by
Damien F. Mackey
“MB IIC at Shechem was a major
destruction,
so almost certainly it was the city
of Abimelech”.
Back in 1988, I, then following a pattern of
biblical archaeology different from the one that I would embrace today, had
raised this query about the city of Shechem to Dr. John Osgood: https://creation.com/images/pdfs/tj/j03_1/j03_1_124-127.pdf
“Techlets”, EN Tech. J., vol. 3,
1988, pp. 125-126:
…. I think too
that Shechem might be a problem in your scheme of things. From the Bible it would
seem that Shechem was a small settlement at the time of Abraham, but a city at
the time of Jacob. It seems to me that according to your scheme Shechem would
be the same size in Jacob's time as in Abraham's. Correct me if I am wrong.
Also Prof. Stiebing, who has criticised at various times the schemes of all revisionists
(see Biblical Archaeological Review, July/August 1985, pp. 58-69),
raises the problem of the absence of LBA remains at Samaria as regards the EBA
Conquest Reconstruction.
Looking back now on Dr. Osgood’s reply to this, his
view on Shechem, at least, makes perfect sense to me.
He seems to have arrived at a proper overview of the
archaeology of Shechem, from Abraham to Jeroboam I (and beyond). Here is what
Dr. Osgood wrote on pp. 126-127:
W. Ross in Palestine
Exploration Quarterly (1941), p.22-27 reasoned, I believe correctly, that
the Bethel of Jeroboam must be Shechem, since it alone fills the requirements.
The Bethel of Jacob, and of Joshua-Luz, was found on the border of Benjamin, so
it is this Bethel around which our argument must revolve. The question is
whether Beiten is this Bethel and hence Et Tell is Ai, or whether we look for another.
Another location
may be needed, but it does not particularly affect the revised chronology I
have presented.
Beiten did appear
to have some EB occupation, but the findings were not up to the expectation of
the Judges 1 narrative. Major occupation with the MB I culture began and
continued thereafter. It is Et Tell, however, which I feel should have some
comment.
If the MB I people
were the Israelites, then Et Tell in isolation would fit the narrative
extremely well. It shows termination of occupation at the end of EB III, and no
reoccupation until Iron II (perhaps Aiath in Isaiah 10:28; see also the exiles
in Ezra 2:28). Its topography fits the story of Joshua, with a northern Wadi a
small distance away enabling Joshua to draw the people out of the city, and a
close western slope near the city where the ambush could hide, yet quickly
enter the city as needed. I am not entirely convinced with the arguments I have
seen rejecting it on either excavation details or topography, although I sense
that geographical argument may carry more weight. In any case, those who have
rejected it on excavation grounds have done so on the basis of an end of LB
conquest, which is here rejected.
Whatever may be
the truth of the identities of Ai and Bethel, at this point in time it does not
materially affect the chronology here espoused.
Shechem: This is
no problem to the revised chronology presented here, since the passage concerning
Abraham and Shechem, viz. Genesis 12:6, does not indicate that a city of any
consequence was then present there. On the other hand, Jacob's contact makes it
clear that there was a significant city present later (Genesis 33 and 34), but
only one which was able to be overwhelmed by a small party of Jacob's sons who
took it by surprise.
I would date any
evidence of civilisation at these times to the late Chalcolithic in Abraham's
case, and to EB I in Jacob's case, the latter being the most significant.
The Bible is
silent about Shechem until the Israelite conquest, after which it is apparent that
it developed a significant population until the destruction of the city in the
days of Abimelech. If the scriptural silence is significant, then no evidence
of occupation would be present after EB I until MB I and no significant
building would occur until the MB IIC.
Shechem was
rebuilt by Jeroboam I, and continued thereafter until the Assyrian captivity.
Moreover, Shechem
was almost certainly the Bethel of Jeroboam, during the divided kingdom. So I
would expect heavy activity during the majority of LB and all of Iron I.
This is precisely
the findings at Shechem, with the exception that the earliest periods have not
had sufficient area excavated to give precise details about the Chalcolithic
and EB I. No buildings have yet been brought to light from these periods, but these
periods are clearly represented at Shechem.
MB IIC at Shechem
was a major destruction, so almost certainly it was the city of Abimelech. The population's
allegiance to Hamor and Shechem could easily be explained by a return of
descendants of the Shechem captives taken by Jacob's son, now returned after
the Exodus nostalgically to Shechem, rather than by a continuation of the population
through
intervening periods (see Judges 9:28, Genesis 34).
For Jeroboam's
city and after, the numerous LB and Iron I strata are a sufficient testimony
(see Biblical Archaeology, XX, XXVI and XXXII).
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