Sunday, July 12, 2026

Quasi-royal influence of Joseph, Haman, and prophet Daniel, all entitled “Father”

 


 

by

Damien F. Mackey

  

Just as Joseph the Dreamer was like the Sun, obfuscating the light of his parents and brothers (Genesis 37:9), so did his quasi-royal power, and that of Haman and Daniel, at times, even seem to overshadow, or usurp, that of the Pharaoh/king.

  

This is based on my most recent article:

 

King Nabonidus may have thought of wise Daniel, Nabu-balatsu-iqbi, as his “father”

 

(7) King Nabonidus may have thought of wise Daniel, Nabu-balatsu-iqbi, as his "father"

 

It was customary for ancient kings to refer to their wise mentors and counsellors, their second-in-command, as “Father”.

 

Here, I just want to reflect upon the enormous power and/or influence exerted by three high officials known as “Father”: viz. Joseph of Egypt; Haman; and the prophet Daniel.

 

Just as Joseph the Dreamer was like the Sun, obfuscating the light of his parents and brothers (Genesis 37:9), so did his quasi-royal power, and that of Haman and Daniel, at times, seem even to overshadow, or usurp, that of the Pharaoh/king.

 

Joseph

 

Joseph, son of Jacob, was apparently, in his character and temperament, rather different from the extremely mild Moses (Numbers 12:3): “Now Moses was a very humble man, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth”.

 

Moses, of many different historical guises (alter egos), had tasted total power as Pharaoh - as Userkare of Egypt’s Sixth Dynasty - but decided that he did not want that (cf. Hebrews 11:24-25), and so he abdicated.

 

Joseph, also of many different historical guises (alter egos), ruled as a virtual Pharaoh, for instance, as Den (Udimu) of Egypt’s First Dynasty, who bore a royal cartouche.

 

On this, see my article:

 

Joseph also as Den, ‘he who brings water’

 

(11) Joseph also as Den, 'he who brings water'

 

And as Ankhtifi, the saviour of Egypt from a protracted Famine, Joseph even seemed to have excluded Pharaoh entirely. 

 

Previously I wrote on this (and note how dramatically he contrasts with the mild Moses):

 

Just who was this incredible character like no other, the mysterious Ankhtifi?

 

I asked this question right at the end of my recent article:

 

Egypt’s high official, Ankhtifi, outboasts even great Senenmut

 

(4) Egypt’s high official, Ankhtifi, outboasts even great Senenmut | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu

 

Who, indeed, was Ankhtifi, a high official of Egypt, seemingly a quasi-Pharaoh (see “ruled like a pharaoh” below), who, in his Autobiography, did not even bother to observe standard Egyptian protocol by mentioning the current Pharaoh?

Which means that Egyptologists cannot be exactly sure when Ankhtifi lived.

 

Bearing a host of impressive titles, Anhktifi - or whoever wrote his Autobiography - boasted of his having been like no other man ever born:

 

“I am a man without equal …. I am the front of people and the

back of people because (my) like will not exist; he will not exist.

(My) like could not have been born; he was not born”.

 

Could Ankhtifi have been the renowned Joseph, who likewise was front and centre involved in a terrible Famine?

Certainly Ankhtifi’s claim to have been the greatest ever to have been born seems to be echoed in the sage Sirach’s short praise of Joseph (Sirach 49:15):

 

Nor was anyone ever born like Joseph …”.

Haman

 

Joseph, who was righteous, pure and honourable, and a faithful servant of the Lord, may also have inherited some of his father Jacob’s cunning, and that’s alright (Matthew 10:16): ‘Behold, I send you out as sheep in the midst of wolves; so be shrewd as serpents and innocent as doves’, was nothing, however, like the conspiratorial Haman, and his perhaps even shrewder wife:

 

Haman and his shrewd wife, Zeresh, remind us of Ahab and wife, Jezebel

 

(4) Haman and his shrewd wife, Zeresh, remind us of Ahab and wife, Jezebel

 

Right at the beginning, the machiavellian Haman had been involved in a conspiracy against King Ahasuerus (Xerxes) that was foiled by Mordecai. And this was one of the reasons for Haman’s fierce resentment against Mordecai. Haman had been planning to overthrow the Medo-Persian kingdom and return it to the Babylonians.

Some texts wrongly say “Macedonians” (Esther 16:13-14):

 

For with certain new and unheard of devices he hath sought the destruction of Mardochai [Mordecai], by whose fidelity and good services our life was saved, and of Esther the partner of our kingdom, with all their nation:

Thinking that after they were slain, he might work treason against us left alone without friends, and might transfer the kingdom of the Persians to the Macedonians.

 

Haman had weasled his way into respect and had thus completely captivated the admiration and hearts of the King and the people (vv. 10-12):

 

Now that you may more plainly understand what we say, Aman [Haman] the son of Amadathi [Hammedatha], a Macedonian [sic] both in mind and country, and having nothing of the Persian blood, but with his cruelty staining our goodness, was received being a stranger by us:

And found our humanity so great towards him, that he was called our father, and was worshipped by all as the next man after the king:

But he was so far puffed up with arrogancy, as to go about to deprive us of our kingdom and life.

 

This “father” of the Medo-Persians even authored a conspiratorial edict (decree) on behalf of the king, who gave Haman his signet ring (3:8-10):

 

Then Haman said to King Xerxes, ‘There is a certain people dispersed among the peoples in all the provinces of your kingdom who keep themselves separate. Their customs are different from those of all other people, and they do not obey the king’s laws; it is not in the king’s best interest to tolerate them. If it pleases the king, let a decree be issued to destroy them, and I will give ten thousand talents of silver to the king’s administrators for the royal treasury’.

So the king took his signet ring from his finger and gave it to Haman son of Hammedatha, the Agagite [Captive], the enemy of the Jews.

 

Contrast this with, the albeit shrewd, Joseph, who greatly respected his superiors and who would do nothing dishonourable against them, e.g. in the case of Potipher’s wife.

 

Joseph, was highly honoured by the ruler just as Haman would later be, but Joseph’s exaltation did nothing to harm the country in which he abode as a foreigner, unlike the foreign Haman, who intended to use his power to bring down the King and the Jews.

 

Daniel

 

The wise and holy Daniel was historically (as Nabu-balatsu-iqbi, see article above) called “father” by the eccentric and superstitious king, Nabonidus (Nebuchadnezzar).

 

So wise was he (cf. Ezekiel 28:3: “Are you wiser than Daniel? Is no secret hidden from you?”), having not only interpreted the King’s Dream, but having actually recalled it for the King (Daniel 2), that King Nebuchadnezzar fell down and virtually worshipped Daniel.

 

Once again, as with Joseph and Haman, the superior-ranked ruler was lowering himself before the inferior-ranked official.

 

Daniel 2:46-47:

Then King Nebuchadnezzar fell prostrate before Daniel and paid him honor and ordered that an offering and incense be presented to him. The king said to Daniel, ‘Surely your God is the God of gods and the Lord of kings and a revealer of mysteries, for you were able to reveal this mystery’.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

King Nabonidus may have thought of wise Daniel, Nabu-balatsu-iqbi, as his “father”

 

 


by 

Damien F. Mackey

  

“In his inscriptions, Nabonidus refers to his father Nabu-balatsu-iqbi as a

"learned counsellor" … "wise prince", "perfect prince" … "heroic governor".”

 Wikipedia

  

It was customary for ancient kings to refer to their wise mentors and counsellors as “Father”.

 

The great Joseph of Egypt, for one, was “Father to Pharaoh” (Genesis 45:8).

 

The title in ancient Egyptian was basically it ntr:

 

"Father of the God Beloved of the God" the Egyptian title "it-ntr mry-ntr"

and the rites of royal investiture

Author

Birrell, Michael Damian. 

Date

1998

 

According to the following, the title usually referred to the king’s father-in-law:

God's Father | Ancient Egypt Wiki | Fandom

God's Father or Divine Father (ancient Egyptian: it-nr) is an ancient Egyptian honorific title. The title was usually held by the father-in-law of the Pharaoh, the most famous individuals would be Yuya and Ay, the latter even used this title as his epithet upon ascending to the throne. The title may also be given to the non-royal father of a pharaoh, as the title was attested for Mentuhotep, the non-royal father of Pharaoh Sobekhotep III of the Thirteenth Dynasty. At the same time, the title could also serve as an honorific title for consecrated priests, in which case the title was usually extended with reference to the deity of the priest's cult, the most common example being the "God's Father of Amun".”

 

But that could not have been the case with Joseph.

 

The title can apparently refer to one who was second to the king - as clearly was the case with Joseph (Genesis 41:43): “[Pharaoh] had [Joseph] ride in a chariot as his second-in-command … and people shouted before him, ‘Make way!’ Thus he put him in charge of the whole land of Egypt”.

 

Much later, in the Medo-Persian realm, King Ahasuerus and his people had referred to the crafty and conspiratorial – but no doubt extremely charismatic – Haman, by this highly exalted title (Esther 16:10-11):

 

 ‘Now that you may more plainly understand what we say, Aman [Haman] the son of Amadathi [Hammedatha] … having nothing of the Persian blood, but with his cruelty staining our goodness, was received being a stranger by us: And found our humanity so great towards him, that he was called our father, and was worshipped by all as the next man after the king’.

 

In the case of Joseph, Haman and Daniel (whom we shall now consider), the second-in-command can be found to have even, in certain instances, dominated a ruler who was less wise (in the case of Joseph and Daniel), or less shrewd (in the case of Haman).

 

Now I suggest that, when King Nabonidus referred to Nabu-balatsu-iqbi - otherwise unattested (under that name) - as his “father”, he was not meaning his biological father. He was referring to his wise counsellor, whom he made governor (Daniel 2:48): “Then the king placed Daniel in a high position and lavished many gifts on him. He made him ruler over the entire province of Babylon and placed him in charge of all its wise men”.

 

Not only do the titles that the king uses with reference to Nabu-balatsu-iqbi, "learned counsellor" … "wise prince", "perfect prince" … "heroic governor", wonderfully fit with what we know about the prophet Daniel (1:3-4):

 

Then the king ordered Ashpenaz, chief of his court officials, to bring into the king’s service some of the Israelites from the royal family and the nobility— young men without any physical defect, handsome, showing aptitude for every kind of learning, well informed, quick to understand, and qualified to serve in the king’s palace ...

 

but the name, Nabu-balatsu-iqbi, seems to equate almost perfectly with the Babylonian name that was given to Daniel: Belteshazzar.

 

It needs to be noted immediately that Belteshazzar was not, as many may think it is, a Bel-name, like e.g. Belshazzar:

Belshazzar - Wikipedia

Belshazzar (Babylonian cuneiform  Bēl-šar-uur … meaning "Bel, protect the king" … Hebrewבֵּלְשַׁאצַּר Bēlšaʾṣṣar) …”.

 

It is more of a balatsu name, as in our Nabu-balatsu-iqbi:

nabu_balatsu_iqbi — Grokipedia

“The name Nabû-balāsu-iqbi is attested in Neo-Babylonian Akkadian cuneiform as 𒀭𒀝𒁀𒆷𒀜𒋢𒅅𒁉 (variants include dAG-ba-la-at-su-iq-bi and d na-bi-um-ba-la-at-su-iq-bi), with the standard romanization Nabû-balāsu-iqbi. …. This theophoric personal name invokes Nabû, the Mesopotamian god of wisdom, writing, and scribes, whose cult was prominent in the Neo-Babylonian period, particularly at Borsippa near Babylon. …. Linguistically, the name breaks down into three elements: Nabû (the divine name), balāsu (possessive form of balāu, meaning "life," with su indicating "his"), and iqbi (the third-person perfect form of the verb qabû, "to speak" or "to command"). The full meaning is thus "Nabû has spoken (to grant) his life," idiomatically interpreted as "Nabû has given him life" or "Nabû has preserved his life," reflecting a prayer for divine protection and vitality. …. Such constructions emphasize the deity's agency in bestowing essential blessings like longevity or prosperity”.

 

Moreover, the fact that it has Nabu for its theophoric seems to accord perfectly with what King Nebuchednezzar - a Nabu/Nebo name - says about Daniel’s given name (Daniel 4:8): ‘Finally, Daniel came into my presence and I told him the dream. (He is called Belteshazzar, after the name of my god, and the spirit of the holy gods is in him.)’

 

Thus we could well expect that Daniel’s Babylonian name, Belteshazzar, comprised the elements, Nabu (‘… after the name of my god …’), and balatsu-.

And this is just what we do find in the name Nabu-balatsu-iqbi.

 

These names were quite variable.

 

Previously I have, with this sort of name construction in mind, attempted an historical identification of Daniel as:

 

Nabu ahhe bullit, Daniel as Governor of Babylon

 

(10) Nabu ahhe bullit, Daniel as Governor of Babylon

 

I have also suggested an identification of Daniel with Ubaru (Gubaru), governor of Babylon:

 

Prophet Daniel as Esarhaddon's governor of Babylon, Ubāru

 

(10) Prophet Daniel as Esarhaddon's governor of Babylon, Ubāru

 

Note, Ubāru is not a Belteshazzar type name, but more of a description. It means that Ubāru was, just like the Hebrew Daniel, a “stranger, foreign guest, resident alien, guest-friend”.

 

Nabu-balatsu-iqbi - Wikipedia

….

Nabu-balatsu-iqbi (Neo-Babylonian Akkadian𒀭𒀝𒁀𒆷𒀜𒋢𒅅𒁉, romanized: Nabû-balāsu-iqbi) was the father of the Neo-Babylonian king Nabonidus (r.556539 BC). A mysterious figure, Nabu-balatsu-iqbi is only referenced in Nabonidus's own inscriptions, with no other record of his existence or status.

….

In his inscriptions, Nabonidus refers to his father Nabu-balatsu-iqbi as a "learned counsellor" … "wise prince", "perfect prince" and "heroic governor". …. Nabonidus never elaborates more on his father's origin and ethnicity, just maintaining that he was courageous, wise and devout. …. No person named Nabu-balatsu-iqbi who can reasonably be identified as Nabonidus's father appears in documents prior to Nabonidus's reign, making his father's status and position unclear.

…. 

…. Nabu-balatsu-iqbi was also … possibly of … Aramean origin. ….

That Nabu-balatsu-iqbi is repeatedly referred to as "prince" in Nabonidus's inscriptions suggests some sort of noble status and political importance. …. Frauke Weiershäuser and Jamie Novotny speculated that Nabu-balatsu-iqbi could have been an Aramean chief. ….

 

Nabu-balatsu-iqbi was, like Daniel, a “mysterious figure”, noble (“chief”), and foreign (Aramean).

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Sixty-two years of Darius, who was Cyrus ‘the Great’

 

 


by

 Damien F. Mackey

  

That very night Belshazzar, king of the Babylonians, was slain, 

and Darius the Mede took over the kingdom, at the age of sixty-two”.

 Daniel 5:30-31

 

Wonderful parallels this revision now offers

 

With Amēl-Marduk (Evil-Merodach) identified as Belshazzar – and the father, Nebuchednezzar, as Nabonidus – then we find (to be explained further below):

 

Amēl-Marduk governing Babylon while his father is (away and) incapacitated, and, likewise,

Belshazzar, governing Babylon while his father is (away and) incapacitated.

 

And with Amēl-Marduk/Belshazzar further identified with Shamash-shum-ukin, a supposed brother of Ashurbanipal (my Nebuchednezzar/Nabonidus), but actually his son, then the apparent incarceration of the troublesome Amēl-Marduk by his father, Nebuchednezzar, accords well with the incarceration of the son, Nabu-shum-ukin (= Shamash-shum-ukin) (see below).

 

What’s more, Nebuchednezzar is thought to have incarcerated Nabu-shum-ukin along with Jehoiachin, the former king of Judah.

 

That might go a long way towards explaining why the son of the Chaldean king would, upon the death of his father, Nebuchednezzar, exalt Jehoiachin in the kingdom.

They had been fellow captives.

 

2 Kings 25:27: “In the thirty-seventh year of the captivity of Jehoiachin, the king of Judah, on the twenty-seventh day of the twelfth month, Evil-merodach who had become king that year, released Jehoiachin, the king of Judah, from prison”.

 

            A brick discovered at Babylon with an inscription of Amēl-Marduk. Photo: © Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Vorderasiatisches Museum, Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft; Foto: Robert Koldewey, 1911 (Bab Ph 2302). Used with Permission.

 

King Belshazzar

 

Despite almost universal doubt, King Belshazzar really did exist as a son and successor of Nebuchednezzar ‘the Great’.

Biblically, Belshazzar is referenced in Baruch 1:11, 12, and he was, as well, the historically verifiable Amēl-Marduk, the biblical Evil-Merodach, who, as we have read, set free the captive Judaean king, Jehoiachin.

 

King Jehoiachin, too, is historically verified.

 

The plot thickens.

In my article:

 

Nebuchednezzar incarcerated his son

 

(6) Nebuchednezzar incarcerated his son

 

we learn that Amēl-Marduk was a troublesome son whom King Nebuchednezzar had placed in prison along with Jehoiachin of Judah, and that Amēl-Marduk may otherwise have been called Nabu-shum-ukin – which accords nicely  with my view that the supposed brother of Ashurbanipal (my Nebuchednezzar), Shamash-shum-ukin, was actually Ashurbanipal’s son and successor, Sin-shar-ishkun:

 

Fitting Ashurbanipal’s so called brother, Shamash-shum-ukin, into my revised scheme

 

(3) Fitting Ashurbanipal’s so called brother, Shamash-shum-ukin, into my revised scheme

 

King Nebuchednezzar’s son, Amēl-Marduk/Belshazzar (= Sin-shar-ishkun/Shamash-shum-ukin), was able to wield significant power (though not actual kingship) while his father was cruelly incapacitated during his protracted illness.

He must have over-reached himself somewhere along the line, because we learn that he was, as Amēl-Marduk (or Nabu-shum-ukin), imprisoned for an unknown period of time.

 

On this troublesome son of Nebuchednezzar, we read as follows:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amel-Marduk

Amēl-Marduk was the successor of his father, Nebuchadnezzar … (r.605562 BC). ….

It seems that the succession to Nebuchadnezzar was troublesome and that the king's last years [sic] were prone to political instability. …. In one of the inscriptions written very late in his reign, after Nebuchadnezzar had already ruled for forty years, the king affirms that he had been chosen for kingship by the gods before he had even been born.

 

Stressing divine legitimacy in such a fashion was usually only done by usurpers or if there were political problems with his intended successor. Given that Nebuchadnezzar had been king for several decades, and had been the legitimate heir of his predecessor, the first option seems unlikely.

….

 

Amēl-Marduk was chosen as heir during his father's reign … and is attested as crown prince in 566 BC. …. evidence of altercations between Nebuchadnezzar and Amel-Marduk makes his selection as heir seem even more improbable. …. In one text, Nebuchadnezzar and Amēl-Marduk are both implicated in some conspiracy, with one of the two accused of bad conduct against the temples and people: ….

 

Concerning [Nebu]chadnezzar they thought [. . .] his life were not treasured [by them . . . the people of] Babylon to Amēl-Marduk spoke, not [. . .] . . . "concerning the treasure of [the Esagila] and Babylon [. . ."] they mentioned the cities of the great gods [. . .] his heart over son and daughter will not let [. . .] family and tribe are [not . . .] in his heart. All that is full [. . .] his thoughts were not about the well-being of [the Esagila and Babylon . . .], with attentive ears he went to the holy gates [. . .] prayed to the Lord of lords [. . .] he cried bitterly to Marduk, the gods [..w]ent his prayer to [. . .]. ….

 

The inscription contains accusations, though it is unclear to whom they are directed, concerning the desecration of holy places and the exploitation of the populace—failures in the two main responsibilities of the king of Babylon. The accused is afterwards stated to have cried and prayed to Marduk, Babylon's national deity. ….

 

Another text from late in Nebuchadnezzar's reign contains a prayer by an imprisoned son of Nebuchadnezzar named Nabu-shum-ukin ( Nabû-šum-ukīn), who states that he was imprisoned because of a conspiracy against him.

 

…. According to the Leviticus Rabbah, a 5th–7th-century AD Midrashic text, Amel-Marduk was imprisoned by his father alongside the captured Judean king Jeconiah (also known as Jehoiachin) because some of the Babylonian officials had proclaimed him king while Nebuchadnezzar was away. …. The Assyriologist Irving Finkel argued in 1999 that Nabu-shum-ukin was the same person as Amel-Marduk, who changed his name to "man of Marduk" once he was released as reverence towards the god to whom he had prayed. …. Finkel's conclusions have been accepted as convincing by other scholars … and would also explain the previous text, perhaps relating to the same incidents.

…. 

 

The Chronicles of Jerahmeel, a Hebrew work on history possibly written in the 12th century, erroneously states that Amēl-Marduk was Nebuchadnezzar's eldest son, but that his father sidelined him in favour of his brother, 'Nebuchadnezzar the Younger' (a fictional figure not attested in any other source), and was thus imprisoned together with Jeconiah until the death of Nebuchadnezzar the Younger, after which Amel-Marduk was made king. ….

 

Considering the available evidence, it is possible that Nebuchadnezzar saw Amēl-Marduk as an unworthy heir and sought to replace him with another son.

 

Why Amēl-Marduk nevertheless became king is not clear. …. Regardless, Amel-Marduk's administrative duties probably began before he became king, during the last few weeks or months of his father's reign when Nebuchadnezzar was ill and dying. …. The last known tablet dated to Nebuchadnezzar's reign, from Uruk, is dated to the same day, 7 October, as the first known tablet of Amel-Marduk, from Sippar. ….

 

[End of quote]

 

Apparently, also – and again, right in line with my identification of Amēl-Marduk with Belshazzar, son of Nabonidus – Amēl-Marduk had governed the kingdom while Nebuchednezzar was away, incapacitated.

 

“… officials … bewildered by the king's behavior, counseled Evilmerodach

to assume responsibility for affairs of state so long as his father was unable

to carry out his duties. Lines 6 and on would then be a description of Nebuchadnezzar's behavior as described to Evilmerodach”.

 

British Museum tablet No. BM 34113

Tradition has King Nabonidus going through a period of sickness, or alienation, during which time he was absent from his kingdom.

 

For example we read this (somewhat inaccurate) account at:

https://www.archaeology.org/issues/458-2203/features/10334-babylon-nabonidus-last-king

…. Nabonidus, who is mistakenly identified as his predecessor Nebuchadnezzar II (r. 605–562 B.C.), is described as a mad king obsessed with dreams. According to the Book of Daniel, the king leaves Babylon to live in the wilderness for seven years. This depiction overlaps somewhat with Nabonidus’ own inscriptions, in which he emphasizes that he was an especially pious man who paid heed to dreams as the divine messages of the gods. Nabonidus was also infamous in antiquity for abandoning Babylon for 10 years to live in the deserts of Saudi Arabia, where he established a kind of shadow capital at the oasis of Tayma. This was a strange and unprecedented move for a Mesopotamian ruler. …. 

 

As I see it, though, King Nabonidus was not “mistakenly identified as his predecessor Nebuchednezzar”. Nabonidus was Nebuchednezzar:

 

Daniel’s Mad King was Nebuchednezzar, was Nabonidus

 

(4) Daniel’s Mad King was Nebuchednezzar, was Nabonidus | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu

 

It is known that King Nabonidus’s son, Belshazzar, looked after the affairs of state during the absence of the legitimate king, his father.

William H. Shea, for instance, has written on this unconventional situation (Andrews University Seminary Studies, Summer 1982, Vol. 20, No. 2, pp. 135-136):

 

NABONIDUS, BELSHAZZAR, AND THE BOOK OF DANIEL: AN UPDATE

 

https://www.andrews.edu/library/car/cardigital/Periodicals/AUSS/1982-2/1982-2-05.pdf

 

…. Entrusting the kingship to Belshazzar, as mentioned in the Verse Account, is not the same as making him king.

 

The Verse Account refers to Belshazzar as the king's eldest son when the kingship was "entrusted" to him, and the Nabonidus Chronicle refers to him as the "crown prince" through the years that Nabonidus spent in Tema [Tayma]. Moreover, the New Year's festival was not celebrated during the years of Nabonidus' absence because the king was not in Babylon. This would suggest that the crown prince, who was caretaker of the kingship at this time, was not considered an adequate substitute for the king in those ceremonies. Oaths were taken in Belshazzar's name and jointly in his name and his father's name, which fact indicates Belshazzar's importance, but this is not the equivalent of calling him king.

There is no doubt about Belshazzar's importance while he governed Babylonia during his father's absence, but the question remains - did he govern the country as its king? So far, we have no explicit contemporary textual evidence to indicate that either Nabonidus or the Babylonians appointed Belshazzar as king at this time. ….

 

Given the pre-eminence of the name Nebuchednezzar over the less familiar one of his alter ego, Nabonidus, I would be extremely pleased to find evidence in the historical records of an illness and alienation of Nebuchednezzar qua Nebuchednezzar.

 

And so I have, thanks to A. K. Grayson.

 

For, as I wrote in my article:

 

Cyrus as ‘Darius the Mede’ who succeeded Belshazzar

 

(4) Cyrus as ‘Darius the Mede’ who succeeded Belshazzar | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu

 

I was gratified to learn of certain documentary evidence attesting to some apparent mad, or erratic, behaviour on the part of King Nebuchednezzar the Chaldean, to complement the well-attested “Madness of Nabonidus”.

This led me to conclude - based on a strikingly parallel situation - that Evil-Merodach, son and successor of Nebuchednezzar, was Belshazzar.

 

I reproduce that information here (with ref. to British Museum tablet No. BM 34113 (sp 213), published by A. K. Grayson in 1975): 

 

Read lines 3, 6, 7, 11, 12, and Mas referring to strange behavior by Nebuchadnezzar, which has been brought to the attention of Evilmerodach by state officials. Life had lost all value to Nebuchadnezzar, who gave contradictory orders, refused to accept the counsel of his courtiers, showed love neither to son nor daughter, neglected his family, and no longer performed his duties as head of state with regard to the Babylonian state religion and its principal temple. Line 5, then, can refer to officials who, bewildered by the king's behavior, counseled Evilmerodach to assume responsibility for affairs of state so long as his father was unable to carry out his duties. Lines 6 and on would then be a description of Nebuchadnezzar's behavior as described to Evilmerodach. Since Nebuchadnezzar later recovered (Dan. 4:36), the counsel of the king's courtiers to Evil-merodach may later have been considered "bad" (line 5), though at the time it seemed the best way out of a national crisis.

 

Since Daniel records that Nebuchadnezzar was "driven from men" (Dan. 4:33) but later reinstated as king by his officials (verse 36), Evilmerodach, Nebuchadnezzar's eldest son, may have served as regent during his father's incapacity. Official records, however, show Nebuchadnezzar as king during his lifetime.

 

Comment: Now, is this not the very same situation that we have found with regard to King Nabonidus’ acting strangely, and defying the prognosticators, whilst the rule at Babylon - though not the kingship - lay in the hands of his eldest son, Belshazzar?

 

King Nebuchednezzar’s son, once imprisoned (as Amēl-Marduk/Nabu-shum-ukin), ultimately, now as sole King, died a violent death no matter what name we give to him.

 

Calculating those sixty-two years (revised)

 

Working backwards from Daniel 5:30-31: “That very night Belshazzar, king of the Babylonians, was slain, and Darius the Mede took over the kingdom, at the age of sixty-two”, we connect Year 1 of Darius the Mede (Cyrus) to the last year of Belshazzar, say, Year 3/4.

We then add that 4 to the 43 years of the reign of Nebuchednezzar ‘the Great’ (same as the 43 years of Ashurbanipal) = 47.

Since Year 4 of King Jehoiakim of Judah coincided with Year 1 of Nebuchednezzar (Jeremiah 25:1), then Year 1 of Jehoiakim would bring us to (3+47) that nice round number of 50.

Another 12 years are needed (12 + 50) to bring us to our sought-after 62. That would take us back 12 years into the reign of King Josiah of Judah, the father of Jehoiakim. Subtracting 12 years from the 31 year-reign of Josiah, we arrive at Year 19 of Josiah, one year after the discovery of the Book of the Law (cf, 2 Kings 22:1, 3, 8).

 

This date approximately, and allowing for all of my mathematical uncertainties, would be when Darius/Cyrus was born.

 

Now, in my greatly streamlined, revised chronology, the life Cyrus, of whom the prophet Isaiah wrote (44:24-28 and 45:1-13), would have overlapped with the latter years of the long life of the prophet Isaiah.

 

So, instead of Isaiah having to make long-range – over 200 years in advance – predictions about Cyrus, he was actually writing of a much younger contemporary; perhaps he even knew about the young lad personally from exiled Hebrews.