Wednesday, February 21, 2024

King Abdi-Hiba of Jerusalem Locked in as a ‘Pillar’ of Revised History

by Damien F. Mackey Who was this Abdi-Hiba of Jerusalem, and when did he live? We know at least who were his pharaonic contemporaries. With the inadequacies of the Sothic dating upon which the conventional Egyptian chronology has been based (and to which the other nations have been tied) now laid bare, e.g.: Sothic Star Theory of the Egyptian Calendar http://www.academia.edu/2568413/Sothic_Star_Theory_of_the_Egyptian_Calendar and also The Fall of the Sothic Theory: Egyptian Chronology Revisited https://www.academia.edu/3665220/The_Fall_of_the_Sothic_Theory_Egyptian_Chronology_Revisited and the ground thus cleared for the raising of a scientific chronological model that is not based upon artificial a priori assumptions, revisionist scholars have been able to re-assess the abundant El Amarna [EA] archive to re-determine its proper historical location. One of the EA correspondents who has aroused special interest, owing to the mention of Jerusalem (Urusalim) in connection with him, is the king of that city, Abdi-Hiba (Abdi-Heba), the author of six letters (EA 285-290): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdi-Heba Abdi-Heba was the author of letters EA 285-290.[9] 1. EA 285—title: "The soldier-ruler of Jerusalem" 2. EA 286—title: "A throne granted, not inherited" 3. EA 287—title: "A very serious crime"' 4. EA 288—title: "Benign neglect" 5. EA 289—title: "A reckoning demanded" 6. EA 290—title: "Three against one"'[9] Who was this Abdi-Hiba of Jerusalem, and when did he live? We know at least who were his pharaonic contemporaries. As I have previously written about EA in a general fashion: http://www.specialtyinterests.net/elamarna_period.html#ere EA’s Egyptians Identifying the EA pharaohs is the easiest … challenge as it is almost universally agreed that Amenhotep III and Akhnaton are those who are referred to in the EA correspondence by their throne names, respectively, of Nimmuria (i.e. Nebmare, Nb-m3't-R') and Naphuria (i.e. Neferkheprure, Nfr-hprw-R'). These two pharaohs, having been Sothically dated to the late C15th-early C14th BC, are - from a biblical perspective - usually considered by historians to have pre-dated the arrival of the Israelites in the Promised Land - or at least to have coincided with their arrival there. Thus it is common to read that the habiru rebels who feature prominently in the EA letters were either the Hebrews of the time of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, or perhaps the newly arrived Hebrews (Israelites) under Joshua. …. But To Which Era Do Revisionists Re-Locate EA’s Abdi-Hiba? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- …. two … pieces of evidence in EA letters 285-290 … determine the historical terminus a quo for king Abdi-Hiba: namely, the mention of Jerusalem; and the mention of Beth Shulman (“House of Solomon”). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We ourselves, set completely free as we are from Sothic theory, are able to begin to zone in on the correct era of Abdi-Hiba, and we are going to find that it is nothing like what the conventional text books say about this king as a ruler of Jerusalem in the mid 1300’s BC, and probably, therefore, corresponding with pharaoh Amenhotep III. In terms of biblical correlation, the era of Abdi-Hiba would be considered to approximate to the Judges period, some would say to the time of Joshua (as said above). Thus: http://www.biblehistory.net/newsletter/joshua.htm The Bible states in Joshua 10:26 that Joshua defeated these kings, captured them and killed them, including the king of Jerusalem, Adoni-Zedek. It is very likely that Abdi-Heba and Adoni-Zedek are one [and] the same man. The reason being is that “Adoni-Zedek” is a title rather [than] the actual name of the king. Adoni-Zedek means the “Lord of Zedek,” similar to the name Melchi-Zedek which means “Prince of Zedek,” who was the ruler of Salem according to Genesis 14:18. The Hebrews would have associated this title with the prince of Salem, an early name for the city of Jerusalem. So the letters written by Abdi-Heba, trying to stop the advancing Hebrews [sic], were likely written by either Adoni-Zedek, mentioned in Joshua 10:1, or Adoni-Bezek, another king mentioned in Judges 1:7 who was defeated by Joshua and buried in Jerusalem. The letters from Abdi-Heba seem to have been written to either Amenhotep II or Amenhotep III. Since one of the letters from Abdi-Heba mentions that the pharaoh, whom he was requesting help from, had conquered the land of Naharaim and the land of Cush, this would likely point to Amenhotep II who indeed had military campaigns against both these countries. [End of quote] Evidences would suggest that a Joshuan alignment with the EA Pharaohs is not sustainable. For, two such pieces of evidence in EA letters 285-290 that spring to mind determine the historical terminus a quo for king Abdi-Hiba: namely, the mention of Jerusalem; and the mention of Beth Shulman (“House of Solomon”). In other words, the conventional scenario, and any other that would locate the reign of Abdi-Hiba in Jerusalem to a period ante-dating kings David and Solomon, are immediately to be cancelled out as having historical validity (and that even apart from the ramifications of Sothic theory). That means that Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky’s revision, in which he chronologically re-locates Abdi-Hiba - along with Nimmuria and Naphuria - to the early period of Israel’s Divided Monarchy (about half a millennium after the Joshua/Judges period), is not to be cancelled out at least by our ‘two pieces of evidence’. (i) Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky’s Pioneering Effort In Dr. Velikovsky’s firm opinion, Abdi-Hiba was to be identified with king Jehoshaphat of Judah. He, reflecting later upon this choice, commented: http://www.varchive.org/ce/sultemp.htm “In Ages in Chaos (chapters vi-viii) I deal with the el-Amarna letters; there it is shown that the king of Jerusalem whose name is variously read Ebed-Tov, Abdi-Hiba, etc. was King Jehoshaphat (ninth century)”. In this same article, Dr. Velikovsky made a most significant discovery towards re-setting his revised EA period to the approximate time of King Solomon: The Šulmán Temple in Jerusalem In the el-Amarna letters No. 74 and 290 there is reference to a place read (by Knudtzon) Bet-NIN.IB. In Ages in Chaos, following Knudtzon, I understood that the reference was to Assyria (House of Nineveh).(1) I was unaware of an article by the eminent Assyriologist, Professor Jules Lewy, printed in the Journal of Biblical Literature under the title: “The Šulmán Temple in Jerusalem.”(2) From a certain passage in letter No. 290, written by the king of Jerusalem to the Pharaoh, Lewy concluded that this city was known at that time also by the name “Temple of Šulmán.” Actually, Lewy read the ideogram that had much puzzled the researchers before him.(3) After complaining that the land was falling to the invading bands (habiru), the king of Jerusalem wrote: “. . . and now, in addition, the capital of the country of Jerusalem — its name is Bit Šulmáni —, the king’s city, has broken away . . .”(4) Beth Šulmán in Hebrew, as Professor Lewy correctly translated, is Temple of Šulmán. But, of course, writing in 1940, Lewy could not surmise that the edifice was the Temple of Solomon and therefore made the supposition that it was a place of worship (in Canaanite times) of a god found in Akkadian sources as Shelmi, Shulmanu, or Salamu. The correction of the reading of Knudtzon (who was uncertain of his reading) fits well with the chronological reconstruction of the period. In Ages in Chaos (chapters vi-viii) I deal with the el-Amarna letters; there it is shown that the king of Jerusalem whose name is variously read Ebed-Tov, Abdi-Hiba, etc. was King Jehoshaphat (ninth century). It was only to be expected that there would be in some of his letters a reference to the Temple of Solomon. Also, in el-Amarna letter No. 74, the king of Damascus, inciting his subordinate sheiks to attack the king of Jerusalem, commanded them to “assemble in the Temple of Šulmán.”(5) It was surprising to find in the el-Amarna letters written in the fourteenth century that the capital of the land was already known then as Jerusalem (Urusalim) and not, as the Bible claimed for the pre-Conquest period, Jebus or Salem.(6) Now, in addition, it was found that the city had a temple of Šulmán in it and that the structure was of such importance that its name had been used occasionally for denoting the city itself. (Considering the eminence of the edifice, “the house which king Solomon built for the Lord”,(7) this was only natural.) Yet after the conquest by the Israelites under Joshua ben-Nun, the Temple of Šulmán was not heard of. Lewy wrote: “Aside from proving the existence of a Šulmán temple in Jerusalem in the first part of the 14th century B.C., this statement of the ruler of the region leaves no doubt that the city was then known not only as Jerusalem, but also as Bet Šulmán.”—“It is significant that it is only this name [Jerusalem] that reappears after the end of the occupation of the city by the Jebusites, which the Šulmán temple, in all probability, did not survive.” The late Professor W. F. Albright advised me that Lewy’s interpretation cannot be accepted because Šulmán has no sign of divinity accompanying it, as would be proper if it were the name of a god. But this only strengthens my interpretation that the temple of Šulmán means Temple of Solomon. In the Hebrew Bible the king’s name has no terminal “n”. But in the Septuagint — the oldest translation of the Old Testament — the king’s name is written with a terminal “n”; the Septuagint dates from the third century before the present era. Thus it antedates the extant texts of the Old Testament, the Dead Sea Scrolls not excluded. Solomon built his Temple in the tenth century. In a letter written from Jerusalem in the next (ninth) century, Solomon’s Temple stood a good chance of being mentioned; and so it was. …. Though I cannot locate the exact reference at present, I recall a brief article pointing out that, contrary to Dr. Velikovsky, Beth Šulmán could not properly refer to the actual Temple of Solomon, since this edifice was always referred to as the Temple of Yahweh. So, the better translation of the EA phrase is “House of Solomon”. Now, that accords with contemporary usage, in that we have at least two documented references to the “House of David” (the Tell Dan and the Mesha Moabite Inscription), see André Lemaire at: http://www.cojs.org/pdf/house_of_david.pdf For a time, this equation of Abdi-Hiba = Jehoshaphat held as the standard amongst revisionists. However, the Glasgow School, in 1978, seriously re-assessed Dr. Velikovsky’s entire EA revision – with, as I believe, some outstanding results. This included a reconsideration of Velikovsky’s corresponding opinion that king Jehoshaphat of Judah’s contemporaneous ruler of Samaria, king Ahab of Israel, was to be identified with the prolific EA correspondent Rib-Addi. (ii) The “Glasgow” School’s Modification of Velikovsky The Glasgow Conference of 1978 gave rise to important contributions by scholars such as Martin Sieff; Geoffrey Gammon; John Bimson; and Peter James. These were able at the time, with a slight modification of Dr. Velikovsky’s dates, to re-set the latter’s revised EA period so that it sat more comfortably within its new C9th BC allocation. Thus pharaoh Akhnaton (Naphuria) now became a contemporary of king Jehoram of Judah (c. 848-841 BC, conventional dating) - and, hence, of the latter’s older contemporary Jehoram of Israel (c. 853-841 BC, conventional dating) - rather than of Dr. Velikovsky’s hopeful choice of Jehoshaphat (c. 870-848 BC, conventional dating) and of king Ahab of Israel (c. 874-853 BC, conventional dating). Peter James, faced with J. Day’s “Objections to the Revised Chronology” in 1975, in which he had raised this fundamental objection to Dr. Velikovsky’s identification of Abdi-Hiba with Jehoshaphat (ISG Newsletter 2, 9ff): Velikovsky claims that Abdi-Hiba, king of Jerusalem, is to be equated with Jehoshaphat. Abdi-Hiba means ‘servant of Hiba’ - Hiba being the name of a Hittite goddess. Can one really believe that Jehoshaphat, whom the Old Testament praises for his loyalty to the Israelite god, could also have borne this name involving a Hittite goddess? plus James’s own growing belief that the lowering of the date of the EA letters (within a revised model) was demanded by “several chronological and other considerations ...”, arrived at his own excellent comparison of Abdi-Hiba with king Jehoram of Judah. I give only his conclusion here, with which I fully concur, whilst recommending that one reads James’s full comparisons (“The Dating of the El-Amarna Letters”, SIS Review, Vol. II, No. 3 (London, 1977/78), 84): To sum up: the disasters that befell Jehoram of Judah and Abdi-Hiba of Jerusalem were identical. Both suffered revolts of their subject territories from Philistia to Edom. During the reign of both the Philistines invaded and swept right across Judah, entering Jerusalem itself, in concert with the sack of the king’s palace by “men of the land of Kaši” or men “that were near the Cushites”. These peculiar circumstances could hardly be duplicated in such detail after a period of five hundred years. It is clear that Velikovsky’s general placement of the el-Amarna letters in the mid-ninth century must be correct, and that the modification of his original model suggested here, that Abdi-Hiba was Jehoram rather than Jehoshaphat, is preferable. [End of quote] Rib-Addi, for his part, could not have been king Ahab of Israel, Glasgow well determined. Dr. Velikovsky had been wrong in his proposing that the Sumur mentioned in relation to Rib-Addi (though not necessarily even his city, it has since been suggested) was Samaria, when Sumur is generally regarded as referring to Simyra, north of Byblos on the Syrian coast. David Rohl’s Intriguing Angle on EA Whilst I personally fully accept the Glasgow School’s basic conclusions about Abdi-Hiba and Rib-Addi, those, generally, who had worked these out went on later to disown them completely. James would team up with David Rohl to devise a so-called New Chronology, that I find to be a kind of ‘No-Man’s-Land revision’ hovering awkwardly mid-way between convention land and real base. Rohl, in The Lost Testament, would re-locate EA back from Dr. Velikovsky’s Divided Monarchy, where (when modified) I think that it properly belongs, to the time of the Unified Monarchy of kings Saul and David. Rohl will, like Dr. Velikovsky, propose an EA identification for a king of Israel, but it will be for Saul rather than for the later king Ahab. According to Rohl, king Saul is to be identified with EA’s Labayu, generally considered to have been a local ruler in Canaan. And Rohl identifies David with the Dadua (“Tadua”) who is referred to in EA 256. For Rohl, Abdi-Hiba is now a Jebusite ruler of Jebus/Jerusalem. Dr. Rohl is extremely competent and his reconstructions are generally most interesting to read. However, his EA revision, locating Abdi-Hiba as it does as an early contemporary of David’s, who is defeated by the latter, cannot therefore discern in EA’s Beth Shulman any sort of reference to David’s son, Solomon. Moreover, Rohl’s revision may have difficulty accounting for the fact that the name Urusalim (Jerusalem) occurs in the letters of Abdi-Hiba, supposedly a Jebusite king ruling over Jebus, but apparently known to David as Jerusalem (I Chronicles 11:4). Conclusion Whilst the New Chronology is superficially impressive, it, based as it is upon rocky ground, fails to yield the abundant fruit that arises from the fertile soil of a modified Velikovskian EA. James’s erstwhile identification of EA’s Abdi-Hiba as king Jehoram of Jerusalem not only yields some impressively exact comparisons between these two, supposedly separate, historical characters, but it is also able to accommodate most comfortably (chronologically) those two EA evidences of Shulman (Solomon) and Urusalim (Jerusalem). Hence EA’s Abdi-Hiba = King Jehoram of Judah is worthy to be regarded now as a firm pillar of the revised chronology, from which fixed standpoint one is able to generate a very convincing series of further correlations between EA and the particular biblical era. Peter James has thereby provided the definitive answer to the questions that I posed earlier: Who was this Abdi-Hiba of Jerusalem, and when did he live? With whom was Abdi-hiba corresponding? Abdi-hiba “also makes clear that it was not his “father or mother who put me in this place” (on the throne), but rather the “strong arm of the king”.” The question is: which “king”? The following would be a typical view of the El Amarna [EA] situation of Abdi-hiba of Jerusalem (“Urusalim”), that he was a C14th BC Canaanite king enthroned by a pharaoh: https://www.bibleodyssey.org/en/places/related-articles/jerusalem-in-the-amarna-letters.aspx Jerusalem in the Amarna Letters by Christopher Rollston The Amarna Letters are a group of inscribed clay tablets discovered around 1887 at Amarna, a site in Egypt on the east bank of the Nile about 190 miles south of Cairo. The city was founded by the Egyptian king (pharaoh) Amenhotep IV, who later became known as Akhenaten. Akhenaten was known as a heretic king; he worshiped only the Egyptian god Aten, perhaps becoming history’s first monotheist, and he apparently attempted (unsuccessfully) to impose this monotheism on Egyptian religion more broadly. The tablets total almost 400 in number and are written (almost without exception) in Akkadian. Most of these letters come from vassal cities in Syria-Palestine, including Byblos, Tyre, Gezer, Hebron, Shechem (Nablus), Ashkelon, Megiddo, and Jerusalem, and contain diplomatic correspondence with officials in Babylonia, Assyria, Mitanni (an area of northern Syria and southeastern Anatolia), Alashia (Cyprus), and Hatti (central Anatolia). They date to the 14th century B.C.E., primarily to the reigns of the Egyptian kings Amenhotep III (reigned circa 1382–1344 B.C.E.) and Amenhotep IV (reigned circa 1352–1336 B.C.E.). The letters from Jerusalem (written as “Urusalim” in the Amarna texts) are from a Canaanite ruler named Abdi-Heba. He states that he is a “soldier for the king, my lord” and requests that the Egyptian monarch send him a messenger and some military men to help resist his enemies. In multiple letters he states that he “falls at the feet of my lord the king, seven times and seven times,” a stock phrase and common ancient Near Eastern motif that conveys his faithfulness to his Egyptian suzerain. He also makes clear that it was not his “father or mother who put me in this place” (on the throne), but rather the “strong arm of the king.” Here Abdi-Heba reveals that he was not the heir to the throne but given the throne of Jerusalem by the Egyptian king himself. He goes on to state that for this reason he will always be a faithful vassal of his Egyptian lord, regardless of any accusation by an enemy to the contrary. Among the enemies he refers to in his correspondence are the “Apiru” (people living on the fringes of society in the second millennium B.C.E., sometimes serving as mercenaries) and the Kashites (a Hittite people from Anatolia). The Amarna Letters from Jerusalem have attracted substantial attention because of their dialect. It is normally argued that they are quite different in terms of cuneiform signs used, orthography, and syntax from the rest of the letters from Canaanite cities¾more sophisticated in certain ways, which may indicate the scribal culture at Jerusalem was of a particularly high quality. The Amarna Letters from Jerusalem are of interest for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that they come from Jerusalem a few centuries before King David would ostensibly vanquish the Canaanite (Jebusite) population of Jerusalem and make it his own capital (2 Samuel 5). Also, the correspondence with a Jerusalem ruler in the 14th century provides evidence for occupation in the city in a period (Late Bronze Age II) for which there is little archaeological evidence. Recently a fragment of an Akkadian tablet (now called “Jerusalem Tablet 1) was found in excavations at Jerusalem, and some scholars have claimed that this tablet contained some correspondence between a king of Jerusalem and a king of Egypt. But this tablet is ultimately too fragmentary to determine if it was a letter. Among the most important things that these tablets demonstrate is that there was a vibrant and sophisticated scribal apparatus in Jerusalem during the Late Bronze Age. This Canaanite city was certainly not a backwater, but precisely the reverse. [End of quote] In terms of the revised chronology, however, Abdi-hiba was instead a C9th BC Jewish king of Jerusalem – a name not known for the city during the C14th BC, when it was called Jebus. And, in terms of the revised chronology that I follow specifically in the case of Abdi-hiba (following an early idea of Peter James), he was a biblical king, namely, Jehoram of Judah, son of the great king Jehoshaphat. To establish who may have set Abdi-hiba on his royal throne, as indicated by him in EA 286: Seeing that, as far as I am concerned, neither my father nor my mother put me in this place, but the strong arm of the king brought me into my father’s house, why should I of all people commit a crime against the king, my lord? - and one presumes from the above that it could not have been king Jehoshaphat himself - might the better be determined by an examination of who was/were the recipient/s of his letters (EA 285-290). EA Letters of Abdi-Hiba “Abdi-Heba was the author of letters EA 285-290”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdi-Heba 1. EA 285—title: "The soldier-ruler of Jerusalem" 2. EA 286—title: "A throne granted, not inherited" 3. EA 287—title: "A very serious crime"' 4. EA 288—title: "Benign neglect" 5. EA 289—title: "A reckoning demanded" 6. EA 290—title: "Three against one"'[9] One is most surprised to find out, upon perusing these letters of Abdi-hiba, that - despite Rollston’s presumption that Abdi-hiba’s “the king, my lord” was an “Egyptian monarch” - no Egyptian ruler appears to be specifically named in this set of letters. Moreover, “Egypt” itself may be referred to only once in this series (EA 285): “ … Addaya has taken the garrison that you sent in the charge of Haya, the son of Miyare; he has stationed it in his own house in Hazzatu and has sent 20 men to Egypt-(Miṣri)”. When we include the lack of any reference to Egypt in the three letters of Lab’ayu (252-254): Was Lab'ayu even writing to a Pharaoh? (8) Was Lab'ayu even writing to a Pharaoh? | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu and likewise in the two letters of the woman, Baalat Neše - ten letters in all - then we might be prompted to reconsider whether the extent of Egyptian involvement was as much as is generally claimed. EA 285 is as follows: To the king [my lord, thus hath spoken] Abdi-{iiba, thy servant. [At] the feet [of the king, my lord], seven times and seven times I fall. Behold, I am not a [loeal ruler] ; an officer am I to the [king, my lord]. Why has the king . . . not sent a messenger . . A Under sueh cireum- stanees Eenjiamu has sent. . . . Let the king [hearken] to Abdi-Juba, his servant! [Behold], there are no troops. Let the king, my lord, send an officer, and let him take the loeal rulers with him! The lands of the king . . . and people . . . who are . . . and Addaya, the offieer of the king, [has] their house. . . . Let the king take heed for them, and let him send a messenger quiekly When ... I die. . . . Letter from Lachish (Constantinople, W. 21 9). 2 [To the] great, thus hath spoken Pabi, at thy feet I fall. Thou must know that Shipti-Ba'al and Zimrida are eon- spiring, and that Shipti-Ba'al hath spoken to Zimrida: " My father of the eity, Yarami (?) has written to me — Give me [six] bows, and three daggers, and three swords ! If I go forth against the land of the king, and thou dost join me, I shall surely conquer. He who makes (?) this plan is Pabu. Send him before me. w Now I have sent Rapi-el. Ho will bring to the great man information about this affair (?) EA 286 is as follows: --Say [t]o the king, my lord: Message of Abdi-Heba, your servant. I fall at the feet of my lord, the king, 7 times and 7 times. (5-15)--What have I done to the king, my lord? They denounce me : ú-ša-a-ru[2] (I am slandered) before the king, my lord,1 "Abdi-Heba has rebelled against the king, his lord." Seeing that, as far as I am concerned, neither my father nor my mother put me in this place, but the strong arm of the king2 brought me into my father's house, why should I of all people commit a crime against the king, my lord? (16-21)--As truly as the king, my lord, lives,3 I say to the commissioner of the king, [my] lord, "Why do you love the 'Apiru but hate the mayors? Accordingly, I am slandered before the king, my lord. (22-31)--Because I say4 "Lost are the lands of the king, my lord," accordingly I am slandered before the king, my lord. May the king, my lord, know that (though) the king, my lord stationed a garrison (here), Enhamu has taken i[t al]l away. [ ... ] Reverse: (32-43)--[Now], O king, my lord, [there is n]o garrison, [and so] may the king provide for his land. May the king [pro]vide for his land! All the [la]nds of the king, my lord, have deserted. Ili-Milku has caused the loss of all the land of the king, and so may the king, my lord, provide for his land. For my part, I say, "I would go in to the king, my lord, and visit the king, my lord," but the war against me is severe, and so I am not able to go in to the king, my lord. (44-52)--And may it seem good in the sight of the king, [and] may he send a garrison so I may go in and visit the king, my lord. In truth,5 the king, my lord, lives: whenever the commissioners have come out, I would say (to them), "Lost are the lands of the king," but they did not listen to me. Lost are all the mayors; there is not a mayor remaining to the king, my lord. (53-60)--May the king turn his attention to the archers so that archers of the king, my lord, come forth. The king has no lands. (That) 'Apiru6 has plundered all the lands of the king. If there are archers this year, the lands of the king, my lord, will remain. But if there are no archers, lost are the lands of the king, my lord. (61-64)--[T]o the scribe of the king, my lord: Message of Abdi-Heba, your [ser]vant. Present eloquent words to the king, my lord. Lost are all the lands of the king, my lord. EA 287 is as follows: Say to the king, my lord: Message of Abdi-Heba, your servant. I fall at the feet of my lord 7 times and 7 times. Consider the entire affair. Milkilu and Tagi brought troops into Qiltu against me... ...May the king know (that) all the lands are at peace (with one another), but I am at war. May the king provide for his land. Consider the lands of Gazru, Ašqaluna, and Lakisi. They have given them [my enemies] food, oil and any other requirement. So may the king provide for archers and send the archers against men that commit crimes against the king, my lord. If this year there are archers, then the lands and the hazzanu (client kings) will belong to the king, my lord. But if there are no archers, then the king will have neither lands nor hazzanu. Consider Jerusalem! This neither my father nor my mother gave to me. The strong hand (arm) of the king gave it to me. Consider the deed! This is the deed of Milkilu and the deed of the sons of Lab'ayu, who have given the land of the king to the 'Apiru. Consider, O king, my lord! I am in the right!.... EA 288 is as follows: To the king, my lord, my sun, hath spoken thus Abdi- hiba, thy servant. At the feet of the king, my lord, seven times and seven times do I fall. Behold, the king, my lord, hath set his name upon the East and upon the West. It is a wickedness which they have wrought against me. Behold, I am not a local ruler, I am an officer 2 of the king, my lord. Behold, I am a shepherd of the king, and one who brings tribute to the king. Neither my father, nor my mother, [but] the mighty hand of the king, hath established me in my father's house . . . came to me. . . . I gave him ten slaves into his hand. When Shuta, the officer of the king, came to me, I gave him twenty-one maidservants and eighty (?) asiru . . . gave I into the hand of Shtita, as a present for the king, my lord. Let the king care for his land I The whole land of the king will be lost. They have assumed hostilities against me (?) As far as tho territory of Sheri, as far as Ginti-kirmil, it goes well with all the local rulers (?), and hostility prevails against mc. If one could see ! 3 But I do not see the eyes of tho king, my lord, because hostility is established against me. When there was a ship on the sea, and the mighty hand of the king held Najjrima and Kapasi. But now the habiru hold the cities of the king. There is no local ruler left to the king, my lord ; all are lost. Behold, Turbazu has been slain in the gate of Zilu ; yet tho king docs nothing. Behold, Zimrida of Lachish, his servants havo slaughtered him . . . the Habiru, Iaptiji-Adda, has been slain in the gate of Zilu ; yet the king does nothing. . . . l Let the king take care for his land, and let the king give his attention in regard to troops for the land of tribute (?) 1 For if no troops come in this year, all the lands of the king, my lord, will be destroyed and in ruins. They must not say before the king, my lord, that the land of the king, my lord, is destroyed, and all the local rulers are destroyed. If no troops arrive in this year, then let the king send an officer to take mo to thee with my brothers, and wo will die with the king, my lord. EA 289 is as follows: Lines 1-4)--[Say t]o the king, my lord: Message of 'Abdi-Heba, your servant. I f[all] at the feet of my lord, the k[ing], 7 times and 7 times. (5-10)Milkilu does not break away from the sons of Labaya and from the sons of Arsawa, as they desire the land of the king for themselves. As for a mayor who does such a deed, why does the king not (c)all him to account? (11-17)--Such was the deed that Milkilu and Tagi did: they took Rubutu. And now as for Jerusalem-(URUUru-Salimki), if this land belongs to the king, why is it ((not)) of concern1 to the king like Hazzatu? (18-24)--Ginti-kirmil belongs to Tagi, and men of Gintu are the garrison in Bitsanu.2 Are we to act like Labaya when he was giving the land of Šakmu to the Hapiru? (25-36)--Milkilu has written to Tagi and the sons ((of Labaya)), "Be the both of you a protection.3 Grant all their demands to the men of Qiltu, and let us isolate Jerusalem."4 Addaya has taken the garrison that you sent in the charge of Haya, the son of Miyare; he has stationed it in his own house in Hazzatu and has sent 20 men to Egypt-(Miṣri). May the king, my lord, know (that) no garrison of the king is with me. (37-44)--Accordingly, as truly as the king lives, his irpi- official,5 Pu'uru, has left me and is in Hazzatu. (May the king call (this) to mind when be arrives.)6 And so may the king send 50 men as a garrison to protect the land. The entire land of the king has deser[ted]. (45-46)--Send Ye((eh))enhamu that he may know about the land of the king, [my lord]. (47-51)--To the scribe of the king, [my lord: M]essage of 'Abdi-Heba, [your] servant, Offer eloq[uent] words to the king: I am always, utterly yours.7 I am your servant.— EA 290 is as follows: Let it be known what Milkilu and Shuwardata did to the land of the king, my lord! They sent troops of Gezer, troops of Gath . . . the land of the king went over to the ‘Apiru. But now even a town near Jerusalem, Bit-Lahmi (Bethlehem) by name, a village which once belonged to the king, has fallen to the enemy . . . Let the king hear the words of your servant Abdi-Heba, and send archers to restore the imperial lands of the king! But if no archers are sent, the lands of the king will be taken by the 'Apiru people. This act was done by the hand of Milkilu and Shuwardata. Good Correspondence Between EA and Revision According to 2 Kings 8:16-17: “In the fifth year of Joram son of Ahab king of Israel, when Jehoshaphat was king of Judah, Jehoram son of Jehoshaphat began his reign as king of Judah. He was thirty-two years old when he became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem eight years”. In favour of Abdi-hiba as king Jehoram of Judah, and Lab’ayu as Ahab of Israel, is the fact that Lab’ayu is appropriately dead by the time of Abdi-hiba. Thus EA 280: Say to the king, my lord, my god, my Sun: Message of Shuwardata, your servant, the dirt at your feet. I fall at the feet of the king, my lord, my god, my Sun, 7 times and 7 times. The king, my lord, permitted me to wage war against Qeltu (Keilah). I waged war. It is now at peace with me; my city is restored to me. Why did Abdi-Heba write to the men of Qeltu, "Accept silver and follow me?"... Moreover, Labaya, who used to take our towns, is dead, but now another Labaya is Abdi-Heba, and he seizes our town. So, may the king take cognizance of his servant because of this deed... Interestingly, Abdi-hiba is being designated here as “another Labaya”. And (EA 287) “the sons of Lab'ayu”, are now active in place of their deceased father. Jehoram of Judah, who, according to P. Mauro (The Wonders of Bible Chronology) was both prorex and corex during the latter part of his father Jehoshapat’s reign (and had three regnal beginnings), was also a contemporary, then, of the two sons of Ahab, Ahaziah and Jehoram – these being, according to my revision, “the sons of Lab'ayu”.

Friday, February 16, 2024

Go West, young student of ancient geography!

by Damien F Mackey This article was previously a four-part series entitled: Bringing New Order to Mesopotamian History and Chronology But a veritable historical (chronological) and geographical revolution has occurred since that was written, challenging even the very notion of what was Mesopotamian. As I recall it: A first step was taken by Creationist writers, which was most unexpected considering their strong focus upon the Babel incident, traditionally thought to have occurred in Sumer in southern Mesopotamia – this region long considered to have been the biblical “land of Shinar” (e.g. Genesis 10:10). The thought now, however, was that Shinar was to be located, insteads, in NW Syria, with various differing geographical suggestions being brought forth. This was basically a return to the view of Dr. W. F. Albright that Shinar was to be found NW of Sumer. He believed that it was the same as the ancient kingdom of Hanna in N Syria. A second step: Kenneth Griffith and his colleague, Darrell K. White, who were amongst those favouring a re-location of Shinar, and hence of ancient Babel: An Upper Mesopotamian location for Babel (6) An Upper Mesopotamian location for Babel | Kenneth Griffith - Academia.edu really ‘hit the scoreboard’, I believe, when they proceeded to identify the Mountain of the Ark’s landing as Karaca Dağ (in SE Turkey): A Candidate Site for Noah’s Ark, Altar, and Tomb (6) A Candidate Site for Noah's Ark, Altar, and Tomb. | Kenneth Griffith and Darrell K White - Academia.edu apparently the site of first (i.e., post-diluvian) human agriculture (Neolithic). Humanity’s beginnings, post-Flood, were now appropriately being set where we find the world’s oldest sites/cities: Göbekli Tepe; Urfa (Șanliurfa); and Harran. A third step: I, who had been following closely this fascinating shifting of a long-held geography far westwards and northwards, was eventually able to bring forward my own contributions. I had long held – a view also espoused by W.F. Albright – that Magan and Meluḫḫa referred to, respectively, Egypt and Ethiopia, and were not, as we are told, regions close to Sumer during the Akkadian and Ur III periods (though they later meant Egypt and Ethiopia). On this premise, I re-thought Akkad and Dilmun, and re-located them to the Mediterranean coast, as, respectively, Ugarit (Egyptian IKAT) and Tyre: Magan, Meluhha, Dilmun and Akkad (6) Magan, Meluhha, Dilmun and Akkad | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu After that, things would become quite sensational. A fourth step: Sumer and Central Mesopotamia were now to be stripped of some of their (supposedly) most famous locations, which I found to be Judean instead: (Girsu = Jerusalem; Lagash (Lakish)/Eshnunna = Lachish/Ashduddu (Ashdod)): As Ashduddu (Ashdod) is to Lachish, so, likewise, is Eshnunna to Lagash (6) As Ashduddu (Ashdod) is to Lachish, so, likewise, is Eshnunna to Lagash | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Sumeria’s standard history and geography now needed to be radically revised: Sumerian History in Chaos (7) Sumerian History in Chaos | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Sumerian History in Chaos: Urukagina, first reformer, or C8th BC ruler of Jerusalem? (7) Sumerian History in Chaos: Urukagina, first reformer, or C8th BC ruler of Jerusalem? | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Sumerian Geography in Chaos (7) Sumerian Geography in Chaos | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu Now, as if all this were not enough: A fifth step: (This one actually pre-dated my efforts, but I only learned of it this year, 2023). Royce (Richard) Erickson saw fit to shift certain countries closely associated with Sumer, Elam and Chaldea (and others), far, far to the NW. See my favourable, brief, coverage of his research in my article: More geographical ‘tsunamis’: lands of Elam and Chaldea (8) More geographical ‘tsunamis’: lands of Elam and Chaldea | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu I strongly recommend for those interested, though, to read Royce Erickson’s article referenced therein. Obviously this necessary (so I think) impoverishing of southern Mesopotamia will significantly colour any future attempts on my part at: Bringing New Order to Mesopotamian History and Chronology Previously I had written: Introduction In 1985, Lester J. Mitcham had attempted to identify the point of fold in the Assyrian King List [AKL], necessary for accommodating the downward revision of history.[1] He looked to bridge a gap of 170 years by bringing the formerly C12th BC Assyrian king, Ninurta-apil-Ekur, to within closer range of his known C14th BC ancestor, Eriba-Adad I. In the same publication, Dean Hickman had argued even more radically for a lowering, by virtually a millennium, of formerly C19th BC king Shamshi-Adad I, now to be recognised as the biblical king, Hadadezer, a Syrian foe of king David of Israel.[2] I myself have accepted this adjustment (See B. below). Prior to all that, Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky had urged for a folding of the C14th BC Kassite king (and el-Amarna correspondent), Burnaburiash II, with the C9th BC Assyrian king, Shalmaneser III, who had conquered Babylon.[3] And there have been other attempts as well to bring order to Mesopotamian history and chronology; for example, Phillip Clapham’s attempt to identify the C13th Assyrian king, Tukulti-Ninurta I, with the C8th BC king, Sennacherib.[4] Clapham soon decided that, despite some initially promising similarities, these two kings could not realistically be merged.[5] For a completely new approach to a revised Sennacherib, see my: Assyrian King Sargon II, Otherwise Known As Sennacherib https://www.academia.edu/6708474/Assyrian_King_Sargon_II_Otherwise_Known_As_Sennacherib Whilst all of these attempts at Mesopotamian revision appear to have certain merit, other efforts were doomed right from the start because they infringed against established archaeological sequences. Thus Mitcham, again, exposed Emmet Sweeney’s defence of Professor Gunnar Heinsohn’s most radical revision, because of its blatant disregard, in part, for archaeological fact.[6] I myself am proposing that: A. C12TH BC FOLDS INTO C8TH BC Here I want briefly to offer what I think can be a most compelling fold; one that (a) does not infringe against archaeology, and that (b) harmonises approximately with previous art-historical observations of likenesses between 13th-12th centuries BC and 9th-8th centuries BC art and architecture.[7] And it also has the advantage – unlike Mitcham’s and Clapham’s efforts – of (c) folding kings with the same name. I begin by connecting Merodach-baladan I and II (also equated by Heinsohn[8]), each of 12-13 years of reign, about whose kudurrus J. Brinkman remarked:[9] Four kudurrus …, taken together with evidence of his building activity in Borsippa … show Merodach-baladan I still master in his own domain. The bricks recording the building of the temple of Eanna in Uruk …, assigned to Merodach-baladan I by the British Museum’s A Guide to the Babylonian and Assyrian Antiquities … cannot now be readily located in the Museum for consultation; it is highly probable, however, that these bricks belong to Merodach-baladan II (see Studies Oppenheim, p. 42 …). My proposal here involves a C12th to C8th BC fold. But, more strikingly, I draw attention to the succession of Shutrukid rulers of Elam of the era of Merodach-baladan I who can be equated, as a full succession, with those of the era of Merodach-baladan II. Compare: C12th BC Shutruk-Nahhunte; Kudur-Nahhunte; and Hulteludish (or Hultelutush-Insushinak) with C8th BC Shutur-Nakhkhunte; Kutir-Nakhkhunte; and Hallushu (or Halutush-Insushinak). This is already too striking, I think, to be accidental, and it, coupled with the Merodach-baladan pairing, may offer far more obvious promise than have previous efforts of revision. There is also lurking within close range a powerful king Tiglath-pileser, variously I and III. Common to Tiglath-pileser I/III were: a love of building (especially in honour of Assur) and hunting, and many conquests, for example: the Aramaeans, with frequent raids across the Euphrates; the Hittites (with the possibility of a common foe, Ini-Tešub); Palestine; to the Mediterranean; the central Zagros tribes; Lake Van, Nairi and Armenia (Urartu); the conquest of Babylon. To name just a few of the many similarities. It seems to me that historians really repeat themselves when discussing these presumably “two” Assyrian “kings”. Consider this amazing case of repetition, as I see it, from Seton Lloyd:[10] The earliest Assyrian references to the Mushki [Phrygians] suggest that their eastward thrust into the Taurus and towards the Euphrates had already become a menace. In about 1100 BC Tiglath-Pileser I defeats a coalition of “five Mushkian kings” and brings back six thousand prisoners. In the ninth century the Mushki are again defeated by Ashurnasirpal II, while Shalmaneser III finds himself in conflict with Tabal …. But when, in the following century, Tiglath-pileser III once more records a confrontation with “five Tabalian kings”, the spelling of their names reveals the fact that these are no sort of Phrygians [sic], but a semiindigenous Luwian-speaking people, who must have survived the fall of the Hittite Empire. I think that we should now be on safe grounds in presuming that the “five Mushkian kings” and the “five Tabalian kings” referred to above by Seton Lloyd as having been defeated by Tiglath-pileser I/III – but presumably separated in time by more than 3 centuries – were in fact the very same five kings. Previously I had written (but must now modify): If this revised scenario is acceptable, then it would absolutely demand that the C10th BC’s two-decade plus ruler of Babylon, Nebuchednezzar I, be identified with the neo-Assyrian king of similar reign-length, Sennacherib, conqueror of Babylon, whom C. Jonsson claims was actually king of Babylon a year before his becoming king of Assyria.[11] Nebuchednezzar was a noted devotee of the Assyrian god, Adad[12]. It is thought that both Sargon II and Sennacherib (whom I have identified as one) had, somewhat modestly, unlike Tiglath-pileser III, not adopted the title, “King of Babylon”, but only shakkanaku (“viceroy”). We well know, however, that modesty was not an Assyrian characteristic. And so lacking in this virtue was Sargon II/Sennacherib, I believe, that historians have had to create a complete Babylonian king, namely, Nebuchednezzar I, to accommodate the Assyrian’s rôle as ‘King of Babylon’. I have since made what I think is a far more satisfactory later connection of Nebuchednezzar I with his namesake Nebuchednezzar [so-called] II, who follows closely Sennacherib in my revised chronology. [1] “A New Interpretation of the Assyrian King List”, Proc. 3rd Seminar of C&AH, pp. 51-56. [2] “The Dating of Hammurabi”, pp. 13-28. [3] Ages in Chaos, Vol. I, 1952. [4] “Hittites and Phrygians”, C&AH, Vol. IV, pt. 2, July, 1982, p. 111. [5] Ibid., Addenda, p. 113. [6] “Support for Heinsohn’s Chronology is Misplaced”, C&CW, 1988, 1, pp. 7-12. [7] E.g. Lewis M. Greenberg, “The Lion Gate at Mycenae”, Pensée, IVR III, 1973, p. 28. Peter James, Centuries of Darkness, p. 273. E. Sweeney, Ramessides, Medes and Persians, p. 24. [8] As noted by Mitcham, “Support …”. Heinsohn then goes way too far and equates Merodach-baladan with Lugalzagesi of the time of Sargon of Akkad. [9] A Political History of Post-Kassite Babylonia, p. 87, footnote 456. [10] Ancient Turkey, pp. 68-69. [11] “The Foundations of Assyro-Babylonian Chronology”, C&CR, vol. ix, 1987, p. 23, n. 24. [12] Brinkman, op. cit., p.113. B. C19TH BC FOLDS INTO C11TH BC Now, following the lines of argument as pioneered by Dean Hickman, evidence may favour that certain famous kings of the c. C19th BC need to be radically re-dated and biblically identified. Among these are: 1. Shamshi Adad I, who becomes Hadadezer, the foe of King David of Israel; 2. Ila-kabkabu, who becomes Rekhob, father of Hadadezer. 3. Zimri Lim of Mari, who becomes King Solomon’s Syrian foe Rezon; 4. Iahdunlim, who becomes Eliada, father of Rezon. 5. Yarim Lim of coastal Yamkhad, who becomes Hiram, king of Tyre. We should recognize that the ancient history of these regions is not yet based on a secure chronology. Typically, king lists contain merely names with no indications as to overlapping and time periods. In my estimate there are a few clues which allow for equating certain kings with those from Biblical history where they are known under different names. What I intend to do is bring source material together of three central figures, SHAMSHI ADAD I, ZIMRI LIM AND YARIM LIM. I shall use them as pillars to present a defensible chronology which we shall elaborate on as new information comes in. Shamshi Adad is conventionally dated to about 1815-1782 BC. His name is found in the so-called ‘Assyrian Kinglist’. Shamshi Adad's father was Ila-kabkabu, who was according to all appearances an insignificant local ruler at Assur. From Shamshi Adad we have building inscriptions written in what scholars call ‘Old Babylonian’. But first we quote from the scriptural source since many can follow along these verses in their own copy of this book. Hadadezer was the foe of King David of Israel (2 Samuel 8:1-12): "And ... David smote the Philistines, and subdued them: and David took `Metheg-am-mah' out of the hand of the Philistines. And he smote Moab, and measured them with a line, casting them down to the ground; even with two lines measured he to put to death, and with one full line to keep alive. And so the Moabites became David's servants, and brought gifts. David smote also `Hadadezer', the the son of Rekhob, king of Zobah, as he went to recover his border at the river Euphrates. And David took from him a thousand chariots: and 700 horsemen, and 20,000 footmen: and David lamed (cut the heel's sinew) all the chariot horses, but saved of them 100 chariots. But when the Syrians of Damascus came to help Hadadezer king of Zobah, David slew of the Syrians 22,000 men. Then David put garrisons in Syria of Damascus: and the Syrians became servants to David, and brought gifts. And the Lord preserved David wherever he went. And David took the shields of gold that were on the servants of Hadadezer, and brought them to Jerusalem. And from Betah, and from Berothai, cities of Hadadezer, king David took exceeding much brass. When `Toi', king of Hammath, heard that David had smitten all the host of Hadadezer, then `Toi' sent Joram his son unto king David, to salute him, because he had fought against Hadadezer, and smitten him: for Hadadezer had wars with Toi. And Joram brought with him vessels of silver, and vessels of gold, and vessels of brass: Which also king David did dedicate unto the Lord, with the silver and gold that he had dedicated of all nations which he had subdued; of Syria and Moab, and of all the children of Ammon, and of the Philistines, and of Amalek, and of the spoil of Hadadezer, son of Rehob, king of Zobah." (2 Samuel 10:6-17 NIV): "When the Ammonites realized that they had become a stench in David's nostrils, they hired 20,000 Aramean soldiers from Beth Rehob and Zobah, as well as the king of Maacah with a 1,000 men, and also 12,000 men from Tob. ... Then Joab and the troops with him advanced to fight the Arameans, and they fled before him. ... After the Arameans saw that they had been routed by Israel, they regrouped. Hadadezer had Arameans brought from beyond the River (Euphrates); they went to Helam, with Shobach the commander of Hadadezer's army leading them. ... When David was told of this he gathered all Israel, crossed the Jordan and went to Helam. The Arameans formed their battle lines to meet David and fought against him. But they fled before Israel, and David killed 700 of their charioteers and 40,000 of their foot soldiers. He also struck down Shobach the commander of the army, and he died there. When all the kings who were vassals of Hadadezer saw that they had been defeated by Israel, they made peace with Israel and became subject to them. So the Arameans were afraid to help the Ammonites anymore". One significant chronological anchor is the information that Shamshi-Adad boasted that he had erected triumphal stelae in Lebanon. He was allied with the princes of upper Syria, notably Carchemish and Qatna. We know from Scripture that Hadadezer liked to set up victory monuments; David defeated him "as he went to set up his monument at the river Euphrates" (1 Chronicles 18:3). Scripture records also that the Syrian was ruler of the kings beyond the river (2 Samuel 10:16, 19), i.e. the Euphrates, as later records from Assyria confirm as well. Hickman thought that "this description resembles that of Shamshi-Adad". Some Confused History Explained Some writers have pointed out that the Biblical narrative first claims that David defeated the Syrians and, two chapters later, when David was campaigning against the Ammonites, the Syrians, he had just defeated, (the author, being a poor scholar, actually makes a defeat into a total wipe out), are now sending troops to help the Ammonites. How can that be? Well, as we learn about the Mesopotamian kings we realize they ruled off and on over a large region and would have had no problem in raising new armies. We learn from the scriptures that Assur was called Zobah in Israel and Shamshi Adad's father was called Rekhob. Shamshi Adad did seem to have controlled the three major city centres of Assur, Nineveh and Erbil. He also set up stone stelae on the shore of the Mediterranean Sea. We learn that he had a significant army including siege engines and many chariots but little training to fight a war against an experienced guerrilla warfare tactician like David. His successes against the kings of the north ensured a period of peace which lasted into the time of Solomon. The defeat of Hadadezer/Shamshi Adad marked the eventual weakening of the Assur of his days. Hadadezer had another capital “Shubat-Enlil”, the ‘Residence of Enlil’, located at the source waters of the Khabur River. The ruins of Chagar-Bazar are thought to be that second capital where an administrative archive from the time of Shamshi-Adad/Hadadezer was found. Shamshi/Hadadezer had two sons, Ishme-Dagan sub-king of Ekallatum on the Tigris, and Yasmah-Adad sub-king of Mari. It appears that Yasmah was inferior in his administrative skills to his brother as letters from his father to him show. These letters reveal a father full of anxiety, parental concern sometimes alternating with an ironic approach and even humorous in some cases. Hadadezer/Shamshi was an able administrator who kept a close eye on the affairs in his realm. He castigated officers in his army who were unfair in dividing up the spoils of warfare. Reading the letters we can hear the direct voices of authentic, ancient kings. His influence reached to Carchemish and the shores of the Mediterranean. In ancient times a kingdom was often the product of its founder and largely disappeared with him. The person who took up where Hadadezer/Shamshi Adad left off was Rezon. Rezon I identify as Zimri Lim of Mari who once wrote this historically important Mari letter: "There is no king who can be mighty alone. Behind Hammurabi, the man of Babylon, march 10 to 15 kings; as many march behind Rim-Sin, the man of Larsa, Ipal-piel, the man of Eshnunna, Amut-piel, the man of Qatna, and behind `Yarim Lim', the man of Yahmad, march 20 kings." Of the palace archives of Mari 1,600 letters have been published addressed partly to the palace at Mari or copies of letters sent from the palace. Most of them cover the period from Yasmah Adad, son of Hadadezer/Shamshi Adad to Rezon/Zimri Lim. "And God stirred up another adversary, Rezon, the son of Eliadah, who fled from his lord Hadadezer king of Zobah: And he gathered men unto himself, and became captain over a band, when David slew those of Zobah: and they went to Damascus, and dwelt therein, and reigned in Damascus. And he was an adversary to Israel all the days of Solomon, beside the mischief that Hadad did: and he abhorred Israel, and reigned over Syria." [1 Kings 11:23-25] "To Zimri Lim communicate the following: ‘Thus says your brother Hammurabi [of Yamhad]: The king of Ugarit has written to me as follows: "Show me the palace of Zimri Lim! I wish to see it." With this same courier I am sending on his man.'" "This building is not ... the gem of the Orient, rather one palace on a par with many others." Zimri Lim was a contemporary of king Hammurabi the author of the famous Hammurabi Codex, Book of Laws – Solomonic Laws based on Moses, I believe. Being a contemporary of Solomon, Zimri Lim would thus have been one of all those "kings of the earth" who came to visit King Solomon. Zimri Lim's multi-storied palace at Mari with over 260 rooms is the source of one of the richest sources of written documents anywhere in the Middle East. Famous rooms include the shrine of Ishtar in the palace, the Court of the Palms, the King's Throne Room, the Banquet Hall, and the Royal Apartments but later excavators (Margueron) identified the use of the rooms quite differently from Perrot. In later times it was Hammurabi, the former friend, who conquered Mari and burned the palace. The palace occupied more than 6 acres which were excavated by the French archaeologist A. Perrot in 1933. He viewed the whole complex as belonging to Zimri Lim without considering its longer history. The wall-paintings in the throne room were in five registers depicting scenes from myth, religion, and secular themes. Some wall paintings of men and women represent them as wearing long, colourful robes and headdress, others wear kilt style tunics reaching to the knees or with split cutouts further up the thigh. No foot wear can be seen. Two winged lions with the head of bearded man with headdress are seen as well as a large cow behind the throne of the king. Hammurabi, besides destroying at least parts of the palace, also reconstructed it. The literary form of the Mari letters remind us of the El Amarna letters which were written just some 100 years later. Rulers of equal status address each other as “brother”, “father” and “son” even if they are overlord or vassal. Subordinates to the king call him “lord” and themselves “slaves”. From Mari also comes what has been described as the earliest mention of Canaan - but later now, of course, according to this revision. There we read simply: "Thieves and Canaanites are in Rahisum. We just face each other." C. C24TH BC AKKAD DYNASTY Ramifications for Biblical Studies What ensues from the sort of revision of history that I am pursuing is a fairly complete turnaround of the almost universal tendency by historians and biblical commentators to argue for a dependence of the biblical material upon Mesopotamian, Canaanite and Egyptian myths and influences. With Hammurabi now re-dated to the time of King Solomon, then no longer can his Laws be viewed as a Babylonian forerunner of Mosaïc Law. And, with the age of El Amarna now re-dated to c. C9th BC, no longer can pharaoh Akhnaton’s Sun Hymn, so obviously like King David’s Psalm 104, be regarded as the influence for the great King of Israel. The same comment applies to the Psalm like pieces in the monuments of Queen Hatshepsut, the biblical Queen of Sheba, whose influence was Israel. See e.g. my: Solomon and Sheba https://www.academia.edu/3660164/Solomon_and_Sheba But, just as conventional historians have wrongly assumed an all-out pagan influencing of biblical Israel, so had I assumed (based on the tendency of the revision) that the Moses-like - as to associated mythology - Sargon of Akkad, conventionally dated to c. 2300 BC, must actually have post-dated Moses. And I had accordingly looked for a much later, revised location for the Akkadian dynasty. However, that apparently futile search was finally stopped short after I had read the following scholarly article by Douglas Petrovich: Identifying Nimrod of Genesis 10 with Sargon of Akkad by Exegetical and Archaeological Means https://www.academia.edu/2184113/_2013_Identifying_Nimrod_of_Genesis_10_with_Sargon_of_Akkad_by_Exegetical_and_Archaeological_Means That would mean that the Akkadian dynasty has been dated to at least within a few centuries of its proper place. My conclusion now would be that the famous Sargon legend (I have taken this from: http://www.skeptically.org/oldtestament/id3.html): “I am Sargon, the powerful king, the king of Akkad. My mother was an Enitu priestees, I did not know any father . . . . My mother conceived me and bore me in secret. She put me in a little box made of reeds, sealing its lid with pitch. She put me in the river. . . . The river carried me away and brought me to Akki the drawer of water. Akki the drawer of water adopted me and brought me up as his son. . .”[,] so like the account of Moses in Exodus 2, but thought to have been recorded as late as about the C7th BC, was based upon the biblical Exodus story that would have been recounted in Mesopotamian captivity by people like Tobit and his family, and other Israelites and Jews. So, even though Sargon of Akkad himself, and his dynasty, well pre-dated Moses, the famous written legend about the mighty king of Akkad well post-dated Moses. Taking the Middle out of ‘Middle Assyrian Era’ The so-called ‘Middle Assyrian Period’, thought to range from approximately 1400-900 BC (dates vary) can no longer stand as a separate entity of history, but must - like the so-called ‘Middle Kingdom’ of Egyptian history, partly contemporaneous with Egypt’s ‘Old Kingdom’ - be folded with another era. Assyrian history, for the era of present concern - from El Amarna [EA] to late Tiglath-pileser - is conventionally arranged like this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Assyrian_kings Middle Assyrian Period Middle Assyrian Period King name Reigned[18][19][20] Notes[14][15] Eriba-Adad I c. 1380–1353 BC (short) "son of Ashur-bel-nisheshu" Ashur-uballit I c. 1353–1318 BC (short) "son of Eriba-Adad (I)" Enlil-nirari c. 1317–1308 BC (short) "son of Ashur-uballit" Arik-den-ili c. 1307–1296 BC (short) "son of Enlil-nirari" Adad-nirari I c. 1295–1264 BC (short) "son of Arik-den-ili" Shalmaneser I c. 1263–1234 BC (short) "son of Adad-nirari (I)" Tukulti-Ninurta I c. 1233–1197 BC (short) "son of Shalmaneser (I)" Ashur-nadin-apli c. 1196–1194 BC (short) "during the lifetime of Tukulti-ninurta (I), Ashur-nadin-apli, his son, seized the throne" Ashur-nirari III c. 1193–1188 BC (short) "son of Ashur-nadin-apli" Enlil-kudurri-usur c. 1187–1183 BC (short) "son of Tukulti-Ninurta (I)" Ninurta-apal-Ekur c. 1182–1180 BC (short) "son of Ila-Hadda, a descendant of Eriba-Adad (I), went to Karduniash. He came up from Karduniash (and) seized the throne." Beginning with Ashur-Dan I, dates are consistent and not subject to middle/short chronology distinctions. Ashur-Dan I c. 1179–1133 BC "son of Ashur-nadin-apli" Ninurta-tukulti-Ashur c. 1133 BC "son of Ashur-dan (I), briefly" Mutakkil-nusku c. 1133 BC "his (Ninurta-tukulti-Ashur's) brother, fought him and took him to Karduniash. Mutakkil-Nusku held the throne briefly, then died." Ashur-resh-ishi I c. 1133–1115 BC "son of Mutakkil-Nusku" Tiglath-Pileser I c. 1115–1076 BC "son of Ashur-resh-ishi (I)" Asharid-apal-Ekur c. 1076–1074 BC "son of Tiglath-pileser (I)" Ashur-bel-kala c. 1074–1056 BC "son of Tiglath-pileser (I)" Eriba-Adad II c. 1056–1054 BC "son of Ashur-bel-kala" Shamshi-Adad IV c. 1054–1050 BC "son of Tiglath-pileser (I), came up from Karduniash. He ousted Eriba-Adad (II), son of Ashur-bel-kala, (and) seized the throne" Ashur-nasir-pal I c. 1050–1031 BC "son of Shamshi-Adad (IV)" Shalmaneser II c. 1031–1019 BC "son of Ashur-nasir-pal (I)" Ashur-nirari IV c. 1019–1013 BC "son of Shalmaneser (II)" Ashur-rabi II c. 1013–972 BC "son of Ashur-nasir-pal (I)" Ashur-resh-ishi II c. 972–967 BC "son of Ashur-rabi (II)" Tiglath-Pileser II c. 967–935 BC "son of Ashur-resh-ishi (II)" Ashur-Dan II c. 935–912 BC "son of Tiglath-Pileser (II)" Neo-Assyrian Period Neo-Assyrian Period King name Reigned[21][22][23] Notes[14][15] Adad-nirari II 912–891 BC "son of Ashur-Dan (II)" Tukulti-Ninurta II 891–884 BC "son of Adad-nirari (II)" Ashur-nasir-pal II 884–859 BC "son of Tukulti-Ninurta (II)" Shalmaneser III 859–824 BC "son of Ashur-nasir-pal (II)" Shamshi-Adad V 824–811 BC "son of Shalmaneser (III)" Shammu-ramat, regent, 811–808 BC Adad-nirari III 811–783 BC "son of Shamshi-Adad (V)" Shalmaneser IV 783–773 BC "son of Adad-nirari (III)" Ashur-Dan III 773–755 BC "son of Shalmaneser (IV)"; solar eclipse 763 BC[7] Ashur-nirari V 755–745 BC "son of Adad-nirari (III)" Tiglath-Pileser III 745–727 BC "son of Ashur-nirari (V)" Shalmaneser V 727–722 BC "son of Tiglath-Pileser (III)" That is a lot of kings - and they supposedly span more than six centuries. But now, with the second listed king, Assuruballit, Ashur-uballit I c. 1353–1318 BC re-dated from the mid-C14th BC to the mid-C9th BC, we all of a sudden have five centuries less with which to manoeuvre. Many of these kings, though, I believe, are duplicates. And other listed names might refer to powerful officials and generals rather than actual kings. For, did not that neo-Assyrian ‘Great King’, Sennacherib, boast (Isaiah 10:8): ‘ARE NOT MY COMMANDERS [PRINCES, OFFICIALS] ALL KINGS?’? We need to discern a dynastic pattern for the above-listed Assyrian kings in order for us to be able to corral these manifold names into the much reduced time space, now, of approximately one and a half centuries. Continuing the compression of those oppressive Assyrian kings. John R. Salverda, commenting on my identification of the conventional Tiglath-pileser I with Tiglath-pileser III, in my article: Tiglath-pileser King of Assyria https://www.academia.edu/9293293/Tiglath-pileser_King_of_Assyria wrote this: “You may just as well throw in Tiglath-pileser II as well. He was the son of another Ashur-resh-ishi (II), the contemporary of another Jeroboam (I) and the father of another Ashur-Dan (II)”. According to the conventional arrangement of the Assyrian king lists, the kings Shalmaneser (I-V) span a period from approximately C13th BC-C8th BC: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shalmaneser • Shalmaneser I King of Assyria (1274–1245 BC) • Shalmaneser II, King of Assyria (1031–1019 BC) • Shalmaneser III, King of Assyria (859–824 BC) • Shalmaneser IV, King of Assyria (783–773 BC) • Shalmaneser V, King of Assyria (727–722 BC) and Biblical conqueror of Israel whilst the kings Tiglath-pileser (I-III) span a period from approximately C12th BC-C8th BC: • Tiglath-Pileser I was a king of Assyria (1114–1076 BC) • Tiglath-Pileser II was King of Assyria (965-932 BC) • Tiglath-Pileser III was a King of Assyria (745–727 BC) However, according to my revision so far, four of these supposedly individual kings merge into just the one Assyrian king, whose reign ceases at the approximate time of the Fall of Samaria (c. 722 BC, conventional dating), when Sargon II comes to the throne. Thus I have concluded: Tiglath-pileser I = Tiglath-pileser III = Shalmaneser III = Shalmaneser V As an approximation, working backwards from 722 BC, and taking the longest reign, the 38 years for Tiglath-pileser I, we arrive at the possible span of (722 + 38 =) 760, 760-722 BC for our composite king Shalmaneser/Tiglath-pileser. That would mean that, in biblical terms, the long reign of this Assyrian monarch would have spanned back from the Fall of Samaria all the way to the late reign of king Jeroboam II of Israel (William F. Albright has dated his reign to 786–746 BC, while E. R. Thiele says he was coregent with Jehoash 793 to 782 BC and sole ruler 782 to 753 BC.[1]). If this present new arrangement is truly on the right track, then John R. Salverda’s view that Tiglath-pileser II must also be merged with our composite king is looking most likely indeed. And what of the remaining kings Shalmaneser, I, II and IV?

El Amarna in Chaos

by Damien F. Mackey “But in the field of history nothing is established for ever: the discovery of new sources, or simply a new perspective on events, can call into question an almost official historical truth which has been long-accepted by everyone”. Michael Benoit, The Thirteenth Apostle (p. 355). Who was Akhnaton? Who, or what, influenced him? What was he trying to do? Part One: The Exodus? If Egyptology had got it right with its Sothic dating of the reign of Akhnaton to c. 1350 BC, then a quite common view that would have Akhnaton as a contemporary of the Hebrew Moses, or even as Moses himself, might make one pause to consider its possibility. For such was the radical religious revolution in Egypt, as brought about singlehandedly by the most unusual of pharaohs, Akhnaton, that the likes of Sigmund Freud, and others, have concluded that the apparent monotheism that the pharaoh enforced upon Egypt had influenced Moses into becoming a monotheist. “Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, even considered that Moses may have been inspired by Akhnaton. In his book Moses and Monotheism, published in 1939, he argued that the Hebrews had been followers of Akhnaton’s religion, and that their god was actually the Aten” (Graham Phillips, Act of God, Pan Books, 1998, p. 171). There are not a few today who claim – or who wonder whether – Akhnaton was, in fact, the prophet Moses. A well-known example of this is the Islamic scholar, Ahmed Osman, who made this very identification in his book, Out of Egypt. The Roots of Christianity Revealed (1999). I critically reviewed the book in my articles: Osman's ‘Osmosis’ of Moses. Part One: The Chosen People https://www.academia.edu/44650799/Osmans_Osmosis_of_Moses_Part_One_The_Chosen_People and: https://www.academia.edu/44650907/Osmans_Osmosis_of_Moses_Part_Two_Christ_The_King But there are others who argue that Akhnaton cannot properly be called a monotheist. Rather, they say, Akhnaton was a henotheist. Henotheism (Greek "one god") is a term coined by Max Müller, to mean devotion to a single primary god while accepting the existence or possible existence of other deities. Müller stated that henotheism means "monotheism in principle and polytheism in fact". He made the term a center of his criticism of Western theological and religious exceptionalism (relative to Eastern religions), focusing on a cultural dogma which held "monotheism" to be both fundamentally well-defined and inherently superior to differing conceptions of God. https://www2.nau.edu/~gaud/bio301/content/heno.htm This was Dr. I. Velikovsky’s take on the religion of Akhnaton. He wrote Oedipus and Ikhnaton in 1960. Dr. Velikovsky had also thought that the cataclysmic Thera (Santorini) eruption - which some date to the time of Akhnaton (wrongly, I believe) - was a dramatic backdrop to the biblical Plagues of Egypt and the Exodus. This is yet another factor that has prompted some (e.g. Graham Phillips, op. cit.) to connect Moses to the time of Akhnaton. Dr. Velikovsky himself had re-dated Akhnaton and the whole El Amarna (EA) era to the time of kings Ahab of Israel and Jehoshaphat of Judah, c. 850 BC, some 500 years after the conventional date for Akhnaton. Unfortunately, the who influenced whom of history gets seriously derailed by the conventional chronology coupled with a poorly documented biblical chronology. For instance: - Law of Moses likenesses are also discerned in the Code of Hammurabi, a famous king of Babylon. No one could deny these similarities; - To King Sargon of Akkad is attributed a legendary story of his rescue from a basket in a river that is clearly like the Exodus account of baby Moses; - Egyptian literature has a famous Tale of Sinuhe, which professor E. Anati rightly noted ‘shared a common matrix’ with the account of Moses’ flight from Egypt and sojourn in the land of Midian; - Ramses II is dated to c. 1300 BC, and is claimed to be the Pharaoh of the Exodus; - Akhnaton’s Sun Hymn is very much like King David’s Psalm 104. Instinctively, historians will conclude in every case that Moses borrowed - from Sargon; from Hammurabi; from Sinuhe; and that David (if he existed at all) borrowed from Akhnaton. Instinctively, it is always concluded that the biblical tales were the beneficiary of (borrowed from) the pagan original (so-called) versions. Refreshingly, G. Phillips, who adheres to the conventional chronology, has stated (op. cit., p. 172: “… Akhenaten took his ideas from the Hebrews”. The revised chronology turns things upside down. - Hammurabi, now dated to c. 1000 BC, post-dated Moses by half a millennium; - Tale of Sinuhe appears late, in New Kingdom texts; - Ramses II, now to be shifted from c. 1300 BC, to c. 700 BC; - Akhnaton well post-dates Moses. The only exception is Sargon of Akkad who did indeed pre-date Moses by some centuries. However, the written legend of him as a baby in a basket well post-dates Moses, emerging around the time of Ashurbanipal (c. 700 BC). Moses was not Akhnaton, nor, chronologically, could he have been influenced by Akhnaton. Part Two: Monotheism, henotheism, or polytheism? What was Akhnaton trying to do? The account of Atenism that I shall be following here – that prompted me to write this current article, in fact – will be based upon Chapter Seven: “The One God”, of Graham Phillips’ book, Act of God, already referred to. P. 155: “The most remarkable aspect of Akhenaten’s revolution in religious thought is that it apparently springs into existence – seemingly from nowhere – the moment he becomes king. Apart from passing allusions, there is only a handful of references predating Akhenaten’s reign which seem to give the Aten any real significance”. Here Phillips gives four such earlier cases, from Amenemhet I of the Twelfth Dynasty to Amenhotep III, Akhnaton’s father. Graham Phillips’ statement above (p. 155) had already set my mind thinking in the direction that Akhnaton may have been a foreigner, an invader of Egypt – and certainly not one involved in any sort of Exodus. And when did such a foreign invasion of Egypt occur, one that attacked Egypt’s old religion? (- discounting the Hyksos invasion which, revised, occurred not long after the Exodus). That was the invasion of the Syrian Arsa, or Aziru, as referred to in the Great Harris Papyrus. (More on that later in this article). Now, there was a prominent Syrian (or Amurru) named Aziru at the very time of Akhnaton, and he, Dr. I. Velikovsky has identified (rightly, I believe) with the Syrian king, Hazael, of the Bible. On this see e.g. my articles: Is El Amarna’s Aziru Biblically Identifiable? https://www.academia.edu/19589826/Is_El_Amarna_s_Aziru_Biblically_Identifiable?sm=b and: Is El Amarna’s Aziru Biblically Identifiable? Part Two: Aziru of Papyrus Harris https://www.academia.edu/19601864/Is_El_Amarna_s_Aziru_Biblically_Identifiable_Part_Two_Aziru_of_Papyrus_Harris?sm=b P. 156: “… Atenism is even stranger than it first appears: before Akhenaten’s reign this new supreme deity was not really considered a god at all”. P. 157: “From the Karnak Talatat, together with the relief from early tombs that managed to escape desecration, we learn that Akhenaten had seemingly proclaimed the Aten supreme deity the moment he became pharaoh …”. … “From the beginning Akhenaten sees himself as a prophet …. Akhenaten described himself as ‘Divine Ruler of Thebes’.” P. 158: “Although the Aten is supreme god and Akhenaten is its only prophet from the outset of the reign, there appears to have been no suppression of the old religion for the first four or five years. In fact, the high priest of Amun was still active in the year 4, overseeing the cutting of stone for a royal statue. However, by the year 5 Akhenaten proscribed the cult of Amun-Re, closed the god’s temples, and made a complete break from the past by founding his new city on a virgin site not previously sacred to any god”. My comment: Na’aman the Syrian had, upon his conversion, taken a pile of Israeli soil to Syria. 2 Kings 5:17: ‘… please let me, your servant, be given as much earth as a pair of mules can carry, for your servant will never again make burnt offerings and sacrifices to any other god but the LORD’. “Throughout the first half of his reign, Akhenaten seems to have been struggling to find a conventional Egyptian context with which to convey his new religious concept. … The full title by which Akhenaten refers to his god in his early regnal years is: ‘Re-Herakhte, who rejoices in the horizon in his aspect of the light which is in the sun-disc’.” P. 159: “However, Akhenaten clearly does not see his god as Re-Herakhte. Namely, ‘the light which is in the sun-disc’. In an attempt to distinguish his deity from any previous god, however, Akhenaten has its name contained in a double cartouche. All the same, it appears that his subjects still found it difficult to grasp the idea that the Aten was something other than Re-Herakhte”. Prior to my reading of Graham Phillips’ book, I had been accepting of Dr. I. Velikovsky’s view that Akhnaton was a henotheist, having devotion to a primary god amidst a whole host of other gods. Now, thanks to Phillips, I am of the quite different opinion that Akhnaton was imposing monotheism upon Egypt, albeit a practical monotheism, it necessarily having to be adapted to a culture that was riotously polytheistic. Na’aman had this problem upon his conversion. 2 Kings 5:18-19: ‘But may the LORD forgive your servant for this one thing: When my master enters the temple of Rimmon to bow down and he is leaning on my arm and I have to bow there also—when I bow down in the temple of Rimmon, may the LORD forgive your servant for this’. “‘Go in peace,” Elisha said”. P. 163: ‘There are three essential aspects of Akhenaten’s god which sets it apart from all other Egyptian deities: • It is the one and only universal god. • It appears to have had no name. • It cannot be represented by a graven image.” My comment: Re the first point, recall here Na’aman’s (2 Kings 5:15): ‘Now I know … that there is no god in all the earth except in Israel’. On pp. 164-165, Graham Phillips will show, from relevant scriptural quotations, that these three points were also the very essential aspects of the God of Moses. Akhnaton was not a henotheist. He was enforcing a one supreme deity upon a completely polytheistic Egypt. Akhnaton did not live in the time of Moses, but at the time of the Split Kingdom of Israel (Ahab, Jehoshaphat, Jehoram, Ben-Hadad I). Part Three: Who was Akhnaton? The Great Harris Papyrus (GHP) tells of the invasion of Egypt by “a certain Syrian”, Arsa (Iarsu), or Aziru, and this I take to relate to the unconventional reign of Akhnaton in Egypt (Papyrus Harris I, 75: 2-6; Breasted 1905: IV, 198-9): The land of Egypt was overthrown from without and every man was thrown out of his right; they had no chief for many years formerly until other times. The land of Egypt was in the hands of chiefs and of rulers of towns; one slew his neighbour great and small. Other times having come after it, with empty years, Iarsu, a certain Syrian was with them as chief. He set the whole land tributary before him together; he united his companions and plundered their possessions. They made the gods like men and no offerings were presented in the temples. (Quote taken from N. Grimal, A History of Ancient Egypt, 1994, p. 270) To subdue the land of Egypt so completely was no mean accomplishment. It would defy the best efforts of the mighty neo-Assyrian kings, until Ashurbanipal managed fully to accomplish it in the C7th BC (conventional dating). Now, as we know from the EA letters, a certain Syrian, Aziru, was a contemporary of Akhnaton. He is considered to have been one of the vassal kings subservient to the successive EA pharaohs, Nimmuria (Amenhotep III) and Naphuria (Akhnaton). Dr. I. Velikovsky had identified the EA Aziru with the biblical king of Syria, Hazael; and he had identified Aziru’s predecessor, Abdi-ashirta, with Hazael’s alleged father (the Bible does not make this connection, I believe), Ben-Hadad. I fully accept Velikovsky’s twin identifications here. He was able to make this most striking observation in the case of Hazael (in Ages in Chaos, I, 1952): In the only dialogue preserved in the Scriptures in which Hazael participates, there are three turns of speech that also appear in his [EA] letters. The context of the dialogue - the question of whether the king of Damascus would survive, and the statement that he, Hazael, the new king, would cause the cities of Israel to go up in smoke - is also preserved in the el-Amarna letters. It is therefore a precious example of the authenticity of the scriptural orations and dialogues. In my university thesis, I took the identification further. Thus: Hazael = Aziru (EA) = Aziru (GHP): David Rohl had shown that the Syrian GHP name could be rendered as Hazael. I wrote: Rohl will, in his explanation of the name Arsa, by which he designates the ‘Syrian’ Aziru, even come to the conclusion - interesting in my context - that this name can be rendered as ‘Asa-el’, which is equivalent to Hazael; though Rohl himself will actually look to date this Arsa to the time of king Asa of Judah (early C9th BC, conventional dating). Here is Rohl’s account of this: ARSA: also written Arsu or Irsu. However the hieroglyph usually transcribed as ‘u’ was invariably vocalised as ‘a’ (e.g. Hut-waret = Haware; Hut-Hor = Hathor). • The link between the Israelite Arsa and the Arsa of the Egyptian texts is intriguing but there is another identification possibility. The short name Asa could be a hypocoristicon of a longer nomen containing a theophoric element. The name Asa-el (‘El has made’) does occur in 2 Chronicles 17:8 …. The name Asa combined with the theophoric element El is attested at this time …. Asa, like the king of Damascus Hazael (Aramaean Haza-ilu) …. But can we now extend this Hazael/Aziru identification even further, to incorporate Akhnaton himself? That would at first seem most unlikely, given the universal view that EA’s Aziru was a vassal, and correspondent with, Akhnaton. However, as I have shown in various articles, supposed vassal kings, writing to EA pharaohs, do not necessarily name any pharaoh in their letters. See e.g. my article: To whom was Baalat-neše writing? https://www.academia.edu/37765661/To_whom_was_Baalat_ne%C5%A1e_writing Now the same situation I seem to find in the case with Aziru of EA. He, assassinator of his alleged father, Abdi-ashirta, then taken in as an ally by the Hittite emperor, Suppiluliumas, never actually names Akhnaton (Naphuria). The kings who do refer to the pharaohs by their throne names tend to be the eastern Great Kings, of Babylon (Karduniash), of Mitanni, and of Assyria. (There is also a western coastal king). Thus: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarna_letters EA# Letter author to recipient EA# 1 Amenhotep III to Babylonian king Kadashman-Enlil EA# 2 Babylonian king Kadashman-Enlil to Amenhotep III EA# 3 Babylonian king Kadashman-Enlil to Amenhotep III EA# 4 Babylonian king Kadashman-Enlil to Amenhotep II EA# 5 Amenhotep III to Babylonian king Kadashman-Enlil EA# 6 Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II to Amenhotep III EA# 7 Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II to Amenhotep IV EA# 8 Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II to Amenhotep IV EA# 9 Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II to Amenhotep IV EA# 10 Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II to Amenhotep IV EA# 11 Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II to Amenhotep IV …. EA# 14 Amenhotep IV to Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II EA# 15 Assyrian king Ashur-Uballit I to Amenhotep IV EA# 16 Assyrian king Ashur-Uballit I to Amenhotep IV EA# 17 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 18 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 19 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 20 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 21 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 22 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 23 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 24 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 25 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep III EA# 26 Mitanni king Tushratta to widow Tiy EA# 27 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep IV EA# 28 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep IV EA# 29 Mitanni king Tushratta to Amenhotep IV EA# 30 Mitanni king to Palestine kings EA# 31 Amenhotep III to Arzawa king Tarhundaraba EA# 32 Arzawa king Tarhundaraba to Amenhotep III(?) …. EA#156 Amurru king Aziri to pharaoh #1 EA#157 Amurru king Aziri to pharaoh #2 EA#158 Amurru king Aziri to Dudu #1 EA#159 Amurru king Aziri to pharaoh #3 EA#160 Amurru king Aziri to pharaoh #4 EA#161 Amurru king Aziri to pharaoh #5 …. The Syro-Palestinian kings do not tend to do this. Thus Akhnaton (Naphuria) and Aziru do not necessarily cancel out each other. Akhnaton still can be the Syrian Aziru (= Hazael), the invader of GHP, who closed the temples and who made the gods like men (i.e., non-gods). This new scenario now opens the door for those “empty years” of GHP to mean (Grimal, op. cit., ibid.): “A number of ‘empty’ years designate a period when the throne was effectively considered to be vacant because it was occupied by a usurping line”. To the two questions: Who was Akhnaton? What was he trying to do? I have so far concluded in this article: Akhnaton was Hazael of Syria (Aram) = Aziru of EA. Akhnaton was attempting to impose Mosaïc monotheism upon a polytheistic Egypt – not at the time of Moses, though, but in the Divided Kingdom period (of Ahab, Ben-Hadad, Jehoram). But why? What could possibly have prompted an apparently ruthless king of Syria – who had even assassinated his long-reigning Syrian predecessor – to subdue Egypt and to undertake the herculean task of trying to turn the Egyptians into monotheists? The answer to this lies in ‘The Sinai Commission’. The prophet Elijah had been commanded by Yahweh at Horeb (I Kings 19:15-17): ‘Go back the way you came. Go to the Desert of Damascus. When you get there, anoint Hazael as king over Aram. Also anoint Jehu as king over Israel. He is the son of Nimshi. And anoint Elisha from Abel Meholah as the next prophet after you. He is the son of Shaphat. Jehu will put to death anyone who escapes Hazael’s sword. And Elisha will put to death anyone who escapes Jehu’s sword’. to wipe out the House of Ahab and to uproot Baalism. Hazael was to be at the head of this divine commission. But, again, why choose a Syrian to do this work? Jehu and Elisha, yes, they were Israelites sternly opposed to Baalism, but what sort of affiliation had they with this Syrian? The answer to this is, plenty, if the Syrian were one upon whose very person the prophet Elisha had worked a miracle. I refer to Na’aman the leper, who was a Syrian captain. He, I have previously identified with Hazael: Na’aman and Hazael https://www.academia.edu/42245731/Naaman_and_Hazael But there was also a spiritual miracle, a metanoia, involved. Na’aman had vowed never again to worship idolatrously. He was now entirely Yahweh’s man. Legend has it that this Na’aman had actually been the cause of the death of king Ahab of Israel, the one who had mortally wounded him with an arrow. As Hazael (presuming he were), he also took the credit in the Tell Dan inscription for the demise of Jehoram of Israel and Ahaziah of Judah – a victory that the Bible accredits to Jehu. As Elisha foresaw, Hazael was to cause havoc in Israel - though Elisha must nevertheless have consented to it. Mary of Nazareth must have detested with all her maternal instincts what was being done to her Son, who actually referred to the Na’aman incident with Elisha (Luke 4:27): ‘And there were many in Israel with leprosy in the time of Elisha the prophet, yet not one of them was cleansed--only Naaman the Syrian’, but she consented to it as being the fulfilment of a long-expected divine plan for the salvation of humanity: ‘Let it be it done unto me according to thy word’ (1:38). So, at some stage, Hazael also subdued Egypt, possibly with Assyrian assistance since the contemporaneous Asuruballit of Assyria will later be called by his descendant, Adad-nirari, “subduer of Musru [Egypt]”? Relevant to this situation of the land of Egypt under Syrian occupation, Graham Phillips has written (op. cit., p. 153): “So different was everything about the Amarnans that some scholars even concluded that they had not been Egyptians at all, but foreign settlers who had merely adopted the Egyptian language”. (A correct estimation, I believe). Hazael would have felt some of the same sorts of tensions as he had, as Na’aman, when he – though now a monotheist – had had to move in a polytheistic (Rimmon) environment under the rulership of Ben-Hadad I (as previously discussed). As in the time of pharaoh Hatshepsut under the influence of Solomon, Davidic wisdom began to pervade Egypt. On this, see e.g. my article: Solomon and Sheba https://www.academia.edu/3660164/Solomon_and_Sheba I have already referred to the commonly noted likenesses between Akhnaton’s Sun Hymn and King David’s Psalm 104 (with David having the precedence). And Akhnaton at Akhetaton, like Hatshepsut with Thebes, and David with Jerusalem, determined to rest there, “[Akhnaton] swore that he would never again leave the holy city” (G. Phillips, op. cit., p. 58). Akhnaton, like Oedipus (as noted by Dr. Velikovsky), did indeed slay his father, under the guise of Aziru having slain Abdi-ashirta. Was this father, then, Amenhotep III ‘the Magnificent’, the Nimmuria of EA? “But in the field of history nothing is established for ever: the discovery of new sources, or simply a new perspective on events, can call into question an almost official historical truth which has been long-accepted by everyone”. Michael Benoît, The Thirteenth Apostle (p. 355).

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

Akhnaton’s Chief Minister an Israelite?

by Damien F. Mackey Na’aman was also, I believe, the Syrian military captain, Hazael (he being both biblically and historically attested), who succeeded Ben-hadad I as king. Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky had brilliantly identified Hazael as the Aziru of the El Amarna correspondence (in Ages in Chaos, I, 1952). And I thought it must logically follow on that Hazael-Aziru would also be the Syrian Arsa (Irsu), or Aziru, of the Great Harris Papyrus (GHP): Akhnaton was Aziru https://www.academia.edu/48877759/Akhnaton_was_Aziru This Syrian invader, Aziru, is said in GHP to have done in Egypt precisely what Akhnaton would do there: close the temples and treat the Egyptian gods with contempt. Akhnaton’s brand new city of Akhetaton, we found, was an armed military camp, his chief officers being Asiatics (one could read Syrians), and not native Egyptians. This all smacks of an invasive force! Now I learn from reading Graham Phillips excellent book, Act of God (1998), that Akhnaton may have even had an Israelite as his Chief Minister: Pp. 280-281: “[Aper-El] was one of the most important figures in Akhenaten’s government. He was both the vizier of Memphis - the governor of northern Egypt - and an important religious figure, as he bore the title ‘Father of the God’. This made him of equal status to Akhenaten’s chief minister Ay. Aper-El’s son had been an important figure: the general in charge of all the chariotry of Lower Egypt, and the ‘Scribe of Recruits’, making him responsible for all army recruitment in the area. … ‘… a possible co-regency of the two kings’. This was nothing, however, compared to the apparent identification of Aper-El himself. The remarkable thing was that Aper-El was not a native Egyptian but an Asiatic – which in itself would be unusual enough, as no other pharaoh of the eighteenth dynasty is known to have appointed an Asiatic to such high office. More specifically, however, he seems to have been an Israelite. His name, Aper-El, Alain Zivie realized with surprise, appeared to have been a title, an Egyptian form of Abed or Oved-El, meaning ‘The Servitor of [the god] El’. El is an abbreviated form of the Hebrew word Elohim, meaning Lord, which is the form in which God is usually addressed in the original Hebrew of the Old Testament …. Mackey’s comment: The name Oved-El can also be rendered as the more familiar ‘Obadiah. The holy man, Tobit, would have been called ‘Obadiah or ‘Abdiel (‘Abdullah in Arabic) – Tobit being a Grecised version of that Hebrew name. P. 282: The depictions of the Aten in [Aper-El’s] tomb, together with other Amarna-style illustrations, make it blatantly apparent that Aper-El was also an Atenist. Alain Zivie even suggests that Aper-El was a prophet of the Aten in Memphis. The title ‘Father of the God’ would certainly imply this. Here we not only have evidence of a shared link between the Hebrew religion and Atenism, but a corporeal example of someone who seems to have been a prophet of both [sic] religions and saw nothing contradictory about it.

Friday, February 2, 2024

Abu Lahab, Lab’ayu, Ahab

by Damien F. Mackey “In searching the Hebrew Bible for a wicked man whose name resembles Abu Lahab, one finds Ahab (Hebrew: אַחְאָב), the seventh king of ancient Israel … son of King Omri and husband of Jezebel of Sidon”. Ercan Celik Ercan Celik is, I feel, on the right track here, in seeking to find, in the Bible, a leading character of the early Islamic story. For the Prophet Mohammed (Muhammad) is, himself, a fictitious (largely) biblical composite as according to my series: Biography of the Prophet Mohammed (Muhammad) Seriously Mangles History https://www.academia.edu/12500381/Biography_of_the_Prophet_Mohammed_Muhammad_Seriously_Mangles_History With the life of Mohammed having borrowed so many of its bits and pieces from the Bible (both the Old and New Testaments), it is no wonder that Mohammed himself has been portrayed as a most remarkable kind of man (verging on a superman), having such a breathtaking career. The real miracle is that scholars down through the ages have been able to compile a coherent life of the man. The downside of it is - apart from the religious implications - that it is historically a complete shambles. Better to view the whole thing as a marvellous work of fiction. 1,025 × 400 Now, a Turkish writer, Ercan Celik, believes that he has traced the so-called “uncle” of Mohammed to the Old Testament: https://iqsaweb.wordpress.com/2015/05/26/celik_abu-lahab-jezebel/ Who were Abu Lahab and His Wife? A View from the Hebrew Bible In The Qur’an and Its Biblical Subtext, G. S. Reynolds observes that …scholars of the Qur’an accept the basic premise of the medieval Islamic sources that the Qur’an is to be explained in light of the life of the Prophet Muhammad… However, he proposes that critical Qur’anic scholarship not depend on prophetic biography (sīrah) or traditional Qur’anic exegesis (tafsīr), but rather, … the Qur’an should be appreciated in light of its conversation with earlier literature, in particular Biblical literature… This argument necessarily involves an examination of both the relationship of Muslim exegetical literature to the Qur’an and the relationship of the Qur’an to Biblical literature. Sūrat al-Masad (Q 111) offers a valuable example for how a Biblical perspective can augment our understanding of the Qur’anic text. The text of the sūrah names its main character Abu Lahab, and mentions that he has a wife, but does not provide any further identifying information. Only extra-Qur’anic literature can give us more details about who he was. In this blog post, I compare how he may be identified through the Islamic literary sources and through the Hebrew Bible. Abu Lahab In Islamic Literature Abu Lahab, meaning “the father of flame,” is identified as the uncle of the prophet Muhammad, ʿAbd al-ʿUzza ibn ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib, nicknamed Abu Lahab on account of his reddish complexion. He is said to have been a rich and proud man, and he and his wife Umm Jamil, sister of Abu Sufyan, are depicted as fierce enemies of Muhammad and the early Muslim community. There are many anecdotes in the Islamic literary sources about their verbal and physical attacks on the prophet. Some Qur’an commentators say that Umm Jamil used to litter Muhammad’s path with harmful thorns of twisted palm leaf fibres, and that this is the historical context for the final verse of Sūrat al-Masad: “Will have upon her neck a halter of palm-fibre” (Q 111:5). Abu’l-Ahab in Biblical Literature In searching the Hebrew Bible for a wicked man whose name resembles Abu Lahab, one finds Ahab (Hebrew: אַחְאָב), the seventh kings of ancient Israel (r. ca. 885-874 BCE), son of King Omri and husband of Jezebel of Sidon. We could read “Abu Lahab” alternatively, and without substantial change, as “Abu’l-Ahab,” father of Ahab. According to the Hebrew Bible, the father of Ahab is Omri, who is described in 1 Kings 16:25 as having acted “more wickedly than all who were before him.” His son Ahab, in his own time, “married Jezebel the daughter of Ethbaal king of the Sidonians, and went to serve Baal and worshiped him . . . Thus Ahab did more to provoke the Lord God of Israel than all the kings of Israel who were before him” (1 Kings 16:31-33). …. As for Jezebel, it is said that she ordered the killing of prophets (1 Kings 18:4). The prophet Elijah escaped her persecution and with God’s command confronted Ahab with a challenge to the priests of Baal: “You call on the name of your god and I will call on the name of the Lord; the god who answers by fire is indeed God” (18:24). The supporters of Baal called upon their god to send fire to consume their sacrifice, but nothing happened. When Elijah called upon the name of the Lord, fire came down from heaven immediately and consumed their offering. Eventually Ahab in killed in battle, and when Elisha, successor to the prophet Elijah, anoints Jehu king of Israel, the latter had the house of Ahab killed. Jezebel was captured by her enemies, thrown out of a window, trampled by a horse, and her flesh eaten by dogs. A Comparison of the Qur’anic and Biblical Characters There are some significant parallels between the qur’anic character of Abu Lahab and the biblical character of Abu’l-Ahab. To illustrate these, let us evaluate Sūrat al-Masad in light of the biblical account: • May the hands of Abu Lahab [Abu’l-Ahab] be ruined and ruined is he. The biblical story of Ahab fits well with this verse, in both linguistic and narrative/thematic terms. The father is invoked for ruin. Omri was the first person to introduce the worship of Baal in Israel, for which his progeny are to be ruined. In Qur’anic Arabic terminology, hands (here, yadā) are symbolic of power and of progeny. The fate of Omri’s progeny is pronounced not so much in the tafsir literature as in the biblical texts. • His wealth will not avail him or that which he gained. The Ahab of the Bible seems to have had greater wealth than the Abu Lahab of Islamic tradition; his great wealth failed to prevent his demise by God’s command. • He will [enter to] burn in a Fire of [blazing] flame. Hellfire is an eschatalogical concept associated with unbelief, especially with the sort of idolatry instituted by Omri and Ahab. • And his wife [as well]—the carrier of firewood. The feature of firewood (ḥaṭab) is key. The challenge at Mount Carmel consisted of sacrificing bulls on firewood in order. We can imagine Jezebel supporting the Baalist priests by collecting the best woods to burn the sacrifice easily. The image of Jezebel carrying firewood makes more sense of this verse than that of Umm Jamil dumping thorns. • Around her neck is a rope of [twisted] fiber. Traditional exegetes struggle to explain the meaning of the rope of palm-fiber (masad). It may be better understood in light of the Jezebel story. The term masad appears to be a hapax legomenon in the Qur’an that might have a Hebrew root and be related to Jezebel’s violent death. This term begs for further examination along these lines. …. [End of quotes] Name within a name No one could argue with Ercan Celik’s statement that: “In searching the Hebrew Bible for a wicked man whose name resembles Abu Lahab, one finds Ahab (Hebrew: אַחְאָב) …”. Why, the very element ahab appears in the name L-ahab. From what I have read, the name Ahab is somewhat problematical, with certain scholars suggesting that it may actually have been a foreign (non-Hebrew) name. Another suggestion is that Ahab means “uncle”, which would, at least, work in well with the view that Abu Lahab was the “uncle” of Mohammed. I have identified the biblical King Ahab with Lab’ayu (Labaya) of the El Amarna [EA] letters, an identification that I now consider to be virtually certain: King Mesha of Moab tells that he built Jericho (Qeriho) and used “prisoners of Israel” (4) King Mesha of Moab tells that he built Jericho (Qeriho) and used "prisoners of Israel" | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu King Ahab as El Amarna’s Lab’ayu What absolutely clinches Ahab as Lab'ayu for me is that King Abdi-hiba of Jerusalem (Urusalim) will complain in EA # 289 that Lab'ayu had been giving away “the land of Sakmu” (Shechem) to the Habiru. “Are we to act like Labayu when he was giving away the land of Sakmu Shechem] to the [tent-dwelling] Hapiru?” Abdi-Heba of Jerusalem, Amarna Letter EA 289: 18-24 Shechem was the northern Bethel, the Bethulia of the Book of Judith, as C.C. Torrey showed beyond all doubt (even though he did not believe that Judith was historical). The Habiru must be, in this case, the Moabites under King Mesha, who must therefore be Hiel the Bethelite (Shechemite) who built Jericho at the time of King Ahab. Mesha tells us straight out that he built Qeriho (Jericho) using "prisoners of Israel" (Moabite Stele): “I built Qeriho [Jericho]: the wall of the parkland and the wall of the acropolis; and I built its gates, and I built its towers; and I built the king’s house … and I dug the ditches for Qeriho with prisoners of Israel”. This adds a new dimension to our consideration of Ahab/Abu Lahab and the name. For Lab’ayu, not entirely dissimilar to Abu Lahab, inverted (Lahab Abu), is thought to mean ‘Lion Man’. The ‘Lion Man’ now becomes a perfect partner for Queen Jezebel, as EA’s Baalat-neše, ‘Mistress of Lions’. This would give us three sets of significant husband-and-wife combinations, namely: King Ahab-Queen Jezebel; Lab’ayu-Baalet-neše; Abu Lahab-(wife) Umm Jamil Two of these sets are regarded as being wicked, Ahab-Jezebel, and - as we read above - the accursed Abu Lahab and his wife. The little that we know of EA’s Lab’ayu would tend to give the impression, again, of a somewhat devious, or duplicitous, character. The Mount Carmel Incident Thanks to Ercan Celik’s piece above, I can now include Elijah and the Mount Carmel showdown with the Baalists, in the presence of King Ahab, as being yet another biblical borrowing in the biography of Mohammed. I had not noticed this one before. And his wife [as well]—the carrier of firewood. The feature of firewood (ḥaṭab) is key. The challenge at Mount Carmel consisted of sacrificing bulls on firewood in order. We can imagine Jezebel supporting the Baalist priests by collecting the best woods to burn the sacrifice easily. Mohammed has now assumed the rôle of the steadfast prophet Elijah against the Baalists, as represented by Abu Lahab and his wife: “… he and his wife Umm Jamil … are depicted as fierce enemies of Muhammad and the early Muslim community”. The Qur'an is so derivative! The Lord’s intended ruination of the House of Ahab, including Queen Jezebel, as conveyed by the great prophet Elijah, is echoed in Ercan Celik’s comments: • May the hands of Abu Lahab [Abu’l-Ahab] be ruined and ruined is he. The biblical story of Ahab fits well with this verse, in both linguistic and narrative/thematic terms. The father is invoked for ruin. Omri was the first person to introduce the worship of Baal in Israel, for which his progeny are to be ruined. In Qur’anic Arabic terminology, hands (here, yadā) are symbolic of power and of progeny. …. • His wealth will not avail him or that which he gained. …. • He will [enter to] burn in a Fire of [blazing] flame. Hellfire is an eschatalogical concept associated with unbelief, especially with the sort of idolatry instituted by Omri and Ahab. • Around her neck is a rope of [twisted] fiber. Traditional exegetes struggle to explain the meaning of the rope of palm-fiber (masad). It may be better understood in light of the Jezebel story. The term masad appears to be a hapax legomenon in the Qur’an that might have a Hebrew root and be related to Jezebel’s violent death. …. Including King Baasha of Israel There is yet a further dimension to be added to all of this. Emmet Sweeney comes close to it when he proposes to identify Lab’ayu with Elah, the son of King Baasha of Israel (The Theban Empire: Vol. 3, Ages in Alignment Series. Second and revised edition, p. 102): “… Labayu … can only be Baasha’s son Elah …”. Since I have, however, in various articles, identified Baasha with Ahab, then I must logically conclude that Baasha, not Elah, was EA’s Lab’ayu (= Ahab). The name Baasha, apparently meaning “rotten”, “stinking”, may be a derogatory name applied to an evil, ill-fated king. For more on this identification, see e.g. my article: Baasha as Ahab (5) Baasha as Ahab | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu There I wrote: Baasha and Ahab compare quite favourably Baasha’s sudden irruption onto the scene has its later ‘justification’, I would suggest, in the far more detailed biography of Ahab. As to reign length, we have almost a perfect match in that Baasha reigned for 24 years (I King 15:33) and Ahab for 22 (16:29). But that becomes quite a perfect match when we further realise that Baasha reigned for 2 years at Tirzah [which I have tentatively identified elsewhere as Shechem]. Though, in conventional terms, Samaria (at the time of Baasha) was not yet a capital city, according to my revision it would already have been. And king Ahab of Israel is said specifically to have reigned for 22 years “in Samaria”. Putting it all together, we get Baasha’s 2 years at Tirzah, and then a further 22 years (making his total 24 years); 22 years being the length of Ahab’s reign. In other words, Baasha-Ahab (if it is the same person) reigned for 2 years at Tirzah, and then for 22 years at Samaria, a total of 24 years of reign. This must have been after Ahab’s presumed father, Omri, had built Samaria (16:24). I say ‘presumed’, because I have, in my related articles, followed T. Ishida in his view that the Bible does not mention a House of Omri, but does refer to one of Ahab, thereby allowing for me to make the tentative suggestion that Ahab was probably related to Omri only though marriage. And that would further allow now for Ahab’s direct father to be, not Omri, but - as Baasha’s father: “Ahaziah of the house of Issachar” (1 Kings 15:27). …. Tomoo Ishida instead suggested that the narrative of dynastic instability in the Kingdom of Israel suggests an underlying rivalry between tribes for its throne.[1] In the biblical narrative, the House of Jeroboam was from the Tribe of Ephraim, while the House of Baasha was from the Tribe of Issachar.[1] The Omrides are connected in this narrative with the city of Jezreel, where they maintained a second palace. According to the Book of Joshua, Jezreel was controlled by the Tribe of Issachar. Ishida views the narrative as suggesting that the Omrides themselves were members of the Tribe of Issachar.[1] .... I would modify this, though, to say instead, not “the Omrides”, but the Ahabites “were members of the Tribe of Issachar”.