Monday, December 8, 2025

Reflecting on the biblical Egyptology of Ron Wyatt’s wife, Mary Nell (Lee)

by Damien F. Mackey According to Mary Nell, Ron believed that he had been able to work out the complexities of Egyptian dynastic history in relation to the Bible only because God had enabled him to do so. Otherwise, it would have been impossible considering the intricacies of the subject. Yesterday, the eve of today’s feast-day of the Immaculate Conception (8th December, 2025), I came across a video by Mary Nell (Lee) Wyatt on the high official, Senenmut, of Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty: NEW Discovery | Ron Wyatt Found Evidence For Moses In Egypt! Prior to this, Mary Nell Wyatt was for me just a name that I had seen associated with, as his wife, the well-known Ron Wyatt. Thus I was stunned to hear her expatiate at great length and fluency on Egyptology, from the First Dynasty all the way through to the Eighteenth, in relation to her large book: Battle for the Firstborn: The Exodus and the Death of Tutankhamen (2020). Mary Nell’s narrative, heavily based upon the research of her deceased husband, gives as plausible account as most have been able to do of biblical history, from Abram (Abraham) to Moses, in its relation to the Egyptian dynasties. And it is highly original. Apparently, before the pair (met or) married, Ron had lived in Hawaii and had there, in the library, voraciously devoured books on history. What enhances Mary Nell’s presentation is she herself, a very likeable person who can listen patiently to her interviewer’s questions – unlike some guest speakers who want to talk all the time, talk all over the interviewer, and, when they do pause to listen, ostensibly, seem tense and impatient to re-commence their diatribe. According to Mary Nell, Ron believed that he had been able to work out the complexities of Egyptian dynastic history in relation to the Bible only because God had enabled him to do so. Otherwise, it would have been impossible considering the intricacies of the subject. Now she, as Ron’s successor, believes that the model that she has laid out in her book is the correct one. + + + + + Today’s feast of the Immaculate Conception recalls the one human person (Jesus, though having a fully human nature, was a Divine Person) in history who was not deceived, over whom the Devil never had any dominance. It is one thing to say that we are instruments of the Holy Spirit, but are we really? Might we be deceiving ourselves – or allowing the Devil, the Father of Lies (John 8:44), to deceive us? I remember years ago being turned off Ron Wyatt when I read that he would come to some mound and go all rigid with the Holy Spirit, standing there and pointing at the mound, within which some great biblical discovery, presumably, was waiting to be revealed. His gullible followers would then hasten keenly to start digging there. But nothing ever seemed to come to fruition. At the fateful moment, for example, the Israeli authorities (or some other unforeseen situation) would intervene, preventing the team from continuing. Nothing was ever able to come to fruition. The fact of the matter was, there was no fruition! Apparently the state of Israel is quite prepared to let loose such Christian Zionist amateur archaeologist types to dig in areas of no significance, looking on benignly while the Christians hope to add to their ‘amazing’ discoveries of no significance: Christian Zionists a boon to Israel, but sadly mistaken about Final Coming and Third Temple (7) Christian Zionists a boon to Israel, but sadly mistaken about Final Coming and Third Temple Another key point that we need to consider in studies such as this is that there is a world of difference between knowledge and wisdom, which is an inspired gift of the Holy Spirit. Knowledge is, too, of course (cf. Isaiah 11:2), but here I am talking about knowledge in natural terms, as knowing a whole lot of stuff. Our academic world is full of purveyors of much stuff, but wisdom can often seem to be in very short supply: Trenchant Criticisms of the Academic World (5) Trenchant Criticisms of the Academic World There is nothing self-deceptive in the wise man – the wise woman, Mary Immaculate. Take the prophet Daniel, as an example. He knew by the power of the Holy Spirit that what he had interpreted in relation to King Nebuchednezzar’s Dream, a humanly impossible assignment, was absolutely correct, coming as it did from God (Daniel 2:45): “The dream is true and its interpretation is trustworthy”. This is what the Wyatt’s appear to have been claiming, as well. But can the same be said, “true”, “trustworthy” for their admittedly impressive (at least superficially) biblical Egyptology? The prophet Daniel’s wisdom was built upon prayer and fasting, and strict obedience. And there was no self-seeking, or ego, in it. Once the ego takes over, and a reputation is gained, one may feel pressure to ‘doctor’ digging sites, to start planting artefacts, as Ron Wyatt has often been accused of doing. All in the name of God, of course: Abandonment of common sense, telling lies for God, not necessary prerequisites for biblical interpretation (4) Abandonment of common sense, telling lies for God, not necessary prerequisites for biblical interpretation Professor Ian Plimer is not the problem here! The Wyatt version of Egyptology I like the fact that Ron Wyatt had approached Egyptology from the point of view of covering the extensive biblical phase from Abram (Abraham) to Moses, rather than simply focussing upon just one segment, e.g. the Famine era of Joseph. A holistic approach. How well, though, does he and his wife’s Egyptological platform serve for setting up later major events, archaeologically and/or geographically verifiable, such as Joshua’s Conquest of Jericho, and Shishak of Egypt’s despoliation of the Temple of Yahweh? If it be a case of a Danielic type of inspiration from the Holy Spirit, then the whole thing must, like Nebuchednezzar’s Dream, fall lock, stock and barrel, right into place. Sadly, as we are going to find out, this will not be the case. Once again, there will be a lack of fruition, unlike: An accurate revision of history is a ‘tree’ bearing ample fruit (7) An accurate revision of history is a 'tree' bearing ample fruit And if such be so, then it cannot justifiably be claimed to have been inspired by the Holy Spirit. Abraham and Joseph Mary Nell gets off to a very good start, so I believe, by supposing Abraham to have lived at the beginning of Egyptian dynastic history, First or Second Dynasty. It gets even better with her identification of Joseph with the great Imhotep, who served Horus Netjerikhet, a Famine Pharaoh, of Egypt’s Third Dynasty. Creationist Patrick Clarke, who will locate Joseph during Egypt’s Eleventh Dynasty, will refer critically to the Wyatt thesis here in his article: “Joseph’s Zaphenath Paaneah—a chronological key” (JOURNAL OF CREATION 27(3) 2013 || VIEWPOINT): …. Wyatt creates far greater problems by linking Joseph to the famous Imhotep. …. Wyatt (using the conventional Egyptian chronology as the guide) must move Imhotep and Zoser around seven centuries nearer the birth of Christ. …. Given the unsuitability of the choices of pharaohs and names for Joseph above, is there a suitable pharaonic candidate who meets the biblical requirements? Mentuhotep II appears to meet these requirements perfectly, needing a movement of three centuries rather that the stress-inducing seven centuries required by Wyatt above. …. The fact is (my opinion) that, to identify Joseph and Moses, one needs to knit together, as one, several Egyptian dynasties, even kingdoms. Both Wyatt and Clarke are correct that (Wyatt) Joseph is the Third Dynasty Imhotep and (Clarke) that he belonged to the Eleventh Dynasty Famine era of Mentuhotep II. See how I have connected all this, and more, in my article: Symmetrical dynastic links for Famine Pharaoh and Joseph (4) Symmetrical dynastic links for Famine Pharaoh and Joseph But both Wyatt and Clarke are wrong, however, in naming the Third Dynasty (Famine) Pharaoh as Zoser (see my article again). As far back as 1987, Tom Chetwynd had opined that Joseph may have been Imhotep (“A Seven Year Famine in the Reign of King Djoser with Other Parallels between Imhotep and Joseph”, Catastrophism and Ancient History, Volume IX, Part I). Did the Wyatt’s come to this conclusion independently? That can happen. Whatever be the case, it would be nice as a general courtesy if writers would indicate whenever they had adopted an idea from someone else. Whilst listening to Mary Nell most capably deliver her long account of Egyptian history, I wondered at times what happened to certain very important dynasties or rulers. For instance – and perhaps she has dealt with this in her book – the mighty Twelfth Dynasty of Egypt did not seem to get any reasonable mention at all. This, I believe, to have been the very dynasty (or one of them, as merging is necessary) that had begun the Oppression of Israel when Moses was born: Egypt’s Twelfth Dynasty oppressed Israel (6) Egypt's Twelfth Dynasty oppressed Israel Mary Nell scoots through a whole swathe of dynasties and ends up in the Seventeenth, with Pharaoh Kamose as her first Oppressor King of Israel (cf. Exodus 1:8). This is a startlingly long jump from Imhotep as Joseph, in Egypt’s Third Dynasty (c. 2600 BC, conventional dating) to the infancy of Moses presumably under Kamose (c. 1550 BC, conventional dating). Biblically estimated, Moses was born only about 65 years after the death of Joseph. And now for the intriguing identification of Moses as the high Eighteenth Dynasty official, Senenmut – a view that has become extremely popular in recent times – with Moses’s Egyptian foster-mother as Hatshepsut. Bizarrely, Mary Nell chooses to identify the male Senenmut in statues as a female: Quite missing from her treatment of the Eighteenth Dynasty (at least in the video) is another much favoured candidate for Moses, the monotheistic pharaoh, Akhnaton. I do not recall Mary Nell even mentioning him. After Akhnaton came the famous Tutankhamun, Pharaoh’s ill-fated first born (see title of Mary Nell’s book). Actually, Smenkhkare is considered to have been Tutankhamun’s older brother, and apparently his features, and not those of Tutankhamun, are what adorn the royal mask. (Mary Nell claims that these are Tut’s father’s features): Tut’s famous middle coffin probably belonged to his predecessor Smenkhkare (6) Tut's famous middle coffin probably belonged to his predecessor Smenkhkare Dr. I. Velikovsky’s intuitive (though not properly worked out) identifications of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III, of Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty, with, respectively, the biblical Queen of Sheba and King Shishak (Ages in Chaos, I, 1952), are far preferable, I would think, to Mary Nell’s admittedly intriguing and original scenario. And I was able in 1997 to include the addition of Senenmut, as (not Mary Nell’s Moses) King Solomon in Egypt (pairing with the Queen of Sheba, Hatshepsut): Solomon and Sheba (8) Solomon and Sheba All of this segues very nicely into Dr. Velikovsky’s thesis that pharaoh Thutmose III (Shishak), in his Year 22-23 (First Campaign) despoiled the Temple in Jerusalem, about 5 years after the death of King Solomon. The chronology is virtually exact, locking in, as it does, with Senenmut’s (as Solomon) fading from the Egyptian records around Year 16 (of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III). Dr. Velikovsky had made quite a mess, though, of putting together the geography of Thutmose III’s campaign unto Jerusalem, which I hope to have rectified in articles such as: Yehem near Aruna - Thutmose III’s march on Jerusalem (6) Yehem near Aruna - Thutmose III's march on Jerusalem I do not know if Mary Nell’s version of Egyptian history has projected this far ahead. But why I do know that the Egyptological reconstruction of the Wyatt’s is faulty, and thus not locked in as “trustworthy” by the Holy Spirit, is because any New Kingdom reconstruction of the Exodus will have as its consequence the sore fact that, when Joshua will arrive at Jericho, there will be no city there for him to attack. As I wrote in my article (favouring that holistic approach): From Raamses to the ‘Sea of Reeds’ (8) From Raamses to the 'Sea of Reeds' …. Why the new Kingdom is totally inappropriate While, superficially, a New Kingdom (Eighteenth or Nineteenth Dynasty) setting for the Exodus might appear to fit the bill, it would actually cause far more problems than it may seemingly manage to solve. For it is not sufficient simply to grab a particular phase out of history and claim that it attaches nicely to a biblical event. The Bible records a long, developing history which necessitates that the whole thing be fitted into an historical and archaeological framework. If, for instance, one were to take Ramses II as the Pharaoh of the Exodus, one would then need to be able to situate, each into its own proper place, Joseph and the Famine at an earlier phase of Egyptian history, and, then, Abram (Abraham), before Joseph. On this note, Dr. John Osgood has rightly, in a recent article (2024): https://assets.answersresearchjournal.org/doc/v17/ jericho_dating_joshuas_conquest_of_canaan_comments_osgood.pdf Answers Research Journal 17 (2024): 221–222, “The Walls of Jericho: Dating Joshua’s Conquest of Canaan—Comments”, expressed his ‘amazement’ when those involved in biblico-historical reconstructions exclude “a whole saga of history”: …. Habermehl tells us that “we note that the Bible does not say that Hiel built a city, but only a wall.” Really, then what do the words “Hiel of Bethel built Jericho” mean? It had a foundation (not specifically of a wall) and it had gates (1 Kings 16:34). But the archaeologists have clearly and categorically found a large city during Middle Bronze on the site of Jericho and therefore before Hiel. That city needs an explanation, as it won’t go away. This is where I am amazed at the blindness of both conventional and revisionist discussions, as if the pages of the book of Judges are stuck together and a whole saga of history is excluded. Namely, there was the attack on Jericho, the city of palm trees, by Eglon of Moab, and for 20 years that site was occupied by 10,000 of his troops (Judges 3:12– 30, see also Deuteronomy 34:3; Judges 1:16; 2 Chronicles 28:15—the city of palm trees). …. [End of quote] Nor will it be sufficient to focus only upon Egypt – though that nation was, admittedly, the main power during the biblical era from the patriarchs Abram (Abraham) to Moses. Mesopotamia, Syria, Canaan, and so on, must likewise be properly accounted for, both historically and archaeologically. Key to a biblico-historical synthesis will obviously be the Conquest of Canaan and its centrepiece, the Fall of Jericho, which outstanding episode should be archaeologically verifiable. Pharaoh Ramses II may indeed have had his wonderful horses and chariots, but, for those who hold him to have been the Pharaoh of the Exodus, these are now faced with a Late Bronze Age (LBA) archology for the Conquest, and for Jericho, that is hopelessly inadequate. Much has been written about this. Stuart Zachary Steinberg briefly sums it up here: Redating the Conquest of the Promised Land | by Stuart Zachary Steinberg | Medium “For nearly 150 years the conquest by the Israelites has been dated to the Late Bronze Age. The reason for that has been primarily placing the Exodus in the Late Kingdom to have Raamses II as the pharaoh of the Exodus, to correspond with Exodus where it states that the children of Israel built the store cities of Pithom and Raamses. The problem is that there are nearly no correspondence[s] between the destruction of various cities and archaeology in the Late Bronze Age (LBA). Most [of] the cities mentioned do not exist or were destroyed much earlier. Case in point is Jericho. During the Late Bronze Age there was no city at Jericho for Joshua to destroy”. This is the dire situation that confronts the conventional scholars and whoever else might look to situate the Exodus at the time of Egypt’s New Kingdom. The high point of the Conquest of Canaan by Joshua was the destruction of Jericho, whose walls famously fell down. However: “During the Late Bronze Age there was no city at Jericho for Joshua to destroy”. Boom, boom. This is that lack of fruition, again – no lock, stock and barrel co-ordination.

Symmetrical dynastic links for Famine Pharaoh and Joseph

by Damien F. Mackey From this I conclude that the 7-year biblical Famine, at the time of Jacob and Joseph, occurred during Egypt’s First Dynasty, into which must be collapsed the Third and the Eleventh dynasties. Simple Outline Basing the seven-year biblical Famine near to the beginning, in Egypt’s First Dynasty: № Pharaoh Also known as 1 Narmer Menes 2 Aha Hor-Aha 3 Djer Hor-Djer 4 Djet Wadj, Zet, Uadji 5 Den Dewen, Udimu 6 Adjib Anedjib, Enezib 7 Semerkhet – 8 Qaa Kaa but focussing here upon only: Djer Djet Den then the neat pattern that emerges is this: Djer An abbreviated version (hypocoristicon) of the known 7-year Famine Pharaoh Horus Netjerikhet of Egypt’s Third Dynasty. Djer = Ne-tjer-ikhet. Djet Reputedly, “a great famine” Pharaoh (Manetho). Djet is an abbreviated version (hypocoristicon) of Horus Netjerihedjet (Mentuhotep II) of Egypt’s Eleventh Dynasty, likewise a Famine era. Djet = Netjerihe-djet. Den He, a quasi-Pharaoh, is clearly the biblical Joseph. Simply consider his various names: Usaphais. Usaph- is Joseph. Khasti: “the foreigner”. Den (Udimu): “He who brings water”. This could not be more Joseph like: Usaph (Joseph), the foreigner, who brings water (to a parched Egypt), e.g. the Bahr Yusef canal. From this I conclude that the 7-year biblical Famine, at the time of Jacob and Joseph, occurred during Egypt’s First Dynasty, into which must be collapsed the Third and the Eleventh dynasties. The Bible thus serves to cause a most radical streamlining of early Egyptian dynastic history, spreading from Djer (c. 3000 BC, conventional dating) to Mentuhotep II (c. 2000 BC, conventional dating) – an unwanted gap of a millennium. For more on the First Dynasty Famine, see e.g. my article: Taking a Djet to Djoser’s Famine (2) Taking a Djet to Djoser's Famine For the reign of Mentuhotep II as the Famine era, see Patrick Clarke’s article: Joseph’s Zaphenath Paaneah—a chronological key Joseph’s Zaphenath Paaneah—a chronological key · Creation.com In support of this, perhaps, see my article: Was this the original ‘Famine Stela’? (3) Was this the original 'Famine Stela'? The Famine Pharaoh was simply Horus Netjerikhet (who later included Netjerihedjet), the powerful Mentuhotep II. But was he also Djoser (Zoser)? Further clarifications Clearly, now, Joseph (Den) was the legendary Imhotep who served Horus Netjerikhet during a 7-year Famine. But Imhotep has been somewhat elusive to pin down as a real flesh and blood historical character: Enigmatic Imhotep - did he really exist? (3) Enigmatic Imhotep - did he really exist? In this article I enlarged the great Joseph even further by identifying him also with (Hotep) Khasekhemwy, variously located to the Second and Third dynasties. The Nebti name of Khasekhemwy was hotep im(-ef), that is, IMHOTEP. As for Djoser, he was not Horus Netjerikhet, as is commonly thought, but was Joseph once again, in a variant version of the name Khasekhemwy, as Sekhemkhet, whose alternate name was Djoser-ti.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

Seleucid Akra tormented the Jews

by Damien F. Mackey … many good researchers, closely following the ancient records, have determined that Haram al-Sharif definitely was not where the Jerusalem Temples had been built. A decade ago, in 2015, there was great excitement amongst archaeologists that the hitherto elusive Akra (Acra) fortress built by the Seleucid invaders in Jerusalem had been discovered. Brent Nagtegaal wrote about it enthusiastically a few years later: Fortress of Antiochus Epiphanes Uncovered in Jerusalem | ArmstrongInstitute.org Fortress of Antiochus Epiphanes Uncovered in Jerusalem Hannukah’s nemesis comes to life in 2015 discovery By Brent Nagtegaal • December 20, 2019 His article will require some correction (my comments to be added). He wrote: In November 2015, the Israel Antiquities Authority (iaa) sent a news brief to reporters in Jerusalem, calling for a press conference the following day to announce the “solution to one of the greatest questions in the history of Jerusalem.” The announcement did not disappoint: On site, in Jerusalem’s City of David, archaeologist Doron Ben-Ami announced that the famed Akra (citadel) of Antiochus Epiphanes had been discovered. Up until that announcement, little had been found testifying to the massive Hellenistic intrusion into the city early in the second century b.c.e. Yet here, at the northwestern portion of the City of David, a massive section of a city wall from that very period was found under layers and layers of construction from later civilizations. Damien Mackey’s comment: A chronological correction. While “the second century b.c.e.” is the standard era for Antiochus IV ‘Epiphanes, this will need to undergo some lowering if I am right in my revised identification of this Seleucid king: Time to consider Hadrian, that ‘mirror-image’ of Antiochus Epiphanes, as also the census emperor Augustus (4) Time to consider Hadrian, that 'mirror-image' of Antiochus Epiphanes, as also the census emperor Augustus Brent Nagtegaal continues: Along with the city wall, the base of a fortification tower was unearthed, having a width of over 3.5 meters (12 feet) and a length of over 18 meters (60 feet). Attached to the lower portion of the wall was a sloped embankment known as a glacis. This was made up of layers of soil, stone and plaster designed to keep attackers away from the base of the wall, a key feature of a defensive city wall. According to the press release from the iaa, this glacis extended as far down as the bottom of the Tyropoeon valley, the depression on the western part of the ancient city. Around the massive wall, lead slingstones typical of Antiochus’s army were discovered, as well as bronze arrowheads featuring a trident symbol on them—the mark associated with Epiphanes. Further corroborating the dating of the wall were a number of coins, the earliest of which dates to the time of Antiochus Epiphanes. On top of that, hundreds of pottery handles impressed with markings from Rhodes that were used for wine vessels were also discovered, testifying to the Hellenistic nature of the fortress’s inhabitants. While one can rarely be 100 percent sure of the identification of such a site, the evidence certainly does support the conclusion that this building is indeed the famed Akra. Fortress of Antiochus Following an unsuccessful bid to conquer the Ptolemaic kingdom in Egypt in 168 b.c.e., Antiochus iv (Epiphanes) ventured back to Judea and unleashed one of history’s most atrocious anti-Semitic attacks on the fledgling province of Judea. He ransacked the capital city of Jerusalem, sacrificed swine flesh on the altar of sacrifice in the temple courtyard, and then set up a statue of Jupiter in the holy of holies. Afterward, he ravished the countryside in order to destroy any vestige of the Holy Scriptures he could find, as well as killing those who would not comply with his decrees. Then, in order to ensure the Jews didn’t rebel, he constructed a massive fortress in the northern part of the City of David and stationed a permanent garrison of his troops there. Damien Mackey’s comment: Now for a geographical correction. This is where the sensational find starts to unwind in terms of it being the Akra. Its position here “in the northern part of the City of David” is perfectly correct if the standard geography is followed, according to which the Jerusalem Temples had once stood at today’s Temple Mount, Haram al-Sharif. But many good researchers, closely following the ancient records (e.g. Marilyn Sams below), have determined that Haram al-Sharif definitely was not where the Jerusalem Temples had been built. See also my article on this: True location of Jerusalem Temples right near Gihon Spring (4) True location of Jerusalem Temples right near Gihon Spring Brent Nagtegaal continues: This famed building stood for the next quarter of a century, a constant affront to the Jews as it sat adjacent to the temple. Even after the Maccabean revolt against Antiochus Epiphanes was successful at reclaiming Jerusalem in 165 b.c.e., the Jews still could not take the citadel. Damien Mackey’s comment: The war can be re-dated to the early years of Jesus Christ: Religious war raging in Judah during the Infancy of Jesus (3) Religious war raging in Judah during the Infancy of Jesus Brent Nagtegaal continues: In fact, for the next 20-plus years, long after the death of Antiochus Epiphanes in Babylon, a garrison of Seleucid troops continued to be stationed in the Akra, constantly hounding those visiting the temple grounds. As Flavius Josephus relates in Antiquities of the Jews: [A]nd when he had overthrown the city walls, he built a citadel [Greek: Acra] in the lower part of the city, for the place was high, and overlooked the temple; on which account he fortified it with high walls and towers, and put into it a garrison of Macedonians. However, in that citadel dwelt the impious and wicked part of the multitude from whom it proved that the citizens suffered many and sore calamities. It was only after Simon, the elder brother of Judas, came into power over the new, restored Jewish state in 142 b.c.e., that the Seleucid forces were finally ousted from the Akra a year later. Then, to ensure that foreigners would never again hold captive the religious practice of the Jews, Josephus records that Simon led a three-year, night-and-day effort to destroy the Akra completely, even grinding down part of the ground it rested upon. How could these excavators find evidence of the Akra if Simon destroyed it? …. I shall leave Brent Nagtegaal’s article at this point, with this relevant question hanging, to turn to an important article by Marilyn Sams, who far better understands the geography of Old Jerusalem: (4) Did Excavators Find the Seleucid Citadel in the Givati Parking Lot Did Excavators Find the Seleucid Citadel in the Givati Parking Lot? by Marilyn Sams Since 2007, parts of the Givati parking lot excavation on the southeastern hill of Jerusalem, conducted by Doron Ben-Ami and Yana Tchekhanovets, have been characterized as the remains of Queen Adiabene’s palace and also the Seleucid Acra. Both of these faulty identifications are based on a misunderstanding of and/or lack of attention to literary descriptions which place both of these constructions in the lower city, formerly the City of David, called “Acra,” starting in the Greek period. “Acra” (meaning “citadel” in Greek) stands for both the citadel itself and the area it occupied--the lower city. Josephus and First Maccabees place them both south of the temple, which was in the middle of the southeastern hill, and also verify that Simon Maccabee not only destroyed the citadel, but also the hill on which it stood. Therefore, there were no remains remaining. This paper will set forth the literary evidence evidencing the citadel’s actual location, which was also near the location of Queen Adiabene’s palace. Citadels Preceding the Seleucid Citadel Because the Haram esh-Sharif has been falsely identified as the temple mount, rather than the Roman camp Antonia, claimed by eyewitness Eleazar ben Ya’ir to be the only monument remaining after the 70 A.D. destruction (War VII, 8, 376), there have been eight erroneous proposals for the location of the Israelite and Seleucid citadels. However, they were all in the same location, starting with the Jebusite citadel (called “Millo” in Samuel, Kings, and Chronicles), where David resided before building his palace across from it in the newly renamed City of David (Antiquities VII, 3, 65). The northern boundary of this city can be assumed to be the Middle Bronze Age II and Iron Age I walls found in Kathleen Kenyon’s Area H at the bottleneck of the southeastern hill. Hence, the City of David covered roughly the lower half of the southeastern hill. In 3 Kings 2: 35 (Septuagint version), we discover that Solomon expanded this city by breaching its northern wall and adding the “wall of Jerusalem,” a fortification which would then protect the northern half of the southeastern hill and the daughter of Pharoah in the palace he had newly built for her, outside the City of David. The crescent shape of the City of David/Jerusalem (the shape of the southeastern hill) is witnessed by accounts in Josephus, Aristeas, Tacitus, and the Venerable Bede, confining the city to the southeastern hill, with no northerly extension described. It is notable from the Septuagint scripture that Solomon did not breach the City of David’s wall until he had already built the temple and his own palace and rebuilt the citadel. Since the temple was built on Mount Zion at the border between Benjamin and Judah, above En Shemesh (Spring of the Sun--the Gihon Spring), Solomon’s citadel replaced the former Jebusite citadel and acted as a landmark (along with the temple) demarcating the Benjamin/Judah borderline. Hezekiah repaired this citadel (2 Chronicles 32: 5), Nehemiah mentioned it in the Persian period (Nehemiah 7: 2), and Josephus described it during the conquest of Jerusalem by Antiochus the Great (Antiquities XII, 3, 133). Antiochus Epiphanes IV, the son of Antiochus the Great, replaced the citadel of these descriptions with a new one in the same place. The “Lower City,” “Acra,” and the “City of David” As noted by archaeological excavations or the lack thereof, the “city” of the Persian and Greek periods reverted to the southeastern hill only. Therefore, the “lower city” of those periods was the area south of the temple, which edifice Hecateus of Abdera (c. 4th century B.C.) described as occupying the “middle” of the city (Contra Apion I, 22, 198), a location shared by the Gihon Spring (Shiloah), as noted in Hagigah 76a of the Jerusalem Talmud. The Letter of Aristeas also implies the temple’s bifurcation of the city by describing “upper towers” and “lower towers.” …. In Antiquities XII, 5, 252, Josephus recounts Antiochus Epiphanes’ 168 B.C. conquest of Jerusalem, after having overthrown the walls, and his building a citadel in “the lower part of the city:” He also burned down the finest buildings; and when he had overthrown the city walls, he built a citadel [Acra] in the lower part of the city, for the place was high, and overlooked the temple; on which account he fortified it with high walls and towers, and put into it a garrison of Macedonians. (italics and bracketed Greek terms or other information mine, as in all further quotations) The towers and immense stones of the citadel are described by Aristeas and the height of the “place” of the citadel recalls the 3 Kings 2: 35 passage which says Solomon built his citadel “above” the temple, implying the Seleucid citadel replaced the former Solomonic citadel in the same place. The descriptions of the citadels’ location as being “above” and “high” and “overlooking the temple” are factors which have been minimized, ignored, or dismissed in the false locations posited for all the citadels. The literary evidence is clear that the citadels were in a place higher than the temple in the lower city--that part of the city, in both the Israelite era and the Greek era, being limited to the lower half of the southeastern hill. The reason for the height of the citadel being greater than the temple appears to derive from the difference in height between two natural hills, which were likely augmented by occupational tels (because of the spring), dating from 3,000 B.C., with Mount Zion, the hill on which the temple was built, being the lower of the two. Antiochus Epiphane’s destruction of Jerusalem is also set forth in Maccabees 1: 31-36, but in these verses, Acra, or the “lower part of the city” is referred to as the City of David: And when he [Antiochus] had taken the spoils of the city, he set it on fire, and pulled down the houses and walls thereof on every side…Then builded they the city of David with a great and strong wall, and with mighty towers, and made it a strong hold for hem,…For it was a place to lie in wait against the sanctuary, and an evil adversary to Israel. Hence, the citadel built by Antiochus and occupied by his soldiers became a snare to the Jews, rather than a protection to the temple, as had been its previous role. The tide turned, however, when Judas Maccabeus made an assault on the garrison of Macedonians in the “upper city…[and] drove the soldiers into the lower, which part of the city was called the Citadel [Acra]” (War I, 1, 39). Since the city of this period occupied only the southeastern hill, the “upper city” was north of the temple, and the “lower city” was south of the temple and called Acra, because the citadel stood there (just as the area around the citadel called Millo had also been called Millo). It appears from later descriptions that the Macedonian soldiers driven into the lower city were forced to reside in Antiochus Epiphanes’ citadel. Hence, the War passage explains why the Givati parking lot (located in the “upper” area of the southeastern hill) yielded lead sling shots, bronze arrowheads, and catapult stones stamped with Antiochus IV’s symbol, and coins from his era (Fessenden, 2015). The Macedonian soldiers had been there, in the “upper city,” before Judas drove them into the “lower city.” But it was in the lower city, not the upper, where the Seleucid citadel stood. ….

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Must look elsewhere for Maccabee town, Modein

by Damien F. Mackey “Simon built a monument over the tomb of his father and his brothers. He made it high so that all might see it. It had polished stone at the front and back. He also set up seven pyramids, opposite each other, for his father and mother and four brothers. He devised an elaborate site for the pyramids, setting up great columns around them. On the columns, he put suits of armor for a permanent memorial. Beside the suits of armor, he carved ships so that all who sail the sea might see them”. I Maccabees 13:27-29 Modein, the ancestral home of the Maccabees, could not have been situated in central Israel The quote above from I Maccabees 13 tells me immediately that the presently favoured site location of the Maccabean ancestral home of Modein, at Modi'in-Maccabim-Re'ut in central Israel, could by no means be the Modein of the Maccabees. Why? Because, as we shall read below, “all who sail the sea” would not possibly have been able to have viewed the elaborate designs carved on a tomb which would have been some 27 km distant from the Mediterranean Sea - and much further away from the Sea of Galilee. Steve Fine has noted this fact when he wrote in (pp. 6-7 of): The Hasmonean Royal Tombs at Modi‘in Art and Identity In Latter Second Temple Period Judaea: (6) The Hasmonean Royal Tombs at Modi‘in Art and Identity In Latter Second Temple Period Judaea: | Steven Fine - Academia.edu It seems that the armor and ships at the Hasmonean tombs were meant to project Hasmonean power by sea and land. Located in the home territory of the Hasmoneans at Modi‘in, on this boundary between the Judaean heartland and the conquered (or soon to be conquered) coastal plain and the somewhat distant Mediterranean Sea (approximately twenty-seven kilometers to the west as the crow flies) … this typically Hellenistic monument presents Hasmonean military accomplishments and objectives in a concrete form that was easily understood by Jew and Greek alike. From such a distance, it is most likely that the monument could not be seen at sea. …. [End of quote. My emphasis] The archaeologists who have been getting excited in relatively recent times about a potential discovery of the Maccabean tomb in that central region, at Horbat Ha-Gardi, will seriously need to re-consider (my opinion) just what they are uncovering there: https://news.artnet.com/art-world/archaeologists-may-found-lost-tomb-maccabees-334463 Archaeologists May Have Found the Lost Tomb of the Maccabees Experts are taking a closer look at the site. Sarah Cascone, September 23, 2015 Archaeologists may have finally uncovered the lost tomb of the Maccabees, Jewish warriors who led a successful rebellion against Greek rule in the second century BC. Experts are taking a second look at a tomb at Horbat Ha-Gardi, near the ancient city of Madi’in. Over a hundred years after it was first discovered, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) has resumed long-abandoned excavations at the site. First discovered in the late 1800s, the site’s similarities to historical descriptions of the Maccabees’ final resting place were immediately recognized. Researchers at the time even went so far as to claim “there is no room for doubt. I found the Tomb of the Maccabees.” In Antiquities of the Jews, a 2,000-year-old manuscript by Josephus Flavius, “the tomb was described as a tall, impressive structure surrounded by columns; it was said to overlook the sea and was built of fine stones and was covered with pyramid-like roofs,” according to a statement by the IAA. Early assumptions about the tomb were quickly challenged when Charles Clermont-Ganneau, a French scholar of the time, found a mosaic floor decorated with a Byzantine cross, indicating that the site had been built by Christians. However, Clermont-Ganneau maintained that the site could still hold the fabled Tomb of the Maccabees, writing that “it is possible that this structure was built by the Christians, so as to commemorate the burial place of the Holy Maccabees, since they were exalted saints in the eyes of Christianity.” Nevertheless, excavations were soon abandoned. Amit Re’em, an excavation director on the Authority’s new project, suspects the tomb was discovered by ancient Christians, who added the cross to identify the site as the burial place of important figures—namely the Maccabees. “What other important figures would be here?” he asked the AP. Re’em and excavation director Dan Shahar admitted in a statement that their efforts had yet to yield conclusive evidence: “An excavation and a lot of hard work are still required in order to confirm that assumption unequivocally, and the riddle remains unsolved—the search for the elusive Tomb of the Maccabees continues.” [End of article] If the Maccabean town of Modein was not situated in central Israel, then where should we look for it? Searching for the town of Modein in Galilee Why, Galilee? Because of my having re-dated the Maccabean revolt against the Seleucids to the era of the Infancy of Jesus Christ, with Judas Maccabeus being identified as Gamaliel’s rebel, “Judas the Galilean”: Judas the Galilean vitally links Maccabean era to Daniel 2’s “rock cut out of a mountain” (2) Judas the Galilean vitally links Maccabean era to Daniel 2’s “rock cut out of a mountain” This historical revision now enables for a serendipitous meeting of Rabbi Gamaliel’s “in the days of the census” (Acts 5:37) with Luke 2:1’s “decree that a census should be taken”. Same census, same emperor, same era, same revolt. We can now take all this a geographical step further. If the Maccabean ancestral home of Modein was in, not central Israel, but Galilee - as I believe it to have been - then it must have been very close to the only Sea in that region, the Sea of Galilee, in order that, regarding those splendid carvings of the tomb, “all who sail the sea might see them”. Tiberias has a famous cemetery facing the Sea of Galilee. There, for instance, we find a tomb dedicated to Moses Maimonides (Rambam).

Luke calls Arimathea “a city of the Jews”

by Damien F. Mackey “[Joseph] (he had not consented to their plan and action), a man from Arimathea, a city of the Jews, who was waiting for the kingdom of God”. Luke 23:51 Introduction Following the magnificent research of Harry Whitakker, I was impelled to embrace an identification of the rich young man of the Gospels, a ruler, with the Cypriot Levite, Joseph Barnabas: Was Apostle Barnabas the Gospels’ ‘rich young man’? (7) Was Apostle Barnabas the Gospels' 'rich young man'? A next step saw me taking this identification further, to include: Joseph of Arimathea a perfect match for Apostle Barnabas as the Gospels’ ‘rich young man’ (7) Joseph of Arimathea a perfect match for Apostle Barnabas as the Gospels' 'rich young man' followed, somewhat more tentatively, by: Can Joseph Barnabas be extended to incorporate Joseph Barsabbas? (8) Can Joseph Barnabas be extended to incorporate Joseph Barsabbas? For me, now, the God-fearing rich young man of the Gospels, a man of some status, had become Joseph Barnabas (and possibly also Joseph Barsabbas), the wealthy Levite from Cyprus, a good man, who was also, as Joseph of Arimathea, a wealthy member (ruler) of the Sanhedrin. While most of all of this seemed to tie up very well indeed, a geographical challenge did arise inasmuch as our man, Joseph, a Cypriot (from Cyprus), hailed from a town, Arimathea, generally thought to have been somewhere in Judah or Israel. Though its true location is very uncertain: Bible Map: Arimathea “Its identity is the subject of much conjecture. The Onomasticon of Eusebius and Jerome identifies it with Ramathaim-Zophim in the hill-country of Ephraim (1 Samuel 11), which is Ramah the birthplace and burial-place of Samuel (1 Samuel 1:19; 1 Samuel 25:1), and places it near Timnah on the borders of Judah and Dan. G. A. Smith thinks it may be the modern Beit Rima, a village on an eminence 2 miles North of Timnah. Others incline to Ramallah, 8 miles North of Jerusalem and 3 miles from Bethel (Matthew 27:57 Mark 15:43 Luke 23:51 John 19:38)”. My proposed solution to this difficulty, given that there is so much uncertainty about the location of Arimathea (“Its identity is the subject of much conjecture”), was to suggest for Joseph’s Arimathea the highly important Cypriot town, the like-named, Amathus (Amathea). “A City of the Jews” While I was initially happy with this identification, I later read that Luke the Evangelist had, in his reference to Arimathea, called it “a city of the Jews” (Luke 23:51): (… Ἁριμαθαίας πόλεως τῶν Ἰουδαίων …). My immediate reaction to this was to think that Arimathea must, therefore, have been located somewhere in Judah. But, then, why would Saint Luke make the obvious qualification that a city in Judah was “a city of the Jews”? As far as I am aware, Luke does not qualify any other cities or towns in this way. May be, Saint Luke was referring to an Arimathea in a foreign land, say Cyprus, which had a large Jewish population, or perhaps was even dominated by Jews. Was Amathus in Cyprus just such a city? Jews were prominent in Cyprus. Joseph Barnabas, a Levite, hailed from Cyprus. And: “There is evidence of Jewish settlers at Amathus” (2024 article below): A View of Cyprus: A History of the Jewish Community in Cyprus A History of the Jewish Community in Cyprus Jewish presence in Cyprus begins in the ancient times. There is evidence of Jewish settlers at Amathus. In the 2nd BCE there were a considerable number of Jewish people recorded on the island. They had a close relationship with the locals and the Roman rulers at that time, liked them. When St Paul and Barnabas arrived on the island, to convert people to Christianity, they caused problems, by attempting to convert the Jewish to Christianity. According to the history books of the time, the Jews supported the war against the Romans and sacked Salamis and annihilated the Greek population. Apparently, they massacred 240,000 Greek Cypriots. This led to the Jews being punished. …. Summing it up: Saint Joseph of Arimathea, as Barnabas, may thus have hailed from Amathus (Amathea), a city of the Jews in Cyprus.

Monday, December 1, 2025

From Raamses to the ‘Sea of Reeds’

by Damien F. Mackey “Piramesse, Sukkoth, and Migdol of the Exodus narrative are reasonably identified with locations known from ancient Egyptian archaeology and epigraphy …. Other locations in the itinerary, such as Etham, Pi Hahiroth, Baal Zephon, and especially the Re(e)d Sea, remain ambiguous or undiscovered”. Stephen O. Moshier and James K. Hoffmeier Introduction Many of us were exposed to that magnificent 1956 film based upon the Book of Exodus, The Ten Commandments, shot in VistaVision (colour by Technicolor), and produced, directed and narrated by Cecil B. DeMille. According to this film, Ramses II ‘the Great’, son of Seti, was the Pharaoh of the Exodus. And this is the common view held today, due to – among other things – mention of the city of “Rameses” (Raamses) in Exodus 1:11: “So [the Egyptians] put slave masters over them to oppress them with forced labour, and [the Hebrews] built Pithom and Rameses as store cities for Pharaoh”. Unfortunately, this historical location for Ramses ‘the Great’ is far from being correct. “Rameses” in Exodus 1:11 is a much later editorial amendment after pharaoh Ramses, about seven centuries later, had built his own city in that vicinity, where had stood ancient Avaris (modern Tell el-Dab'a). Moses would have known Avaris, not Rameses. The Exodus of Israel does not belong to the New Kingdom era of Ramses, of Egypt’s Nineteenth Dynasty, but to the Old/’Middle’ Kingdom era of the Thirteenth Dynasty. Ramses was not the Pharaoh of the Exodus, and, far less, was Yul Brynner. Three major factors, among many, would immediately disqualify Ramses II of Egypt’s New Kingdom from being the Pharaoh of the Exodus: Firstly, there was nothing like a departure from Egypt of tens of thousands of slaves during his long and magnificent period of rule (66-67 years). Secondly, archaeologically, there would have been no (Late Bronze Age) city of Jericho for Joshua to have conquered. Thirdly, the Exodus Israelites clearly belonged to the Middle Bronze I (MBI) phase of archaeology as conquerors and occupiers of Early Bronze III/IV towns and villages. That does not mean, however, that my Old/‘Middle’ Kingdom setting of the Exodus during Egypt’s Thirteenth Dynasty raises no prickly issues of its own. (a) Problems needing to be solved: horses and chariots Probably the biggest problem of all to be faced concerns horses and chariots. During whatever Egyptian kingdom one may choose to locate the Plagues and Exodus, a problem that arises is that the Fifth Plague devastated Egypt’s livestock (Exodus 9:6): “All the livestock of the Egyptians died …”. Presumably, that catastrophe would have included their horses. This difficulty can be satisfactorily answered, though, as I suggested in my article: Exodus Pharaoh could still gather sufficient horses after the Plagues (3) Exodus Pharaoh could still gather sufficient horses after the Plagues The pestilence may not have affected in the least Pharaoh’s horses, because, as we read, the Fifth Plague was confined to all “the livestock in the field” (9:3). “In the field”, baś-śā-ḏeh (בַּשָּׂדֶ֔ה). That is why one has to read every word of Scripture. Presumably the horses used by Pharaoh and his armed forces would have been safely secured in stables. That, however, is not the least of our problems concerning horses – likewise, chariots. Can we be certain that Old/‘Middle’ Kingdom Egypt, in which I have located Moses, actually had any horses and chariots? While this may sound like a ridiculous question, the reality is that - at least in our present state of knowledge - one cannot find any depictions, whatsoever, of anything resembling a horse or a war chariot for the entire Old/’Middle’ Kingdom period of Egyptian history. Yet, we read in Exodus 14:7: “[Pharaoh] took six hundred of the best chariots, along with all the other chariots of Egypt, with officers over all of them”. And, again (14:19): “The Egyptians—all Pharaoh’s horses and chariots, horsemen and troops—pursued the Israelites …”. Egypt’s New Kingdom, on the other hand, abounds in such requisite depictions. At least we know that there is archaeological evidence for the horse in the environs of Egypt, possibly going back even as far as Predynastic times. On this, see e.g. my article: Is the biblical Exodus, pitched in Egypt’s Old (or Middle) Kingdom, one chariot army short of reality? (2) Is the biblical Exodus, pitched in Egypt's Old (or Middle) Kingdom, one chariot army short of reality? That, however, would seem to be scant archaeological material over such a long period of Egyptian history. As regards war chariots, Egypt’s New Kingdom (and The Ten Commandments film) admittedly has it all over my Old/’Middle’ Kingdom model. Ramses II, for instance, is famed for his fine horses and his chariots. In another article, I, still grappling with this most difficult of subjects: Were horse-drawn chariots already in use in Old Kingdom Egypt? (4) Were horse-drawn chariots already in use in Old Kingdom Egypt? quoted an expert, Stuart Piggott, as referred to in Renata-Gabriela Tatomir’s 2014 article, “The presence of horse in ancient Egypt and the problem of veracity of the horseshoe magic in the ancient Egyptian folklore and mythology”, who may have managed to inject some degree of hope into this extremely difficult pursuit: …. The archaeological data which are presently available (some of which have been available since 1976) seem therefore to seriously undermine the claim that Egypt was without horses until the Hyksos dynasties. The work at Nahal Tillah seems to show that horses were available in the immediate vicinity that is in the northern Negev, very early on in the history of Egypt, while Egyptians were clearly present where these horses were present. This fact made some scholars to opinate that it might be possible that the horse and military chariot were re-introduced to Egypt by the Hyksos. The time between the end of the Old Kingdom and the Hyksos is many centuries, and many things can happen in such a long time. Another hypothesis is that horses in the Old Kingdom might be an exception …. However, the scholars’ debate on the likeliness that based on zooarcheology evidence the presence of horse in Egypt may be even much earlier is a very long one, mainly because an Equus caballus is dated to the native Egyptian fauna of Palaeolithic times. According to Gaillard … the faunal samples comprised a lower molar and an incomplete mandible with P2 in situ from a true horse, «Equus caballus». The scholar points out that the morphology of these specimens compares better with that in mandibular teeth of asses …. As such, they should be included in the wild ass material. Gaillard also figured an upper third molar of a Solutrean horse … which is erroneously interpreted by Churcher … as evidence for a true horse in the Kom Ombo area. As matters stand, the presence of wild horses in the Plain of Kom Ombo during Late Palaeolithic times can be considered unsubstantiated. …. However, another issue arises: is there evidence of chariots and wheels in Zoser's reign and the end of Old Kingdom Egypt? So far, Stuart Piggott seems to be an expert in regard to early wheeled vehicles. Downhere is a quote from his book The Earliest Wheeled Transport from the Atlantic Coast to the Caspian Sea providing some helpful factual background information. The central problem of the earliest wheeled vehicles in Europe from about 3000 BC is that of assessing the respective merits of two hypotheses, that assuming a restricted place and time for an invention subsequently rapidly and widely adopted, and that permitting independent invention of the basic principle of wheeled transport in more than one locality, with subsequent parallel regional development. In specific terms it raises the classic issue of 'diffusion' from an area with a higher degree of technological performance to others with less inventive expertise: the Near East and Neolithic Europe around 3000 BC. The problem is not rendered easier by the fact that we are dealing with wooden structures with a low survival value as archaeological artifacts, helped only by fired clay models among those societies which had a tradition of producing such miniature versions of everyday objects, itself a restricted cultural trait. In the instance of the earliest agricultural communities of south-east Europe from the seventh millennium BC [sic], which did so model humans, animals, houses and even furniture, the absence of vehicle models is at least a suggestive piece of negative evidence for a failure to make this break-through in vehicle technology, despite an efficient agrarian economy and a precocious non-ferrous metallurgy before the beginning of the third millennium. When in that millennium the first European wheels, and depictions and models of wheeled vehicles, appear, radiocarbon dates show us how close in time these are to the comparable evidence for the first appearance in Sumer and Elam of the same invention, and the likelihood of independent discovery in east and west, virtually simultaneously, is sensibly diminished. The thesis of the rapid adoption of a novel piece of transport technology originating in the ancient Near East, as proposed by Childe thirty years ago, still remains the preferable alternative. One of the most recent finds in Western Europe, the wagon from Zilrich with disc wheels of the tripartite construction, and a calibrated radiocarbon date of 3030 BC, greatly strengthens this supposition, for the relatively complex technology is precisely that of the early third millennium wheels of Kish, Ur and Susa. …. The foregoing makes it clear that according to that scholar: 1) there is an intrinsic difficulty with survival of evidence of early wheeled vehicles; 2) wagons with tripartite disk wheels were in existence by 3030 BC; and 3) this technology spread far and fast. Given these three facts, the problem of proving that the highly advanced civilization of Old Kingdom Egypt did not have wheeled military vehicles a full 580 years after the invention and spread of the tripartite wheel seems to be a very much greater one than that of proving that she did. …. [End of quotes] Facing these major problems? In light of all this, there are various approaches that one can take to save the situation. Or, should it be rather a matter of, as I asked the question in Part One of my article, “Is the biblical Exodus … reality?”: “So, why not just admit that that the Exodus of Israel must have occurred later, during Egypt’s New Kingdom?” That, after all, would completely solve the problem of the horses and the chariots. And, it can also provide us with a pharaoh named Ramses (cf. Exodus 1:11). But I, then, in Part Two, proceeded to put forward compelling reasons why I shall never embrace an Egyptian New Kingdom Exodus: Why the new Kingdom is totally inappropriate While, superficially, a New Kingdom (Eighteenth or Nineteenth Dynasty) setting for the Exodus might appear to fit the bill, it would actually cause far more problems than it may seemingly manage to solve. For it is not sufficient simply to grab a particular phase out of history and claim that it attaches nicely to a biblical event. The Bible records a long, developing history which necessitates that the whole thing be fitted into an historical and archaeological framework. If, for instance, one were to take Ramses II as the Pharaoh of the Exodus, one would then need to be able to situate, each into its own proper place, Joseph and the Famine at an earlier phase of Egyptian history, and, then, Abram (Abraham), before Joseph. On this note, Dr. John Osgood has rightly, in a recent article (2024): https://assets.answersresearchjournal.org/doc/v17/ jericho_dating_joshuas_conquest_of_canaan_comments_osgood.pdf Answers Research Journal 17 (2024): 221–222, “The Walls of Jericho: Dating Joshua’s Conquest of Canaan—Comments”, expressed his ‘amazement’ when those involved in biblico-historical reconstructions exclude “a whole saga of history”: …. Habermehl tells us that “we note that the Bible does not say that Hiel built a city, but only a wall.” Really, then what do the words “Hiel of Bethel built Jericho” mean? It had a foundation (not specifically of a wall) and it had gates (1 Kings 16:34). But the archaeologists have clearly and categorically found a large city during Middle Bronze on the site of Jericho and therefore before Hiel. That city needs an explanation, as it won’t go away. This is where I am amazed at the blindness of both conventional and revisionist discussions, as if the pages of the book of Judges are stuck together and a whole saga of history is excluded. Namely, there was the attack on Jericho, the city of palm trees, by Eglon of Moab, and for 20 years that site was occupied by 10,000 of his troops (Judges 3:12– 30, see also Deuteronomy 34:3; Judges 1:16; 2 Chronicles 28:15—the city of palm trees). …. [End of quote] Nor will it be sufficient to focus only upon Egypt – though that nation was, admittedly, the main power during the biblical era from the patriarchs Abram (Abraham) to Moses. Mesopotamia, Syria, Canaan, and so on, must likewise be properly accounted for, both historically and archaeologically. Key to a biblico-historical synthesis will obviously be the Conquest of Canaan and its centrepiece, the Fall of Jericho, which outstanding episode should be archaeologically verifiable. Pharaoh Ramses II may indeed have had his wonderful horses and chariots, but, for those who hold him to have been the Pharaoh of the Exodus, these are now faced with a Late Bronze Age (LBA) archology for the Conquest, and for Jericho, that is hopelessly inadequate. Much has been written about this. Stuart Zachary Steinberg briefly sums it up here: Redating the Conquest of the Promised Land | by Stuart Zachary Steinberg | Medium “For nearly 150 years the conquest by the Israelites has been dated to the Late Bronze Age. The reason for that has been primarily placing the Exodus in the Late Kingdom to have Raamses II as the pharaoh of the Exodus, to correspond with Exodus where it states that the children of Israel built the store cities of Pithom and Raamses. The problem is that there are nearly no correspondence[s] between the destruction of various cities and archaeology in the Late Bronze Age (LBA). Most [of] the cities mentioned do not exist or were destroyed much earlier. Case in point is Jericho. During the Late Bronze Age there was no city at Jericho for Joshua to destroy”. This is the dire situation that confronts the conventional scholars and whoever else might look to situate the Exodus at the time of Egypt’s New Kingdom. The high point of the Conquest of Canaan by Joshua was the destruction of Jericho, whose walls famously fell down. However: “During the Late Bronze Age there was no city at Jericho for Joshua to destroy”. Boom, boom. In fact, I believe that any reconstruction that is not built upon the Exodus Israelites as the Middle Bronze I (MBI) people of archaeology, who destroyed and/or settled in many of the Early Bronze III/IV cities of Canaan and Transjordan, cannot be correct: MBI Israel and the fall of cities Jericho and Ai (5) MBI Israel and the fall of cities Jericho and Ai This biblico-archaeological equation is supported by some experienced heavy hitters, such as Dr. Rudolph Cohen, Professor Emmanuel Anati, and Egal Israel: Egal Israel accepts the MBI peoples as being the Israelites of the Exodus (DOC) Egal Israel accepts the MBI peoples as being the Israelites of the Exodus So insistent am I upon this that I once harshly reviewed an archaeologically-based paper sent to me for review that did not embrace this firm foundation. The author, who had put a lot of hard work and effort into it, later complained when the paper was rejected for publication. I felt sorry for him. And, I have to admit that I myself have not always been clear about the archaeology for the Exodus – though it seems plainly obvious to me now. Negotiating Egypt and its barriers The MBI Israelites left behind them a devastated Egypt, whose magicians had been forced to concede that ‘the finger of God’ was at work in the Plagues. Did this cataclysmic state of affairs result in the conversion of some of the magicians, who may then, perhaps, have been amongst the “many other people” who departed Egypt with the Israelites? (Exodus 12:38) Were Jannes and Jambres, traditionally brother-magicians - {whom I have identified as the Reubenite (Israelite) pair, Dathan [Jathan] and Abiram} - compelled, despite their entrenched detestation of Moses, to bow to a higher Authority and, ultimately, to join the Exodus? Throughout it all, sadly, the ruler of Egypt, identified as the Thirteenth Dynasty’s Khasekemre-Neferhotep [I], remained unmoved (8:19): “But Pharaoh’s heart was hard and he would not listen, just as the LORD had said”. Unfortunately for Egypt, the Pharaoh, who, as well, had been brought to his knees, by the death of his first-born son, had ultimately and rashly determined to pursue the Israelites with his chariots and horsemen (whatever form these may have taken). According to the usual translation there were “about six hundred thousand men on foot, besides women and children” who departed from Egypt at the time of the Exodus (12:37): historically, the nomadic MBI people. Common sense, though, has to be applied when dealing with some of the more fantastic biblical numbers, and this is a clear case in point. If Israel had really fielded that many able-bodied men, “armed” (13:18) - {the overall total of fleeing Israelites estimated at about two million} - then they were hardly going to fear the inhabitants of Canaan no matter how tall these might have been. Moreover, the land of Goshen, and, later, the harsh desert, could not possibly have accommodated such a vast number. This is a clear case of the poor choice of translation of that albeit tricky Hebrew word elef (אֶ֧לֶף) as “thousand”, when another choice would make more (common) sense. The word elef can also mean “clan” or “squad” (cf. Numbers 1:16; Judges 6:15 and I Samuel 10:19), “reducing the purported number of 600,000 individual young men to 600 clans or squads, with a more likely total of 72,000 people” (Peter. C. Phan, Christian Theology in the Age of Migration: Implications for World Christianity, p. 109). Exodus 12:40 provides us with an important time span. This is the 430 years of servitude (12:40-42): Now the length of time the Israelite people lived in Egypt was 430 years. At the end of the 430 years, to the very day, all the LORD’s divisions left Egypt. Because the LORD kept vigil that night to bring them out of Egypt, on this night all the Israelites are to keep vigil to honor the LORD for the generations to come. 480 years later, King Solomon will begin to build the Temple of Yahweh (I Kings 6:1). …. (b) Problems needing to be solved: horses and chariots Several solutions may be proposed for the lack of evidence of horses and chariots in Egypt at this particular time. - One. Egypt had then only a rudimentary type of chariot. It may not even have been for war purposes, except for the speedy conveyance of fighting men. - Two. Egypt had only recently bought horses and chariots from neighbouring trading partners. The war chariot does not appear to have been an Egyptian invention. Before this new phenomenon had had time to reach the walls of Egypt, in art form, the whole substance of it had drowned during the Exodus pursuit. One. I am probably going to have to downsize here, and conclude that the reason why war chariots are not depicted in Egypt prior to the New Kingdom is because Egypt had not yet developed them. That the image of Pharaoh with his chariot army, as so brilliantly depicted in the film The Ten Commandments, may be yet another of the film’s historical inaccuracies. Egypt, assuredly, had long had various means of land transport - carts, wagons, sledges, donkeys, palanquins - but no war chariots as yet. The Hebrew word (רִכְבּ) translated as “chariot” can mean simply cart drawn by an animal: CHARIOT - JewishEncyclopedia.com “Vehicles are designated in Hebrew chiefly by two expressions, "'agalah" and "rakab," with "merkab" and "merkabah" derived from the latter. The former denotes the wagon used for heavy loads and general work, the name being connected with the root "to roll"; while the latter is the chariot of war or of state”. The Exodus Pharaoh must have used horse-drawn carts and/or wagons, not so much as instruments of war, but as the means of conveying his army as quickly as possible in pursuit of the fleeing Israelites. In favour of this theory, in the case of Exodus 14, is the use of rakab rather than merkabah, war chariot. While this does, admittedly, take away some of the glamour from how we might have envisaged this scene (prompted by movies), the sight confronting the Israelites, whose host included women, children, and the aged, would nevertheless have been frightful. Two. The other possibility for consideration does require a time squeeze. Perhaps the Egyptians had begun to develop horse-drawn war chariots only while Moses was exiled in Midian, during the late Twelfth to early Thirteenth dynasties - or, had recently begun to import these from their trading partners. Half a millennium later, Solomonic Israel would be trading in horses and chariots, now emanating from Egypt (I Kings 10:26-29). Solomon accumulated chariots and horses; he had fourteen hundred chariots and twelve thousand horses, which he kept in the chariot cities and also with him in Jerusalem. The king made silver as common in Jerusalem as stones, and cedar as plentiful as sycamore-fig trees in the foothills. Solomon’s horses were imported from Egypt and from Kue — the royal merchants purchased them from Kue at the current price. They imported a chariot from Egypt for six hundred shekels of silver, and a horse for a hundred and fifty. They also exported them to all the kings of the Hittites and of the Arameans. The Exodus Route There is no conclusive evidence whatsoever that Pharaoh himself actually drowned in the Sea of Reeds: Did Pharaoh Die in the Red Sea? - Chabad.org There are differing opinions in the Midrash … concerning his fate. Some say that he drowned in the Red Sea together with his army, while others opine that he survived the miraculous event. He survived in order to retell a firsthand account of the miracles and wonders that G d performed. …. Previously, I had accepted the Exodus route as painstakingly laid out by the experienced archaeologist professor Emmanuel Anati. Unlike charlatans and fraudsters, who claim to find biblical locations and artefacts without having any consideration for distances, logistics, water holes, and so on: What of Ron Wyatt’s Egyptian chariot wheels in the Red Sea? (10) What of Ron Wyatt's Egyptian chariot wheels in the Red Sea? professor Emmanuel Anati has had decades of professional experience in the region: https://int.icej.org/news/special-reports/moving-mountains …. Anati considers the route used by the Israelites after they left Egypt to be crucial to locating Mount Sinai. This is a riddle which has kept Christian researchers busy since Byzantine times. But in order to find the route, Anati decided to walk through the Sinai and try to trace the original route on foot himself. “I have studied the itinerary of the Exodus route and went through Egypt and Sinai, all the way trying to find the different stations mentioned in the Bible. I did it twice. The first time I had in my mind that St. Catherine’s was Mount Sinai, and I got completely lost. The second time I had this idea in mind of Har Karkom and I could find many stations which fit the description of the Bible. That itinerary led me directly to the area of Har Karkom,” he stated. One of the most interesting discoveries supporting his theory is that Har Karkom is eleven days journey by foot from Kadesh Barnea, just as the Book of Deuteronomy describes. In addition, the route has ten wells spaced fairly evenly apart, providing a source of water at the end of each day of travel. “It is absolutely fitting,” insisted Anati. “So all those things led me to think that it was Mt Sinai.” …. That is not to say that improvements, refinements, may not be introduced here and there. There are other archaeologists who, while accepting many of professor Anati’s identifications, do not necessarily agree with every detail of his itinerary. Australian archaeologist, Deb Hurn, for instance, has written: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/312317572_Eleven_Days_From_Horeb_Deuteronomy_11-2_and_Har_Karkom “Eleven days from Horeb”: Deuteronomy 1:1-2 and Har Karkom Deuteronomy 1:1-2 is an inscrutable list of obscure toponyms and diverse prepositions. Yet from it derives the common understanding that Mount Horeb is eleven days distant from Kadesh-Barnea. In 1983, paleoethnologist Emmanuel Anati identified Har Karkom in the Central Negev as Mount Sinai-Horeb, but the mountain lies within 100 km of the Kadesh district. To address this biblical problem, Anati proposed a circuitous eleven-day route from Har Karkom to Kadesh via minor water-sources as little as 7 km apart. The narrative of Numbers 10-13, however, indicates that Israel's march from Sinai to Kadesh took only six days of actual travel. This presentation will propose and describe the route of this journey in terms of ancient trails, water sources, and campsites. What, then, of the “eleven days” of Deuteronomy 1:1-2? By a new reading, this text describes the way from the east bank of the Jordan River to Horeb (at Har Karkom) via well-known ancient roads. A route of eleven daily stages links twelve water-sources averaging 30 km apart, the standard rate of military and commercial travel in the ANE. This paper will offer identities for the seven listed stations and locate the remaining five stations, offering a rationale for their omission. No longer obscure and irrelevant to its context, Deuteronomy 1:1-2 turns out to be an accurate, linear, timed itinerary describing the optimal route between Mount Horeb and the Jordan River where Moses spoke his final words to Israel. …. All such responsible views need to be taken into consideration. But I am now inclined to think that professor Anati’s identification of Lake Serbonis Bardawil) is too far away to have been, as he sees it, the Sea of Crossing. Moreover, this body of water is situated right on the Mediterranean coast, on the very route to Canaan that the Bible says the Israelites did not take (Exodus 13:17). At this point in time I tend to favour, as an approximation, an Exodus route geography that, for the Sea of Reeds, lies yet within the confines of Egypt, such as the following: “Which Way Out of Egypt? Physical Geography Related to the Exodus Itinerary Stephen O. Moshier and James K. Hoffmeier”: Which-Way-Out-of-Egypt-Moshier-and-Hoffmeier.pdf Introduction Many editions of the Hebrew Tanakh and Christian Holy Bible feature a map showing one or multiple alternative Exodus routes out of the Nile Delta into the Sinai Peninsula. The routes are based upon various interpretations of the itineraries contained in the scriptures (Exod 12–19; Num 33). Archaeological excavations and studies of ancient texts during the past century contribute information relevant to the Exodus itinerary. For example, Piramesse, Sukkoth, and Migdol of the Exodus narrative are reasonably identified with locations known from ancient Egyptian archaeology and epigraphy (Bietak, Chap. 2). Other locations in the itinerary, such as Etham, Pi Hahiroth, Baal Zephon, and especially the Re(e)d Sea, remain ambiguous or undiscovered. Bible maps generally show the modern geography of settlements, river courses, lakes, and coastlines. However, geologic studies reveal changes in the land that have implications for some of these problematic locations and overland routes traveled by ancient people. In particular, surveys in the region over the past 40 years have identified and delineated abandoned Nile distributaries, significant ancient inland lakes (now dry or changed), the migrating Mediterranean coastline, and overall evolution of the Nile Delta plain. This chapter presents a map of the natural geography of the region during the Bronze Age based upon multiple sources from cartography, archaeology, and geology (Fig. 8.1). …. Implications for the Toponymy and Geography of Exodus Several locations with probable or tentative associations with geographic references in the Exodus text are depicted in Fig. 8.1. The Israelite people in Egypt are said to have built the “supply cities” of Pithom and Rameses (Exod 1:11), but no geographical location is offered in the Torah. Nearly a century ago, Sir Alan Gardiner demonstrated that Ramesses of the Pentateuch (Gen 47:11; Exod 1:11, 12:37; Num 33:3 and 5) was one and the same as Pi-Ramesses, the Delta residence of Ramesses II and his successors (Gardiner 1918: 261–267). …. Rameses (Piramesse) is now identified with the site at Qantir after the pioneering work of Labib Habachi in the 1940s and 1950s (Habachi 1954, 2001: 65–84). It is situated along the ancient Pelusiac branch in the eastern delta just northeast of Tell el Dabca (Hyksos Avaris). Pithom only occurs in Exodus 1:11 and is not listed in the Exodus itinerary. Its location has long been a topic of archaeological investigation (Naville 1888, 1924; Petrie 1906). There is firm textual and archaeological evidence for locating Pithom in Wadi Tumilat at Tell er-Retabeh. Early on, however, Naville maintained that it was Succoth (Naville 1888: 4), while Petrie who worked at Retabeh 20 years later thought that it was Pi-Ramesses and Rameses of Exodus (Petrie 1906: 28; 1911: 33–34). The tendency now, however, is to identify it as Pi-Atum (Pithom) of Pap. Anastasi V: 51–61.4 Scientific investigations of Tell el-Retabeh resumed in 2007 by a Polish-Slovak mission (Rzebka et al. 2009: 241–280; 2011: 139–184). It is also clear from Ramesside period texts that the Egyptian toponym tkw, which when written in Hebrew, is Succoth (Muchiki 1999: 232–233) of Exodus 12:37 and 13:30 and Numbers 33:5–6. While tkw in Egyptian texts refers to the Wadi Tumilat of today (Kitchen 1998: 73–78), it also appears to have been connected with the site of Tell el-Maskhuta. Maskhuta is the Arabic name of the present-day village that partially occupies the archaeological site, and linguistically Maskhuta preserves that ancient name tkw, sukkot, in Hebrew. The initial movement of route described in Exodus appears to have been from Piramesse to the Wadi Tumilat, thereby seeking to avoid the Ways of Horus, the northern military highway out of Egypt (cf. Exod 13:17 where it is called “the way of the Land of the Philistines”). By moving toward the Wadi Tumilat, the Hebrews were trying to escape via the other and more southerly route out of Egypt, namely, the Way of Shur as it is known in the Bible (Gen 16:7, 20:1, 25:18). The Egyptian name of this road, presently not known to us, was primarily used for travel to Sinai originating from the locations at base of the Delta (e.g., Memphis). Travelers attempting a direct (straight) route between Piramesse and the central Wadi Tumilat would first encounter the Bahr el-Baqar swamps (east and south of Piramesse) and next the highest elevations of the sandy El Jisr Plateau on the north side of the Wadi (although the elevations do not regularly exceed 25 m above sea level). A more reasonable route would have been south along the Pelusiac channel toward the other great Rameside city in the eastern delta at Bubastis (Tell Basta) and approaching the western entrance of the Wadi Tumilat. “Etham on the edge of the wilderness (Exod 13:20)” is probably at the eastern end of the Wadi Tumilat, possibly near the shores of Lake Timsah. The Hebrew writing of ’etam, like the name Pithom, preserves the name of Atum (Muchiki 1999: 230), the Patron deity of tkw. The inscribed block of Ramesses II smiting foreigners discovered by Petrie at Retabeh demonstrates Atums status as “Lord of Tje(k)u” (Petrie 1906: pl. 30). Furthermore the Arabic name Wadi Tumilat clearly preserves the name Atum, a reminder of the sun god’s influence in the area over the centuries. Lake Timsah would be a logical candidate for the Re(e)d Sea, but the narrative records an abrupt “turning back” (Heb. šub) (Exod 14:2) to a new location before coming “the sea” (hayam), a body of water different than Lake Timsah. This next camp destination is “near Pi-Hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea” and “directly opposite Baal Zephon” (Exod 14:2). …. Migdol can be associated with a fortress of the same name guarding the Ways of Horus in the northwest Sinai along the Mediterranean coast (Gardiner 1920; Hoffmeier 2008b). “Turning back” to the north would put the Hebrew escapees in the midst of the Ballah Lakes, which was the fortified east frontier zone that included the fortified sites of Tjaru (Sile), i.e., Hebua I and Hebua II (Abd el-Maksoud 1998; Abd el-Maksoud and Valbelle 2005, 2011) and Tell el-Borg (Hoffmeier and Abd El-Maksoud 2003). The Egyptian geographical term p3 twfy refers to an area of freshwater and abundant fish, reeds, and rushes (cf. Pap. Anastasi III 2:11–12). The Egyptian p3 twfy has long been linguistically associated with the Hebrew yām sûp or Re(e)d Sea of Exodus 14 and 15 (Gardiner 1947; Lambdin 1953: 153; Hoffmeier 2005). Gardiner called attention to the parallelism between the two bodies of water on Egypt’s NE frontier in Pap. Anastasi III (2:11–12), š-ḥr (Shi-hor of Josh 13:3; Jer 2:18, clearly on the eastern frontier). He went on to make the following observation: “‘the papyrus marshes (p3 twf) come to him with papyrus reeds, and the Waters of Horus (P-shi-Ḥor) with rushes:’ the connection of P3 twf with Biblical יַם-סוּף Yam-sûph ‘Sea of Reeds’ (Heb. Sûph and Eg. twf are the same word) and that of P3- š-Ḥr ‘the Waters of Horus’ with Biblical שִּׁיח֞וֹר Shiḥor are beyond dispute” (Gardiner 1947:201*). Bietak went a step further and identified the northern lake in Egyptian texts—what the French team of Dominique Valbelle and Bruno Marcolongo called the “eastern” or the “paleo-lagoon”—situated east of the sites of Hebua I and II and Tell el-Borg (Valbelle, et al. 1992; Marcolongo 1992)—with P3-š-Ḥr (Bietak 1975). Bietak identified the more southerly lake with P3 twfy and the Biblical יַם-סוּף Yam-sûph Sea of Reeds. Over the past 40 years, he has continued to champion these identifications (Bietak 1987: 166–168; 1996: 2). The archaeological and geological investigations we conducted in northern Sinai between 1998 and 2008 have further clarified the history and their dimensions during the New Kingdom Period. Our work only supports the identifications Gardiner and Bietak proposed, viz., that P3 twfy of Ramesside Period texts and yam sûp of the Exodus narratives should be identified with the Ballah Lake system and that š-ḥr/Shi-hor of Egyptian and biblical texts is the eastern lagoon. ….

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Ahikar, Uriakku (Arioch) of Adana (Ecbatana), extended as Deioces (Daiukku) of Ecbatana

by Damien F. Mackey DEIOCES (Gk. Dēïókēs), name of a Median king; this Greek form, like Assyrian Da-a-a-uk-ku (i.e., Daiukku) and Elamite Da-a-(hi-)(ú-)uk-ka, Da-a-ya-u(k)-ka, and so on, reflects Iranian *Dahyu-ka-, a hypocoristic based on dahyu – “land” (cf. Schmitt). DEIOCES - Encyclopaedia Iranica Awarikus [Arioch] became a vassal of the Neo-Assyrian Empire during the rule of its king Tiglath-pileser III … who listed Awarikus as one of his tributaries in 738 BCE [sic]. …. Awarikus remained loyal to the Neo-Assyrian Empire during conflicts opposing it to Arpad, Gurgum, Kummuh, Samʾal and Urartu, in exchange of which Tiglath-pileser III rewarded him with lands belonging to Arpad, Samʾal and Gurgum. …. Wikipedia Introduction Much of this introductory part will be taken from my article: Ahikar was, like his uncle Tobit, already prominent during the reign of Assyria’s Shalmaneser (3) Ahikar was, like his uncle Tobit, already prominent during the reign of Assyria's Shalmaneser in which I further extended the identity of Ahikar (Achior, Arioch), nephew of Tobit, and governor of Elam for Assyria, to include Awarikus [Uriakku, Arioch] of Adana (Ecbatana). We know this great man now under some several variations of his name, Ahikar (Aḥiqar): http://www.melammu-project.eu/database/gen_html/a0000639.html “The hero has the Akkadian name Ahī-(w)aqar “My brother is dear”, but it is not clear if the story has any historical foundation. The latest entry in a Seleucid list of Seven Sages says: “In the days of Esarhaddon the sage was Aba-enlil-dari, whom the Aramaeans call Ahu-uqar”.” In the Book of Tobit, he is called Ahikar, but Achior, in the Douay version. In the Book of Judith, he is called, again, Achior. His Babylonian name may have been, Esagil-kini-ubba: Famous sage Ahikar as Esagil-kinni-ubba (2) Famous sage Ahikar as Esagil-kinni-ubba Islam turned him into a great sage and polymath, Loqmân: Ahiqar, Aesop and Loqmân https://www.academia.edu/117040128/Ahiqar_Aesop_and_Loqm%C3%A2n but, even more incredibly, a handful of Islamic polymaths, supposedly in AD time, were based on Ahikar, as either Aba-enlil-dari or as Esagil-kini-ubba: Melting down the fake Golden Age of Islamic intellectualism (3) Melting down the fake Golden Age of Islamic intellectualism | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu This man was obviously monumental, leaving a giant historical and literary footprint. We know from the Book of Tobit that Ahikar went to Elam (Elymaïs) (2:10): “For four years I [Tobit] remained unable to see. All my kindred were sorry for me, and Ahikar took care of me for two years before he went to Elymais”. This fact is picked up in a gloss in the Book of Judith in which Achior is referred to, rather confusingly, as Arioch (1:6): “Many nations joined forces with King Arphaxad—all the people who lived in the mountains, those who lived along the Tigris, Euphrates, and Hydaspes rivers, as well as those who lived in the plain ruled by King Arioch of Elam”. Apparently, then, Ahikar actually governed Elam on behalf of the neo-Assyrians. Thus the Book of Judith should have referred to Achior as leader of all the Elamites, rather than (causing much confusion) “Achior … the leader of all the Ammonites” (5:5). Arioch may well be now, also, the “Arioch” of Daniel 2: Did Daniel meet Ahikar? (2) Did Daniel meet Ahikar? We are now in the reign of King Nebuchednezzar the Chaldean. It is most important, however, for what follows, that Nebuchednezzar be recognised as the same king as Esarhaddon, as Ashurbanipal: King Ashurbanipal, the sick and paranoid Nebuchadnezzar of Daniel 4 (2) King Ashurbanipal, the sick and paranoid Nebuchadnezzar of Daniel 4 As “King Arioch of Elam” ‘Are not my commanders all kings?’ Isaiah 10:8 We probably find Arioch as Uriakku, and Urtak, of the Assyrian records: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urtak_(king_of_Elam) Urtak or Urtaku was a king of the ancient kingdom of Elam …. He ruled from 675 to 664 BCE, his reign overlapping those of the Assyrian kings Esarhaddon (681-669) and Ashurbanipal (668-627). …. Mackey’s comment: Not “kings”, but only the one king, Esarhaddon = Ashurbanipal (see above). Urtak was preceded by his brother, Khumban-Khaldash II. …. Khumban-Khaldash made a successful raid against Assyria, and died a short time thereafter. …. He was succeeded by Urtak, who returned to Assyria the idols his elder brother had taken in the raid, and who thereby repaired relations between Elam and Assyria. …. He made an alliance with Assyria's Esarhaddon in 674 … and for a time Elam and Assyria enjoyed friendly relations … which lasted throughout the remainder of Esarhaddon's reign, and deteriorated after Esarhaddon was succeeded by Ashurbanipal [sic]. …. We find Arioch, again, in the context of a geographically revised Elam (Media): Ecbatana and Rages in Media (1) Ecbatana and Rages in Media as the ruler of Adana (Ecbatana) during the neo-Assyrian period, as one Wariku/ Awariku(s), which name is clearly Arioch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awarikus …. Other attestations …. The name Awarikkus referred to in the Karatepe and Çineköy inscriptions as ʾWRK (𐤀𐤅𐤓𐤊‎‎), and Warikkas is referred to in the Hasanbeyli and Cebelireis Daǧı inscriptions as WRYK (𐤅𐤓𐤉𐤊‎)[7] and in the İncirli inscription as WRYKS (𐤅𐤓𐤉𐤊𐤎‎‎).[11] In Akkadian Awarikkus or Warikkas is referred to in Neo-Assyrian inscriptions as ᵐUrikki (𒁹𒌑𒊑𒅅𒆠)[12]) and ᵐUriaikki (𒁹𒌑𒊑𒅀𒅅𒆠[12]).[13][14] …. Life Awarikus claimed descent from one Muksas, who is also referred to in his Phoenician language inscriptions as MPŠ (𐤌𐤐𐤔‎‎), and also appears in Greek sources under the name of Mopsos (Μόψος) [Mackey: derived from Moses?] as a legendary founder of several Greek settlements across the coast of Anatolia during the early Iron Age. This suggests that Awarikus belonged to a dynasty which had been founded by a Greek colonist leader.[15][7][21][22] Damien Mackey’s comment: Is Mopsus a reflection back to Moses, the great Lawgiver? Ahikar, as a Naphtalian Israelite, could, in a sense, have claimed descent from Moses. Reign Awarikus became a vassal of the Neo-Assyrian Empire during the rule of its king Tiglath-pileser III,[23] who listed Awarikus as one of his tributaries in 738 BCE.[7][24][25] Awarikus remained loyal to the Neo-Assyrian Empire during conflicts opposing it to Arpad, Gurgum, Kummuh, Samʾal and Urartu, in exchange of which Tiglath-pileser III rewarded him with lands belonging to Arpad, Samʾal and Gurgum.[26][20] Awarikus seems to have remained a loyal vassal of the Neo-Assyrian Empire throughout most of his reign, thanks to which he was able to reign in Ḫiyawa for a very long period until throughout the rules of Tiglath-pileser III and his successor Shalmaneser V, and was still reigning when Sargon II became the king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire.[27] Ḫiyawa under Awarikus likely cooperated with the Neo-Assyrian forces during Tiglath-pileser III's campaign in the Tabalian region in 729 BCE.[28] In his inscription from his later reign, Awarikus claimed to have enjoyed good relations with his overlord, the Neo-Assyrian king Sargon II, with Awarikus's relation with Sargon II appearing to have been an alliance or partnership through a treaty according to which Sargon II was the protector and suzerain of Awarikus.[29][7] According to this inscription, Awarikus had a very close relationship with Sargon II, and he declared that Sargon II himself and the Neo-Assyrian royal dynasty had become "a mother and father" to him and that the peoples of Ḫiyawa and Assyria had "become one house."[15] According to this same inscription, Awarikus had built 15 fortresses in the west and east of Ḫiyawa.[30][15] Assuming the king WRYK of the Cebelires Daǧı inscription was the same as Awarikus of Hiyawa, his kingdom might have extended to the western limits of Rough Cilicia and nearly reached Pamphylia, and would thus have included Ḫilakku.[31] …. Monuments An inscription by Awarikus is known from the site of Çineköy, located about 30 kilometres to the south of his capital of Adanawa.[23][35] Other monuments of Awarikus include a stela from İncirli and a border stone from Hasanbeyli.[36] Under direct Neo-Assyrian rule After Sargon II's son-in-law and vassal, the king Ambaris of Bīt-Burutaš, had rebelled against the Neo-Assyrian Empire in 713 BCE, he deposed Ambaris and annexed Bīt-Burutaš.[30][35] As part of his reorganisation of the Anatolian possessions of the Neo-Assyrian Empire after the annexation of Bīt-Burutaš, in 713 BCE itself Sargon II imposed a Neo-Assyrian governor on Ḫiyawa who also had authority on Bīt-Burutaš, as well as on the nearby kingdoms of Ḫilakku and Tuwana.[37] Under this arrangement, Awarikus became subordinate to Aššur-šarru-uṣur, who was the first governor of Que, as Ḫiyawa was called in the Neo-Assyrian Akkadian language. Thus, Awarikus was either reduced to the status of a token king or deposed and demoted to a lower position such as an advisor of the governor, while Aššur-šarru-uṣur held all the effective power although the Neo-Assyrian administration sought to preserve, for diplomatic purposes, the illusion that Awarikus was still the ruler of Ḫiyawa in partnership with Aššur-šarru-uṣur.[30][38][39] Thus Hiyawa and other nearby Anatolian kingdoms were placed the authority of Aššur-šarru-uṣur.[40][41][42] Following the appointment of Aššur-šarru-uṣur, Awarikus of Ḫiyawa and Warpalawas II of Tuwana became largely symbolic rulers although they might have still held the power to manage their kingdoms locally.[39] The reason for these changes was due to the fact that, although Awarikus and Warpalawas II had been loyal Neo-Assyrian vassals, Sargon II considered them as being too elderly [sic] to be able to efficiently uphold Neo-Assyrian authority in southeastern Anatolia, where the situation had become volatile because of encroachment by the then growing power of Phrygian kingdom.[39] Deposition The appointment of Aššur-šarru-uṣur as his superior might have led to tensions between him Awarikkus, who had likely been left disillusioned with Neo-Assyrian rule after his long period of loyal service to the Neo-Assyrian Empire. Therefore, Awarikus might have attempted to rebel against the Neo-Assyrian Empire, and therefore in 710 or 709 BCE he sent an embassy composed of fourteen delegates to Urartu to negotiate with the Urartian king in preparation for his rebellion.[43] This embassy was however intercepted by the king Midas of Phrygia, who was seeking a rapprochement with the Neo-Assyrian Empire and therefore handed it over to Aššur-šarru-uṣur.[30][35][44] Awarikus was consequently deposed, and possibly executed, by the Neo-Assyrian Empire for attempting to revolt, after which Ḫiyawa was annexed into the Neo-Assyrian Empire as the province of Que, and Aššur-šarru-uṣur was given full control of Que, which merely formalised the powers that he had already held.[30][45][44] The exact fate of Awarikus is however unknown,[46] and he might already have been dead by the time that Midas handed over his delegation to Assur-sarru-usur, hence why no mention of punishing him appears in the Neo-Assyrian records.[47] Mackey’s comment: No, Arioch was still alive and well during the reign of Esarhaddon, like Urtak (above), “… which lasted throughout the remainder of Esarhaddon’s reign”. Aššur-šarru-uṣur (var. Ashur-resha-ishi), for his part, may well have been one of the sons of Sargon II/Sennacherib, Sharezer (šarru-uṣur), who assassinated their father: Adrammelech and Sharezer murdered king Sennacherib https://www.academia.edu/119221740/Adrammelech_and_Sharezer_murdered_king_Sennacherib When Tobit’s (and presumably Ahikar’s) tribe of Naphtali was taken into captivity by Shalmaneser ‘the Great’, who must be recognised as Shalmaneser III/V, and also as Tiglath-pileser so-called III, or Pul, who took Naphtali into captivity (2 Kings 15:29), Tobit and his family were taken to “Nineveh”, whilst some of Tobit’s relatives, or kinsmen, Ahikar, Raguel and Gabael?, must have been taken into Media (Elam). Since Tiglath-pileser took his Israelite captives “to Halah, and on the Habor [Khabur], the river of Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes” (17:6), then Tobit’s “Nineveh” may likely have been Calah (Nimrud), given here as “Halah”. Deioces of Ecbatana The legendary Deioces, whose name Daiukku might well remind one of Uriakku (Arioch), ruler of Adana in southern Cilicia – Ecbatana in Elam – ruled over that region for a very long time, the same time as Arioch “was the king of the Elymeans” (Judith 1:6). Arioch, who was Tobit’s nephew Ahikar, a kind person, who “gave alms” (Tobit 14:10), befits the wise and just, lawgiving ruler, Deioces. As K. Halk tells of him (2025): Deioces: The Legendary Founder of the Median Kingdom — Historact Platform Deioces (Ancient Greek: Δηιόκης) was the legendary founder and the first king of the Median kingdom, an ancient polity in western Asia that played a significant role in the development of the ancient Near East. Deioces is remembered for his efforts to establish a centralized and orderly government in a region marked by chaos and disunity. His leadership laid the foundation for what would eventually become the Median Empire, a precursor to the mighty Achaemenid Empire. This article explores the life, reign, and legacy of Deioces, as well as his contributions to the formation of one of the first organized states in the region. Through his story, we gain insight into the emergence of the Medes as a powerful and influential people in ancient history. The Background of the Median Kingdom The Medes were an ancient Iranian [sic] people who inhabited the region that is today known as northwestern Iran. The Median kingdom emerged during the early 1st millennium BCE, at a time when the area was dominated by various tribes and small polities. The Medes, along with other Iranian groups, began migrating into the region, where they settled and gradually assimilated with the local population. The political landscape of the region was characterized by a lack of central authority, with numerous tribes vying for power and influence. The Rise of the Medes The Medes are believed to have settled in the region sometime around the 9th century BCE. They were one of several Iranian-speaking groups that migrated southward from the steppes of Central Asia. Over time, the Medes established themselves as a distinct cultural and political entity, and by the 8th century BCE, they began to emerge as a significant power in the region. The early history of the Medes is largely obscure, with much of what is known coming from later sources, such as the writings of Herodotus. The Medes faced challenges from neighboring powers, including the Assyrian Empire, which exerted considerable influence over the region. The Assyrians were a dominant force in the Near East, and their campaigns often brought them into conflict with the Medes. Despite this, the Medes managed to maintain their independence and gradually consolidated their power under the leadership of Deioces. The Rise of Deioces Deioces is traditionally regarded as the first king of the Medes and the founder of the Median kingdom. According to Herodotus, Deioces was a wise and just man who gained the respect and admiration of the Median people. His rise to power was marked by his reputation for fairness and his ability to resolve disputes, which earned him a following among his fellow Medes. The Need for Order During the time of Deioces, the Median tribes were divided and lacked a central authority. The region was plagued by lawlessness and internal conflicts, with each tribe governed by its own leader. In this chaotic environment, Deioces distinguished himself as a man of integrity and wisdom. He became known for his ability to mediate disputes and deliver impartial judgments, which led many people to seek his counsel. Recognizing the need for stability and order, the Medes decided to unite under a single ruler. They chose Deioces as their leader, believing that his sense of justice and fairness would bring peace and unity to their people. Deioces accepted the role of king, but he set certain conditions: he demanded that the Medes build a fortified capital and establish a centralized government that would allow him to exercise authority effectively. The Establishment of Ecbatana One of Deioces’ first actions as king was the construction of a new capital city, which he named Ecbatana (modern-day Hamadan in Iran). Ecbatana was strategically located and well-fortified, serving as the political and administrative center of the newly unified Median kingdom. According to Herodotus, the city was built with a series of seven concentric walls, each painted in different colors, creating an impressive and formidable fortress. The establishment of Ecbatana as the capital was a significant step in the consolidation of Median power. It provided a central location from which Deioces could govern, and it symbolized the unity of the Median tribes under a single ruler. The construction of Ecbatana also demonstrated Deioces’ vision for a strong, centralized state that could withstand external threats and maintain internal order. The Reign of Deioces Deioces’ reign marked the beginning of a new era for the Medes, characterized by political stability and the establishment of a centralized government. As king, Deioces implemented a number of reforms aimed at strengthening his authority and creating a more organized and cohesive society. Centralization of Power One of Deioces’ primary goals was to centralize power and establish a strong monarchy. He sought to distance himself from the people, believing that a sense of awe and reverence was necessary to maintain authority. …. … Deioces was able to create a stable and orderly government that laid the foundation for the future expansion of the Median kingdom. Legal Reforms and Governance As a ruler known for his sense of justice, Deioces placed a strong emphasis on the development of a legal system that would ensure fairness and equality. He established a formal system of laws and appointed judges to oversee legal matters throughout the kingdom. These judges were responsible for resolving disputes and ensuring that justice was administered impartially. The establishment of a legal system helped to create a sense of order and stability within the kingdom. It also reinforced Deioces’ authority, as he was seen as the ultimate source of justice and the guarantor of the people’s rights. By creating a system of laws and governance, Deioces was able to transform the Medes from a collection of loosely connected tribes into a unified and organized state. The Legacy of Deioces …. Deioces was a visionary leader whose efforts to establish a centralized and orderly government laid the foundation for the rise of the Median kingdom and the eventual emergence of the Achaemenid Empire. His reign marked the beginning of a new era for the Medes, characterized by political stability, legal reforms, and the construction of a powerful and well-organized state. Although much of what is known about Deioces comes from the writings of Herodotus and may contain elements of legend, his legacy as the founder of the Median kingdom is undeniable. ….