Part 3, Complex Society: Contacts and Exchanges

The Hebrews and Their Religion

*Hebrews (*Israelites, *Jews)

Obscure origins

Assyrian Empire (911-612 B.C.E.)

*Sources of Hebrew History

Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)

biblos, “book”

Organization

1) *Torah/Pentateuch

Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy

2) Prophets

3) Miscellaneous Writings

History, poetry, and philosophy

Evidence of oral transmission

3 traditions in Torah

Example: 2 accounts of creation of the first man and woman

Similarity to flood story in Epic of Gilgamesh

Earliest written version, 2100 BCE

Evidence of written transmission

Silver amulet with prayer, ca. 600 BCE

Quoting a version of Numbers 6:24-26 : “The Lord bless you and protect you. The Lord deal kindly and graciously with you. The Lord bestow his favor upon you and grant you peace.”

Dead Sea scrolls, ca. 100 BCE

Isaiah Scroll

Interpreting biblical and archaeological evidence

*Faith

God

Miracles

*Legends

Early prophets

Abraham

Miracle: God’s intervention

Moses

Miracle: Parting of Red Sea

*History

Maximalists 1300 BCE

Minimalists 700 BCE or even later

Hebrew Historical and Archaeological Origins

Herders

*Semitic language

*"Maximalist" historical/archaeological interpretation

Biblical narrative

Arrival of “12 Tribes” in Canaan

Archaeological evidence

Canaanites and Philistines in lowlands

Hebrew migration, 1300-1100 BCE

Hillside villages

Bronze & flint tools

Several deities

1% or less pig bones

"Age of Kings" (1020- ca. 920 BCE)

Saul of Benjamin

David of Judah

Solomon

Capital at Jerusalem

Archaeological evidence?

Archaeological excavations at Jerusalem

Example of "King David's Palace" at "City of David" in Jerusalem Old City

Based on the sign at the "City of David" archaeological site, what controversy exists about the identification of the structure as "King David's Palace"?

Stepped Stone Structure

Foundation of David’s palace or Canaanite fortress?

*"Minimalist" historical/archaeological interpretation

Complex society arises, 1000-900 BCE

Divided kingdoms under great powers

*Assyrian Empire, 911-612 BCE

*Israel (north)

Assyrian conquest of Israel, 722 BCE

*Judah (south)

Jerusalem population, 5,000 people

Legend of earlier capital under David and Solomon

*Neo-Babylonian Empire (612-539 BCE)

Conquest of Judah, 587 BCE

Deportation of elite to Babylon

Hebrew Bible

Biblical narrative

Age of Prophets

Moral failings blamed for political decline

Hebrew Religion

Polytheism

Hebrew folk religion

Fertility goddess figurines, 8th-6th century BCE

*Monotheism

*Yahweh (YHWH), literally "Being"

*Covenant

10 Commandments

Ethical code

Lecture Study Questions

1. How was the Hebrew Bible composed orally and finally put in writing?

2. What problems are involved in using the Hebrew Bibles as a historical source? What elements of the biblical narrative are matters of faith? What elements can be classified as legends?

3. How do "maximalist" and "minimalist" scholars disagree about the value of the Hebrew Bible as a historical source? What controversy exists about the identification of an archaeology site in the Jerusalem Old City as the "City of David"?

Reading Study Questions

Reading: Hansen, et al., 44-48

1. What different opinions do scholars have about the value of the Hebrew Bible as a historical source? Why do archaeologists interpret absence of pig bones in archaeological sites as evidence of the arrival of Hebrews in the southern Levant?

2. When and where do the authors of Voyages in World History state that the current version of the Hebrew Bible was written down in its current form? What similarities and differences exist between the flood stories of the Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh and the Hebrew Bible? What do the two flood stories reveal about the oral transmission of the Hebrew Bible before it was written down in Babylon?

Supplementary Reading on D2L>Content:

08) "The Book of Deuteronomy"

1. What is the nature of the Hebrew covenant with their god? What does God promise and demand in return?  What are his rewards and punishments?

2.  How do these selections from the Bible explain and justify political events, such as the Hebrews' settlement in the land of Canaan and defeats at the hands of their enemies?

3. What are the similarities and differences between the Ten Commandments and the "Judgments of Hammurabi" from earlier in time (see the previous reading on Mesopotamia)? What are the reasons for similarities?