Abstract: The Bible vs. Archaeology. This article challenges current archaeological interpretation and presents a comprehensive reconciliation of the Bible with archaeology, from the patriarchal period to the Roman period.

 

The Bible vs. Archaeology, You Decide.

By Bruce Alan Killian

THE PROBLEM

The Bible and archaeologists do not tell the same story. The conquest of Canaan is a good example: The Bible says, Joshua conquered the whole region leaving no survivors.1 Archaeologists say Israel "emerged" from among the Canaanite peoples without a conquest.2 They say this because there is evidence of neither culture change nor conquest. Archaeology has apparently disproved the Bible. Some major differences between the Bible and archaeology are: There is no evidence of the destruction of Egypt by plagues at the Exodus. There is no evidence of a forty-year wilderness wandering, no evidence of a rapid and complete conquest by Joshua, and no evidence for a wealthy international trading kingdom of Solomon, etc.

This author believes that properly interpreted archaeology does tell the same story as the Bible. The big details should match: plagues destroyed Egypt, Israel wandered forty years in the wilderness, Israel attacked and conquered Canaan, etc. Most recent archaeologists deny substantial evidence for these events. Archaeologists cannot necessarily tell whether a culture is Canaanite or Israelite. They can tell the destruction of cities. They can tell whether the inhabitants are city dwellers or nomads. They can tell the difference between a poor local economy and rich international economy. Most reconcilers pick one event such as the conquest of Jericho, not the big picture. The big details should match, but they don't. The goal of this article is to look at the big picture and propose a solution.

Biblical Chronology Challenged

A few archaeologists have challenged the standard Biblical chronology. Rudolph Cohen, in "The Mysterious MBI People" asked, "Does the Exodus tradition in the Bible preserve the memory of their entry into Canaan?" He answers yes; they may be Israel because only the MBI people match the Bible.3 The problem is the MBI (Middle Bronze I Age) period ends in about 2000 B.C. over five hundred years before a 1450 B.C. Exodus. In another article, Emmanuel Anati asks, "Has Mt. Sinai Been Found?" He answers yes, if we can place the Exodus in the Bronze Age Complex: 3200-1550 B.C. He also mentions parallels between the Exodus and Egyptian literature in the First Intermediate period.4 Cohen and Anati have *problem with the Exodus story, but a chronological problem.

Egypt, Basis of Biblical Chronology

Egypt holds a unique place in archaeology because its chronology is "fixed" and early. Egyptian chronology is fixed because it is based on written records tied to fixed risings of the star Sirius dating to about 1870 B.C. Biblical archaeological chronology is tied to Egyptian chronology. Sir Flinders Petrie discovered pottery-dated stratigraphy, the ability to date debris layers by pottery. Pottery was similar over large areas and changed slowly with time. Pieces of broken pottery had little value therefore generally stay in the strata where they first fell. Petrie linked the ubiquitous pottery pieces to Egyptian chronology. Linking the relative pottery chronology to the fixed Egyptian chronology, Biblical chronology became fixed.

THE SOLUTION

This brings up two questions: First, does the Bible agree with a corrected chronology at all time periods? Second, is there any reason to suspect that an astronomically based chronology may be inaccurate?

With a corrected chronology, these problems disappear, as will be shown below; but there is a new problem, how does one account for the excess six hundred years. This too will be dealt with later.

This revised archaeological interpretation assumes the 'confirmed star dates' are inaccurate. God said, "Once more . . . I will shake the heavens."5 This implies that God has shaken the heavens in the past. If God shook the heavens, 'star dating' can be challenged. The Bible also says, God shakes the earth out of its place.6 If the earth's orbit changed, dating by the rising Sirius would be invalid. Two stories in the Bible indicate a change in the stable progression of the earth in its orbit: Joshua's long day and Hezekiah's going back of the shadow of the sun.7 About 700 B.C., God caused the shadow of the sun to reverse its normal direction for a time. About 1400 B.C. God lengthened the a day to twice its length. These events challenge the assumption that the rising of Sirius is necessarily a dateable event. Then Egyptian chronology could be wrong and therefore the chronology of the Bible.

This article will look at the periods before and after this to see if a chronological shift makes sense. Cohen and Anati's MBI people will be used as the reference for the Israelites when looking backwards and forwards in time.

Archaeologic

Egyptian

Date

Date

Brief Palestinian Archaeology

Interpretation

Interpretation

Period

Period

Stand (length)

Prop. (length)

Description

Standard

Proposed

Early

I

Pre-dynastic

3300 (250)

2450 (250)

Unfortified cities emerge with regional diversity.8

 

Prepatriarchal

Bronze Age

II

Archaic Period

3050 (350)

2200 (350)

Cities become fortified with pubic buildings, intensive urbanization.9

Prepatriarchal

Patriarchs to Canaan10

(EB)

III

Old Kingdom

2700 (400)

1850 (400)

Growth, very similar to EB II, with impressive formidable fortifications.11

 

Israel in Egypt

EB12

OR

MB

IV

 

I

1st Inter-mediate

2300 (300)

1450 (50)13

Nomads destroy every city, but don't settle in them, mostly cemeteries.14 No Egyptian presence.

Prepatriarchal 15

Wandering & Conquest

Middle

IIA

Middle

2000 (200)

1400 (200)

"Mighty City-States," totally new urban population.16

Patriarchal Period

Israel Settles

Bronze Age

IIB

Kingdom

1800 (150)

1200 (100)

Increased settlement & urban growth. No cultural break. Hazor great.

 

Judges Rule

(MB)

IIC

2nd Inter-mediate

1650 (100)

1100 (100)

Increased settlement & urban growth. No cultural break. Prosperity zenith.17

Israel in Egypt

United Israel

Late

IA

 

1550 (80)

1000 (70)

No cultural break, Little Egyptian presence. International marine trade.18

 

United Israel

Bronze Age

IB

 

1470 (100)

930 (230)

Egypt conquers & influences19 No walls or breaks, declining population/urbanization 20

Exodus

Israel & Judah

(LB)

IIA

New

1400 (100)

700 (90)

Cities destroyed in Canaan at various times, partial urban revival Conquest in Canaan21

Wandering & Conquest

Judah; Assyrian Conquest

 

IIB

Kingdom

1300 (100)

610 (20)

No cultural break, Hittites powerful. Bible is only record of public construction.22

 

Babylonian Conquest 1

 

IA

 

1200 (50)

590 (10)

No-break. Strong Egyptian presence. Two waves of destruction. Turmoil.23

Judges Rule 24

Babylonian Conquests 2-3

 

IB

 

1150 (150)

580 (50)

Egyptian control ends. Subsistence pottery, no public buildings, small Population.25

 

Babylonian Captivity

Iron Age

IIA

 

1000 (75)

530 (200)

Sparse evidence. Urban culture begins. Poor unwalled villages. Dark age.26

United Israel

Persian Period

 

IIB

Late Period

925 (195)

330 (160)

Jerusalem a metropolis27 Well studied, but few remains until 800.

Israel & Judah

Greek Period

 

IIC

 

720 (135)

170 (120)

Great prosperity in Judah. Hardly known outside Judah.28

Judah

Maccabean Period

Babylon Persian

 

 

585 (535)

50 (0)

Remains very rare. Until recently most obscure. Iron culture continues.29

Captivity to Herod

Roman Period

Each row covers an archaeological period, including: age designation, standard and proposed reference dates, brief discussion of its archaeology, etc. The rows cover the various phases of the Early Bronze (EB), Middle Bronze (MB), Late Bronze (LB), and Iron ages.

Bold text indicates the Biblical period clearly matches the archaeological of the period.

Underlined italic text indicates the archaeology of the period does not match the Biblical account.

Many of the dates vary from one author to the next. The standard dates listed can vary by as much as one hundred years from one author to the next.

ABRAHAM

Big picture differences between the Bible and archaeology in Abraham's days hinge on the existence of certain walled cities in Canaan. According to the Bible, Abraham migrated to Canaan in about 2050 B.C. It was a time when there were walled cities at Shechem, Hebron and Sodom and a time when Bethel, Ai, Hebron, Jerusalem and Gerar, were cities (and probably walled) in Canaan.30 During this period Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed. This would be during the Middle Bronze Age I (MBI) period which archaeologists date to 2300-2000 B.C. At the start of the MBI period all walled cities in Canaan were destroyed and not rebuilt until the MBII period.31 Genesis mentions walled cities in Canaan in Abraham's day therefore most archaeologists place him after the MBI period. Ai, Sodom, and Gomorrah were ruins in Abraham's day.

If the MBI people are the Israelites, then Abraham lived back in the EBII period, a time when these walled cities existed. Abraham must have entered Canaan before Ai, Sodom, and Gomorrah were destroyed and abandoned during the EB.32

JOSEPH

Archaeologists place Joseph during the Middle Kingdom or in the second intermediate period. There is no record of the famine or Joseph's service as vizier.

In this revised interpretation, Joseph entered Egypt near the start of the Old Kingdom. This was Egypt's third dynasty, a period of very high cultural achievement.33 Djoser, the second pharaoh of the Third Dynasty, built the first pyramid, the Step Pyramid. Imhotep was Djoser's second in command, Egypt's most renowned vizier.

Joseph was made vizier over all Egypt after he interpreted Pharaoh's dream. The dream was that there would be seven years of plenty followed by seven years of famine.34 In the reign of Djoser there was a seven-year famine.35 This is the only seven-year famine in Egyptian history and this precisely parallels the famine recorded in the Bible.

A second parallel between Djoser's reign and the Bible are dreams and their interpretation. The same stele that records the seven-year famine, also records a dream of Pharaoh Djoser. Imhotep his foreign born vizier interpreted that dream. The interpretation of this dream reveals the method for making a concrete like stone for use in the construction of pyramids.36

On this same stele, priests advised Ptolemy V in 186 B.C. to build a dam to stop a famine due to flooding. They discovered this solution by researching the ending of Djoser's famine.37 The solution was to build a dam to direct part of the Nile flood into the Faiyum. The name of the river created by this dam is river Joseph.38 Was this river named to memorialize the architect?

The EXODUS Out of Egypt

Archaeologists agree that if there were an Exodus it occurred sometime during the prosperous New Kingdom typically dated 1550-1085 B.C. During this period Egypt was an empire, and there is no sign of devastating plagues, millions of slaves leaving, sudden collapse, long periods of anarchy, or a missing pharaoh and his army. The Exodus of Israel apparently had an imperceptible effect on life in Egypt.

The Bible says a pharaoh of Egypt harshly oppressed Israel for eighty years. Then God sent ten plagues and destroyed Egypt. He destroyed all Egypt's trees, crops, livestock, firstborn, army and pharaoh. He then led millions of her slaves out with large flocks and the wealth of Egypt. The disastrous effects in Egypt persisted at least forty years and were fearfully remembered three hundred years later.39 The Bible does not mention Egypt again as a nation until King Saul about four hundred years later.

In this revised interpretation, the Exodus occurred at the end of the Old Kingdom. This corresponds to start of the MBI period.40 The next to the last pharaoh of the Old Kingdom was Pepi II. "When he died, the whole vigorous, complex, coherent structure of the united kingdom of Egypt fell in ruins, and a time of anarchy ensued."41 The time Moses spent in Midian as a shepherd, corresponds to the last years of Pepi II's ninety-four year reign. The Ipuwer Papyrus42 records the plagues and devastation from the Egyptian viewpoint, strikingly paralleling the Bible.43 The mummy of Pepi II's successor has not been found, because he drowned in the Red Sea. The Bible explains why this mighty Old Kingdom of Egypt suddenly collapsed into anarchy.

Israel Wanders the Wilderness

Archaeologists discount the Bible, because not a single find has been made in the desert between the Middle Bronze II and the Late Bronze Age, the entire period typically dated from 2000-1200 B.C.44 Finkelstein said, there is "not a shred of evidence" providing information on the Exodus. Further it is "extremely unlikely" that new materials will be found to allow serious archaeological research on the Exodus and desert wanderings.45 Apparently Israel left nothing to indicate their presence. The city of Arad did not exist between 2300 and 1000 B.C. It simply was not there for Israel to conquer.

According to the Bible, God led Israel out of Egypt and through the Red Sea in about 1450 B.C. They spent a year camped at Mt. Sinai and then nearly forty years wandering the desert. Near the end of this wandering they attacked and destroyed the city of Arad.

In this revised interpretation, a large population of nomads, Israel, suddenly and briefly occupied the desert. They show up at Mt. Sinai (Har Karkom). These nomads wandered exclusively in the desert proper, not in the better land to the north. Their pottery indicates they were a sedentary people from Egypt living as nomads.46 The evidence of their wandering is abundant, but their presence remains a puzzle.47 The main evidence of their presence is a distinctive form of pottery made on a fast wheel, for they built few structures. Millions of Israelites 'wandered' the desert for forty years, their remains are abundant and scattered widely. Israel destroyed Arad as they left the area.

Israel in the Transjordan

Archaeologists place the Exodus at a time when Edom and Moab were countries of nomads. There is some evidence of small settlements, but no fortified cities. Heshbon destroyed by Moses did not exist between 2300 and 1200 B.C.

At the end of the wilderness wandering, Moses led Israel to the plains of Moab. The route led through Edom and Moab. But the kings of Edom and Moab denied them passage through their territories. Moses complied leading Israel around these two countries. During the MBI period there were populations in walled cities in these countries. In these countries the EB culture continued after the MBI culture started elsewhere. Israel left Edom and Moab alone.

Then the Amorites attacked Israel. Israel destroyed them and their capitol Heshbon and captured their territory.48 Moses then turned up the road toward Bashan and destroyed everyone and all their sixty fortified cities.49 Glueck found in the Transjordan, a long line of fortified sites, destroyed during the MBI. These sites reached from Transjordan to Syria and were never reoccupied. Matching the destructions of the Amorites and Bashan. The MBI pottery is absolutely unique and amazingly uniform where ever it is found.50

Israel Conquers Canaan

Archaeologists find little evidence for the conquest of Canaan by Israel. There was an almost total lack of fortifications during this period.51 Rather than taking Canaan by conquest, Israel peacefully emerges from among the Canaanites.52

According to the Bible, Joshua led Israel in their conquest of Canaan. Millions of Israelites crossed the Jordan and camped out near Jericho for six years while they conquered Canaan, starting with Jericho. They conquered seven nations, killed thirty-one kings and destroyed their cities. The cities were large and fortified. Joshua subdued the whole region, including the hill country, the Negev, the western foothills and the mountain slopes, together with all their kings. He left no survivors. He totally destroyed all who breathed.53 This happened around 1400 B.C.

The MBI people now show up in Canaan as conquerors. The Bible says, "Joshua destroyed every city on its mound." This is emphasized by Miss Kenyon,

The final end of the Early Bronze Age civilisation came with catastrophic completeness. The last of the Early Bronze Age walls of Jericho was built in a great hurry, using old and broken bricks, and was probably not completed when it was destroyed by fire. Little or none of the town inside the walls has survived denudation, but it was probably completely destroyed, for all the finds show that there was an absolute break, and a new people took the place of the earlier inhabitants. Every town in Palestine that has so far been investigated shows the same break. The newcomers were nomads, not interested in town life, and they so completely drove out or absorbed the old population, perhaps already weakened and decadent, that all traces of the Early Bronze Age civilisation disappeared.54 [Emphasis added]

Ai seems to require that the MBI people be Israel. One can say we don't know the site of this city (very unlikely), someone made up the story of the destruction of Ai, or the Entrance occurred in the MBI period.55 Additional excellent correlation between the Bible and this interpretation.

At Jericho after the city was destroyed there was a prolonged camping occupation.56 Israel camped at Gilgal (near Jericho), while the land was conquered. Their pottery was brittle57 which may account for the frequency of the finds.

A primary evidence of the MBI people is the shaft tomb. In the area around Jericho there are numerous shaft tombs built by the Israelites while they conquered Canaan. The tombs evidence a large and virile population, but the graves are frequently just a bag of disarticulated bones.58 These are the bones of the Israelites who died in the wilderness. Jacob dug a tomb in a field and called it a cave. This describes a shaft tomb. There are several types of tombs, evidencing a tribal organization, with each group maintaining its own burial customs.59 The tombs show a clear Egyptian influence.60 The tombs also show that they came "from a comparatively civilised area, in which there was a well-developed architectural tradition."61

Israel Settles Canaan

Between 1900 and 1200 there is clear evidence of no cultural break.62 Therefore archaeologists infer that Israel absorbed the Canaanite culture. The population and settlement declined. There was much disruption during this period due to local conflict.63 Archaeologists have Canaan controlled by Egypt as a part of its empire to a greater or lesser extent throughout the New Kingdom. They see the stronger Egyptian control as the periods of peace mentioned in the Bible, these include conquests and rule of Canaan by Pharaohs Rameses II and Seti I.

The Bible says, after the conquest Israel settled in the land. So God gave Israel all the land he had sworn to give their forefathers, and they took possession of it and settled there.64 Some Canaanites reappeared with iron chariots, settling the coastal plain and the valley of Jezreel at least to Beth Shan. Israel settled particularly in the hill country. Judges then ruled Israel for more than three hundred years. During that period Israel was conquered and briefly controlled at different times by most of the surrounding nations except Egypt.

In this revised interpretation, Israel now settles Canaan. Settlement pattern is one of the best indications of a cultural change. Finkelstein wrote on the settlement pattern during the EB, MBI and MB periods. He says, during the Early Bronze Age there were 118 settlement sites in the hill country, all but one were abandoned during the MBI. During the MBI there are 49 mostly small settlement sites clustered in the desert in the eastern half of the country evidenced mainly by cemeteries.65 Then during the MBII there is an unprecedented wave of settlement in the hill country, there are 248 sites including about half the MBI sites and nearly all the Early Bronze sites.66 This is exactly what happened when Israel entered Canaan. The EB people are the Canaanites. Israel, the MBI people, camped out for six years mainly at Gilgal67 while conquering Canaan. Then Israel, the MBII culture, occupied the land after the conquest.68

With the Judges we enter into the Middle Bronze Age proper (MBII). This was a period of higher culture, reverting to town life and absorbing the culture of the nomadic conquerors.69 The newcomers brought pottery made entirely on a fast wheel, and they introduced bronze weapons.70 "The pottery of the period is exceptionally fine."71 Finds of metal weapons are plentiful from the MBI period, but rare during the rest of the Middle Bronze Age72 as is so stated in Scripture.73

In this revised interpretation, the prosperous new culture was the Israelite culture. This culture had a long life, lasting from the MBII through at least the Iron I, a period of about eight hundred years.74 That is until the conquest by Babylon. Archaeologists can find no change in culture in this period because there was no change in culture. The change of culture occurred in the MBI when Israel entered the land.

The Israelite settlement began the MBII period or the start of the Middle Bronze Age proper. The nomads settled rebuilding most of the cities. They introduce an entirely new culture, with a certain Egyptian style, the most complete break ever recorded.

Joshua destroyed the Canaanites, but new ones came back. This group had iron chariots and built impressive new fortified cities. A new line of fortified cities shows up on the coastal plain and the valley of Jezreel as far as Beth Shan, again precisely matching the Bible.75

SOLOMON

Archaeologists place Solomon's reign during a period when Canaan was a backwater nation with little evidence of wealth or trade.76 Israel was a nation that was just subsisting. It was not rich even in comparison with its poor neighbors. A nation whose cities had no walls or public buildings. The traditional dating of Solomon has been linked to a distinctive type of city gate first recognized at Megiddo and later found at Hazor and Gezer.

Yagael Yadin redated a city gate at Gezer, of the same design and dimensions as the Megiddo gate to the Solomonic period. Macalister had dated the Gezer gate to the Maccabean period on the evidence of Hellenistic pottery and Greek inscriptions.77 Yadin redated the gate on the evidence of distinctive Iron Age pottery. The Hazor site Yadin ascribed to Solomon covered only half the acropolis and was much smaller than the preceding cities. It was more of a palace enclosure than a royal city and was thought to be so by some. Macalister called the Gezer site a Maccabean castle, not much of a city. Solomon built cities, not castles on part of the previous mounds. This period of subsistence described by the archaeologists was actual situation when Nehemiah returned.

The Bible describes Solomon's reign as the pinnacle of Israel's wealth, power, and influence. Solomon built the Temple, palaces, and store cities. He sent fleets of ships on international trading voyages. Solomon was described as greater in riches and wisdom than all other kings on the earth.78 Solomon came to power at the end of the Middle Bronze Age. Archaeologically this is a prosperity zenith in Canaan with a flourishing international trade. A time of population and urban growth.

ISRAEL IN THE KINGS PERIOD

Archaeologists have extensively studied this period. In Israel there were an abundance fortified towns and villages. There were public buildings and underground water systems. The massive fortifications were presumably to counter the Assyrian threat.79

According to the Bible, shortly after Solomon died, Israel separated into two countries Israel and Judah. We will deal with these countries separately. Israel and Judah were regularly at war. Near the end of this period, Assyria took Hazor, Gilead and Galilee from Israel. Later Assyria conquered Israel and deported the entire population. Assyria then settled a new population from a variety of locations into the area previously occupied by Israel. These people were taught the religion of Israel and became the Samaritans.80

In this revised interpretation there was a great deal of continuity between this period and the preceding period. The are regular battles with Judah resulting in various destructions.81 The period ends with a total conquest by the Assyrians and the population of Israel deported.

In the next period an "entirely new settlement in the Iron Age I hundreds of new small sites were inhabited in the mountainous areas of Upper and Lower Galilee, the hills of Samaria and Ephraim, in Benjamin, in the Northern Negev, and in parts of Central and Northern Transjordan", but not in Judah.82 While this is generally attributed to the settlement of Israel it is actually the settlement of the Samaritans after the deportation of Israel.

JUDAH IN THE KINGS PERIOD

Archaeologists designate this period as the Iron IIB. They link Judah's conquest to the Egyptian Sheshonk, on the evidence of the similarity of his name to Shishak, the name given to the conqueror in the Bible. This is a dark age in archaeological history. Jerusalem becomes a great metropolis at this time.

According to the Bible, when Israel divided, Rehoboam came to power in Judah. A few years later Egypt conquered and subjugated Judah and carried off the treasures of the Temple.83 Canaan had not been under Egyptian domination since before the Exodus. Though subjugated Judah appears to continue as a sovereign nation. This period is also punctuated by war between Israel and Judah.

In this revised interpretation, Egypt's conquest occurred at the start of the Late Bronze IB period. The Egyptian archaeological record supports this. Since the end of the Old Kingdom, Egypt had not attempted to conquer Canaan. Rehoboam's reign corresponds to the sole reign of Pharaoh Thutmose III, the great conqueror of the New Kingdom. Thutmose III invaded and conquered Judah. Rehoboam, Judah's king became subject to Thutmose III and the Temple was sacked. Thutmose III carefully details on the wall of the temple of Karnak the treasures carried from the Temple. The wall pictures include the type, number, design and material of the Temple contents. These match the account given in the Bible.84 Thutmose III is called Shishak in the Scriptures. Although Canaan was part of the Egyptian Empire, control was left almost entirely in the native's hands.85 This is the period of the Amarna letters, correspondence between Egypt's pharaohs and various rulers in the countries to the North.86

THE FALL OF JUDAH

Archaeologists in these later periods often substitute the Biblical record for the archaeological record. It is therefore necessary to sort opinions taken from the Bible from archaeological evidence. This is one of the most obscure periods in the lands of the Bible; stratigraphic sequences for this period are rare. In Judah the period from Solomon until nearly 700 B.C. is little known, presumably because of the continuity and lack of destructions at these sites. Jerusalem greatly expanded during this period and the population became concentrated there.87

The Bible describes Judah's 350 years history as peaceful, but punctuated with war. Some years later a Pharaoh again conquered Judah and killed Josiah. The last years of Judah are prosperous, but idolatrous; they are finally destroyed over a period of twenty years in three conquests. With the destruction of Jerusalem, the population was either killed or deported to Babylon. The country was then left desolate for fifty years.

In this revised interpretation, the decline and fall of Judah occur at the end of the LB period. While Josiah was king, Pharaoh Neco went up to the Euphrates River to help the king of Assyria. King Josiah marched out to meet him in battle, but Neco faced him and killed him at Megiddo.88 We better know this Pharaoh today as Ramses II. The three waves of conquest in the fall of Judah are very obvious at the end of the LB Age and the beginning of the Iron Age. With the conquest of Judah by Nebuchadnezzar the population is deported and the land is left desolate for fifty years.

Israel returns from Babylon

Archaeology textbooks cover this period briefly, because there is very little that can be dated to this period. From 500 to 335 B.C. the "Persian cultural influence seems to have been minor, the influence of the Greek world began to be felt strongly."89 "Even where the Persian period is represented the levels of debris are often thin and badly cut about by subsequent Hellenistic and Roman foundation trenches and rubbish pits."90

The Bible says, While Judah was in Babylon, the land lay desolate for seventy years. After this the Israelites returned from the Babylonian captivity and lived at a subsistence level for seventy more years. This is the Iron IIA, a period with a small poor population, just barely subsisting. They lived in cities without walls. Then Nehemiah became the leader of Judah. He led them in rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem and repopulating it. A time of prosperity ensued. This starts Iron IIB, the building of the walls of Jerusalem it becomes the one walled city in the area. From Daniel 11 we find a period of peace extended until the Maccabees.

For hundred years Jerusalem and Judah grow and prosper in peace under the Persian and Greek Empires.

The archaeologists by this period are feeling the stretch of the periods. Alexander the Great conquered and then Hellenized the world. Here the Greek culture overshadows the Assyrian culture centuries before Alexander, in spite of the fact that the many of the Israelites returned from the Assyrian culture.

MACCABEES

It is difficult to find archaeological details of the period from the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar down to the period of the Maccabees and beyond. "In the Hellenistic period (332-63 B.C.) Even the political revolt of the Maccabees and the creation of an independent Jewish kingdom in Judea (150-60BC) did not significantly affect the process of Hellenization."91

The Maccabees led the casting off the Seleucid rule. This is recorded in the Books of Maccabees. It was a period of war succeeded by a period of prosperity.

In this revised interpretation, the destructions attributed to the Babylonians are due to the war between the Selucids and Maccabees. The reason that there is no effect on the Maccabees in slowing the Hellenization is that the Maccabees were gone by this time in the stretched out Greek period. The whole reason for the Maccabean revolution was to throw off the incursion of the Greek culture and restore the culture of the Jews.

When Macalister dug up Gezer he dated much of the remains to the Maccabean period. Later Yadin looking at the gate design of Gezer redated it to the period of Solomon because of its similarity to other gates that had been dated to Solomon's day. One archaeology student "complained" that this redating eliminated a considerable part of the Hellenistic remains.92 Solomon is separated from the Maccabean period by eight hundred years, could there be a mix up.

Velikovsky observed that the Egyptian record after the New Kingdom almost exclusively came from outside sources, such as the Bible and Greek literature. And even though these pharaohs had done great exploits they did not leave monumental remains as their predecessors had done. If one searches the libraries for hard Old Kingdom under Pepi II. The plagues and the Exodus of Israel devastated Egypt and the Old Kingdom collapsed. Then Israel appears and left abundant evidence of their nomadic presence in the desert. Animal pens, pottery pieces, and drawings marked their stay. They disappear as suddenly as they appeared. The walled cities in Edom and Moab were flourishing at the time Israel went around these countries. Jericho was a flourishing city with a wall that was reinforced shortly before it fell outward and the city destroyed by fire. All the cities of the Northern Transjordan and all the cities in Canaan were destroyed at this time. During the conquest Israel camped in the desert along the Jordan especially in the region of Jericho. After a time Israel settled in the cities of Canaan. The culture remained at least until the Babylonian captivity.

These are two very different views. One follows the archaeological interpretation presuming the Bible "embellishes" what actually happened. The other follows the Bible and discovers a matching archaeology. You decide which is correct.

Copyright Ó Bruce Alan Killian 1998 All rights reserved.

Email author: bakillian@earthlink.net

 

References

1. Joshua 10:24 cf. 11:16-23.

2. Anthony J. Frendo, "Five Recent Books on the Emergence of Ancient Israel: Review Article," Palestine Exploration Quarterly (July-December 1992. London):144.

3. Rudolph Cohen, "The Mysterious MBI People," BAR 11 (July/August 1983):16.

4. Emmanuel Anati, "Has Mt. Sinai Been Found?," BAR 11 (July/August 1985):45, 57.

5. Haggai 2:6.

6. Job 9:6.

7. 2 Kings 20:11, Isaiah 38:8 and Joshua 10:13-14. Daniel 2:21 He changes times and seasons; he sets up kings and deposes them.

8. Mazar, p. 92-3.

9. Mazar, p. 108-9.

10. Evidence of Biblical Names at Mari. Biblical Archeologist "Further Concerning Ebla and the Bible", Summer 1981, Vol. 44, num. 3. pp. 151-2.

11. Mazar, p. 119.

12. EBIV only in Edom and Moab after conquest. Mazar, pp. 142, 158. This period is also called Intermediate Bronze (IB).

13. Duration problem discussed Mazar, p. 190.

14. Kenyon mentions that except for the chronology of Egypt the IB would be shorter if the amount of accumulation was considered. REF. p. ____. Vast cemeteries surrounded by a vast campsite. Mazar, pp. 154, 162, 158.

15. Y. Aharoni, "The Negeb," Archaeology and Old Testament Study. D. Winton Thomas. ed. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967):387

16. Revolutionary change in all aspects of the material culture: settlement pattern, urbanism, architecture, pottery, metallurgy & burial customs. Mazar, p. 175. Culture similar to Byblos (which was similar to Egypt) p. 189. No break at Byblos, coastal Lebanon or Syria. p. 198. Mazar, p. 187, 203.

17. Mazar, p. 174.

18. Mazar, p. 239-40, Widespread destruction. p. 226-7.

19. Shishak conquers Judah. Thutmose III conquers Judah.

20. Mazar, p. 239.

21. No evidence of Population in Negev. No evidence of population in Edom or Moab. Archaeological remains of the Assyrian campaign are found in Assyria not in Palestine. REF Maybe Mazar, p. 241.

22. Mazar, pp. 234, 379.

23. New settlement pattern in Israel, but not in Judah. International trade disappears. Mazar, p. 334, 296-7, 300, 235.

24. Mazar, p. 359 Transjordan Iron I does not confirm Biblical traditions of Edom, Moab and Amorite Kingdoms.

25. Mazar, pp. 300, 344-6, 337.

26. Mazar, pp. 371, 374, 416, 378.

27. Mazar, p. 424. Abundant fortified towns in Israel p. 415.

28. Mazar, pp. 438, 549.

29. Assyria documents period. Only hill country suffered, coast & Galilee prospered. The Bible and Recent Archaeology. rev. ed. by P. R. S. Moorey (Atlanta: Knox Press, 1987):139, 143-145.

30. All in Genesis: Shechem 34:20, Hebron 23:2, Sodom 19:1, Bethel & Ai 13:3, Hebron 13:18, Jerusalem 14:18, Gerar 20:1.

31. Kathleen M. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, 3rd ed. (New York: Prager Publications, 1970):134.

32. Mazar, p. 143.

33. Hayes, "Chronology: Egypt," pp. 175-6.

34. Genesis 41:46, 53-54.

35. G. Ernest Wright, Biblical Archaeology, New and rev. ed. (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1962):56.

36. Joseph Davidovits and Margie Morris, The Pyramids: an Enigma Solved (New York: Hippocrene Books, Inc., 1988):143.

37. Davidovits and Morris, p. 142.

38. (Bahr Yusef) National Geographic, Atlas of the World, 5th ed. (Washington, D.C.:National Geographic Society, 1981):181:X2.

39. Exodus 9:6, 25; 10:15; 12:29,37; Psalm 136:15; Deuteronomy 11:3-4.

40. Velikovsky's proposal to redate the Exodus did not go far enough. He placed the Exodus at the end of the Middle Kingdom. Immanuel Velikovsky, Ages In Chaos, (Garden City: Doubleday & Co. 1952):49-53.

41. Barbara Mertz, Temples, Tombs and Hieroglyphs, rev. ed. (New York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1964, 1978):96.

42. Alan Gardiner, Egypt of the Pharaohs (London: Oxford University Press paperback 1964, Clarendon Press, 1961):110.

43. Velikovsky, Ages In Chaos, pp. 22-39.

44. Aharoni, "The Negeb," p. 386.

45. Israel Finkelstein, "Raider of the Lost Mountain¾ An Israeli Archaeologist Looks at the Most Recent Attempt to Locate Mt. Sinai," BAR 15 (July/August 1988):46.

46. Y. Aharoni, "The Negeb," Archaeology and Old Testament Study, D. Winton Thomas, ed. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967):388. Cohen, "The Mysterious MBI People," p. 25.

47. Aharoni, "The Negeb," p. 386.

48. Numbers 21:21-25.

49. Deuteronomy 3:1-5.

50. Glueck, p. 139-43.

51. Mazar, p. 239.

52. Frendo, "Five Recent Books on the Emergence of Ancient Israel: Review Article," p. 144.

53. Joshua 10:40.

54. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 134.

55. Ziony Zevit, "The Problem of Ai," BAR (March, 1985), p. 59-61.

56. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 153.

57. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 136.

58. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 139.

59. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 137.

60. Kathleen M. Kenyon, "Jericho," Archaeology and Old Testament Study, D. Winton Thomas. ed. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967):271.

61. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 157.

62. Kenyon, "Jericho," p. 269.

63. Mazar, p. 239.

64. Joshua 21:43.

65. Finkelstein, "The Central Hill Country in the Intermediate Bronze Age," p. 42.

66. Finkelstein, "The Central Hill Country in the Intermediate Bronze Age," p. 27.

67. Joshua 4:19; 9:6; 10:15; 10:43; 14:6.

68. Joshua 21:43.

69. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 160.

70. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, pp. 163-4.

71. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 176.

72. G. Posner, "Syria and Palestine c. 2160-1780 B.C.," C. J. Gadd, I. E. S. Hammond and N. G. L. Edwards, eds., History of the ncient Near East, 3rd ed. 15 vols. Vol. 1, Pt. 2: Cambridge Ancient History (Cambridge: University Press, 1971):568.

73. 1 Samuel 13:19-22.

74. Kenyon, Archaeology in the Holy Land, p. 162.

75. Mazar, p. 176-8, Joshua 17:16.

76. J. Maxwell Miller, "Solomon: International Potentate or Local King?," Palestine Exploration Quarterly (Jan-June 1991).

77. Yagael Yadin, Hazor, (New York: Random House, 1975):201-3.

78. I Kings 10:23, 2 Chronicles 9:22.

79. Mazar, p. 414.

80. Kings 15:29; 17:24, Ezra 4:2.

81. Mazar, p. 239-243.

82. Mazar, p. 334.

83. 2 Chronicles 12:2-9.

84. Velikovsky, Ages on Chaos, pp. 143-63.

85. Casson, Lionel. Ancient Egypt, Great Ages of Men (New York: Time, 1965):56.

86. Velikovsky, Ages on Chaos, p. 223-4.

87. Mazar, p. 416.

88. 2 Kings 23:29.

89. BAR,______,______, p. 70.

90. Kenyon. PRS Morey, p. 139.

91. Maccabees & Hellenization ________________.

92. Ronny Reich, "Archaeological Evidence of the Jewish Population at Hasmonean Gezer," Israel Exploration Journal, Vol. 31 Num. 1-2, 1981, p. 48.

93. Michael A. Hoffman, Egypt Before the Pharaohs (New York: Alfred A

 

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