Ancient Jewish
History:
The Two Kingdoms
(c.920 BCE - 597 BCE)
Ancient
Jewish History: Table
of Contents | The
Twelve Tribes | The
Holy Temple
|
Background
The experiment with the opulence and power of the
great eastern kingdoms had ended in disaster for Israel . King
Solomon created the
wealthiest and most powerful central government the Hebrews would ever see, but
he did so at an impossibly high cost. Land was given away to pay for his
extravagances and people were sent into forced labor into Tyre in the north. When Solomon died, between 926 and 922 BCE, the ten
northern tribes refused to submit to his son, Rehoboam,
and revolted.
From this point on, there would be two kingdoms
of Hebrews: in the north - Israel,
and in the south -Judah.
The Israelites formed their capital in the city of Samaria , and
the Judaeans kept their capital inJerusalem.
These kingdoms remained separate states for over two hundred years.
The history of the both kingdoms is a litany of
ineffective, disobedient, and corrupt kings. When the Hebrews had first asked
for a king, in the book ofJudges,
they were told that only God was their king. When they approached Samuel the
Prophet, he told them the desire for a king was an act of disobedience and that
they would pay dearly if they established a monarchy. The history told in the
Hebrew book,Kings,
bears out Samuel's warning.
The Hebrew empire eventually collapses, Moab successfully revolts against Judah,
and Ammon successfully secedes from Israel.
Within a century of Solomon's
death, the kingdoms of Israel and Judah were left as tiny little states - no
bigger than Connecticut - on the larger map of the Middle
East .
As history proved time and again in the region,
tiny states never survived long. Located directly between the Mesopotamian
kingdoms in the northeast and powerful Egypt in the southwest, the Hebrew Kingdoms
were of the utmost commercial and military importance to all these warring
powers. Being small was a liability.
The Conquest of Israel
In 722 BC, the Assyrians conquered Israel . The
Assyrians were aggressive and effective; the history of their dominance over
the Middle
East is a
history of constant warfare. In order to assure that conquered territories
would remain pacified, the Assyrians would force many of the native inhabitants
to relocate to other parts of their empire. They almost always chose the upper
and more powerful classes, for they had no reason to fear the general mass of a
population. They would then send Assyrians to relocate in the conquered
territory.
When they conquered Israel ,
they forced the ten tribes to scatter throughout their empire. For all
practical purposes, you might consider this a proto-Diaspora("diaspora"="scattering"),
except that these Israelites disappear from history permanently; they are
called "the ten lost tribes of Israel ."
Why this happened is difficult to assess. The Assyrians did not settle the
Israelites in one place, but scattered them in small populations all over the Middle
East . When the Babylonians later conquered Judah ,
they, too, relocate a massive amount of the population. However, they move that
population to a single location so that the Jews can set
up a separate community and still retain their religion and identity. The
Israelites deported by the Assyrians, however, do not live in separate
communities and soon drop their Yahweh religion and their Hebrew names and
identities.
The Samaritans
One other consequence of the Assyrian invasion of Israel involved the settling of Israel by Assyrians. This group
settled in the capital of Israel , Samaria , and
they took with them Assyrian gods and cultic practices. But the people of the Middle
East were
above everything else highly superstitious. Even the Hebrews didn't necessarily
deny the existence or power of other peoples' gods—just in case. Conquering
peoples constantly feared that the local gods would wreak vengeance on them.
Therefore, they would adopt the local god or gods into their religion and
cultic practices.
Within a short time, the Assyrians in Samaria were worshipping Yahweh as
well as their own gods; within a couple centuries, they would be worshipping
Yahweh exclusively. Thus was formed the only major schism in the Yahweh
religion: the schism between the Jews and the Samaritans. The Samaritans, who
were Assyrian and therefore non-Hebrew, adopted almost all of the Hebrew Torah
and cultic practices; unlike the Jews, however, they believed that they could
sacrifice to God outside of the temple in Jerusalem . The
Jews frowned on the Samaritans, denying that a non-Hebrew had any right to be
included among the chosen people and angered that the Samaritans would dare to
sacrifice to Yahweh outside of Jerusalem . The
Samaritan schism played a major role in the rhetoric of Jesus
of Nazareth; and there are still Samaritans alive today around the city of Samaria .
The Conquest of Judah
"There but for the grace of god go I."
Certainly, the conquest of Israel scared the people and monarchs
of Judah. They barely escaped the Assyrian menace, but Judah would be conquered by the Chaldeans about a century later. In 701, the
Assyrian Sennacherib would gain territory from Judah , and
the Jews would have suffered the same fate as the Israelites. But by 625 BC,
the Babylonians, under Nabopolassar, would reassert control over Mesopotamia , and
the Jewish king Josiah aggressively sought to extend his territory in the power
vacuum that resulted. But Judah soon fell victim to the power
struggles between Assyrians, Babylonians, and Egyptians. When Josiah's son,
Jehoahaz, became king, the king of Egypt ,
Necho (put into power by the Assyrians), rushed into Judah and deposed him, and Judah
became a tribute state of Egypt .
When the Babylonians defeated the Egyptians in 605 BC, then Judah became a tribute state to Babylon . But
when the Babylonians suffered a defeat in 601 BC, the king of Judah, Jehoiakim,
defected to the Egyptians. So the Babylonian king, Nebuchadnezzar, raised an
expedition to punish Judah in 597 BC. The new king of
Judah, Jehoiachin, handed the city of Jerusalem over to Nebuchadnezzar, who
then appointed a new king over Judah, Zedekiah. In line with Mesopotamian
practice, Nebuchadnezzar deported around 10,000 Jews to his capital in Babylon ; all
the deportees were drawn from professionals, the wealthy, and craftsmen.
Ordinary people were allowed to stay in Judah .
This deportation was the beginning of the Exile.
The story should have ended there. However, Zedekiah
defected from the Babylonians one more time. Nebuchadnezzar responded with
another expedition in 588 and conquered Jerusalem in 586. Nebuchadnezzar caught
Zedekiah and forced him to watch the murder of his sons; then he blinded him
and deported him to Babylon .
Again, Nebuchadnezzr deported the prominent citizens, but the number was far
smaller than in 597: somewhere between 832 and 1577 people were deported.
The Hebrew kingdom, started with such promise and
glory by David,
was now at an end. It would never appear again, except for a brief time in the
second century BC, and to the Jews forced to relocate and the Jews left to
scratch out a living in their once proud kingdom, it seemed as if no Jewish
nation would ever exist again. It also seemed as if the special bond that
Yahweh had promised to the Hebrews, the covenant that the Hebrews would serve a
special place in history, had been broken and forgotten by their god. This
period of confusion and despair, a community together but homeless in the
streets of Babylon ,
makes up one of the most significant historical periods in Jewish history: the
Exile.
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