Rehoboam, King of Judah (931-914 BC)
"Thus I (Solomon) hated all the fruit of my labor for
which I had labored under the sun,
for I must leave it to the man who will come after me.
And who knows whether he will be a wise man or a fool?
Yet he will have control over all the fruit of my labor for which I have
labored by acting wisely under the sun.
This too is vanity.
Therefore I completely despaired of all the fruit of my labor for which I had
labored under the sun."
(Ecclesiastes 2:18–20)
Shishak I, King of Egypt (945-924 BC) Karnak Invasion of Canaan relief: 926 BC 1 Kings 11:40; 14:25-26; 2 Chronicles 12:2-9 187 city "name rings" in Israel and 43 Bible cities! |
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Shishak Battle Relief at Karnak: Photos and drawings with labeled name rings: Each town is represented by one, two or three name rings that appear as Hebrew captive slaves with their hands tied behind their backs and their necks tied together in a string of ropes. Note the hairstyle and beard which represents that the Jews looked like in 926 BC. Central to the relief is the Egyptian pagan god Amon-Ra with the tall double crown. Pharaoh Shishak is seen in all his conquering glory to the right in a large body outline that is still visible. In the center bottom are all the conquered Hebrew city mayors (chieftains) with uplifted hands as a sign of submission to Shishak to whom they paid tribute. Rehoboam fortified 15 cities, four of which were conquered by Shishak and have a corresponding name ring: Gath, Hebron, Adoraim, Aijalon. Click on images for high resolution |
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43 Bible cities listed in 926 BC Pictured here are three of the 187 city name rings on the wall of the Temple of Amun in Karnak, Egypt from the Shishak invasion of Israel and Judah in 926 BC just as the Bible says! There are at least 43 name rings that are known Bible cities! |
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Archaeologists are digging up bible stories!!! |
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Archaeology is an important science that confirms the historical accuracy of the Bible. Since the Bible refers to hundreds of cities, kings, and places, we would expect to find evidence from on-site excavations. And this is exactly what we have found. The Bible is the most historically accurate book of history on earth. Read the Bible daily! |
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Rehoboam, King of Judah (931-914 BC)
"Thus I
(Solomon) hated all the fruit of my labor for which I had labored under the
sun,
for I must leave it to the man who will come after me.
And who knows whether he will be a wise man or a fool?
Yet he will have control over all the fruit of my labor for which I have
labored by acting wisely under the sun.
This too is vanity.
Therefore I completely despaired of all the fruit of my labor for which I had
labored under the sun."
(Ecclesiastes 2:18–20)
Shishak I, King of Egypt (945-924 BC)
Karnak Invasion of Canaan relief: 926 BC
1 Kings 11:40; 14:25-26; 2 Chronicles 12:2-9
187 city "name rings" in Israel and 43 Bible cities!
Introduction:
a. Sheshonq I
b. Shoshenq I
c. Shishaq I
d. Susac I
e. Shoshenk I
6. The 7.6 meter high relief contains about 187 different "name rings", each representing a city or place conquered by Shishak in his 926 BC invasion of Israel and Canaan.
a. Only about 125 are visible today. Some have been destroyed, vandalized or looted since the time they were documented. Others were lost long earlier.
b. There are 11 rows of name-rings that make up the 187 city names.
7. "GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE BUBAS'TITE PORTAL: The Bubastite Portal is the south entrance to the great First Court of the Temple of Amun at Karnak. It was architecturally conceived as a uniform part of the wall and colonnade surrounding the court. Had it not been for the presence of the temple of Ramses III in the way, this entrance would probably have been placed directly opposite the north entrance at a point almost exactly in the middle of the Ramses temple. Under the circumstances it was built to occupy the space between the Second Pylon and the Ramses temple, and became somewhat more elaborate than the north entrance by the necessary addition of a pilaster against each of the earlier structures. Both north and south walls of the court exactly continue the corresponding walls of the Hypostyle Hall. This was made simple by the fact that the walls of the Hypostyle Hall had been built so as to overlap partially the ends of the Second Pylon because the hall assumed greater proportions than could be inclosed by walls abutting as was customary on the back of the pylon. The walls of the First Court thus continue from the ends of the walls of the Hypostyle Hall overlapping the remainder of the ends of the Second Pylon. Of the area occupied by the thickness of the Bubastite Portal on the face of the Second Pylon only the portion on which the east pilaster abuts is obscured by masonry. On the contrary, the entire area of the east wall of the Ramses III temple from the facade of the portal to the north edge of the west pilaster is covered with the masonry of the portal. There is one fact of importance which must be kept in mind in any consideration of the Bubastite Portal and of the court of which it is a part. Although the portal is an integral part in design of the wall and colonnade inclosing the court, it is physically a separate entity. In the building process it could have been and undoubtedly was erected as a unit and most likely first. The mud-brick scaffolds and ramps used in erecting it could have been built and then removed without reference to those required for constructing the remainder of the enclosure. So also the dressing of the surfaces and the decoration could be done and obviously- were done without reference to the rest of the wall and colonnade." (Reliefs and Inscriptions at Karnak: The Bubasite Portal by The Epigraphic Survey, George R. Hughes, The University Of Chicago Oriental Institute Publications Volume LXXIV, 1954 AD)
8. "A more extensive description of the campaign was inscribed by Shishak himself on the walls of the Temple of Amon in Karnak. In this victory inscription, which is one of the most important historical documents of its time, Shishak lists the names of the cities, villages and settlements he conquered. The first part of the inscription contains a long list of sites in the northern and central sections of Israel. The second part of the inscription, containing over 10 names, is apparently devoted to the Negev. Only a few of the names can be identified with cities known from the Bible. These include Arad, Yurza, Sharnhen, and the proposed identification of Ezion-Geber, which is doubtful. Of particular interest to us here are nine place-names formed with the component p.h\-q-r, which can be readily associated with the Semitic root h\-g-r ("fort"). The list includes, for example, the fortress of Great Arad, which clearly refers to the site still bearing that name. Identifying the other fortresses referred to by Shishak is more problematic, but it may well be that a number of the names refer to the fortresses we have been discussing." (The Fortresses King Solomon Built to Protect His Southern Border, Rudolph Cohen, 1985 AD)
I. Rehoboam (931-914 BC), The Foolish King:
1. Very few kings were as stupid and foolish in dealing with his people as Rehoboam. He chose to listen to the advice of his young drinking buddies rather than the advice of his parents best friends! 2. God chose and anointed Jeroboam as King to replace Solomon even before Rehoboam became king! 3. “Then Ahijah took hold of the new cloak which was on him and tore it into twelve pieces. He said to Jeroboam, “Take for yourself ten pieces; for thus says the Lord, the God of Israel, ‘Behold, I will tear the kingdom out of the hand of Solomon and give you ten tribes (but he will have one tribe, for the sake of My servant David and for the sake of Jerusalem, the city which I have chosen from all the tribes of Israel), because they have forsaken Me, and have worshiped Ashtoreth the goddess of the Sidonians, Chemosh the god of Moab, and Milcom the god of the sons of Ammon; and they have not walked in My ways, doing what is right in My sight and observing My statutes and My ordinances, as his father David did.” (1 Kings 11:30–33) |
a. There is some kind of meaning to God calling his anointed or chosen out of Egypt. Clearly the prophecy of Hosea being applied to Jesus in Mt 2:14-15 is noteworthy. Perhaps only after the second coming will we learn historical details before the world was created as to why this is important. Perhaps the angels understand the antitypical importance.
a. Jeroboam was recalled from Egypt and present in the assembly.
b. Rehoboam rejected the wise advice of his father's elders and accepting the advice of his young foolish drinking buddies: "The young men who grew up with him spoke to him, saying, “Thus you shall say to this people who spoke to you, saying, ‘Your father made our yoke heavy, now you make it lighter for us!’ But you shall speak to them, ‘My little finger is thicker than my father’s loins!” (1 Kings 12:10)
c. My little finger is thicker than my father’s loins: Really? Are you kidding? It sounds like something a 15-year-old teenager would say, not a 41-year-old king.
d. In fact Rehoboam was 41 years old when he became king: “Rehoboam was forty-one years old when he became king, and he reigned seventeen years in Jerusalem.” (1 Kings 14:21)
i. For a 41 year old man, he must have been a listless, mindless, immature jellyfish.
ii. “worthless men gathered about Jeroboam, scoundrels, who proved too strong for Rehoboam, the son of Solomon, when he was young and timid and could not hold his own against them.” (2 Chronicles 13:6–7)
iii. This brought about the God-ordained division of the kingdom into two.
a. Rehoboam gathered his army to attack Jeroboam, but Shemaiah the prophet to call off the attack: 1 Kings 12:21
b. "Now when Rehoboam had come to Jerusalem, he assembled all the house of Judah and the tribe of Benjamin, 180,000 chosen men who were warriors, to fight against the house of Israel to restore the kingdom to Rehoboam the son of Solomon. But the word of God came to Shemaiah the man of God, saying, “Speak to Rehoboam the son of Solomon, king of Judah, and to all the house of Judah and Benjamin and to the rest of the people, saying, ‘Thus says the Lord, “You must not go up and fight against your relatives the sons of Israel; return every man to his house, for this thing has come from Me.” ’ ” So they listened to the word of the Lord, and returned and went their way according to the word of the Lord." (1 Kings 12:21–24)
a. "Rehoboam lived in Jerusalem and built cities for defense in Judah. Thus he built Bethlehem, Etam, Tekoa, Beth-zur, Soco, Adullam, Gath, Mareshah, Ziph, Adoraim, Lachish, Azekah, Zorah, Aijalon and Hebron, which are fortified cities in Judah and in Benjamin. He also strengthened the fortresses and put officers in them and stores of food, oil and wine. He put shields and spears in every city and strengthened them greatly. So he held Judah and Benjamin. Moreover, the priests and the Levites who were in all Israel stood with him from all their districts." (2 Chronicles 11:5–13)
b. At the end of year three, Rehoboam was doing good and the priests and levites were with him. However he turned bad and this triggered the anger of God so that Shishak invaded from Egypt
a. 24a And King Solomon slept with his fathers, and he was buried with his fathers in the city of David. And Rehoboam his son reigned in place of him in Jerusalem, being sixteen years old when he began to reign, and twelve years he reigned in Jerusalem, and the name of his mother was Naanan the daughter of Hanan the son of Nahash king of Ammon. And he did what was evil before the Lord, and he did not go in the way of David his father.
b. 24b And there was a man from the mountain of Ephraim, a servant of Solomon, and his name was Jeroboam, and the name of his mother was Sarisa, a prostitute. And Solomon made him into chief of staff over the forced labor of the house to Joseph, and he built for Solomon Sarira, which is in the mountain of Ephraim, and there were to him three hundred horse-drawn chariots. This one built the citadel with the forced labor of the house of Ephraim, this one closed off the city of David, and he was exalted over the kingdom.
c. 24c And Solomon was trying to put him to death, and he was afraid and he fled to Shishak king of Egypt, and he was with him until Solomon died.
d. 24d And Jeroboam heard in Egypt that Solomon was dead. And he spoke into the ears of Shishak king of Egypt, saying, “Send me away, and I will depart to my land.” And Shishak said to him, “Ask any request, and I will give it to you.”
e. 24e And Shishak gave Jeroboam Ano the elder sister of Tahpenes his own wife to him for a wife. This one is great in the midst of the daughters of the king. And she bore for Jeroboam Abijah his son.
f. 24f And Jeroboam said to Shishak, “Send me out truly, and I will depart.” And Jeroboam came out from Egypt, and he came to the land of Sarira, which was in the mountain of Ephraim, and all the staffs of Ephraim were gathered together there, and Jeroboam built bulwarks there.
g. 24g And his child became sick ⌊with an exceedingly bad sickness⌋, and Jeroboam went to inquire concerning the child, and he said to Ano his wife, “Arise, go inquire of God concerning the child if he will live from his sickness.”
h. 24h And there was a man in Shiloh, and the name to him was Ahijah, and this one was sixty years old, and the word of the Lord was with him. And Jeroboam said to his wife, “Arise, and take into your hand for the man of God bread and cake for his children and grapes and a pot of honey.”
i. 24i And the woman arose and took into her hand bread and two cakes and grapes and a pot of honey to Ahijah. And the man was old, and his eyes became dim-sighted for seeing.
j. 24k And she arose from Sarira and she went, and it happened as she was coming into the city to Ahijah the Selonite, and Ahijah said to his servant, “Go out indeed for a meeting with Ano the wife of Jeroboam, and you shall say to her, ‘Enter and do not stand in position because the Lord says this, “I send harsh things upon you.” ’ ”
k. 24l And Ano entered to the man of God with cakes and a pot of honey. The Lord says this, “Behold, you will depart from me, and it will be when you entered the gate into Sarira and your maidservants will come out to you for a meeting, and they will say to you, ‘The child is dead.’
l. 24m Because the Lord says this, ‘Behold, I will utterly destroy those who urinate towards the wall of a house who belong to Jeroboam, and it will be the ones who died in the city who belong to Jeroboam, the dogs will devour, and the one who died in the field the birds of the sky will devour. And he will strike the child.’ Alas, Lord, for a good word was found in him concerning the Lord.”
m. 24n And the woman went out when she heard, and it happened when she entered into Sarira, and the child died, and the cry went out to meet her. And Jeroboam went to Shechem, which was in the mountain of Ephraim, and he gathered together there the tribes of Israel, and Rehoboam son of Solomon went up from there.
n. 24o And the word of the Lord came to Shemaiah the Elamite, saying, “Take for yourself a new garment that has not entered into water and tear it into twelve pieces, and you will give them to Jeroboam, and you shall say to him, ‘The Lord says this, “Take for yourself twelve pieces to throw round you.” ’ ” And Jeroboam took them, and Shemaiah said, “The Lord says this concerning the ten tribes of Israel.”
o. 24p And the people said to Rehoboam son of Solomon, “Your father made heavy his yoke upon us, and he made heavy the food of his table. And now you made it easier on us, we will serve you.” And Rehoboam said to the people, “There are still three days and I will reply a word to you.”
p. 24q And Rehoboam said, “Bring me the elders and I will take counsel with them, what word I answer the people on the third day.” And Rehoboam spoke into their ears just as the people sent to him, and the elders of the people said, “Thus the people spoke to you.”
q. 24r And Rehoboam rejected their counsel, and it was not pleasing before him, and he sent and brought in his comrades, and he spoke to them the same things, “And these things the people sent to me, saying.” And his comrades said, “Thus you will speak to the people, saying, ‘My smallness is thicker than the loins of my father; my father chastised you with whips, but I would rule you with scorpions.’ ”
r. 24s And the word was pleasing before Rehoboam, and he replied to the people just as his comrades the young men advised him. 24t And all the people spoke as one man each to his neighbor, and all were crying out, saying, “A portion is not for us in David, nor an inheritance in the son of Jesse. To your tents, Israel, because this man will not be a ruler nor a leader.”
s. 24u And all the people scattered from Shechem and went out each into his tent. And Rehoboam strengthened himself and went out and went up upon his chariot, and he entered into Jerusalem, and the whole tribe of Judah and the whole tribe of Benjamin went after him.
t. 24x And it happened when the year began, and Rehoboam gathered together every man of Judah and of Benjamin, and he went up to fight against Jeroboam in Shechem.
u. 24y And the word of the Lord came to Shemaiah the man of God, “Say to Rehoboam king of Judah and to all the house of Judah and of Benjamin and to the remnant of the people, saying, ‘The Lord says this, “You shall not go up nor fight against your brothers the children of Israel. Turn aside each of you to his house because this word came from me.” ’ ”
v. 24z And they heard the word of the Lord, and they ceased from going according to the word of the Lord.
a. The LXX text adds three new details lacking in the Masoretic manuscript: that Rehoboam "sixteen years old when he began to reign and he reigned for 12 years" (24a), the name of Jeroboam's mother was "Sarisa, a prostitute" (24b) and " Shishak gave Jeroboam Ano the elder sister of Tahpenes his own wife to him for a wife" (24e).
b. Other than this, the stories are essentially identical.
c. However, 1 Kings 14:21 plainly tells us that Rehoboam was 41 years old and he reigned 17 years , not 16 years old reigning 12 years. This is one good reason to reject it as spurious text in addition to all the other sensational statements about Jeroboam's mother being a prostitute!
d. "Scholarly study has focused on the evolution of this story, questioning whether it represents a recension of mt Kings—i.e., a purposeful reworking of the text (“midrashic” [Montgomery and Gehman, 254]; “strange and arbitrarily ordered compilation” [Noth, 270])—or an earlier (pre-Dtr) version of the Jeroboam story that preserves traditions rejected in the development of mt (“an independent Northern tradition … worked over by a Judean editor” [Gray, 311]?). However, Talshir’s exhaustive analysis (1990) has shown that the author of the addition fashioned the story out of ready-made components, freely adding and arranging them with great skill. He created a coherent retrospective that is critical of both the protagonist (Rehoboam) and the antagonist (Jeroboam). A few items in the addition suggest that at its base was the narration now preserved in mt. For example, the prophecy of doom tendered by Ahijah to the wife of Jeroboam concerning her sick child is suited more to a royal personage than to the child (v. 24m), yet according to the order of events in the story, Jeroboam has not yet become king. This item has been repositioned from its natural context attested to in mt (14:10–11). Or, if the Shemaiah episode (12:21–24) is a post-Dtr addition to Kings, as seems likely, the writer of the alternative story used it and its prophetic spokesman creatively in his new-spun tale. Talshir’s suggestion is that the story was written in translation Greek from a Hebrew Vorlage (that can be sensed, for one thing, by a number of wordplays stemming from similar-sounding words in the reconstructed Hebrew; e.g., 12:24f: mṣrym, ṣrrh, mṣwr). It is a “historical midrash,” not unlike what may be found in the work of the biblical Chronicler; yet because of its shortness, the date and home of the story are difficult to set. The writer’s anti-Jeroboam stance—the compounding of his sinful acts, while at the same time avoiding any mention of Solomon’s sins—may mean that he lived at the time of the strife between the Jerusalem community and the Samaritans." (AYBC, M. Cogan, 1 Kings 12:24, 2008 AD)
II. The 187 Hieroglyphic name rings of Jewish cities conquered by Shishak:
4. "One smashed stela from Karnak does preserve a few phrases about the start of Shishak’s campaign: “Now, My Majesty found that [ … they] were killing [ … ] army-leaders. His Majesty was upset about them … [His Majesty went forth,] his chariotry accompanying him without (the enemy’s) knowing it. His Majesty made great slaughter among them, … at the edge of the Bitter Lakes.” A contemporary, Hori, had been a “real royal scribe, [following] the king at his incursions into the foreign lands of Retenu [i.e., Palestine]”. (Shishak’s Military Campaign in Israel Confirmed, Kenneth A. Kitchen, BAR 15:03, May/June, 1989 AD)
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III. Master list and Map of Shishak's campaign:
1. Shishak was sent against Rehoboam and Jeroboam because of their idolatry.
a. Rehoboam quickly began idol worship around year three of becoming king. (928 BC)
b. Jeroboam set up the pagan golden calves at Bethel and Dan in the first year of becoming king. (931 BC)
2. Rehoboam fortified several cities in Judah and at least three (Socoh, Gath and Aijalon were conquered by Shishak and have a name ring on Shishak's relief at Karnak:
a. "Rehoboam lived in Jerusalem and built cities for defense in Judah. Thus he built Bethlehem, Etam, Tekoa, Beth-zur, Soco, Adullam, Gath, Mareshah, Ziph, Adoraim, Lachish, Azekah, Zorah, Aijalon and Hebron, which are fortified cities in Judah and in Benjamin. He also strengthened the fortresses and put officers in them and stores of food, oil and wine. He put shields and spears in every city and strengthened them greatly. So he held Judah and Benjamin. Moreover, the priests and the Levites who were in all Israel stood with him from all their districts." (2 Chronicles 11:5–13)
3. There are endless Shishak invasions maps that have been created but none are certain.
a. The sequence of names from 1-187 does not follow any logical single route.
b. "The course of Shoshenq s campaign is not certain in detail from the combined biblical and archaeological/epigraphic evidence, it embraced both Israel and Judah." (The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt, 1100-650 B.C, Kenneth A. Kitchen, p296, 1986 AD)
c. Kitchen believes that Shishak first came to Gaza to set up a launching point for the rest of the invasion. From Gaza Shishak sent out several "flying columns" at the same time in many directions. This may be correct.
d. We have decided not to mark a route, but mark each known city on the map.
4. "Shoshenk I campaign into Palestine: His city list is an imitation of that of Thutmoses III but very instructive. The first 9 names are the `Nine Bows', #10 is the introduction saying simply "List of the towns". (Pharaohs and Kings, David Rohl, p124)
a. Rings 1-9 are known as "the nine bows" which represent the traditional territories and enemies of Egypt. Several examples of this list are extant in other reliefs.
1. Upper Egypt
2. Lower Egypt
3. Natives of Nubia
4. Libya
5. Sekhet-Iam
6. Oases, Beduin of Asia
7. Eastern Desert dwellers
8. Upper Nubia
9. Northerners
b. Ring 10 serves as a "title" for the entire relief with the words: "List of the towns"
5. Details explained on the relief:
a. Each town is represented by one, two or three name rings that appear as Hebrew captive slaves with their hands tied behind their backs. Note the hair style and beard which represents that the Jews looked like in 926 BC. Central to the relief is the Egyptian pagan god Amon-Ra with the tall double crown. Pharaoh Shishak is seen in all his conquering glory to the right in a large body outline that is still visible. In the center bottom are all the conquered Hebrew city mayors (chieftains) with uplifted hands as a sign of submission to Shishak to whom they paid tribute.
b. "The small woman beneath Amun is holding a long-handled spoon in her right hand, and a stick about the same length (the very top of which no longer remains) in her left hand. This long-handled spoon was used to scoop out the brains prior to mummification. The bottom of the “stick” appears to have tassels, so maybe it was a scroll. Below her stick/scroll is a white crown, which was likely Sheshonk I kneeling to this goddess of Thebes." (The Bible's Shishak was Heqakheperre Sheshonk IIa, Eve Engelbrite, August 20, 2012 AD)
6. Table of all the name rings of Shishak at Karnak. The numbering system for the name rings (1 - 187) used here was adopted from the official archeological dig reports. The interpretation of the names and corresponding Bible verses is a hybrid from many sources.
43 of the 187 name rings are Bible cities! |
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1 |
Upper Egypt |
"the nine bows" (traditional territories and enemies of Egypt) |
2 |
Lower Egypt |
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3 |
Natives of Nubia: Cushites: Num 12:1 |
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4 |
Libya: Ezekiel 30:5 |
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5 |
Sekhet-Iam |
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6 |
Oases, Beduin of Asia |
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7 |
Eastern Desert dwellers |
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8 |
Upper Nubia |
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9 |
Northerners |
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10 |
"List of the towns" |
Title |
11 |
Gaza |
Genesis 10:19 |
12 |
Makkedah (not Gezer) |
Joshua 10:10 |
13 |
Rubuti: Beth-Shemesh |
Joshua 15:10 |
14 |
Taanach |
Joshua 12:21 |
15 |
Shunem |
1 Kings 1:3; SOS 6:13 |
16 |
Beth-Shan |
1 Samuel 31:10 |
17 |
Rehov (Apiary) (alternate for Abel-meholah) |
Judges 7:22; 1 Kings 4:12; 19:16) |
18 |
Hapharaim |
Joshua 19:17 |
19 |
3drm Adoraim or Adullam |
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20 |
Lost |
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21 |
Swd (unknown city) |
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22 |
Mahanaim |
Genesis 32:2 |
23 |
Gibeon |
Joshua 9:3 |
24 |
Beth-Horon |
Joshua 10:10 |
25 |
Kdtm, Kiriath-Jearim |
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26 |
Aijalon (Rehoboam fortified) |
Joshua 10:12 |
27 |
Megiddo |
Judges 1:27 |
28 |
3dr, Adar? |
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29 |
Yad-ha-melek, "the hand of the king" (monument) |
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30 |
[Hb]rt, Hebel "by the region [Hebel] of Achzib.", habiruta (Abu Hawam?) |
Josh 19:29 |
31 |
Hmn, Henam, Hanem? |
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32 |
Aruna, Kh. Ara mentioned by Thusmoses III |
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33 |
Brm, Borim Kh. Burin/Burim, near Baqa al-Gharbiyye |
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34 |
Dt-ptr, Gati/Gath-Padalla north of Sharon, cf Amarna Tablet 250, now Jett, Jatt |
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35 |
Yaham, Thumoses III, Khirbet Yamma, Amenhotep II camped at this site. |
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36 |
Bt-rm, Beth Olam or Beth Aruma |
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37 |
Kqry (unknown city) |
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38 |
Socoh, Shuweiket er-Râs |
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39 |
Beth-Tappu[ah]? |
Joshua 15:53 |
40 |
3br, Abel, one of many |
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41-44 |
Lost |
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45 |
Bt-Dbi[?] Beth-Saba/soba: Zeboim, possibly Sapuna in Amarna 274. |
Neh 11:34 |
46-50 |
Lost |
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51 |
Ssd (unknown city) |
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52 |
Lost |
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53 |
Pnw-3r, [P]enuel |
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54 |
Hdst, "new town" (unknown city) |
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55 |
P3-n-Skt, "the one of Succoth" |
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56 |
3dm, Adam[ah], Kh. Tel ed-Damiyeh |
Joshua 3:16 |
57 |
Dmrm, Zemaraim |
Josh 18:22 |
58 |
Shechem? "and its Midgol" |
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59 |
[Mi]gdol, [Ti]rzah |
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60 |
[?]nr (unknown city) |
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61-63 |
Lost |
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64 |
H[?]pn, Hapin, Gapna (unknown city) |
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65 |
Pa-emeq, "the vale/valley" ie Esdraelon or Jezreel |
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66 |
Ezem, Umm el-Azam, 10km south of Aroer |
Josh 15:29; 19:3 |
67 |
Inr, Anaru, (unknown city) |
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68/69 |
Hagr (fort) Ftis, Photeis, Kh. Futeis, Tel Useifir |
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70 |
3r-hrr, El-hallal, clan name: Jehallel |
1 Chro 4:16 |
71/72 |
Phkr 3brm "field of Abraham" Hebron? |
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73/74 |
Sbrt (n) gbry, "Shibboleth" Brook of Geber, Gabor (n) gbry", "brook", (Ezion Geber unlikely) |
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75/76 |
Shibboleth wrkyt "brook of Urikit or Rakkath" |
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77/78 |
P3 hkri Ndyt, Fort of ? (Negev fortress) |
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79 |
(unknown city) |
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80 |
Dpk, Sapek |
1 Sam 30:28 |
81 |
Unidentified |
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82 |
Tp[?], Tappu[ah]?, |
1 Chron 2:43 |
83 |
Gath/Ginti (Rehoboam fortified) |
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84/85 |
Ngb-dnt, Negev of Eznite |
2 Sam 23:8 |
86 |
Tsdn (unknown city) |
|
87/88 |
Hgr-Sny "forts", forts of Ashna, or forts of Shani (crimson): |
Josh 15:33,43 |
89 |
Hk (unknown city) Haqaq |
|
90/91 |
Whtwrk, Negev of Cherethites (unknown city) |
1 Samuel 30:14 |
92/93 |
Ngb-3sht,Negev of Kenites and Shuhathites: |
1 Chron 4:11 |
94/95 |
Hagr-Hanan, Fort of Ben-Hanan, Possible clan name |
1 Chron 4:20 |
96/97 |
Hagr-el-gad, Fort of Hazer Gaddah, west negev |
Josh 15:27 |
98 |
3dm Edom? (unknown city) |
|
99 |
Hnny, Ben-Hanan? (unknown city) |
|
100 |
3dr, Adar, Hazaraddar, Addar (Be’er Ada) |
Josh 15:3; Num 34:4 |
101/102 |
Hagr-Trwn, "fort of Tilon" |
1 Chron 4:20 |
103/104 |
Hydbi Srnrm, Sharan Ri’m, the highland of antelopes |
|
105/106 |
[?]y[?] dwt, "highland of David" Jerusalem |
|
107 |
107: Hgrm, 'the forts', east past Beersheba (107-112 are linked and refer to a series of border fortresses build by Solomon.) |
|
108/109 |
Forts of Arad-Rabbath, 'Great(er) Arad', Tel Arad |
|
110-112 |
Forts of Arad-of-the-House (Bt)-of-Jeroham, Tel el-Milh |
|
113-116 |
Lost |
|
117 |
Addar |
|
118-120 |
(unknown city) |
|
121 |
Frtm, clan of Peleth/Jerahmeel |
1 Chron 2:33 |
122 |
Abel |
|
123 |
Brrd, Beir Loz/Luz, Well of almonds, Borot Loz ponds. "While it is true that no fortresses have been found directly on the Darb Ghazza trade route, several have found on either side like Kuntillet Ajrud and Borot Loz ponds. "And above all, south of Qadesh Barnea along important Darb Ghazza, the main route to the Gulf of Eilat, not even one fortress has been found" ("Aharoni Fortress" near Quseima, Zeev Meshel, 1994 AD) |
|
124 |
Bt-nt, Beth-Anoth: near Hebron |
Josh 15:59 m |
125 |
šrḥn, Sharuhen (not Shilhim: Josh 15:32) |
Josh 19:6 m |
126 |
El-Mat[t]en |
Num 21:18-19 |
127 |
grni, Goren, "threshing floor" |
|
128 |
Adam |
Joshua 3:16 |
129-131 |
(unknown city) |
|
132 |
3rr[?], El Ram, (Not El-ro[i]) clan |
1 Chron 2:9 |
133 |
Yurza, Tel Jemmeh, Thutmoses III |
|
134-138 |
Lost |
|
139 |
Yrhm, Jeroham, Jerahme[el], see ring 112 |
1 Chron 2:9 |
140 |
3nn, Onam (clan name) |
1 Chon 2:26 |
141-144 |
Lost |
|
145 |
Mkt, Maacah? Clan |
1 Chron 2:48 |
146 |
I[]d[r ], Adar "threshing floor" |
|
147-149 |
Lost |
|
150 |
Yrdn, possible Jordan, but more likely "Yorda" |
Josephus: War III,3:5 |
151-153 |
Lost |
|
XI:1 |
(unknown city) |
|
XI:2 |
bis-rph, Raphia |
|
XI:3 |
bis-rbn, Laban, Tel Abu Seleimah |
|
XI:4 |
ngrn? "well of the threshing floor" Ain Goren. (not likely Ekron) Possibly "Ain", Ain, Qudeirat, misidentified as Kadesh Barnea since 1914 AD. However we know there was a fortress at Qudeirat that dates to the time of Solomon. The association with a threshing floor instead of the fortress would be puzzling it Ain Goren is actually Qudeirat. |
Josh 19:7 |
XI:5 |
Hm, Ham |
|
XI:6-37 |
32 of 37 names lost in row XI |
|
IV. "Highlands of David": Name-Rings 105/106
V. The Megiddo Cartouche of Pharaoh Shishak I
2. "Physical proof of the presence of Shishak in Palestine is afforded by the corner-fragment of a once great stela found at Megiddo in Israel. Excavators of Megiddo in the 1920s and ’30s unearthed a 15-inch-long stone fragment with carved cartouches of the king. The fragment dates to about 925 B.C. Seen clearly in the drawing, Shishak’s cartouches read: Hedj-kheper-Re “Bright is the form of (the sun-god) Re” “Amun’s beloved, Shoshenq (I).”" (Shishak’s Military Campaign in Israel Confirmed, Kenneth A. Kitchen, BAR 15:03, May/June, 1989 AD)
3. "In addition to the list of towns (at the Karnak relief), we do possess two documents attesting the name of Sheshonk on Asiatic soil. At Megiddo in Palestine was found a fragment of a monumental stela bearing the name of Sheshonk I and permitting the conclusion that the pharaoh had set up a triumphal monument there. At Byblos in Phoenicia another fragment, this time the chair of a seated statue, bears his name, although this monument may well be a princely gift, rather than a symbol of conquest." (The Campaign of Sheshonk I, J. B Pritchard, ANET p264, 1969 AD)
VI. The El-Hibeh Relief and Cartouche of Pharaoh Shishak I
VII. Pharaoh Osorkon I gifts 383 tons of Solomon's gold and silver to the God's of Egypt in 921 BC!
1. The pillar in a temple at Bubastis that says Pharaoh Osorkon I gifted the modern equivalent of 383 tons of gold and silver to all the gods of Egypt in 921 BC.
a. "Directly after Shishak’s death, and less than a decade after Solomon’s death, Osorkon proudly recorded on a granite pillar in a temple at Bubastis, in the eastern Nile Delta, his own breathtakingly munificent gifts to the gods and goddesses of Egypt. These gifts were for “[all the gods and goddesses of the cities] of Upper and Lower Egypt, from Year 1 (of Osorkon’s reign) … to Year 4 … , making 3 years, 3 months and 16 days,” that is for the period from 924 to 921 B.C. Only fragments of this long and detailed hieroglyphic text of Osorkon have been found. But these seem to record gifts totaling approximately two million deben of silver, and 2,300,000 deben of gold and silver—at least 383 tons of precious metal given by Osorkon to the gods. The crowded lines of the main text give us details of rich gifts to each god or goddess: “What His Majesty gave to the Temple of Aman-re … a standing statue offering incense, … its body of beaten gold and silver, amounting to: gold, 183 deben, silver, 19,000 deben, black copper . … ” After the gifts to Re comes: “gold, lapis … 332,000 deben, total, 594,300 deben,” and so on. Where could Osorkon have obtained such immense wealth, to spend on such a scale after only three and a third years of his reign? Barely five years earlier, Osorkon’s father Shishak had looted the wealth of Jerusalem. It seems unlikely to be a mere coincidence that almost immediately after that event Osorkon could dispose so freely of so much gold and silver. The vast amounts of Solomon’s golden wealth may have ended up, at least in part, as Osorkon’s gift to the gods and goddesses of Egypt." (Where Did Solomon’s Gold Go?, Kenneth A. Kitchen, Bible and Spade, V7, p108, 1994 AD, reprinted from Biblical Archaeology Review 15/3, May, 1989, p.30)
b. "On another fragment from the pillar in the temple at Bubastis hieroglyphs indicate numbers—part of the tally of this vast gold treasure. Each upside down “U” stands for 10; each curl above them stands for 100. The “tadpoles” or “bird-shaped” figures at the bottom of the second column and at the top of the last column on the right represent 100,000 each, and the people with upraised arms are each symbols for 1,000,000." (Where Did Solomon’s Gold Go?, Kenneth A. Kitchen, Bible and Spade, V7, p108, 1994 AD, reprinted from Biblical Archaeology Review 15/3, May, 1989, p.30)
2. Obviously this large cache of precious metals came directly from the Jerusalem Temple and Solomon's palace as per 1 Kings 14:25-26 and 2 Chron 12:2-9.
a. "Now it happened in the fifth year of King Rehoboam, that Shishak the king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem. He took away the treasures of the house of the Lord and the treasures of the king’s house, and he took everything, even taking all the shields of gold which Solomon had made." (1 Kings 14:25-26)
b. "So Shishak king of Egypt came up against Jerusalem, and took the treasures of the house of the Lord and the treasures of the king’s palace. He took everything; he even took the golden shields which Solomon had made." (2 Chronicles 12:9)
3. What a stunning confirmation that the Bible is true!
VIII. Funerary artifacts from Pharaoh Shishak I and Shishak II
Bracelet found on the mummy of Shishak I. Gold inlaid with lapis lazuli, carnelian and faience with "magic eye". (Cairo Museum.) |
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Solid Silver sarcophagus of Shishak II The large amounts of silver and gold in Egypt immediately after Shishak raided Jerusalem may show us the story in the Bible is true! |
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The Great Sphinx of Tanis This sphinx was successively inscribed with the names of these Pharaohs: 1. Ammenemes II (1929-1895 BC) 2. Merneptah (1212-1202 BC) 3. Shishak I (945-924 BC). |
IX. Negev border fortresses of Solomon
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Introduction document: Solomon's network of military border fortresses |
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Conclusion:
A. There are seven historic witnesses to the invasion of Israel in 926 BC which show the Bible is real history!
B. Finding the name of David on name rings 105/106 at Karnak in Egypt that dates to 926 BC is a spectacular bonus!
C. Solomon knew his son Rehoboam was a fool:
By Steve Rudd: Contact the author for comments, input or corrections.