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An intelligence officer whose name is Isaiah the prophet

With the help of the social and political networks that he was involved in or that he founded himself, he had an array of trusted and loyal people who gave him a lot of information about what was happening throughout the Middle East, including the plan to assassinate Sennacherib

Jewish soldiers listen to Rabashka's speech. Detail from a display at the Tower of David Museum. Photo: Tamar Jordani, from Wikipedia (see link at the bottom of the article)
Jewish soldiers listen to Rabashka's speech. Detail from a display at the Tower of David Museum. Photo: Tamar Jordani, from Wikipedia (see link at the bottom of the article)

One of the unclear topics in the Bible is the siege that Sennacherib imposed on Jerusalem in the days of King Hezekiah of Judah. The problem in the story is the contradiction between what is told in the Bible and the documentation of Sennacherib himself. In 35 Kings 37 it is stated that Sennacherib demanded that Hezekiah surrender to him and he refused. At the end of this failed negotiation, a miracle happened to Jerusalem. "And it came to pass that night, that the angel of Jehovah went forth, and smote in the camp of Assyria one hundred and eighty-five thousand, and they all slept in the morning, and behold, they were all dead carcasses. And he traveled and he went and Sennacherib king of Assyria stayed and he stayed in Nineveh. And it came to pass that he bowed down before his God, and Adramelech and Shrezer struck him with the sword, and Ararat and Esarhaddon his son escaped under him" (XNUMX Kings XNUMX:XNUMX-XNUMX).

This event has two additional references in the Bible and they are in Isaiah and in 36 Chronicles. In both it is said that Hezekiah refused to surrender and Sennacherib lost his army. In Isaiah 39:21-XNUMX it is said: "And the angel of the Lord went out and struck the camp of Assyria, in which a hundred and eighty-five thousand shall lie down, and behold, they are all dead carcasses. And he traveled and he went and Sennacherib king of Assyria stayed and he stayed in Nineveh. And it came to pass that he bowed down at the house of Nisroch, his God, and Adramelech and Schratzer, his sons, who struck him with the sword, and why they fled to the land of Ararat, and Esarhaddan reigned under him. In XNUMX Chronicles XNUMX Lev XNUMX it is said: "And the Lord sent an angel and destroyed every mighty man of valor and governor and minister in the camp of the king of Assyria, and he sat in shame in his country, and the house of his God came, and he came out of his mouth there and killed him with the sword."

In his book "The Antiquities of the Jews" Joseph ben Matthieu says that "God sent a disease in his army that resembled a plague and on the first night of the siege one hundred and eighty five thousand people died among the army chiefs and their battalion chiefs. This disaster cast a terrible fear and terror upon him and being anxious for the entire army he fled with his remaining army to his kingdom called the Kingdom of Nineveh. He didn't spend here, but a short time (because) he was murdered in a connection that his eldest sons Adarmelach and Schratzer tied to him. These two were expelled by the citizens because of the murder of their father and fled to Armenia" (p. 345).

Against these reports Sennacherib reports (Manseret Sennacherib) that "As for Hezekiah the Jew about his 46 dry cities. . . 200, 150 souls, small and large, man and woman, horses, mules, donkeys, camels, cattle and sheep to an innumerable number I took out of their contents and apportioned as booty. whom I imprisoned within Jerusalem, the city of his majesty, like a bird in a cage. I surrounded him with fortifications and made the exit from his city gate an abomination to him. . . And he sent after him to Nineveh, a royal city, the strike force, his chosen force, which he brought into Jerusalem, his royal city, to fortify and reinforce, along with 30 gold shekels and 800 silver shekels" (Kogan 79:2003). In addition, according to this report, Hezekiah sent Sennacherib valuable property. Sennacherib does not refer at all to the disaster that befell him. How to reconcile this contradiction?

What the biblical sources and Joseph ben Matthew all have in common is the elimination of most of the Assyrian army in one night, Sennacherib's escape from this disaster and his elimination after he returned to Nineveh. How could it be that he and a handful of soldiers were saved? In 32 Kings 33:33-35 and Isaiah 344:XNUMX-XNUMX, the same prophecy is said by Isaiah regarding the fate of Sennacherib. This king will not be able to enter the city at all. Did Isaiah know what Hezekiah did not? This feeling that the prophet did indeed know something is strengthened when reading the words of encouragement he gave to Hezekiah's representatives during the Assyrian siege of the city. The prophet encouraged "the king himself and his people around him and prophesied that in the future the enemies would be defeated without war and would return in shame and not be as insolent as they are now. For God is the name of his opinion that they will go to destruction and he repeated and said that Sennacherib himself, the king of Assyria, will not succeed in his actions towards Egypt and on his return to his home he will die by the sword" (Yosef ben Matthiyahu ibid. p. XNUMX). This is not a prophecy that is considered a motivational speech to encourage the king and the people that they will be saved. Such a detailed prophecy is like a gamble. It is not difficult to guess what would have happened to the prophet if his prediction had turned out to be wrong. The prophet would have risked his life, what's more, he was a member of Hezekiah's household.

If we go back to the biblical story about Hezekiah's reign, it seems that he reigned for 29 years. In 7 Kings chapter 9 3 it is stated that he rebelled in Assyria and he "struck the Philistines as far as Gaza and its borders from Migdal Nazarim to the fortified city" it was not stated in which year of his reign this occurred. On the other hand, in verse 10 it is stated that in the fourth year of his reign, Manser, the king of Assyria, invaded Israel and carried out a campaign of conquest that lasted for 13 years and exiled its population. What can be understood is that Hezekiah's rebellion was shortly after the establishment of his rule. XNUMX years later, "Sennacherib, king of Assyria, went up against all the "forsaken cities of Judah and destroyed them" (ibid. verse XNUMX). Sennacherib himself did not regret Jerusalem. This can be learned from the fact that, seeing the strength of Sennacherib's army, King Hezekiah transferred to his hands in Lachish a great deal of property, including items from the temple.

Sennacherib stayed in Lachish with part of his army and took control of the cities in this area. He conveyed the ultimate demand of surrender through a diplomatic delegation that included Tartan and Rav Seris and Rabashkah (17 Kings 4:6) while warning Hezekiah that he should not trust an alliance with Egypt. Hezekiah is distressed and sends a delegation to the prophet Isaiah asking for help, and the prophet does encourage him and, among other things, tells him, "Do not be afraid of the things you have heard, which the sons of the king of Assyria blasphemed against me. I will give him a spirit, and he will hear a rumor, and he will return to his country, and I will kill him with the sword in his country" (ibid. chapter XNUMX). Very reminiscent of Joseph's words. A very concrete prophecy indicating that Isaiah had his own knowledge regarding the internal politics in Assyria. The description given in the book of Isaiah is the same as the description given in the book of XNUMX Kings. In XNUMX Chronicles Lev XNUMX-XNUMX it is stated that Hezekiah was also prepared militarily in case of an attack on Jerusalem. ” And they gathered a great people and stopped all the springs and all the streams flowing through the land to say why the kings of Assyria came and found many waters. And he strengthened and built the whole breached wall and went up on the towers and beyond the wall another way and strengthened the city of David and sent out to the majority and defenders. And he will give ministers of war over the people and they will gather to him on the street of the city gate."

The solution to the contradiction between the military achievements of Sennacherib described in the Bible and the Sennacherib sawmill and the blow that fell on his army near the walls of Jerusalem can be explained by the fact that Sennacherib conducted two military campaigns, one described in the sources we mentioned and one not mentioned in any Assyrian source. In the course of this journey and its traumatic end for Sennacherib, the prophet Isaiah is involved. From the descriptions in the Bible it appears that Isaiah was from the social and religious elite in the Kingdom of Judah and that he was personally close to King Hezekiah. In addition to his spiritual and intellectual status, the prophet was networked with the royal court, with various parties in the court of the King of Assyria. He was familiar with all the political moves and the personalities working in them, including unrest among the opponents of King Sennacherib and he was also familiar with the Egyptian army and its methods of operation. Isaiah was the so-called great man of the world. With the help of the social and political networks that he was involved in or that he founded himself, he had an array of trusted and loyal people who gave him a lot of information about what was happening throughout the Middle East. What can support this hypothesis is the prophecy he gave to Hezekiah that Sennacherib would kill.

The impression we get is that there was a rebellion against Sennacherib including Egyptian military activity near the imperial domain of Assyria in the south. Sennacherib had to send a military force to suppress these rebellions and he personally managed them. His pattern of action was the same as that described in the military campaign described in the Bible. He personally commanded the campaign near the border with Egypt and stationed around Jerusalem a large military force with a commander on his behalf and this is what Isaiah was waiting for. According to what is told in the sources, this army all died in the course of one night. If the Assyrian army had died as a result of some kind of virus, most likely the virus would have reached the besieged in the air as well and many of them would have fallen into the void.

It should also not be forgotten that an epidemic lasts several days. A possibility that must be taken into account is poisoning. Isaiah got to know the structure of the Assyrian army, its logistical system, the ways of supplying food, its storage places and its guard system. It is possible that Isaiah had collaborators from among the Assyrian army and also among the members of the royal court who were interested in the overthrow of Sennacherib. Isaiah also knew the ways to get out of the besieged city and move outside of them without the Assyrians noticing. Isaiah prepared large quantities of poisons and at the appropriate time his men left the city and scattered them in the Assyrian food stores. From the time the Assyrians opened these warehouses to prepare their meals, their death was only a matter of hours.

When Sennacherib learned what had happened to his army, he returned, as described in the Book of Chronicles, quickly and shamefully to Nineveh, but this time without a significant part of his army, which made it easier for those who were interested in taking over the government and a few days later he was killed. Presumably, if he had returned to Nineveh crowned with victory, he would have recorded his achievement as in Sennacherib's sawmill documenting his first journey.

If this description is indeed correct, a new picture is obtained regarding Isaiah. In addition to his intellectual reputation he also possessed first-rate military intelligence and political thinking, achieving a massive military victory without firing a single arrow.

Sources

Josephus (Flavius) - Antiquities of the Jews books seven-tenth. Bialik Institute 1944 XNUMX pages.

Kogan Mordechai - a collection of historical inscriptions from Assyria and Babylon from the 2003th-179th centuries BC Bialik Institute XNUMX XNUMX pages

XNUMX Kings

The book of Isaiah

The book of XNUMX Chronicles.

for her photo and license

More of the topic in Hayadan:

6 תגובות

  1. Beyond Mazar's private opinion, which can be debated, the article contains very interesting data about records regarding the kingdom of Israel and Judah found in sources other than the Tanakh, which is really interesting
    Shabbat Shalom
    Sabdarmish Yehuda

  2. "Rabashka" is apparently a linguistic distortion of "Rav Mishkim". In other words, Sennacherib did not just send a eunuch, but one of his ministers.
    As for the interpretation - it seems quite far-fetched. It is clear that each of the mentioned texts is from Paris and covers a part of reality and in any case it is not possible to tap from them regarding the actions or connections of one or another character.

  3. The writer sees from the reflections of his stomach. How many more manipulations can be done on a simple text in the Bible?

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