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Ancient Israelite History:
Conquest & Settlement
       By Jacob Gluck
Topography
  of Israel
Joshua Account.
• lightning military conquest
• Over 5 years
• Conquest and allotment
• 9.5 tribes
• Utterly destroyed
• All of Israel involved in conquest

Judges Account.
• “after the death of Joshua”
• Allotment and conquest (example: judah and simeon)
• Scattered struggles; no unified effort – tribes acting independently.
• 20 cities whose inhabitants were NOT driven out.
   Jerussalem, Gezer, Taanach, Megiddo and Dor included in list.
• Over a long period of time
• Kenites went up with the people of Judah from the city of palms and
   “settled with the people” (--Judges 1:16 implying peaceful infiltration).
• Jebusites coexisted :have dwelt with the people of Benjamin in Jerusalme
   to this day (Judges 1:21).
Another problem with Joshua account.
Written long after events therein related .
e.g. Joshua burned Ai and made it heap of ruins, as it is to this day – was
a village 1200-1050 BCE.
e.g. Book of Jashar (sun standing still in Gibeon)– also mentioned in
lament of David over Saul and Jonathan.
Biblical writer is seeking to redeem God’s promise to patriarchs that
Canaan will be occupied in its entirety. Presenting the “official view”.
Biblical historiography explained historical events theologically.
Biblical writer/editor/redactor is selecting extracts from documents to
suit his agenda.
Joshua 10:40
             -                                           - -
                                              -
The Conquest Perspective.
Albright, Malamat, Yadin.
Biblical account reflects intimate knowledge of the land as it relates to
military strategy.
Canaanites had no unified military organization and lacked sense of national
consciousness.
Small city-states; occasionally clustered in small alliances.
1. Jericho (on edge of Jordan valley, south of waddi makkuk) stands alone.
2. Ai is on plateau 10 miles/3,500 feet from Jericho. Allied with bethel – 2
     miles in northwest . Slide 32
3. Shechem is center of large city-state, north to Megiddo, south to Shiloh.
4. Hivites from Gibeon (el-jib, 5 miles N. of Jerusalem), possibly related to
     Hittites or Hurrians. Reached agreement with Joshua.
5. Jerusalem, head of Amorite alliance (associated with Amurru) that
     included major cities in the southern hill country:
     Hebron, Jarmuth, Lachish and Eglon. Slide 33
6. Hazor (W. of fertile Huleh valley) is head of Canaanite alliance in Galilee
     (whose origins are traced to Phoenician coastal region).
What gave the Israelites –”semi-nomads emerging from the desert
fringes”– an edge?
• Use of reconnaissance (Jericho and Ai)
• Ambush and preemptive strikes
• Recruitment of defectors (Rahab, harlot of Jericho)
• Logistics (supply of troops) e.g. Joshua: prepare provisions for within
    three days…
• Timing. Crossing of Jordan took place on 10th of first month – early
    spring.

Malamat: Joshua reflects a basic element of Israelite consciousness.
Jericho.
Spies find lodging in house of Rahab the harlot. Nearest thing to a hotel?
Rahab is friendly.
Israelites march around the city sevens days. On seventh day, priests blow
trumpets, people shout and the wall of Jericho “fell down flat”.
Joshua 24:11 “Jericho fought against you”.
Marching stratagem is known from ancient military annals, e.g. Roman
general Frontinus.
Archaeology of Jericho.
70 feet of occupation layers still intact, dating from 9,000 BCE, beside
spring know as “ain es-sultan”.
1930’s: John Garstang discovers collapsed mudbricks walls (he dates it
1400 and associates it with Israelites).
1950’s: Kathleen Kenyon employs more precise dating technique. Corner
of 14th cent mudbrick hut is identified as most recent layer. Juglet is from
1325. squatters?
Garstang’s wall is from 2300 BCE. Frequent earthquakes.
Kenyon discovers additional wall from 1560 BCE. Contents of that
settlement have eroded.
Yigael Yadin: LBA inhabitants reused MBA wall (from 1560).
Conclusion: negative archaeological evidence.
Ai (et-tell).
Spies report that “people are but few… do not make the whole people toil
up there Joshua 7:2-3). Cf. waddi makkuk: deep, narrow and rugged.
3,000 men are sent. Battle is lost. Theology attributes loss to sin of Achan:
not sacrificing to god “first fruits”.
In second battle, Joshua attacks with 5,000 men and 30,000 lie in
ambush.
Problem: even 3,000 men would be strung half he distance from Jericho
to Ai.
Another problem: similarity to stratagem employed against the
Benjaminites at Gibeah (Judges 20). “one served as literary model for the
other”. Malamat: Ai is the copy due to negative archaeological evidence.
Archaeology of Ai.
Excavated by Garstang in 1928: “a considerable proportion of LBA wares
were found, including Cypriote wishbone handle… in the collection of the
American School”. Nothing found!
Judith Marquet-Krause excavated in 1933-35. conclusion: site unoccupied
2400-1200.
Unfortified village constructed 1200; abandoned 1050.
Results confirmed by Joseph Callaway in 1964.
Joshua 10: Gibeon (el-jib) Account.
                        -           -
    -           -                                      -
                       -                                                -
                     -                        -            -
      -

    -             -                     -
                                    -

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Malamat: stratagem of surprise; taking advantage of darkness, Israelites
marched 20 miles from Gilgal to Gibeon, climbing 3,000 feet. Attack at
dawn.
Problem: excavated by James B. Pritchard in 1960’s. result: small amount
of LBA material from tomb, but no city.
Extensive surface survey of Khirbet Kefire (Biblical Chephirah?) is negative
for 13th cent.
After defeat of Amorite alliance, Joshua leads mop-up operation against
cities of defeated kings: Makkedah, Libnah, Lachish, Eglon, Hebron, Debir.
Itinerary is traditional: taken by Sennacherib in 701 and Nebuchadnezzar
in 586. This segment, then, may be retrojection.

Debir.
Albright identified it with tel beit mirsim which was destroyed in 13th
cent. BCE.
Problem: Identification is now considered erroneous.

Lachish.
Excavated by Starkey with conclusion of massive destruction in 1230.
D. Ussishkin’s excavation in 1970’s advanced (=pushed) the date by a
century: unwalled city destroyed in 12th cent BCE or later.
Problem: 12th cen. Conquest is too late; could have been executed by
Rameses III or Sea Peoples (Peleset).
Hazor.
Yadin: Hazor was major LBA city; destroyed no later than 1230 BCE.
Reaplced with a poor, small, unwalled settlement.
Problem: Hazor and Lachish not in sync.
Problem: two accounts of encounter with Jabin king of Hazor.
Problem: what are Hivites from Hermon and Jebusies from Jerusalem
doing in this coalition? Appears to be exaggeration to extol the greatness
of the Lord.
    -                -               -              -
                                                              -

-                    -                      -
                                                  -                -
               -                        -
-----------------------------------------------
Joshua Account of Battle at Hazor.
Hamstringing enemy chariot horses.
Burning chariots with fire.
                     -               -
Q: how to outrun charioteers? How to immobilize archers?
Exterminate entire population from Sidon to Mizpeh. (show map).

Judges Account of Battle at Hazor.
Deborah (Issachar) encourages Barak (from Naphtali) to attack.
Prose and poem.
Yadin’s assertion: Judges account is editorial gloss.
Yadin: “archaeology broadly confirms that semi-nomadic Israelites
destroyed a number of major Canaanite cities; then gradually built their
own sedentary settlements on the ruins”.

Conclusion: all 3 seem to refer to same war, probably in period of judges
(NOT initial conquest).
Impact of Albright’s belief in Military Conquest:
Israel “acquired” the land in approx. 1200 BCE amid widespread
sociopolitical upheaval in the Middle East.
Following is Iron Age I: Dark Age
Judges stories reflect circumstances that fit such an era.
Albrecht Alt in “The Settlement of the Israelites in Palestine” (1925).
Working with LBA Egyptian sources.
Central highlands are sparsely settled.
Shechem is only significant city between Jerusalem and Jezreel valley in
1350 (Amarna Period).
Therefore: no military conquest – no resistance.
Alt: a gradual settlement resulted from nomads following their flocks year
after year (in summer) from E. of Jordan to hills W. of river.
Noth and Weippert.
Tribes developed over time; eventually they formed alliance.
Tribal confederacy of Israel formed in Canaan (not E. of Jordan).
Yahweh was crowned God of confederacy; ark of the covenant became
central shrine.
Summer pasturage in harvested fields and woods (after vegetation
ceased in border area).
Peaceful development -- beyond reach of Canaanite city-state or Egyptian
Sovereignty.
Military encounters occurred in a second stage (around 1030 BCE during
monarchy formation) – territorial expansion.
Win some, lose some.
Fits better with book of Judges.
In keeping with Archaeological evidence (2-300 small hill settlements).
Weakness of Alt-noth position: assumes that nomads are distinct from
villagers.
Peasants Revolt Hypothesis by Geroge E. Mendenhall and Norman Gottwald.
Revolutionary social movement among Canaanites, pitting villages against the
cities.
No mas killings of inhabitants of the land.

Mendenhall.
Ignited by Hebrews (outsiders?) advocating commitment to Yahweh, God of
Exodus.
Revolution began in Transjordan by Egyptian fugitives who joined discontented
locals in overthrowing Amorite kingdoms of Sihon and Og.
Habiru in Amrana age (a century earlier) were essentially oppressed villagers.

Gottwald.
Yahwism arose as a function of the revolution to support its social ideals. Priority
to materialism over religion (=Karl Marx).
Disenfranchised elements of Canaanite society:
peasants, farmers, pastoralists, outlaws, mercenaries, adventurers.
Analysis of Peasants Revolt Theory.
Based on 20th cent social theories.
Lacks support from Bible and archaeology.
New Trends in Archaeology.
• Archeologists have given up on the effort to match up stratigraphy with Joshua
  account.
• Greater focus on open-country survey.
• Probe the settlement patterns and lifestyle of smaller villages and hamlets.
• Less concerned with historical questions.
• More interested in anthropological and sociological questions (including
  economy).

Survey Results.
Area sparsely populated in LBA.
Three towns: Shechem, Jerusalem and Hebron.
Small settlements crop up everywhere in Iron Age I (1200-1000).
Southern hill country (tribe of Judah) lagged behind north (Ephraimite hill
country).
Indigenous migration theory of Lawrence Stager.
Villagers of Iron Age I were primarily farmers and secondarily herders.
Implicit is that they migrated from lowland regions of Palestine.
Two new subsistence methods enabled these adventurers to expand into hitherto
inhospitable areas:
• Rock-hewn cisterns (using metal chisels) e.g. tel en nasbeh SW of bethel.
• Hillside terraces (wheat, barley and vegetables) e.g. Ai -- one terrace extends
    325 feet.

Israel Finkelstein.
New settlers had been in the hill country all along.
Change in lifestyle.
“resettlement” of hill country is part of cyclic process

Adam Zertal – settlers fan out from NE to SW; they came from the Transjordan.
Yohanan Aharoni – settlement began in Beersheba (consistent with book of
Judges).
Why all the migration? A period of Upheaval.
• Demise of Egyptian authority
• Fragmentation of Hittite Empire.
• Dorian invasion of the Greek mainland. (show map).
• Less militant Canaanites were pushed out by Sea Peoples into hill country (cf.
  Stager).
• Hittites and Hivites settle in Gibeon, Jerusalem (Jebusite?) and Mt. Hermon.
• Arameans move southward into N. Transjordan (perhaps into hills of Canaan).
• Hebrews refugees from Egypt.

Result: melting pot out of which Israel emerged.
Spy Mission to Jericho
The Battle for Ai
The Battle for Gibeon
The Battle for Hazor
King Jabin is Defeated
The Conquered Land
Tribes of Israel
Map
Tribal allotment
The Battle for Jericho
The Southern Campaign

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Ancient Israelite History: Conquest and settlement

  • 1. Ancient Israelite History: Conquest & Settlement By Jacob Gluck
  • 2. Topography of Israel
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5. Joshua Account. • lightning military conquest • Over 5 years • Conquest and allotment • 9.5 tribes • Utterly destroyed • All of Israel involved in conquest Judges Account. • “after the death of Joshua” • Allotment and conquest (example: judah and simeon) • Scattered struggles; no unified effort – tribes acting independently. • 20 cities whose inhabitants were NOT driven out. Jerussalem, Gezer, Taanach, Megiddo and Dor included in list. • Over a long period of time • Kenites went up with the people of Judah from the city of palms and “settled with the people” (--Judges 1:16 implying peaceful infiltration). • Jebusites coexisted :have dwelt with the people of Benjamin in Jerusalme to this day (Judges 1:21).
  • 6. Another problem with Joshua account. Written long after events therein related . e.g. Joshua burned Ai and made it heap of ruins, as it is to this day – was a village 1200-1050 BCE. e.g. Book of Jashar (sun standing still in Gibeon)– also mentioned in lament of David over Saul and Jonathan. Biblical writer is seeking to redeem God’s promise to patriarchs that Canaan will be occupied in its entirety. Presenting the “official view”. Biblical historiography explained historical events theologically. Biblical writer/editor/redactor is selecting extracts from documents to suit his agenda. Joshua 10:40 - - - -
  • 7. The Conquest Perspective. Albright, Malamat, Yadin. Biblical account reflects intimate knowledge of the land as it relates to military strategy. Canaanites had no unified military organization and lacked sense of national consciousness. Small city-states; occasionally clustered in small alliances. 1. Jericho (on edge of Jordan valley, south of waddi makkuk) stands alone. 2. Ai is on plateau 10 miles/3,500 feet from Jericho. Allied with bethel – 2 miles in northwest . Slide 32 3. Shechem is center of large city-state, north to Megiddo, south to Shiloh. 4. Hivites from Gibeon (el-jib, 5 miles N. of Jerusalem), possibly related to Hittites or Hurrians. Reached agreement with Joshua. 5. Jerusalem, head of Amorite alliance (associated with Amurru) that included major cities in the southern hill country: Hebron, Jarmuth, Lachish and Eglon. Slide 33 6. Hazor (W. of fertile Huleh valley) is head of Canaanite alliance in Galilee (whose origins are traced to Phoenician coastal region).
  • 8. What gave the Israelites –”semi-nomads emerging from the desert fringes”– an edge? • Use of reconnaissance (Jericho and Ai) • Ambush and preemptive strikes • Recruitment of defectors (Rahab, harlot of Jericho) • Logistics (supply of troops) e.g. Joshua: prepare provisions for within three days… • Timing. Crossing of Jordan took place on 10th of first month – early spring. Malamat: Joshua reflects a basic element of Israelite consciousness.
  • 9. Jericho. Spies find lodging in house of Rahab the harlot. Nearest thing to a hotel? Rahab is friendly. Israelites march around the city sevens days. On seventh day, priests blow trumpets, people shout and the wall of Jericho “fell down flat”. Joshua 24:11 “Jericho fought against you”. Marching stratagem is known from ancient military annals, e.g. Roman general Frontinus.
  • 10. Archaeology of Jericho. 70 feet of occupation layers still intact, dating from 9,000 BCE, beside spring know as “ain es-sultan”. 1930’s: John Garstang discovers collapsed mudbricks walls (he dates it 1400 and associates it with Israelites). 1950’s: Kathleen Kenyon employs more precise dating technique. Corner of 14th cent mudbrick hut is identified as most recent layer. Juglet is from 1325. squatters? Garstang’s wall is from 2300 BCE. Frequent earthquakes. Kenyon discovers additional wall from 1560 BCE. Contents of that settlement have eroded. Yigael Yadin: LBA inhabitants reused MBA wall (from 1560). Conclusion: negative archaeological evidence.
  • 11. Ai (et-tell). Spies report that “people are but few… do not make the whole people toil up there Joshua 7:2-3). Cf. waddi makkuk: deep, narrow and rugged. 3,000 men are sent. Battle is lost. Theology attributes loss to sin of Achan: not sacrificing to god “first fruits”. In second battle, Joshua attacks with 5,000 men and 30,000 lie in ambush. Problem: even 3,000 men would be strung half he distance from Jericho to Ai. Another problem: similarity to stratagem employed against the Benjaminites at Gibeah (Judges 20). “one served as literary model for the other”. Malamat: Ai is the copy due to negative archaeological evidence.
  • 12. Archaeology of Ai. Excavated by Garstang in 1928: “a considerable proportion of LBA wares were found, including Cypriote wishbone handle… in the collection of the American School”. Nothing found! Judith Marquet-Krause excavated in 1933-35. conclusion: site unoccupied 2400-1200. Unfortified village constructed 1200; abandoned 1050. Results confirmed by Joseph Callaway in 1964.
  • 13. Joshua 10: Gibeon (el-jib) Account. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --------------------------------------------------------------------- Malamat: stratagem of surprise; taking advantage of darkness, Israelites marched 20 miles from Gilgal to Gibeon, climbing 3,000 feet. Attack at dawn. Problem: excavated by James B. Pritchard in 1960’s. result: small amount of LBA material from tomb, but no city. Extensive surface survey of Khirbet Kefire (Biblical Chephirah?) is negative for 13th cent.
  • 14. After defeat of Amorite alliance, Joshua leads mop-up operation against cities of defeated kings: Makkedah, Libnah, Lachish, Eglon, Hebron, Debir. Itinerary is traditional: taken by Sennacherib in 701 and Nebuchadnezzar in 586. This segment, then, may be retrojection. Debir. Albright identified it with tel beit mirsim which was destroyed in 13th cent. BCE. Problem: Identification is now considered erroneous. Lachish. Excavated by Starkey with conclusion of massive destruction in 1230. D. Ussishkin’s excavation in 1970’s advanced (=pushed) the date by a century: unwalled city destroyed in 12th cent BCE or later. Problem: 12th cen. Conquest is too late; could have been executed by Rameses III or Sea Peoples (Peleset).
  • 15. Hazor. Yadin: Hazor was major LBA city; destroyed no later than 1230 BCE. Reaplced with a poor, small, unwalled settlement. Problem: Hazor and Lachish not in sync. Problem: two accounts of encounter with Jabin king of Hazor. Problem: what are Hivites from Hermon and Jebusies from Jerusalem doing in this coalition? Appears to be exaggeration to extol the greatness of the Lord. - - - - - - - - - - - - -----------------------------------------------
  • 16. Joshua Account of Battle at Hazor. Hamstringing enemy chariot horses. Burning chariots with fire. - - Q: how to outrun charioteers? How to immobilize archers? Exterminate entire population from Sidon to Mizpeh. (show map). Judges Account of Battle at Hazor. Deborah (Issachar) encourages Barak (from Naphtali) to attack. Prose and poem. Yadin’s assertion: Judges account is editorial gloss. Yadin: “archaeology broadly confirms that semi-nomadic Israelites destroyed a number of major Canaanite cities; then gradually built their own sedentary settlements on the ruins”. Conclusion: all 3 seem to refer to same war, probably in period of judges (NOT initial conquest).
  • 17. Impact of Albright’s belief in Military Conquest: Israel “acquired” the land in approx. 1200 BCE amid widespread sociopolitical upheaval in the Middle East. Following is Iron Age I: Dark Age Judges stories reflect circumstances that fit such an era.
  • 18. Albrecht Alt in “The Settlement of the Israelites in Palestine” (1925). Working with LBA Egyptian sources. Central highlands are sparsely settled. Shechem is only significant city between Jerusalem and Jezreel valley in 1350 (Amarna Period). Therefore: no military conquest – no resistance. Alt: a gradual settlement resulted from nomads following their flocks year after year (in summer) from E. of Jordan to hills W. of river.
  • 19. Noth and Weippert. Tribes developed over time; eventually they formed alliance. Tribal confederacy of Israel formed in Canaan (not E. of Jordan). Yahweh was crowned God of confederacy; ark of the covenant became central shrine. Summer pasturage in harvested fields and woods (after vegetation ceased in border area). Peaceful development -- beyond reach of Canaanite city-state or Egyptian Sovereignty. Military encounters occurred in a second stage (around 1030 BCE during monarchy formation) – territorial expansion. Win some, lose some. Fits better with book of Judges. In keeping with Archaeological evidence (2-300 small hill settlements). Weakness of Alt-noth position: assumes that nomads are distinct from villagers.
  • 20. Peasants Revolt Hypothesis by Geroge E. Mendenhall and Norman Gottwald. Revolutionary social movement among Canaanites, pitting villages against the cities. No mas killings of inhabitants of the land. Mendenhall. Ignited by Hebrews (outsiders?) advocating commitment to Yahweh, God of Exodus. Revolution began in Transjordan by Egyptian fugitives who joined discontented locals in overthrowing Amorite kingdoms of Sihon and Og. Habiru in Amrana age (a century earlier) were essentially oppressed villagers. Gottwald. Yahwism arose as a function of the revolution to support its social ideals. Priority to materialism over religion (=Karl Marx). Disenfranchised elements of Canaanite society: peasants, farmers, pastoralists, outlaws, mercenaries, adventurers.
  • 21. Analysis of Peasants Revolt Theory. Based on 20th cent social theories. Lacks support from Bible and archaeology.
  • 22. New Trends in Archaeology. • Archeologists have given up on the effort to match up stratigraphy with Joshua account. • Greater focus on open-country survey. • Probe the settlement patterns and lifestyle of smaller villages and hamlets. • Less concerned with historical questions. • More interested in anthropological and sociological questions (including economy). Survey Results. Area sparsely populated in LBA. Three towns: Shechem, Jerusalem and Hebron. Small settlements crop up everywhere in Iron Age I (1200-1000). Southern hill country (tribe of Judah) lagged behind north (Ephraimite hill country).
  • 23. Indigenous migration theory of Lawrence Stager. Villagers of Iron Age I were primarily farmers and secondarily herders. Implicit is that they migrated from lowland regions of Palestine. Two new subsistence methods enabled these adventurers to expand into hitherto inhospitable areas: • Rock-hewn cisterns (using metal chisels) e.g. tel en nasbeh SW of bethel. • Hillside terraces (wheat, barley and vegetables) e.g. Ai -- one terrace extends 325 feet. Israel Finkelstein. New settlers had been in the hill country all along. Change in lifestyle. “resettlement” of hill country is part of cyclic process Adam Zertal – settlers fan out from NE to SW; they came from the Transjordan. Yohanan Aharoni – settlement began in Beersheba (consistent with book of Judges).
  • 24. Why all the migration? A period of Upheaval. • Demise of Egyptian authority • Fragmentation of Hittite Empire. • Dorian invasion of the Greek mainland. (show map). • Less militant Canaanites were pushed out by Sea Peoples into hill country (cf. Stager). • Hittites and Hivites settle in Gibeon, Jerusalem (Jebusite?) and Mt. Hermon. • Arameans move southward into N. Transjordan (perhaps into hills of Canaan). • Hebrews refugees from Egypt. Result: melting pot out of which Israel emerged.
  • 25. Spy Mission to Jericho
  • 27. The Battle for Gibeon
  • 28. The Battle for Hazor
  • 29. King Jabin is Defeated
  • 33. The Battle for Jericho