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Did the Queen of Sheba have a Son by Solomon?

 

After writing a couple of Daily Thoughts on the subject of the Queen of Sheba, the question was posed to me about whether Solomon might have fathered a child by her?

To answer this question, I must first of all point out that the Scripture does not say either yes or no on the matter. So opinion has to be based on clues only from the Holy Text, and how much reliability we want to place on outside pseudo histories and mythologies. It is harder to prove a negative than it is to prove a positive, so for the sake of our investigation let us assume we are seeking to find evidence to the case that progeny did issue forth from Sheba through a relationship with Solomon.

My first circumstantial evidence to the possibility of such an event occurring would be the fact of Solomon’s conduct with regard to women. Of Solomon the Scripture records:

“But King Solomon loved many strange women, together with the daughter of Pharaoh, women of the Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Zidonians, and Hittites; Of the nation which the Lord said unto the children of Israel, Ye shall not go into them, neither shall they come in unto you: for surely they will turn your heart after their gods: Solomon clave unto these in love.” (1Kings 11:1-2)

The evidence is that Solomon, because of his liking for women, ultimately having some seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines, was a man disposed toward sexual intimacy if it was offered. (1Kings 11:3)

My next piece of circumstantial evidence involves something that the Scripture has to say about the relationship that existed between Solomon and Sheba from the queen’s perspective. That is the Scripture testifies that “…she communed with him of all that was in her heart.” (1Kings 10: 2b) This is a dangerous thing for a queen to do, but is a common action for a woman who is either intimate or desires a deeper relationship with a man. Predatory men and those who have genuine liking or interest in women encourage such honesty. I am not saying Solomon was a predator, but it is plain he liked women. Self revealing conduct is a level of meaning to be found in the desire of a woman toward her husband that God pronounces will be the future of women after the temptation in the Garden. (Genesis 3:16) It includes both the physical and mental for the woman and it is often the case where one part of the person goes the other follows.

My next piece of evidence from the Scripture involves another account of the Queen of Sheba’s actions. It begins “And when the Queen of Sheba had seen all Solomon’s wisdom, and the house that he had built (possibly a reference to the Temple since his ascent to the Temple is mentioned)…there was no more spirit in her.” (1Kings 10: 4-5) Some commentaries see this statement as an indication she fainted, but this interpretation is by no means certain and could it could also point to some sort of surrender of her self will or emotions to Solomon. If the former were the case it would not diminish my point as much as the latter would increase the likelihood of evidence for coitus between the two. Swooning has long been a means by which women could focus attention on themselves, but the reason of oriental opulence given for a legitimate swoon would seem unlikely. Whatever happened there is no doubt it caused Sheba to bestow material benevolence on Solomon, perhaps out of proportion to what she had intended when she came.

My final evidence from Scripture has to do with Solomon’s response to the queen. The Bible says that King Solomon gave unto the Queen of Sheba all her desire. (1Kings 10:13) What this was we do not know, but we do know that what she desired was separate from the royal bounty which he also gave to her. The conclusion of something personal being delivered being making the queen pregnant with child is not out of the question. There are a number of reasons for the queen to desire such a child of Solomon if his influence, power, and wisdom is as great as the Bible says. Just two of them would be relations with the Kingdom of Israel and the another would be the producing of a child that would be a worthy successor to her throne.

Apart from the Biblical record there are a number of ancient accounts which claim that Solomon sired a child by the queen.

….

Taken from: http://www.jonsquillministries.org/FAQSolomanSheba.htm

A Complication with Matthew’s Genealogy of Jesus Christ

Dear [Reader]

A very happy Easter season to you!

…. You learn something new every day. Further to our discussion of Matthew 1, I have only very recently learned, from reading, that Matthew’s Genealogy of Jesus, as we now have it, omits two very important kings of Judah and one ordinary one, amounting to a span of some 70 years. I have read the genealogy before, carelessly, and have never even picked this up – even though I am quite familiar with the Judaean succession. After Jehoram/Joram, an evil king (“Jehoshaphat the father of Joram”, 1:7), we are missing (i) Ahaziah, (ii) Joash/Jehoash and (iii) Amaziah. Instead, Joram is wrongly given as the father of Uzziah (v. 8), another mighty king. Commentators say that this shows the artificiality of the list (contriving to make 14 generations from the Exile to Jesus Christ). I’d have to agree. Jehoash and Amaziah were mighty kings of Judah. And, if one were to suggest that they have been omitted from the list because they were evil, then far more evil kings than they (to wit, Jehoram; Ahaz; and Manasseh) are included in the Genealogy. It just so happens that my discovery of this startling omission coincides with my new theory that king Hezekiah and king Josiah, pious reformer kings of Judah – said to be the best since the Judges (re Passover reform) and since David (re goodness) – are just one and the same king. That would mean further that Hezekiah’s son, Manasseh (later probably reformed as Sheshbazzar?), was the same as the very evil king, Jehoiakim, son of Josiah, at the time of Nebuchednezzar.

Anyway, you can read more on this if you so wish at http://kinghezekiahofjudah.blogspot.com.au/

 see post for 6th April, 2012

That would mean that some of the kings in the Genealogy as we now have it, are duplicates, requiring some omission and thereby making room for the trio Ahaziah; Jehoash and Amaziah.

All the best.

Damien Mackey.

 

A Reader Replies on Matthew’s Genealogy

…. Regarding Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus: I have one or two questions. Why does Matthew break the genealogy into three parts: Abraham to David, David to the Exile and the Exile to Jesus? Why fourteen names in each part? I can give you an answer to the second question. It is not my own answer although I have made it my own. I got it from someone on the internet (whose name I don’t know and who may not have been the originator anyway). It goes like this: The ancient Hebrews were very interested in gematria, a method of scripture interpretation that involved the numerical equivalence of letters. In this system, aleph equals 1, beth equals 2, and so on. The name David, D’V’D, equals 14 because D = 4 and V = 6 and so 4 + 6 + 4 = 14. In the absence of argument to the contrary, I’ll buy that. I was intrigued to notice that Claude Tresmontant, in his work The Gospel of Matthew came within a whisker of seeing it. As a note to Mt 1, 17 he writes Fourteen generations… The redactor of this document evidently attached a theological significance to this numeration of generations which eludes us today, living as we do among the pagans of the twentieth century. In Hebrew the letters of the alphabet served as numerals in instances like this: Aleph = 1; Beth = 2; Ghimel = 3; etc. Theologians of that time and that ethnic milieu, that is to say, the ethnic milieu of ancient Judea, took a great interest in and attached great importance to this question of numerals. What a pity he didn’t notice that fourteen signified David. He might have had some interesting observations to make on that. It seems clear enough that Matthew was emphasizing that Jesus was the Son of David. Did he have anything else in mind? Was the tripartite division an allusion to the weight of three witnesses? I haven’t a clue on this question; do you? Many commentators mention the artificiality of the genealogical list but they differ on the reason for it. I can’t say I have studied the matter. Like you I just accepted that it wasn’t precise, and left it at that. ….

David Overcomes Goliath

Watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19ecIUaN8g0

….

Goliath was a nine-foot-tall soldier from Gath. He bragged that he could beat any Israelite soldier who would fight him. But all the Israelite soldiers were afraid to fight him. David was a young shepherd boy who believed in God. He said, “The Lord who delivered me from the paw of the lion and from the paw of the bear, will deliver me from the hand of this Philistine.” David took his sling and five smooth stones from the brook. Then he went to fight Goliath. King Saul wanted to put his heavy armor and helmet on David. He also tried to give David a big sword, but David said he could not wear them. He knew that his strength and protection came from God. Goliath cursed the boy coming out to fight him. David said to the Philistine, “You come against me with sword and spear and javelin; but I come against you in the name of the Lord Almighty, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied.” David threw a stone with his sling at Goliath. It hit Goliath in the forehead and the giant fell face down. Without a sword in his hand he struck down the giant and killed him. David believed in God, and God helped him win over the giant.

Taken from: http://www.gardenofpraise.com/bibl14s.htm

THE CHRONOLOGY OF THE ALPHA AND THE OMEGA

THE CHRONOLOGY OF THE ALPHA AND THE OMEGA

A Revision of BC and AD Time

by

Damien F. Mackey

of the

Australian Marian Academy of the Immaculate Conception

[AMAIC]

All thanks to Matthew Buckley of The Gap, Queensland (Australia), for making the suggestion (in August 2010) that this book now be written.

 

This book presupposes

(i)     the basic inaccuracy of our received BC and AD dates;

(ii)  that the original Bible, being Divinely inspired, is a wholly accurate document;

(iii)             whatever has already been determined in our (AMAIC) detailed revision of history.

 

Book accessible at: http://amaic1.blogspot.com.au/ 

Post: Monday, February 27, 2012

Finkelstein’s Folly

 

 

How did Israel Finkelstein an Israeli archaeologist and academic reach the conclusion that there never was a Kingdom of King David and King Solomon?

Answer:

Improve Answer Israel Finkelstein says that the kingdoms of Israel and Judah were always separate, with a different life style, different pottery, different myths and legends, and the same language Hebrew, but different dialects. While Judah was full of steep ridges, rocky outcroppings and poor soil, Israel had rolling hills and fertile valleys, with a much larger population than Judah. It was just not possible for Judah to dominate the northern region of Israel, as described in the Bible. If there were a united monarchy, it couldn’t have happened in the tenth century BCE because, at the time of David and Solomon, Israel had far fewer than 100,000 population and was still too small, poor, backward, rural, and sparsely populated to support walled cities, far less an empire with armies and bureaucrats and ambassadors travelling around in royal regalia. Judah was much smaller and poorer than the north. Far from being a world class city, the Jerusalem at the time ascribed to King Solomon was nothing more than a mudbrick village. Professor Finkelstein said, “Today more than 90% of scholars agree that there was no Exodus from Egypt, 80% feel that that the Conquest of the Land did not take place as described in the Bible, and about 50% agree that there was no powerful United Monarchy.” Others who support the views expressed by Finkelstein include Ze’ev Herzog, “Perhaps even harder to swallow is that the united monarchy of David and Solomon, which is described by the Bible as a regional power, was at most a small tribal kingdom. ” Much of what Professor Finkelstein says about the United Kingdom of Israel is in The Bible Unearthed, by Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman. Answer Finkelstein reached this conclusion since, as defined by other archaeologists he is a revisionist who wishes to essentially ‘re-write history’ and ignore proven evidence which stands in the museums of the world. He claims to disprove the Bible but either ignores or is ignorant of what the Bible actually says. This is how he is able to reach the conclusions he does. The evidence is there but the shifting of the chronology makes the evidence not fit the time-frame of David and Solomon. Finkelstein knows this and so rather than re-examining the chronology, which would also incidentally synchronize better with the Hittite/Egypt chronology revision, he prefers to leave the ‘chronology template’ in position which makes it a mis-fit for the Biblical and other chronologies.

Answer

Any answer that sees Finkelstein as a revisionist is really quite defensive and intellectually untenable. The very idea of archaeology is to improve and update our understanding of the past. Finkelsteins conclusions are based upon fieldwork, surveys, and research carried out by a large number of dedicated scientists who apply the scientific method and not value laden and dogmatic faith based systems to their work. The past is not yet, and will probably never be, “written in stone” and even current conclusions will be subject to change as evidence is found and studied. Any person who wishes to understand Finkelsteins work should read his publications and not the highly defensive but more importantly completely unscientific rantings of jilted ideologues for their answers. One of the most important questions to consider is whether human history can exist without leaving footprints in the sand. Naturally, less remarkable activity and events will leave less evidence to be found in the future, while more remarkable activity and events MUST leave more evidence to be found. The lack of evidence supporting biblical activities and events that were not just remarkable but monumental to the recorded history in much of the Bible is glaring and even stunning. The kingdom of Solomon for instance was so important in the Bible and our understanding of the history of the region in as far as its scope and its description that the lack of archaeological evidence supporting its existence is a clear indication of the veracity of the information in the Bible. The same can be said for the lack of evidence within and without Egypt for the Exodus, the conquering of Canaan by Joshua, the united monarchy, the extent of King Davids kingdom, and on. Some events are quite simply too big to leave no evidence. Read more:

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_did_Israel_Finkelstein_an_Israeli_archaeologist

_and_academic_reach_the_conclusion

….

The Bible Illuminates History

by

Damien F. Mackey


  1. 1.      Genesis 1 (c. 4050 BC) and the Flood (c. 2400 BC)

 

Two pillars of ‘Creationism’ or ‘Creation Science’, a very big industry, may actually be un-biblical. I refer to the notions that (i) God created the heavens and the earth in six days and that (ii) the Genesis Flood was global. Genesis I may instead be a revelation to man about a creation already effected. It seems to be strongly liturgical, not scientific (in a western sense). Paradise (the Garden) was for man what the Temple later became. The Sabbath rest has to do with God taking up his abode in the Garden on the seventh day just as He came to ‘rest’ in the Temple that king Solomon had built for him (2 Chronicles 6:41). Happily, some ‘Creationists’ now seem to be cottoning on to the idea that the pre-Flood world is still scientifically identifiable, as opposed to the long-held fundamentalist view that the Flood completely erased all previous topography. The world of Adam’s and Noah’s days reached from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers (east) to the Pishon and Gihon rivers (west). Possibly, a vast sea then circumscribed that whole area. The archaeology of the line of Cain can likely be traced in pre-Flood cities such as Uruk (Sumerian Unuk), called after Cain’s son, Enoch, and Eridu, called after Cain’s grandson, Irad, with legends associating the Babylonian Noah with nearby Shuruppak. I have tentatively identified the luxurious Mesopotamian monarch, Akalamdug, as Lamech, of the antediluvian age of copper. And I have wondered if the mass burials found at Ur at this time might be a case of mass suicide in the face of the all-enveloping Flood.

The Mesopotamian legends give great ages for the pre-Flood rulers, just as the Bible does, though the non-biblical versions are even greater. The difference may possibly be due to the mathematical system in use (the Mesopotamian version perhaps needing to be divided by 60).

From the Fall of Adam and Eve to the Flood we are wholly in the Stone Ages (and Geological Ages needing to be revised), from Palaeolithic to Chalcolithic (Copper/Bronze).

Then came the great Flood which Sir Leonard Woolley identified at Ur. It was huge and so it is irresponsible of critics to deny that a Flood estimated to have covered hundreds of miles had no effect on Eridu, not far ‘down the road’ from Ur. The trouble is one of alignment. Evidence for a great flood has also been found at Kish and other places, but dated differently from the Ur flood. The biblical Flood will enable for the proper realignment of Mesopotamian dynastic history. And it spread much further than Mesopotamia, of course, to Jericho and Jerusalem, and even to Egypt. The whole Fertile Crescent needs to be co-ordinated, Flood-wise, including the Black Sea Flood presently date to c. 7000 BC. This last was a case of the Atlantic ocean overflowing into the Mediterranean and the Black Sea.

The “eight” who survived the Flood probably refer only to the four ancestral couples from whom all later humanity sprang. It does not mean that only eight were aboard the massive Ark. Their offspring would also have been included, allowing for a rapid population of the earth after the Flood.

  1. 2.      Babel to Abram (Abraham) (c. 2000 BC)   

 

After the Flood, the Stone Age sequence may basically have begun again to some extent.

When men came back to the southern Mesopotamian region (“land of Shinar”) after the Flood, there arose the mighty Uruk I dynasty. Sumerian was the original language. The Hamites dominated Mesopotamia, with Ham’s son Cush most likely being king Meskiagasher (or … kasher … or cush) of Uruk, since Meskiagasher was the father of Enmerkar (“Enmer the hunter”) who was almost certainly the biblical Nimrod. Nimrod rebuilt the old cities destroyed (or damaged) by the Flood, such as Uruk (biblical Erech), Babel and Akkad. The latter is unknown, but I have identified it with Mashkan-shapir not far from Baghdad. The tower of Babel was apparently in Babylon (Babel), but the high water table there makes excavation virtually impossible. Buildings at Ur III/IV level, though, do fit the sort of architecture traditionally accredited to Nimrod. It was then that the Proto-Elamite language also came into being, indicating the Babel confusion of tongues.

Humanity scattered. The Jemdat Nasr culture, which spread westwards, may relate archaeologically to the Dispersion from Babel. As to the eastwards spread, I have not studied much the Far East, except I know that the Chinese language has been shown greatly to resemble Sumerian.

In the Ebla tablets in Syria there is evidence of the descendants of Shem (such as Eber father of the Hebrews) and also of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, etc.

Some think that Nimrod was the same as the Amraphel during whose time the four kings of Mesopotamia (Amraphel, Chedorlaomer, Erioch and Tidal) invaded Palestine and captured Abram’s nephew Lot. Chronologically that is possible. For a long time Amraphel was also considered to have been Hammurabi of Babylon. The names are a good fit, but Hammurabi actually comes much later in time as I shall show. Hammurabi in fact refers back to Chedorlaomer as a bygone sacker of Babylon.

Dr. John Osgood has archaeologically pinpointed the Palestinian invasion by the Mesopotamian coalition to Late Chacolithic/Ghassul IV: hence this would be the time of Abram. It corresponds very closely also to the time of king Narmer. Whether Narmer was the first unifier of Egypt (the legendary “Menes”, not a pharaonic name) cannot be established on current scant information.

From a study of the structure of Genesis, we learn the name of Abram’s pharaoh, who took Abram’s wife Sarai. He was Abimelech. I have suggested that this name was a variation of Lehabim, a son of Mizraim (also called “Egypt”). At this stage we cannot tell who these people were also in Egyptian history. But the era is archaeologically verifiable because Abram’s Pharaoh, as Abimelech king of the Philistines, must have ruled both Egypt and southern Canaan. And archaeology shows a migration out of Egypt into Palestine at this time.

Turning to the Far East for the moment, Hinduism has picked up Abram (Abraham) and Sarai as Brahman and Saraisvati.

Legend has Abraham bringing great knowledge to Egypt, e.g. mathematics and astronomy. There is a similar story of a Rikayon who came from Mesopotamia bringing wisdom. Ri-kayon could just possibly be based on the widespread Khyan, shepherd king, or “Greater Hyksos”, known to be early but not yet properly datable: hence Abraham. Another “Greater Hyksos” is Yaqub-har, who might be Jacob, grandson of Abraham. The names Yaqub and Jacob are the same. From the Book of Genesis it appears that Pharaoh was rather in awe of Jacob whose blessing he received (Genesis 47:7).

The wet climate of the Flood era has now given way to a Sahelian climate causing severe drought and famine. Both Abram and Jacob (and his son, Joseph) knew of severe famine. At one point in time the Lower Nile (northern) Delta region dried up completely. But southern Egypt (the Upper Nile) remained fertile and that is probably from where Abram, and later Jacob’s family, got their supplies.

The era of Abraham passes from the Stone Ages into the Early Bronze Age I when cities began to be built. Some of the major cities of Palestine, in fact. This would approximate with early dynastic Egypt.

Abimelech is still king when Isaac, son of Abraham, marries. He must have had a very long reign. Perhaps this factor will enable for Abimelech to be identified in time in the historical records.

  1. 3.      The Era of Joseph (c. 1780-1670 BC)  

 

There was another dry phase during Early Bronze II which may equate to the famine of Jacob’s time. I have suggested that Jacob’s ‘stairway reaching to heaven’ was later produced by his son, Joseph, in Egypt, as Imhotep, the first great builder in stone, as the Step Pyramid of Saqqara. The vizier Imhotep is considered to have been one of the great geniuses of Egyptian history, and a saint. He belonged to the 3rd dynasty, which may need to be aligned with the 1st. There was famine during each. And there are many other similarities between dynasties 1 and 3. I think that Imhotep must also be the famous sage, Ptah-hotep, who, like Joseph, lived for 110 years. He wrote very Proverbs-like sayings, therefore influencing the Bible. I further think that Joseph may have been the great official Mentuhotep of the 11th dynasty (Middle Kingdom).

So, though the history books separate Egypt’s Old Kingdom (dynasties 3-6) from Egypt’s Middle Kingdom (beginning with dynasties 10/11) by 700 years, I would have them concurrent and would probably scrap altogether the concept of a “Middle Kingdom”.

  1. 4.      Moses and the Exodus (c. 1600-1500 BC)  

The “new king” of Exodus 1:8 “who knew not Joseph” – either by not wanting to recognize what the great man had done, or because he was born after Joseph had died (for certainly any Egyptian would have known of Joseph) – was presumably a new dynast. I have suggested that this was the beginning of the mighty 12th dynasty, when king Amenemes I inaugurated a completely new era. And Amenemes also expressed concern about the great number of Asiatics (read Hebrews I think) in the Delta region, just as does the “new king” of the Book of Exodus. This was a period of massive building projects, pyramids, temples, irrigation and agricultural works. I suspect that the Hebrew slaves were heavily involved in all of it. Josephus tells us that they built pyramids. Moreover Hebrew names (some as are given in the Book of Exodus) have been found at this time (e.g. in the Brooklyn Papyrus). There appear to have been mass burials of babies, too. Were these the Hebrew children?

But baby Moses escaped.

The next pharaoh was Sesostris I, during whose time a tale tells of a Moses-like figure, Sinuhe, who fled Egypt for a time to live amongst Bedouin, just as Moses did, and who married a chieftain’s daughter (Moses married the Midianite, Zipporah). Professor Immanuel Anati thinks that these two tales “share a common matrix”. Tradition has Moses’ Egyptian ‘mother’ as “Merris” (Merrhis) and her husband as “Chenephres”. I have identified the latter with pharaoh Sesostris I, whose Horus name was Kha-kheper-re (Greek “Chenephres”?). Greek transliterations of Egyptian names are poor. Sesostris I was an obsessive sphinx builder. His name is virtually the same name as Chephren’s (Kheper-ka-re), who built the Great Sphinx at Giza during the 4th dynasty. Hence I think that Chephren (4th dynasty) and Sesostris I (12th dynasty) must be merged as one, enabling for a folding of the so-called Old and Middle kingdoms.

Now Chephren’s wife was Meres-ankh, who I believe was the traditional “Merris”, foster-mother of Moses.

Whilst Cheops (my Amenemes I) and Chephren, the great pyramid builders, had very bad reputations, the next king, Menkaure (Greek, “Mycerinus”), was considered to have been kind, good and just. These were Moses-like traits. I have tentatively suggested that Menkaure may be Moses, who, tradition says, was “a king”.

But this still needs a lot of work.

Anyway, we are now in the Early Bronze Age III. This must be aligned with what has been construed as the Middle Bronze Age of the Middle Kingdom period, because our Old and Middle kingdoms are now concurrent.

The Plagues and Exodus bring down the 6th dynasty (concurrent with the 12th dynasty), the last ruler in each case being a woman – presumably because the main males were now all dead. The cataclysms release the Israelites from Egypt as the Middle Bronze I people. This is an absolute anchor point of biblical archaeology: Middle Bronze I = Exodus Israelites.

Into the vacuum in Egypt eventually pour the Hyksos people. Many equate these with the Amalekites whom the Israelites encountered on their way to Mount Sinai. The Hyksos, though, were probably a mix of peoples. I think that there was a strong Indo-European element amongst them, and I would also include here the Philistines.

This chaotic phase for Egypt is known as the First Intermediate Period of Egyptian history (dynasties 7-9), following the Old Kingdom, but it really needs to be fused with the so-called Second Intermediate Period (dynasties 13-17), following the Middle Kingdom.

  1. 5.      Joshua and the Israelites (c. 1500-1400 BC)  

The Middle Bronze I people bring with them artefacts from Egypt. That makes sense. Their destination is not the traditional Mount Sinai at Saint Catherine in the Sinai Peninsula, as tour guides will claim. Professor Immanuel Anati has demonstrated that the true holy mountain was modern-day Har Karkom in the Paran desert south of Israel, a long way from the Sinai Peninsula. Anati has traced the Exodus route painstakingly, with reference to wells for drinking water, and the location of tribes named in the Bible (such as the Amalekites).

All but two of the Exodus Israelites will perish in the wilderness due to their rebellion, and even Moses will not get to enter the Promised Land. He probably entered there many times, however, during his 40-year sojourn near Mount Sinai prior to the Exodus. Hence he was able to write geographical instructions for his people, such as “the Valley of Siddim” of Abram’s day, before the Sodom episode, having become “the Dead Sea” (suggesting that the ill-fated cities of Pentapolis are now deep below the Dead Sea). Only Joshua and Caleb survived from the Exodus. And a potsherd has been found at Gezer, that the MBI Israelites conquered, bearing the name, Caleb (which means “dog” in Hebrew).

The Middle Bronze I Israelites attacked the Early Bronze III cities, beginning with Jericho, which, archaeology shows, collapsed outwards as if by an earthquake and was burned to the ground. Just as in the biblical account. Of course archaeologists date this event about 500 years before the Joshuan Conquest and say, therefore, that it could have nothing whatsoever to do with Joshua.

The archaeology of Jericho is rather messy due to the inadequate methods of the early archaeologists. But, still, I think that the Joshuan scenario is readily identifiable there.

  1. 6.      The Judges Era (c. 1400-1020 BC)  

This long and obscure era is difficult both archaeologically and chronologically. Dr. John Osgood has done some excellent work tying the different phases of the Judges to the archaeological record. I do not have much to add to it. I have tentatively suggested that a famous personage who was not a king, but a judge, known from Mesopotamian history, Gudea, might perhaps be Gideon. More impressively, Dean Hickman has argued quite a strong case for the mighty Sargon of Akkad (c. 2000 BC in the textbooks) to have been the Mesopotamian conqueror of Israel, Cushan rishathaim (c. 1300 BC).

I have added to this that this Sargon (Akkadian Sharrukin) might have been the “Greater Hyksos” ruler, Shalek (or Sharek = Sharrukin?), of early Egyptian history.

  1. 7.      Kings Saul and David (c. 1020-950 BC)  

It is now that our revision really starts to blossom. Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky (Ages in Chaos I) had proposed that the recovery of Egypt with the rise of the New Kingdom, the 18th dynasty, had coincided with the rise of the Israelite monarchy after the period of the Judges. The common enemy, he suggested were the Hyksos, whom the 18th dynasty rulers expelled from Egypt; the Hyksos otherwise known as (according to Velikovsky) the Amalekites, with whom kings Saul and David had to contend. Another Jewish scholar, Dr Ed (Ewald) Metzler, had taken all this further by proposing, not merely that the 18th dynasty and Israel were allies, but that the 18th dynasty was in fact Israelite.

This is a radical re-writing of Egyptian history. Here are the early 18th dynasty pharaohs anew with their proposed biblical identifications:

Ahmose = Ahimaaz

Amenhotep I = Saul

Thutmose I = David

Thutmose II = Solomon

Hatshepsut = “Queen of Sheba”

Thutmose III = “King Shishak of Egypt”.

With Saul and David, we are now in the Late Bronze Age I.

Saul married Ahinoam, the daughter of Ahimaaz (I Samuel 14:50), who must have been the Egyptian princess, Ahhotep. The names are cognate. This made Saul a pharaoh. He was Amenhotep I. He may have co-ruled with his successor Thutmose I. No one is entirely certain. That would definitely fit with the awkward co-regency between Saul and David.

Thutmose I, who was not related to Amenhotep I (David was of a different tribe from Saul), married the princess daughter of Amenhotep I. That David was a pharaoh is apparent from the fact that the Bible has both David and “Pharaoh” conquering Gezer, which became the dowry for his daughter. The famed daughter of Thutmose I, who greatly revered her father, was Hatshepsut, whom Velikovsky rightly identified as the biblical “Queen of Sheba”.

Thutmose I was appropriately a non-royal Egyptian by birth, an ageing military commander of great repute. That fits with David.

But people ask how an idolatrous Egyptian pharaoh, Thutmose I, could have been the great Yahwist king David. The actual effective rule of Thutmose I over Egypt was only about 9 years. At this time, Amon-Ra (who I presume represented Yahweh) emerged as the leading god of the Egyptians. There was a definite trend towards monotheism. But the ingrained polytheism still largely prevailed. Yahweh had given David power over the nations in order that his dynasty would become a conduit by which Yahwism would penetrate into these nations. David was generally too busy, though, establishing his empire through wars to have been able to achieve this. He would have hoped for his descendants to have done so. But King David certainly established a vast empire through conquest: Egypt; Syria; Mesopotamia. That empire can well be discerned in our revision. It cannot be perceived at all, however, in the conventional model, according to which king David, who barely even seems to exist, was some small-time ruler of a petty Iron Age kingdom. At least, that is the view of archaeologist Israel Finkelstein, who is even more pessimistic about Solomon, claiming that he may never have existed.

Well we have got news for Finkelstein!

  1. 8.      Solomon, ‘Sheba’ and ‘Shishak’ (c. 950-880 BC)  

Following on from Velikovsky’s view that Hatshepsut was the Queen of Sheba, I identified Hatshepsut’s famous consort, Senenmut, a supposed commoner but of royal privileges, as king Solomon himself. Senenmut was, like Imhotep, another of those genius characters of Egyptian history, a regular polymath. Metzler logically argued that Thutmose II, the husband of Hatshepsut, was Solomon. I now accept that, too. Israel had come to Egypt with a vengeance and Davidic wisdom was now pouring into the land as attested by those inscriptions of Hatshepsut that are so Psalm-like. But they are also Genesis-like, Proverbs-like and Song of Songs-like (the latter being undoubtedly Solomon’s influence).

Late Bronze Age I had now progressed into the cosmopolitan and wealthy Late Bronze II Age.

Yes, Solomon did really exist, you Israeli archaeologists. But you need to be looking in the right places to find copious evidence of him.

To be sure, king Solomon was not bound just to Palestine and Egypt. He also ruled Babylon as the great Hammurabi, supposedly of the Middle Bronze Age. Hammurabi’s laws are so Torah-like that he is often thought to have influenced Moses. Initially dated to c. 2400 BC, Hammurabi is now more likely to be found floating about at c. 1800 BC. One day archaeology will realize that he should be dropped much further again, down to c. 950 BC, so as to become king Solomon. Hammurabi’s laws did not influence Moses. Rather, the Mosaïc Law was adopted by Hammurabi-as-Solomon.

Unfortunately, however, Solomon eventually drifted away from the Torah, swayed by his pagan wives. Hence the Davidic dream of his dynasty’s being a Torah to the nations could not be fully realized through Solomon, though the latter had been a most effective instrument of Yahweh in his earlier days.

Solomon and his Egyptian connections, which the Bible does not bother to follow up, are picked up in Greek folklore as the wise lawgiver Solon, whose laws have been found to be quite Jewish.

My estimation is that Solomon basically ruled Israel, whilst to Hatshepsut and pharaoh Thutmose III (Solomon’s son by a concubine, Isis) he parcelled out Egypt and Ethiopia (and Sheba?). It was a very peaceful and prosperous time, this Late Bronze Age II.

But, in the end, God raised up adversaries to Solomon, Rezon, whom I have identified with Hammurabi’s Syrian foe, Zimri-Lim, and Jeroboam, who eventually took the northern kingdom.

When Hatshepsut and Solomon died, Thutmose III was able to undertake military conquests, whereby he became “the Napoleon of Egypt”. Unlike Napoleon though, so it is thought, Thutmose III never lost a battle. Velikovsky rightly identified Thutmose III as the biblical pharaoh, “Shishak”, who despoiled Jerusalem five years after the death of Solomon. Shishak knew all about Jerusalem from his many years as understudy to his father. With this great victory, he displaced Solomon’s elected son, Rehoboam, as ruler of the Solomonic empire.

I have also proposed that Thutmose III was the dark-skinned Nehesy who led Hatshepsut’s famous expedition to Lebanon (land of Punt) to fetch myrrh trees for her glorious temple at Deir el-Bahri. This temple was based on what she had seen in Jerusalem. If so, if Thutmose III were Nehesy, with some Negroid blood, then he could also be the “Zerah the Ethiopian” who led a massive army of “a million men and three hundred chariots” against Solomon’s grandson, king Asa of Judah (2 Chronicles 14:9). But this time he was soundly defeated by the Judaeans.

  1. 9.      The El-Amarna Era (c. 880-815 BC)  

 

This is another most fruitful phase of the revision, the well-documented El-Amarna age of pharaohs Amenhotep III and IV (Akhnaton).

Velikovsky probably did his major work here, showing that the C14th BC era of the history books for El Amarna was actually the C9th BC era known from the Bible and other history. Amenhotep III and IV are known in the El Amarna letters by their throne names, respectively, of Nimmuria and Naphuria.

Velikovsky most convincingly identified the two great Syrian (biblical) kings of the time, the mighty Ben-hadad I and Hazael, contemporaries of the prophets Elijah and Elisha, with, respectively, El Amarna’s Abdi-ashirta and Aziru. The Syrian captain, Ianhamu, he identified as the Syrian Naaman of the Bible, cured by Elisha of his leprosy.

But, just as Velikovsky had aligned 18th dynasty Egypt with Israel, but had not realized that the 18th dynasty was Israelite, as Metzler later did, so did Velikovsky not realize that – as I think – pharaohs Amenhotep III and IV were actually biblical kings of Israel (and Judah). I got the ball rolling here by identifying Queen Nefertiti with Queen Jezebel. Only later did I realize that Akhnaton was king Ahab of Israel. Then I concluded that the great Amenhotep III, a very Solomon-like king, was the pious king Asa of Judah. The small state of Judah would not have been able to have contained so great and militarily powerful a king as Asa. He must have ruled far beyond Jerusalem. Asa’s falling away in the end was due I believe to the same cause as Solomon’s apostasy, pagan female influence, in Asa’s case Jezebel-Nefertiti. And this wicked queen would soon have even more devastating an effect upon Ahab-Akhnaton.

The eventual fall of Akhnaton and Nefertiti was at the hands of Ay and Horemheb, who find their perfect images, biblically, in Hazael and Jehu, designated (anointed) by the prophet Elijah to wipe out Baalism from Israel, which equated to Akhnaton’s and Nefertiti’s cult of Aton in Egypt.

Later the prophet Elisha himself will fulfil his part of the Sinai Commission, as the long-lived priest Jehoiada of Jerusalem, by wiping out Baalism from Judah, after the reign there of the wicked Queen Athaliah, perhaps Nefertiti’s (Jezebel’s) daughter.

Thus a new age dawned in Israel and Judah.

I believe that I have found a parallel history in the Bible with king Baasha of Israel as Ahab; Baasha’s son Elah, as Ahab’s son, Ahaziah; and king Zimri of Israel as king Jehu of Israel. For one, this explains who was the “Hiel” who built Jericho at the time of king Ahab (I Kings 16:34). It was Ahab’s very son, Elah (Elahi = Hiel). I have further identified this Ahaziah (Elah) as pharaoh Smenkhkare, and Ahaziah’s brother, Jehoram, a slightly better king, as the famous pharaoh, Tutankhamun.

We are now in the early Iron Age (probably overlapping Late Bronze) and the time of luxurious use of ivories (the prophet Amos’s ‘beds of ivory’).

  1. 10.   The Ramessides (c. 880-770 BC)  

 

Obviously, now, there is no possibility in my scheme for the long-reigning Ramses II ‘the Great” (66/67 years of reign) (of the post-El Amarna era) to have been the Pharaoh of the Exodus (which is the usual view) more than a millennium  earlier. So how can we now squeeze in this most significant pharaoh?

Having Jehu as Horemheb, the destroyer of the Aton cult of Akhnaton, Nefertiti, their family and their followers, enables for the Ramessides who followed Horemheb to be anchored to c. 800 BC. I have found that the reigns of Horemheb and the four major Ramessides who followed him (Ramses I; Seti I; Ramses II and Merenptah) add up to virtually the same total as the reigns of Jehu and his four successors (Jehoahaz; Jehoash; Jeroboam II and Zechariah). So, even if my bold theory that the Ramessides were, like Jehu, kings of Israel, is incorrect, nevertheless I shall not be very far wrong, chronologically, in now slotting them into the period c. 880-770 BC. The biggest test of my theory is how well does the reign of Jeroboam II stand up to the 66-67 years reign of Ramses II who I consider to be Jeroboam II’s alter ego? At first glance it does not. Although Jeroboam II was also a powerful and long-reigning king, his 41 years of reign are dwarfed by Ramses’ 66 years. Until, that is the 22-year interregnum of Philip Mauro is added to Jeroboam II’s reign, enabling for more than 60 years total (co-regency may be included).

Perhaps the king of Israel was exclusively in Egypt during the troubled interregnum period.

The great disadvantage that we revisionists have is that, when you bring down history by a massive 500 years, you can end up with some awful crushes at the lower end of the scale. So, although we have managed to tuck into bed quite neatly these 19th dynasty Ramessides, no mean feat, we still have to consider the many 20th dynasty Ramessides (Ramses III-XI) of close chronological proximity to the 19th dynasty ones. These must also be brought into line.

My solution was to identify the founder of the 20th dynasty, the legendary Seti-nakht who is reputed to have ‘driven out a usurper’, with the substantial king Joash of Judah, contemporaneous with the Jehu-ides in Israel. The usurper would then be Queen Athaliah and her fellow Baalists, whom the young king Joash removed under the guidance of the priest Jehoiada (Elisha). The son of Seti-nakht was the powerful pharaoh, Ramses III, whom I have identified with the mighty king Amaziah of Judah. And so on down to Ramses XI as, possibly, king Hezekiah of Judah himself (c. 730 BC).

The despoiling of Jerusalem during Amaziah’s reign I take to be Ramses II’s march on Jerusalem  during the reign of his father, pharaoh Seti I (= king Jehoash of Israel), which campaign to Jerusalem some revisionists think makes Ramses II the biblical “Shishak”. But I think that Thutmose III is by far the better candidate for “Shishak”.

So, the intertwining of the Jehu-ides of Israel and the dynasty of Joash of Judah is reflected, I have suggested, in the reigns of the 19th dynasty Ramessides, on the one hand, and the un-related 20th dynasty Ramessides, on the other. That is my proposed solution to fitting in these two great Egyptian dynasties into a compressed system of revision.

  1. 11.   King Hezekiah of Judah (c. 730 BC)  

 

I have written a large two-volume university thesis on a reconstruction of the era of this great king, knitting into it the Book of Judith: A Revised History of the Era of King Hezekiah of Judah and its Background. This thesis can be accessed at: http://hdl.handle.net/2123/5973

The destruction of the Assyrian army of 185,000 of king Sennacherib I have attributed to the intervention of the Jewish heroine, Judith.

Though I thought that I had just about exhausted this intriguing subject, I now suspect that some new developments are indicating that there is much, much more to be added to this already fascinating era of ancient history. So I shall conclude this history here, pending further investigations.

11th February 2012

Our Lady of Lourdes

Senenmut – The Most Ancient Zodiac

Taken from: http://ancientegyptweblog.blogspot.com.au/2005/03/senenmut-most-ancient-zodiac-dated.htm 

 

[AMAIC dates Senenmut to time of Solomon, as King Solomon]

 

Friday, March 11, 2005

 
The tomb of Senenmut (also written Senmut, both are wrong as we show in the next posting) located as Tomb TT353 at Del el-Bahri, Egypt, has what is regarded to be the world’s oldest Zodiac inscribed on its ceiling. For a full picture in color see the website of Dr. Karl H. Leser.We have been able to decipher this Pharaonic Zodiac in some of its essentials and present that decipherment here.

Partial Decipherment – Zodiac of Senenmut

Leser writes as follows, citing to Peter F. Dorman, an expert on Senenmut, along the way:

“Above, the astronomical ceiling from Chamber A, TT353; it is the oldest astronomical presentation known – the next one was found in the tomb of Sethi I. – and naturally, it is the only one in a private tomb (from Dorman, 1991). The astronomical ceiling measures approx. 3×3.6 m at its greatest dimensions.

The ceiling of Chamber A is divided into two sections representing the northern and the southern skies. The southern – upper part shown in the picture above – is decorated with a list of decanal stars, as well as constellations of the southern sky belonging to it like Orion and Sothis (Sopdet). Furthermore, the planets Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury and Venus are shown and associated deities who are traveling in small boats over the sky. Thus, the southern ceiling marks the hours of the night.

The northern – lower part – shows constellations of the northern sky with the large bear in the center. The other constellations could not be identified. On the right and left of it there are 8 or 4 circles shown and below them several deities each carrying a sun disk towards the center of the picture. The inscriptions associated with the circles mark the original monthly celebrations in the lunar calendar, whereas the deities mark the original days of the lunar month (after Meyer, 1982).

The astronomical ceiling is divided along its east-west axis by a text band composed of five registers. The central line which is wider than the other four registers bears together the titles of Hatshepsut and some titles as well as the name of Senenmut…..”

In the Zodiac of Senenmut we see in the middle of the starry ceiling, about 3/4 of the way own, a figure with a spear, which we interpret as Orion, downing the bull, Taurus, just as in the similar theme at Minoan Knossos, on Crete (see the Ancient World Blog).

Moreover, we can easily identify the two large middle vertical lines – which join at the tail of the Bull and at the head of Cetus at Menkar, here a young woman – as marking the line of the Equinoxes.

Given that knowledge, which places the Zodiac of Senenmut at ca. 1500-1400 BC, we can in fact date the starry ceiling to March, 1476 BC when the four depicted planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury and Venus) all joined in superconjunction with the Sun (and perhaps also the Moon) at the point of the Vernal Equinox.

The upper graphic is used pursuant to the fair use exception to the copyright laws and is reduced in size from the original graphic found at the website of Dr. Karl H. Leser.

The lower graphic was made by Andis Kaulins using the above graphic as a model. The decipherment of the lower drawing and the setting of the date of Senenmut’s heaven to March 1476 BC was made by Andis Kaulins on March 11, 2005.

The above decipherment meshes fairly well with a decipherment made by Andis Kaulins in June of 2001, interpreting similarly the similar Zodiac found in the Tomb of Sethos (who is actually King David).