "dude." Doubtless this is how "Dwd" was pronounced, and the country of "Dwd" would have been Judah. In Egypt, Thoth is often depicted as a scribe, perhaps leading to the idea that David was a cultured man who wrote psalms.

Thoth is also associated with the moon. perhaps Dood was also, so that Dood and Solomon represent the sun and the moon. And, yes, there is very little concrete evidence of a magnificent Hebrew king called Solomon, either. Both David and Solomon reigned for 40 years, but no one will deny that 40 is a magic number in the Hebrew mythology, indeed, in the mythology of the ancient near east. This alone shows that both these monarchs were being magnified in their legends, just as Arthur and Robin Hood were. 

Semantics of David

Kitchen identifies Dood with dwt on his Amun temple wall and elsewhere. Is it significant or merely a coincidence that the Egyptian for Divine was dwat. The identification of these two words with David, virtually cries out that David was originally a god.

It will be no accident that David and Divine look to have the same root. We are talking about a time in history when the Indo-Europeans had rampaged all around effecting everyone from Ireland to India. One of the marks they made everywhere was in language—they originally spoke Sanskrit, and this is the root language of many of the languages of this area until today.

Divine comes from the Sanskrit daiva, in Persian daeva or deva, originally meaning a shining one and therefore a god. Zoroaster made the devas into devils in the interests of monotheism, raising Ormuzd to the position of the Almighty God. The Hindus have devatas which also are gods or lesser gods—spirits and divyas which are supernatural powers.

Deva is related to the Sanskrit word dyaus which the Greeks propnounced as zeus and the Italians as deus or Jupiter because Dyaus Pitar was the Sanskrit God the Father.

No doubt our scholarly friends will tell us that the Hebrews were not Aryans but Semites, speaking quite a different language. Of course, the Semitic languages are different from the Indo-European group but many words were exchanged between the two groups at this time, especially in the ancient near east where the two sets of peoples had come into contact and rivalry.

The similarity between David and divine is reflected elsewhere in Hebrew. Davak means devoted to God and, in the related Semitic language, Arabic, Du'a orda'wa is to pray. Indeed, in Yiddish, davven is also to pray.

Kitchen makes a joke about the beloved of Dod presumably because it sounds daft and he knows that, in Hebrew, Dood (David) means beloved or lover. Who would be more beloved than your god or national hero? Or perhaps David began as a fertility god and was therefore literally a lover.

It is our habit to call our god by the name God. If dood originally was a Hebrew word for a god, perhaps the Hebrews of the time gave the name to their own national god. There were many gods in the world then and in Palestine too, as the scriptures repeatedly tell us, although the mindless monotheists cannot understand it. The god who came to be the god of the Jews and eventually the Christians was probably not the god of the Exodus, who was represented by the image of a bull, or a serpent or a smoking pillar.

Perhaps one of the gods they took from the period of Egyptian colonization, they called Thoth, but pronounced dood and later gave heroic deeds, or perhaps Doodwas a god they met on the way, or when they arrived in Canaan. The Canaanities had a god they called Hadad, meaning "The Loved One." Wherever, he came fromDood was, to judge by semantics, a god, and the fact that he was reduced to the hero of a national saga, does not prove otherwise. Kitchen should stop joking and do his job properly, looking for the identity of Dood in other nations. When he finds him, he will have the answer to his fatuous questions about temples, shrines and so on devoted to Dood. The very word devoted might be proof that Dood was a widespread name for God in ancient times. Many such words precede their supposed derivation.

That his deeds were magnified in typical epic fashion is proved even in the scriptures themselves. David's greatest heroic deed was killing the Philistine champion, Goliath. Or was it? the Holy Book itself does not know. 2 Samuel tells us it was Elhanan who killed the giant. Common sense, but not absurd belief, should convince us that someone has attributed Elhanan's deed to David, the hero. That is how legends grow. Legendary deeds are never transferred to lesser men!

Incidentally, while Kitchen is joking about Dod being as dead as a dud dodo or whatever it was, does he realise that One of David's 30 champions was called Dodo, doubtless a variant or diminutive of Dood? I suppose we must assume that a scholar like him must know, but he sounds as though he did not. That's a hazard for clever people trying to be funny. 

Monarchy

The Persians were intent on setting up a theocracy but there had been a period of monarchy in Israel and the administrator-priests had to explain it within their theocratic historical framework. If God's people wanted a king then they should have a king to teach them a lesson. Saul's history was written as a warning that a theocracy should not want kings. The institution of the monarchy in 1 Samuel chapters 7-13 was shown as a blasphemy against God leading to innumerable punishments, the overthrow of the monarchy and "Exile" (if there ever was one). Only the saviour of the Jews, Cyrus, allowed righteous Jews to "return" to their homeland!

Saul is depicted as a bad king, incompetent and disobedient to God. He reigned only two years according to 1 Samuel 13:1, and then God replaced him with his own choice. God designates David as king and the Merlin of the time, Samuel, anointed him. 

David and Solomon

Caetano Minette de Tillesse thought that the stories of the accession of David and Solomon served the purpose of unifying the disparate tribes of Israel. The author thinks the histories are genuinely tenth century BC because no later editor could have had the aim of uniting an already united kingdom. That is plainly false. The kingdom was not united after the "return" as the Bible makes clear and the Persian administrators had a purpose in using a historical romance to give a basis to unity. The later Hellenistic editors had even more reason at the time of the setting up of the independent Judah by the Hasmonaeans. The core of the romance might be a tenth century romance but the style alone is sufficient to show that it has been edited by a refined editor at a much later date. The obvious times were during the priesthood of the "second" temple and more especially during Hasmonaean times.

The stories of Solomon's and David's accessions, from 1 Sam 4:1b to 1 Kings 8, are strictly parallel to one another. The story of the Ark is the framework of both histories. These romances are reminiscent of the Arthurian legends in which the heroes are replaced by David and Solomon, Samuel is Merlin and the Ark is the Holy Grail.

The accession of David starts with the disaster of the Ark of Israel being taken by the Philistines. The Ark of the God of War, "the Lord of hosts," cannot save Israel from its enemies. The symbolism is that the foreign aggressors have usurped the god of Israel. The tide of history was to nationhood (1 Sam 8:5) but God was the proper king of Israel and he instructs Samuel to make it clear what hardships having a king will mean to them (1 Sam 8;7-8). Kingship is here tied to apostasy and that is what the Maccabees claimed to be fighting. All of this is expressed in terms of some early story of tribal nomads determining to be a people.

While the tenth century core might have had some substance, the later editors had their own purpose. The country had to be unified but the priests wanted a theocracy so that they were the real rulers, and the kings were disparaged. The fate of Israel was bracketed between the loss of the Ark to the Philistines for lack of a king, and the fall of the City to the Babylonians through the faults of the kings. "Exile" was blamed on the wrongs of the kings so that the priests could rule from the temple. It suited the Persians, of course, who preferred priests to princes, and the later Maccabees assumed the priesthood anyway. The Deuteronomic editor plainly mixed the bitter experience of the historic kingship into chapters 8 and 12 of 1 Samuel, and the Maccabaean editor slotted in the rebellious family in this story, over 1000 years earlier in history, calling him Phinehas instead of Mattathias.

Saul's reign was a failed attempt at kingship that ended in disaster for Israel (1 Sam 31). But the Merlin-like kingmaker, Samuel, had already anointed David, in the name of God, to replace Saul as king to deliver Israel from its enemies. David was crowned, conquered Jerusalem and brought the Ark to Zion. The successful king had to be the choice of the priestly god, Yehouah, although the barely united people of the time worshipped their own different gods, in fact.

The priests inadvertantly made a rod for their own backs. They wrote that David brought the Ark of God into the temple to give the legitimacy of God to priestly endeavours in the second temple. The Ark was the safeguard of Israel but David became the protector and saviour of the Ark. The first king approved by God, and supposedly the head of the dynasty, became a god himself—if he was not already—expected to return as the Messiah and save Israel anew.

The return of the Ark to Jerusalem justified David's accession as king and the basis of the temple priesthood. Where the story of David's accession ends, the story of Solomon's accession begins. David left the Ark in a tent in Jerusalem, presumably because God lived with his people in a tent while the Israelites were in the wilderness. But the priests wanted to justify their temple and so a tent was not suitable for the Ark of God. Just as David had been divinely chosen through the prophet Samuel, so Solomon was chosen through the prophet Nathan to complete David's work by housing the Ark in a solid and immoveable building. 1 Kings 8:15-20 notes explicitly that all is now completed as "prophesied".

The accession of David is disturbed by the struggles of Saul and David and the accession of Solomon is disturbed by the revolt of Absalom, which forced David to flee, just as he had fled from Saul. Both cases end in a battle (1 Sam 31; 2 Sam 18) in which Saul and Absalom die, opening the way for the accession of David and Solomon respectively. Note the name Absalom who had to die!

Obviously, the events of David's accession are duplicated in the accession of Solomon. This should be sufficient to prove that we are not dealing with history here but romance. 

Whose House?

The priests were interested in creating the idea that the House of God was the temple and not the House (dynasty) of David. The "prophecy" (2 Sam 7), David's prayer (2 Sam 8) and Solomon's prayer (1 Kings 8) all play on the word "House".

In 2 Samuel 7, "house" initially means temple (which David had the "intention" of building). But Nathan says that David will not build this "house", but that the Lord would build a "house" (descendant, dynasty) for him. This descendant (Solomon) will build the house (temple) for God. David's prayer (2 Sam 8) uses the very same word "house" seven times, now with the meaning of descendance (Solomon), and 1 Kings 8 also uses the same word with the meaning of the temple, which David could not build but which Solomon carried on to its completion.

So the word "house" is used: eight times in 2 Samuel 7; seven times in 2 Samuel 8; and eight times in 1 Kings 8, where it has the two meanings: the temple which should be built, and the descendant who would build the temple. The priests wanted to sow doubt in the minds of a people who considered themselves of the House of David (probably a memory of when David was their local god) and make them think that the new god, Yehouah, always meant the "house" to have been the temple. Even more so, they wanted to confuse the use of the name of the city which previously had been Beth Salem.

The stories of the accession of David and Solomon were composed with an overt apologetic aim—to justify the setting up of the second temple priesthood as the will of God, and later the justification for the free state of the Hasmonaeans. God who used to reside in a tent now lived in the temple. The earlier Hebrew gods or heroes, David and Solomon, became the heroes of the saga and the founders of the Jewish state and its temple. The aim was to justify the temple but it succeeded so well that it gave credence to the make-believe history and David and Solomon began to be seen as real people in an Israelite Golden Age that never existed. 

 

Solomon

The early part of Iron Age II is thought to represent the "Golden Age" of the 10th century kings David and solomon—yet its material culture is of a surprisingly low level.
Peter James

The evidence for the empire of Solomon is deceptively abundant. It is abundant in the Jewish scriptures and nowhere else! Yet, biblicist archaeologists, who would be struck off the register if they were doctors, have "doctored" so much archaeological evidence that religious punters today think Solomon is a well established historical figure. You will often meet expressions like "a wall of the time of Solomon" as if there was no doubt about it because the name Solomon was scratched on every brick. What these "scholars" mean is a wall dated to the tenth century BC when they believe that Solomon lived!

Donald Redford, an author and leading authority on the era, writes in frustration at the absence of anything to verify the biblical stories:

Such topics as the foreign policy of David and Solomon, Solomon's trade in horses or his marriage to Pharaoh's daughter must remain themes for midrash and fictional treatment.

Philip Davies (In Search of Ancient Israel) discounts any possibility of…

…a Davidic empire administered from Jerusalem… The range of indices considered by Jamieson-Drake make it necessary for us to exclude the Davidic and Solomonic monarchies, let alone their empire, from a non-biblical history of Palestine.

The spring 1990 issue of the prestigious journal, the Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, was entirely devoted to deciding which archaeological levels of the ancient cities of Palestine belonged to the time of king Solomon. The scholars were unable to agree on a conclusion. G E Wright can summarise:

No discovery has been made in Jerusalem which can be dated… to the time of David and Solomon.

There was quite obviously a tenth century BC, but what no one has yet been able to prove is that any emperors called David and Solomon lived in it… or any other time for that matter—unless David means Adad (Adad-nirari) and Solomon means Shalman (Shalmanezer), Assyrian kings who ruled successively in the ninth century. Any books that speak of "the time of David" or "the time of Solomon" should be burnt as religious proaganda. Respectable historians do not refer times in history to mythical figures or places. They do not talk of "the time of Hercules" and we can be certain that any historian that spoke of "the time of Atlantis" would be instantly dismissed or certified. Yet these biblical figures, David and Solomon, are no less mythical.

The mythical purpose of "king" Solomon is to build and dedicate the temple to establish that Jerusalem had been associated with a great temple, not because the temple had been to a god called Solomon, but had been founded by a great king called Solomon. The Solomonic temple to Yehouah did not really exist—the temple was to the god Solomon (Salem, Shalma)—but, having been destroyed by the Babylonians, the Persian administrators could pretend it had always been to Yehouah. No one in Judah was in a position to deny it because it happened about a hundred years before. So, the second temple set up by the "returners" is not the second temple to Yehouah—it is the second temple all right, but the first to Yehoauh.

In the bible Solomon has the powers of a Mesopotamian king—he is a melchizedek, in charge of the priesthood and the cult. He conducts the consecration of the temple as High Priest and blesses the qahal—the cultic community or congregation. But Solomon cannot escape the inevitability of the agreed formula that God des not like kings and even he is made to succumb to the temptations of apostasy and is punished as the Deuteronomic Historian makes clear (1 Kings 11).

The procedure for building the temple—decision of the king, confirmation by god, securing materials and labour, planning the building, inauguration and the king's prayer, all followed in 1 Kings 5-8—is that commonly attested in Mesopotamia from Gudea of Lacash on. Because it was common practice, it says nothing about this particular temple.

No trace of the temple of Solomon has ever been found. Be assured that nothing at all that has been found under the earth or in ancient archives can certainly be assigned to Solomon. Though architecture and artefacts corresponding to the tenth century BC are routinely ascribed to the "period of Solomon," absolutely nothing found has ever said anything about a king Solomon! 

Was Solomon a God?

So, the temple to Solomon did exist, but it was a Pagan temple to a Pagan god! El-Amarna letters 74 and 290 mention "Bit-NIN.IB," at first sight a reference to Assyria (House of Nineveh), but Professor Jules Lewy, an Assyriologist, said it was better read as Bit Shulman—the House of Solomon! The king of Damascus had commanded his chiefs, in letter 74, to attack the king of Jerusalem, ordering them to "assemble in Bit Shulman." It must be near Jerusalem or even in it, if the plot was an assassination not a field attack.

In letter 290, the king of Jerusalem complained to the Pharaoh that the Apiru were invading the land, adding:

…and now, in addition, the capital of the country of Jerusalem—its name is Bit Shulman—the king’s city, has broken away…

Towns in the ancient near east were often called after the ruling god (or vice versa). Lewy concluded that Jerusalem was also known at that time by the name "Temple of Shulman"—"bit" ("beth" in Hebrew) in this context meaning temple. The text is ambiguous, but Jerusalem here seems not to refer to a city but to a country. The capital city or the king's city was called Bit Shulman, after the temple of Shulman in it, yet after the conquest by the Israelites under Joshua, no mention is made of it. It was called Jebus or Salem before David conquered the Jebusites and made it his capital city.

Now "salem" is taken to mean "peace" but in view of this information, it looks to be a corruption of Shulman. The biblical story of Solomon begins to look like a rationalization of the traditional name of a city named after Shulman, a god found in Mesopotamian sources as Shelmi, Shulmanu or Salamu. The last of these spellings is "salem!" In the Hebrew Bible, "Solomon" has no terminal "n," the "n" being added in the Greek Septuagint. More pertinent, perhaps, is Salem, the Phoenician (Canaanite) god of the evening, symbolised by Venus as the evening star, and doubtless being the setting sun, an aspect of the sun god to the Egyptians.

Was this a reference to Solomon's temple even at such an early date? The Egyption glyphs read as "Shulman" have no sign of divinity, implying the name is not that of a god. If it is named after its founder then Bit Shulman means Palace of Solomon, and Solomon lived much earlier than anyone thought, or Egyptian chronology is hundreds of years out. Or, perhaps the Egyptians did not recognize Shulman as a god. Either way, the Solomon legend was written to explain the memory of the old name of the city—Salem or Bit Shulman. 

More Aspects of the Myth

Several substantial gateways of a similar design at Hazor, Gezer and elsewhere were glibly assigned to Solomon. Solomon's stables were discovered at Megiddo, and are still described as such by religious liars, but they are not Solomon's if he lived in the tenth century because they are 200 years later. They are also not stables, most modern archaeologists think. No one has ever found Solomon's port at Ezion-Geber. It is not at Eilat or at Aqaba or anywhere between, so Biblicists have been obliged to reposition it down the coast into Sinai, but no one knows where. Solomon's pillars or Solomon's mines north of Eilat were not Solomon's because they were abandoned before the tenth century and were probably Egyptian.

The kingdom of Sheba did not exist in the tenth century, and Ophir remains an unidentified place. It is only speculation that Tarshish is Tartessos in Spain (according to some) or Tarsus in Cilicia (according to others), neither being accessible entirely by sea from Solomon's supposed port except by circumnavigation of Africa. Both Ophir and Tarshish might be entirely mythical places like Shangri-La, intended to depict the kingdom of Solomon as of equal civilisation and wealth. The wealth of Solomon must also be part of his legendary growth because he was at some stage supposedly unable to pay his debts to Hiram, king of Phoenicia (1 Kings 9:10-14). Solomon is supposed to have married a daughter of the Pharaoh Siamun. It is more likely that Solomon was Siamun, because the Egyptians had no practice of marrying off royal princesses to foreigners whereas the Pharaonic line was itself passed on matrilinearly.

Jeroboam is supposed to have rebelled and taken the ten northern tribes out of the confederation of tribes to form Israel leaving Judah and Benjamin to form Judah. Since he followed an oracle of God in doing this, he was again expressing the Persian propagandist's view that God had no desire for His people to have kings and he would undermine them if they insisted on it.

The most likely historical basis of the twelve tribes, if there is one at all, is that they were divisions of the province for taxation purposes. A system like this was used in Israel under Solomon (1 Kings 4:7-19;5:2-4,7). Each of the twelve divisions had to provide tribute for one month of the year. This was an Egyptian system used by the Pharaoh Shoshenq, a successor to Siamun and contemporary of the mythical Solomon.

All these traditions were set down at a relatively late period, often more than 500 years after the events to which they refer…
J Alberto Soggin

Much in the stories of David and Solomon was probably added by the scribes of the Maccabees who wanted to justify their setting up of a Jewish free state. They depicted their own battles with the Seleucid Greeks allegorized as Philistines and Canaanites. 

Who Wrote It?

According to  V Harris (Ancient Literacy) widespread literacy does not happen by accident but requires central commitment and investment, usually by government, and the setting up of a complex social network of support. Such a social structure would be needed to allow any substantial and accurate reporting of history such as emerged even in Greece only in the fifth century BC, with Herodotus and Thucidydes, yet the Israelite so-called Court Historian of Kings supposedly lived in 1000 BC in a society that has left no visible trace! It shows it is fiction—a romance written much later, and not by the natives.

The fault of all apologists, puzzled by a fictional history that is far from glorious, containing many incidents derogating the people and their kings, is that they take the history to be the work of the Jews themselves, and expect it to be laudatory. People, especially in those days, do not present critical histories of themselves. Jews and Christians have to realize, though, that stories written by a conqueror about a subject people need not be laudatory. They were written as propaganda to shame the people of Canaan into behaving the way the Persians wanted. The history therefore showed the immense potential the people had if only they would behave in the right way!

They had been introduced to the universal God of Heaven in a uniquely privileged way in the distant past but their subsequent history showed them as consistently apostatizing against this great god. The god reacted by having to punish them repeatedly, culminating in having them deported to distant parts of the Assyrian and Babylonian empires. But the great and generous god was giving them another chance through the action of his earthly agent, the Persian king, who was returning deported people to their rightful homes and restoring the proper worship of their gods. They were god's saviours of people and restorers of gods.

The native people naturally began totally unfamiliar with this new notion of a god and will have thoroughly opposed it. So, they were shown as unrepentent sinners, opposed not to the Persians but to the God of Heaven, who would punish them accordingly. Among the remnants of history and the romances, the "returners" told a story of the pure religion revealed by God as being corrupted by contact with the Canaanite religions. Stories like those of David and Solomon, and the adulterated history of the divided monarchy, were meant to hammer home the message of potential greatness constantly rejected through ungodly behaviour. Even their greatest kings finshed up apostates. Many lesser ones were thoroughly wicked.

J Hughes (Secrets of the Times: Myth and History in Biblical Chronology) says that the stories of Judges and Samuel are fiction written to give a 1000 year background to the Jewish province set up by the Persians.

Historians know that genealogies are often unreliable because those who commission them are more interested in claims in the present rather than any past actuality. In short, they are often produced to justify the present. That is just as true of Egyptian genealogies as it is for the genealogies given in the gospels. Actual blood relationships in the past are subordinated to present needs, to prove a legitimate claim for example. It is no less remarkable that native Canaanite chroniclers suddenly developed a preference for accurate genealogies than it is that they inexplicably evolved an ethical religion. Both were imposed from outside.

In the history of the monarchies, good and apostate kings alternate, a device meant to show that previous generations had repeatedly come back from error and apostasy to the true God, so that this generation could feel good about returning to the fold as others did before them. They were the remnant, the few Israelites who remained true and pure while others stayed with their idols. The supporters of the new religion and those who repented their apostasy were justified against those who refused to abandon their age old gods and goddesses.

In these stories the king is also divine, though commentators will rarely observe upon it. The only proper king was the Shahanshah, a manifestation of God on earth. In Psalms 45:7, the king is addressed as God! In 1 Kings 21:11-14, those who blaspheme "God and the king" are put to death. In 2 Samuel 23:17, Elyon the Canaanite high god elevated the king (David) above men. The king has the attributes of a fertility god in Psalms 72:6-7,16. He is a priest-king, Melchizedek, in charge of the cult as well as the country!

Plainly in the Hellenistic period, and notably in the Maccabaean period, these stories were being reworked again to render the Jews and their kings much better people than they were shown as by the Persian administrators. David and Solomon in Chronicles seem much more saintly than in Samuel and Kings. 
  



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David's Empire?

Solomon had an empire from Sinai to the Euphrates (1 Kg 4:21; Gen 15:18; Dt 1:7,11:24; Joshua 1:4; 2 Sam 8:3; 1 Chron 18:3), a meaningful area, giving him immense wealth, and a reputation for wisdom. (By a coincidence, it is the precise area of the Assyrian and then Persian province of "Beyond the River," Abarnahara. See below.) The empire was built by his father, David, and crumbled suddenly, for such a power, five years after he died when the Egyptian Pharaoh Shishak invaded Judah and captured it (2 Chron 12). Nevertheless, it had lasted for about 70 years and must have made its mark.

With his power and wealth Solomon built the temple (1 Kings 6), the Royal Palace (1 Kings 7:2-12), the walls of Jerusalem, the Millo (an unknown structure) (1 Kings 9:15,11:27), royal cities at Megiddo, Hazor and Gezer (1 Kings 9:15,17), store cities and cities for his horsemen and chariots (1 Kings 9:19). Solomon had 1400 chariots, 12,000 horsemen and had 40,000 stables for his horses (1 Kings 4:26;10:26). This was a substantial army and could only have been maintained by a substantial population and economy.

The dreamer's history of Israel, mainly a paraphrase of the bible with a commentary, was written by John Bright. This famous Christian historian thiks that Israel became a "ranking power of the contemporary world" "within a century." The hill country of Judah simply never could have had a sufficient population to support armies to conquer the whole of the Levant. Biblicists like to point to the weakness of Egypt and Assyria at the time, but these were massive countries compared with Israel and even in a weakened state could hardly have tolerated, without mention, upstarts forming incipient empires on their borders.

Had he been talking about Persia, he would have been believable. Persia could draw upon the large population (2.5 to 4 million, according to C McEvedy and R Jones in Atlas of World Population History) of the Iranian plateau and the skills in metallurgy of its peoples. The Israelites had a tiny population (55,000 on the West Bank in 1000 BC, according to I Finkelstein, and no more than 250,000 in the whole of Palestine, according to McEvedy and Jones) and no natural advantages. Bright seriously thinks that an impoverished, depopulated colony of Egypt could compete with Egypt (5 million) and Assyria (2 million). No serious historian could contemplate it, even supposing those great powers were in temporary decline as the apologists have to claim. Historians not besotted by the Holy Ghost must smell a rat, but for believers the rat is in the Holy Book so has the odour of sanctity.

The kingdom of David could never have even conquered the north of Canaan which was far more populated with more sophisticated people. If the empire of David was built by alliances and treaties rather than by warfare, it still fails to convince. Alliances were built under the threat of arms or through some perceived advantage, but what was it that made the nations to the north want to form alliances under the suzerainty of the feeble Israelites?

J M Miller and J Hayes (A History of Ancient Judah and Israel) of biblical historians only in 1986 begin to suspect something is phony about the biblical account of early Israel. They criticise the narratives of David and Solomon's reigns, describing them as "folk legend," "not to be read as historical record." It is an advance even if otherwise they paraphrase the bible as much as any other "biblical historian." Separately, Miller has admitted that there is no evidence for the monarchies of David and Solomon outside the bible, so everything that is written or speculated about these monarchs depends entirely on the bible.

Solomon is supposed to have married the daughter of a pharaoh, a privilege that was denied to the powerful kings of the Hittites. Moreover, no Egyptian record of this magnificent liaison has ever been found.

In the whole of the area supposedly covered by the kingdom of these mighty monarchs extant remains of it are "very poor." Kathleen Kenyon says that "the archaeological evidence is meagre in the extreme." The Egyptian, Babylonian, Assyrian and Hittite peoples in the ancient Near East left evidence of their empires including tablets or papyri, art and inscriptions on buildings and monuments. Yet the empire of David and Solomon is not mentioned in any Ancient Near Eastern source. Monumental reliefs and statues, palaces, ivories, jewelry and all the normal signs of the sophistication required to run an empire are lacking.

E Leach (E Leach and D A Lay**** Eds, Structuralist Interpretation of Biblical Myth) says:

There is no archaeological evidence for the existence of these heroes or for the occurrence of any of the events with which they were associated. If it were not for the sacredness of these stories, their historicity would certainly be rejected.

Leach also spots that we have in many of these biblical traditions, conflicts that reflect competing factions in the Persian period, expressed as a mythical allegorical history.

Nothing can be unequivocally attributed to Solomon, nor is there any trace of a great culture that he developed. Hazor, Megiddo and Gezer have been widely excavated and palaces, temples and fortifications have been found, but none mention Solomon and the important buildings seem to be dated before his supposed time and after. Cartouches of the Eighteenth Dynasty Pharaoh, Amenhotep III, were common in deposits where seals of Solomon might have been expected.

The Davidic empire seems to be modelled on great empires of the Ancient Near east, notably the neo-Assyrian or neo-Babylonian, showing that the whole was composed after those empires died, when they were incorporated into the empire of the Medes and Persians. In its sudden emergence from a poor hill country after the wanderings of its people, the empire of David is a bijou image of the swift emergence of the Persian empire in the sixth century BC, after the Persians had wandered for several hundred years. The Persians had migrated, like the Israelites into their ultimate homeland on an arid plateau, and then had quickly become an empire through the military skill of Cyrus the Great, whom David parallels in his similar deeds. David is shown as an Israelite Cyrus defeating neighbouring Goliaths. Furthermore, the empire's extent is the precise extent of the Persian satrapy of Abarnahara.

The expression used to delineate the north eastern boundary of the Empire of David (1 Kings 4:21,24) is the expression, Eber-ha-Nahar, "The Shores of the River" (Euphrates), used by the Assyrians from the seventh century onwards (perhaps earlier) and then by the Persians—as Abarnahara. Since there seems little reason why the Assyrians should have been involved in writing the Jewish scriptures, the conclusion is that the words came from Persian writers. It was therefore written from the fifth century BC. The absence of any references in ancient near eastern annals to such supposedly great kings as David and Solomon makes this fifth century work begin to look like deliberate myth-making.

The Philistines of the scriptures seem to be of the same culture as the Israelites of Canaan and seem to speak the same Semitic language as no suggestions occur of problems of understanding, interpretation or translation. They also worship Dagon, a corn god, considered by the Canaanites as a son of Baal. Since the Philistines were among the "Peoples of the Sea" who only occupied the coastal area from about the time of Rameses II when the Israelites too were moving into Canaan, they can hardly have had linguistic and cultural identity or even similarities with the hordes of escaping slaves.

By the time of the Persians 700 years later, the Philistines had been culturally assimilated into the regional culture of the Semitic Canaanites. Furthermore, the original Sea People at the time of Rameses were essentially mercenary soldiers, not settlers, selling themselves to the Pharaohs for their military skills. The Egyptian texts depict relationships between Philistines and Egyptians as mainly peaceful, as would be expected if they were allies. Doubtless, it is because they were allies of the Egyptians that the Persians showed the Philistines as the enemies of the Israelites. The episode of David and Goliath (1 Sam 17) is revealed as of Persian provenance from its vocabulary.

David conquers Jerusalem and brings the Ark there having retrieved it from the Philistines who had captured it but suffered so much misfortune as a consequence that they had abandoned it. David's kingdom however is shown as friendly with the Phoenicians, who were allies of the Persians in the fifth century and the suppliers of their sailors and navies. 



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The Ain Dara Temple

The Ain Dara Temple and the giant footsteps of the Gods

Ain Dara is a small village in the northwest of Aleppo, Syria, which boasts a remarkable structure – the Ain Dara Temple, located just west of the village.  The temple was discovered in 1955, when a colossal basalt lion was found, quite accidentally, in fact. Following this find, excavations were carried out in subsequent years.

The Ain Dara Temple is an Iron Age Syro-Hittite temple. The Syro-Hittites or Neo-Hittites were a group of political entities that emerged towards the end of the 2nd millennium B.C. Following the collapse of the Hittite Empire, there was a power vacuum in the Eastern Mediterranean. The Syro-Hittite states filled this vacuum and became the dominant power in the region until their conquest by the Neo-Assyrian Empire at the end of the 8th century B.C.

Although the Syro-Hittites are today distinguished from the Hittites, the former probably did not see themselves as different from their predecessors. This can be supported by the epigraphic evidence and the cultural continuity of the region. For instance, the styles of temples built during the Late Bronze Age continued into the Early Iron Age. One of these temples, believed to have been built during the Early Iron Age, was the Ain Dara Temple. 

To enter the temple, one would first have to go through a courtyard built with sandstones and paved with flagstones. A chalkstone basin, perhaps for ceremonial purposes is seen there. The temple, measuring 30 x 30 metres and facing southeast, stood on a 2.5-foot-high platform made of rubble and limestone and was lined with basalt blocks engraved with lions, sphinxes and other mythic creatures. A monumental staircase, flanked on each side by a sphinx and two lions, led up to the temple portico.

After the portico, one would reach the middle room, which measured 6 x 15.5m, followed by the main hall, which was 16 x 16m in size. At the end of this hall was the inner room/sanctum. The cult statue was probably housed in a niche in the back wall of the sanctum.   The building was once covered with rows of basalt reliefs of sphinxes, lions, mountain gods and large clawed creatures whose feet alone remain.

A floor plan of the Ain Dara Temple

A floor plan of the Ain Dara Temple. Image source.

One of the interesting features of the Ain Dara Temple is the footprints carved into the stone floor of the temple. One pair of footprints can be found on the floor of the portico, followed by a single footprint, and another single footprint at the threshold of the main hall. The distance between the two single footprints is about 30 feet. A stride of 30 feet would belong to a person (or ‘god’) about 65 feet tall.

The giant pair of footprints at the Ain Dara Temple

The giant pair of footprints at the Ain Dara Temple. Photo source.

It is not suggested here that the footsteps are real imprints made by a large person walking over the threshold of the temple, but rather that they were carved by the creators of the temple. The question is, why?

It is still unknown whose footprints these were meant to represent.  Some scholars have suggested they are animal prints, while others have suggested they depict the footsteps of the gods. Perhaps, these footprints (measuring about a metre in length) were meant to be an iconic representation of the resident deity. These footprints may have been carved to show the presence of the resident deity as he/she entered his/her temple and approached the throne in the inner sanctum.

Giant steps in the temple of Ain Dara

Giant steps in the temple of Ain Dara. Photo source.

Another interesting feature about the Ain Dara Temple is its similarities with the biblical description of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem. It has been claimed that these two temples were similar in their floor plan, age, size and decoration. Before jumping to the conclusion that one temple influenced the other, it should be mentioned that there are also temples in that region that are comparable to both the Ain Dara Temple and Solomon’s Temple. These temples include that of Ebla, Emar, and Munbaqa. Therefore, it may be suggested that these temples belonged to a wider cultural tradition that dominated the region during that time.

Featured image: The remains of the Ain Dara TemplePhoto source.           

By Ḏḥwty

References

Biblical Archaeology Society, 2013. Searching for the Temple of King Solomon. [Online]
Available here 
[Accessed 10 May 2014].

Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2013. Anatolia. [Online]
Available at: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/22897/Anatolia/44354/The-neo-Hittite-states-from-c-1180-to-700-bc
[Accessed 10 May 2014].

Hodossy-Takács, E., 2014. The Role of Archaeology in Understanding Israelite Religion. [Online]
Available at: http://www.uni-regensburg.de/Fakultaeten/phil_Fak_I/Evangelische_Theologie/pdfs/takacs.pdf
[Accessed 10 May 2014].

Monson, J., 2014. The New ‘Ain Dara Temple: Closest Solomonic Parallel. [Online]
Available at:http://www.michaelsheiser.com/PaleoBabble/Ayn%20Dara%20Parallel%20to%20Solomons%20Temple.pdf
[Accessed 10 May 2014].

Wikipedia, 2013. Ain Dara, Syria. [Online]
Available at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ain_Dara,_Syria
[Accessed 10 May 2014].

Wikipedia, 2014. Ain Dara Temple. [Online]
Available at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ain_Dara_Temple
[Accessed 10 May 2014].

Wikipedia, 2014. Syro-Hittite States. [Online]
Available at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syro-Hittite_states
[Accessed 10 May 2014].



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