Shifting Ground in the Holy Land
Archaeology is casting new light on the Old Testament
- By Jennifer Wallace
- Photographs by Robert Wallis
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 6)
The second Book of Samuel declares that King David “reigned over all Israel and Judah” at Jerusalem. After David, according to the first Book of Kings, Solomon was “sovereign over all the kingdoms from the Euphrates to the land of the Philistines, even to the border of Egypt.” To many Jews, the era of David and Solomon represents their homeland’s zenith, the age of a Greater Israel. In I Kings, it is a time of great prosperity—“Judah and Israel were as numerous as the sand by the sea; they ate and drank and were happy”—during which Solomon built a great temple in Jerusalem, as well as the cities of Hazor, Gezer and Megiddo. Over the past century, four archaeological excavations have searched for Solomonic artifacts in Megiddo, concentrating in recent decades on a few stone blocks some say are the remains of a great palace and stables.
Archaeologist Yigael Yadin, who excavated Megiddo in the early 1960s, believed that the stables belonged to King Ahab, who ruled in the ninth century b.c.; a ninth-century Assyrian inscription on a stone monument at Nimrud, in modern-day Iraq, described Ahab’s great chariot force. Yadin reasoned that the palace, which lies below the stables and so must be earlier, is part of a great building from the time of Solomon. But Finkelstein, who has been excavating at Megiddo for more than ten years, argues that this chronology is wrong—that both layers are several decades later than Yadin posited.
The palace layer beneath the stables, Finkelstein notes, bears masonry marks like those found at a ninth-century b.c. palace site nearby. In addition, pottery found at the palace is almost identical to pottery found at Jezreel, about six miles away, which has also been dated to the mid-ninth century b.c. through independently dated potsherds and biblical references. Finkelstein says that Yadin’s claim, which lacks any confirmation by independent potsherd dating, rests on the I Kings reference only—“This is the account of the forced labor that King Solomon conscripted to build the house of the Lord and his own house, the Millo and the wall of Jerusalem, Hazor, Megiddo, Gezer.”
Finkelstein also says that masonry marks and potsherds from the palace layer suggest that it must have been built around 850 b.c., in the time of Ahab—who “did evil in the sight of the Lord more than all who were before him,” according to I Kings. The so-called golden age of Solomon, Finkelstein goes on, is not supported by archaeological evidence. Rather, he says, it’s a myth concocted in the seventh century b.c. by the authors of Kings and Samuel to validate Judah’s expansion into the northern territory of Israel. Finally, Finkelstein says David never united the country; rather, Judah and Israel remained neighboring states. (The only non-biblical reference to David is found in a ninth-century b.c. inscription from Tel Dan, a biblical site in northern Israel that mentions “the House of David.” Finkelstein says the inscription proves only that David existed, not that he united the kingdom.)
Finkelstein believes that pottery that the literalists date to the mid-tenth century b.c. should actually be dated to the first half of the ninth century b.c. But not everyone agrees. Hebrew University’s Mazar, one of Finkelstein’s main critics, insists with equal conviction that “it’s impossible to condense all these strata of pottery to such a short time span.”
In the fall of 2004, Mazar and Finkelstein each presented their contradictory theses at a conference at Oxford, England, and each brought in a physicist to analyze the radiocarbon dating of the objects from Megiddo. But since the margin of error for radiocarbon dating is about 50 years—within the difference between the competing chronologies—both could claim validation for their theories. The discrepancy of 50 years might seem like splitting hairs, but the implications reverberate into the present day.
Biblical archaeology has been popular in Israel since the nation’s founding in 1948. As Jews poured into Israel from all over Europe following the Holocaust, the “national hobby” helped newcomers build a sense of belonging. “There was a need to give something to the immigrants, to the melting pot,” says Finkelstein. “Something to connect them to the ground, to history, to some sort of legacy.”
In the 1950s, Yigael Yadin and his archaeological rival, Yohanan Aharoni, battled over whether the Israelites conquered Canaan by force, as described in the Book of Joshua, or whether they came peacefully, as described in the Book of Judges. In 1955, Yadin began excavating the ancient city of Hazor in the hope of finding proof of an Israelite conquest. After the Six-Day War in 1967, during which Israelis gained control of the West Bank and the Old City of Jerusalem, Israeli archaeologists began surveying those areas as well, in many cases displacing Palestinian residents to do so. The archaeologists sought out Old Testament sites and renamed places according to biblical tradition, in effect “recasting the landscape of the West Bank” in biblical terms, says Columbia University anthropologist Nadia Abu el-Haj, author of Facts on the Ground, a history of Israeli archaeology. Those terms, she says, “the [West Bank] settlers now pick up.”
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Comments (4)
Outstanding article.
I have visited the Holy Land several times and having been to the places mentioned in the Scriptures you never hear those passages read in quite the same way. Instead of black-and-white and monophonic sound, you see them in living color and Dolby stereo!
Unfortunately, due to the political situation, I could only imagine what the altar described in Joshua Ch 8 might have looked like, until now.
Thank you.
Posted by Jim Evans on May 22,2011 | 02:31 AM
praise the Lord!
Posted by Abby Fox on March 11,2011 | 10:26 AM
I have just returned from three months in Ethiopia deciphering 8th century B.C.E. Sabaean inscriptions, two of which speak of 'BR in the area ruled jointly by four kings and three queens of Sheba. 'BR both in Hebrew and Sabaean means "Those who crossed over" and "Hebrew". These inscriptions on two incense burners (I had white paint cleaned off them) were first recorded in 1973 but no other archaeologist was courageous enough to mention the name as it supported the hypotheses of (i)a substantial local Hebrew population in Old Testament times (ii) the veracity of the Sheba-Menelik Cycle of the Kebra Nagast, and (iii) the probability that Judah and Israel before 586 B.C.E. were in West Arabia not Palestine.
Old Testament archaeology is a disgraceful and politicised discipline. Most of its effort is directed to finding evidence to fit preconceived conclusions. The top "minimalists" are too timid and selfserving to consider that the Old Testament is a true story than might have occurred elsewhere and the Israeli intelligensia too morally corrupt to consider that the Promised Land is in the wrong place.
Posted by Dr Bernard Leeman on October 17,2009 | 10:58 PM
Excellent article. Thanks very much. Sometimes the internet DOES work: credible information at my fingertips. ;-)
Posted by Michael Roman on May 20,2009 | 01:14 AM