The Cities That Built the Bible

Home > Other > The Cities That Built the Bible > Page 35
The Cities That Built the Bible Page 35

by Dr. Robert Cargill


  Mosul, 55

  Mot (deity), 40, 42–43. See also Death (deity)

  Mount of Olives, 171, 185–86, 190, 192

  Mughrabi Ramp, 169

  Muḥammad (prophet), 167

  Muḥammad “the Wolf” (el-Hāmed, Muḥammad Aḥmed), 198, 200–201, 205

  Muratorian Fragment, 254

  Musaeum of Alexandria, 138

  Muses, 138

  Muslim, 167, 171, 194

  Muslim Quarter, 166

  Mycenae(an), 31

  Myers, Mike, 154

  Nabonidus, 96

  Nabopolassar, 81

  Naftali (tribe), 104

  Naḥum, 53, 64, 66–68

  Na‘omi, 222

  Nathan, 95, 184

  National Geographic Channel, 196

  National Museum of Aleppo, 43

  Nazareth, 11, 148, 186, 188, 213, 225–26, 228–32, 265

  Nebuchadnezzar Chronicle, 83

  Nebuchadnezzar II, 25, 57, 77, 82–84, 155, 165, 180, 225

  Nebuzar’adan, 84

  nefesh, 125

  Neḥemiah (Neḥemyah; biblical figure), 181

  Neko II, 107

  Neoplatonism, Neoplatonist, 121–22

  Neo-Assyrian (empire), 54–55, 69, 81–82

  Neo-Babylonian (empire), 69, 78, 81–82, 96, 116

  Neptune (deity), 241

  New York State Bar Association, 208

  New York University, 50, 207

  Nicea, Council of, 2, 258–60

  Nicene confession, 193

  Night Journey, 167

  Nile River, 135–36, 147

  Nimrud (Kalhu), 53, 59

  Nimrud Prisms, 59

  Nineveh, 10, 53, 55–57, 62–69, 115, 264

  Ninth of Av (Tish‘a B’Av), 87

  Noaḥ, 46, 76

  Northern Cheyenne (Native American tribe), 108

  Numitor, 238

  ‘Obed, 222

  ‘Obed ’Edom the Gittite, 178

  Octavian, 241

  Odysseus, 46

  Old Assyrian Kingdom, 54

  Old Babylonian Kingdom, 54

  Olympics (games), 112

  Olympus, Mount, 35, 114

  On Benefits, 130

  On the Sovereignty of Reason, 162

  One, The, 121–22

  O’Neal, Shaquille, 210

  Opis, Battle of, 96

  Oral Torah, 123

  Origen of Alexandria, 220, 254

  Orlinsky, Harry (“Mr. Green”), 203

  ‘Orpah, 222

  Ottoman, 168, 221

  Palatine Hill, 239

  Palestine, Palestinian, 104, 108, 133, 139, 164, 171, 190, 201–202, 213–16, 235, 242, 264

  Panium, Battle of, 115

  pantheon, 34, 42

  papyrus, 18, 135

  Pardee, Dennis, 44

  Paris, 38, 55, 80

  Parthenon, 112, 114

  Parthia(n), 242

  Paul (apostle), 11, 17, 113, 119–20, 125–33, 187, 225, 239–40, 245, 262

  Passover, 186

  Pastafarianism (religion), 268

  Pastoral Letters, 253

  Pax Romana, 241

  Pelethites, 184

  peloni almoni (“Mr. So-and-So”), 222

  Pelops, 124

  Pentateuch, 174

  Pepperdine University, 1, 14

  Peqaḥ, 149–50

  Pergamon Museum, 85

  Perkins, Stewart, 137

  Perseus, 152

  Persia(n), 16, 20, 25, 75, 81, 91–92, 96–98, 111, 114–15, 117, 123, 156, 166, 180–81, 183, 241, 264

  Persian Gulf, 147

  Peter (apostle), 193, 239–40

  Peter II, 193

  Petra, 199

  Phaenomena, 131

  Pharisee, 188

  Pharsalus, Battle of, 242

  Phidias, 114

  Philip II of Macedon, 114

  Philistia, Philistine, 33, 38, 106, 176, 210

  Philo of Alexandria, 126, 145

  Philocrates, 141

  Phoenicia(n), 9–10, 16–26, 28, 34, 37, 41, 48, 50, 59, 76, 82, 241

  Pilate, Pontius, 245–46, 262; Stone, 246

  Plato, 114, 121, 127

  Platonic Academy of Athens, 121

  Platonism, Platonist, 121

  Plotinus, 121

  Plutarch, 138

  Politics, 127

  Pompey the Great (Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus), 241–43

  Porcius Festus, 128

  Porphyry of Tyre, 121

  Poseidon, 241

  Prayer of Nabonidus (4Q242), 92

  Princeton Theological Seminary, 141

  Propylaia, 114

  Protoevangelium of James, 220

  Psalmsa Scroll (11Q5a), 160, 211

  Ptolemies, Ptolemaic (dynasty), 115, 136, 138, 161

  Ptolemy: I Soter, 115, 138; II Philadelphus, 141; IV, 161; VII, 161; VIII Eugeretes II, 139

  Pubala, 43

  Púgatu, 46

  Pul, 54

  Punic Wars, 16, 22

  Puzur-ashur I, 54

  Qadesh, 104

  Qohelet, 87, 122–23

  Quirinius, Publius Sulpicius, 228, 231, 245

  Qumran, Khirbet, 11, 57, 156, 195, 198–99, 203–7, 212, 250, 264

  Qumran-Essene Hypothesis, 204–7

  Qur’an, 2

  Rapa’u, 44

  Rab Shaqeh, 61

  Radiohead, 86

  Rachel (Raḥel), 222

  Raiders of the Lost Ark, 135

  Ras Shamra, 31–32

  Rassam, Hormuzd, 56

  Rebecca (Rebekah, Ribqah, Rivqah), 105

  Records of the Seers, 160

  Red Sea, 24, 146–47

  Reed Sea (Sea of Reeds), 40, 146–47

  Reḥav‘am (Reḥoboam), 57–58, 105

  Remaliah, 150

  Remus, 177, 237–39

  Repha’im: people, 45; Valley of, 181

  Republic, The, 127

  Reṣin, 149–50

  resurrection, 162, 166, 190

  Rhea Silvia, 238

  Riblah, 84

  Roitman, Adolfo, 196–98

  Roman Catholic Church, 163, 194, 262, 267

  Rome, Roman, 11, 16, 55, 111, 119–20, 126, 130, 133, 136, 138–39, 142–43, 145, 151, 166–67, 177, 187, 190, 193, 205, 230–31, 235–43, 245, 262, 265

  Romulus, 177, 237–39

  Rubicon, crossing of, 242

  Rum Stars Camp, 199

  Ruth (biblical figure), 105, 222–23

  Sabine, 239

  Sadducee, 154–55, 188

  Ṣafon (Zaphon), Mount, 35, 43, 114

  Samaria (Shomron), Samaritan: city, 37, 57, 59–60, 64, 66, 69, 107, 150, 174, 178, 264; Pentateuch, 9; Revolt, 221

  Samson (Shimshon), 154

  Samuel (Shmu’el), 222

  Samuel Scroll (4QSama), 210

  Sanders, James A., 5

  Sarah (S´arah; biblical matriarch), 46

  Sarah (Tobit), 154–55

  Sardinia, 16

  Sargon II, 55, 59

  Sargon of Akkad, 33

  satan, the, 44

  Satan, 109

  Saul (Sha’ul; king), 53, 57, 106–7, 176, 224

  Saul (pre-conversion Paul), 128

  Schaeffer, Claude Frédéric-Armand, 31, 38

  Schiffman, Lawrence, 207–8

  Schniedewind, William M., 5

  Scriptorium, 204

  Scripture, 2, 8–9, 10, 139–46, 152– 53, 164, 188–89, 209, 249, 261

  Scythia(n), 81

  Seleucid (dynasty), 92, 115–16, 155, 161, 242

  Seleucus I Nicator, 115

  Sennacherib: (king), 55–56, 60–63, 149, 151, 165; Palace, 56; Prisms (Royal Annals), 62–63

  Seneca the Younger, Lucius Annaeus, 119, 130, 132

  senet, 102

  Senusret III, 172

  September 11th attacks, 171–72

  Septuagint, 9–10, 51, 139, 142, 144– 48, 151–54, 156, 163–64, 210–11, 219, 250–60, 262, 264–65
r />   Service des Antiquités en Syrie et au Liban, 31

  Shadrach, 157–58

  Shabbat, Sabbath, 168–70

  Shafan, 84

  Shalem, 174–75

  Shalmaneser III: king, 54, 59; Black Obelisk of, 59

  Shalmaneser V, 25, 54

  Shamash, 79

  Shamgar son of ‘Anat, 38

  Sharon, Ariel, 242

  Shebna’, 61

  Shechem, 36, 174, 178

  Shekinah, 168

  Sheol (She’ol), 40, 125

  Shepherd of Hermas, 254, 256–57

  Shem, 76

  Shib‘ā Farms, 13

  Shiloh, 174, 177–78

  Shishak, 105–6

  Shoshenq I, Hedjkheperre Setepenre, 105–6

  Shrine of the Book, 196–98, 203

  Sicily, 16

  Ṣidon, 9, 13, 19, 21, 25–29, 263

  Simeon, 231

  Simon Maccabeus, 161

  Sinai: Mount, 49, 80–81; peninsula, 108, 146

  Sisera’, 105, 155

  Sisyphus, 124

  six-chambered gate (Solomonic gate), 100, 101

  Six-Day War, 167

  “slaughter of the innocents”, 243

  Smith, Mark S., 50

  Smoak, Jeremy, 183

  Snyder, Zack, 108

  So I Married an Axe Murderer, 154

  Socrates, 114, 119, 127

  Socrates of Constantinople, 126–27, 190, 192

  Sodom (Sedom), 223

  Solomon (Shlomoh), 22, 24–25, 29, 53, 55, 57–58, 100–101, 165, 179, 183–84

  Songs for Sabbath Sacrifices, 250

  Song of the Three Jews, 157–58

  Sophocles, 114

  soul, 125, 133

  Spain, 16, 240

  Spartan, 106, 108

  Sphinx, 135

  Spock, Mr., 119

  St. Catherine’s Monastery, 257

  Staley, Cale, 103

  Star Trek: original series, 119; The Next Generation, 119

  Star Wars: Episode I—The Phantom Menace, 161

  Stoicism, Stoic, 119, 122, 129– 30, 148

  Suez, Gulf of, 147

  Sukenik, Eleazar, 201–4

  Suleiman I the Magnificent, 168

  Sumerian, 36

  Susanna (character), 158

  Synoptic (gospels), 185–186

  Syria(n), 31, 43, 104, 115, 179, 228, 231, 240–41

  Syrian Orthodox Church, 201

  Syrophoenician woman, 27–28

  Talmud, Babylonian (Bavli), 98, 189, 251

  Tamar, 105

  Tantalus, 124

  targum, 9, 250

  Tartarus, 124–25

  Tel ‘Arad, 179

  Tel ‘Azeqah (Akekah), 72–75, 199–200

  Tel Dan, 38, 50

  Tel Gezer, 50

  Tel Ta‘yinat, 179

  Temple: of ‘Astarte (Bet She’an), 106; of Athena Nike (Athens), 114; of Ba‘al Hadad (Ugarit), 32–33; of Dagon (Ugarit), 32–33; Mount (Jerusalem), 166–69, 171, 187, 237, 242; of Saturn (Rome), 236; of Venus (Jerusalem), 190, 192; of Yahu (Elephantine), 39; of YHWH (Jerusalem), 10, 17, 21–23, 25, 29, 36, 84, 87, 92–96, 98, 105, 118, 145, 166–68, 172, 178–80, 183, 185, 187–89, 193, 235, 242, 245, 262, 264–65; of YHWH (Samaria), 178; of YHWH (Tel ‘Arad), 179

  Tertullian, 130

  Texas Revolution, 108

  Thaïs, 126

  Thanksgiving Hymns Scroll (1QHodayota), 201

  Theodosius II, 121

  Theophilus (pope), 138

  Thermopylae, 108

  Thucydides, 114

  Tiber River, 238

  Tiglath-pileser III, 54, 107

  Tigris River, 55, 117, 147

  Tischendorf, Constantin von, 257

  titulus, 190

  Titus: Roman emperor, 187–88, 237; Arch of, 187–88, 237

  Tobias, 154

  Tobit (character), 154–55

  Torah, 142, 156

  Tower of Babel, 71, 75–78

  Trinity, 242, 263

  triumphal entry, 185

  Triumvirate: First, 242;

  True Cross, 190, 193

  Trypho, 152–53

  Tunis, 16

  Turkey, Turkish, 16, 115, 179, 240

  Tuthmoses III, 104

  Twain, Mark, 192

  Tyre (Ṣur, Ṣor), 9, 13, 17, 19, 21–29, 121, 263

  Tyre, Siege of, 25

  Tzaferis, Vassilios, 14

  U2 (band), 140

  UCLA, 5, 208

  Udum, 43

  Ugarit(ic): city, 9, 31–37, 39–41, 44, 46–48, 51, 114, 263–64; language, 31, 34–36, 38, 41, 43, 47

  UN Resolution 181(II) (Partition Plan for Palestine), 201

  United Nations, 201–2

  Uzzah (‘Uzza’), 178

  Venus, 190, 241

  Vespasian, 237

  Vesta, 238

  Vestal Virgins, 238

  Via Maris, 104

  Via Sacra (Rome), 188

  Virgil, 177, 238

  virgin, 147–48, 151–53, 229

  Vulgate, Latin, 156, 163, 259

  Wadi Rum, 199

  Wailing Wall, 167

  Wall Street Journal, 202

  War Scroll (1QMilḥamah), 201

  Washington D.C., 202

  Waterloo, 108

  West Bank, 48, 213–14, 217

  Western Wall, 10, 166–71

  Willis, Bruce, 99

  Wilson, John F., 244

  Worcester, Massachusetts, 202

  Writing the Dead Sea Scrolls, 196

  Xenophon, 114

  Yabin (Jabin) of Ḥaṣ or, 104–5

  Yadin, Yigael, 203

  Ya‘el (Jael), 105, 155

  Yagrushu, 42

  Yam, 39–40, 42, 50

  yam suf, 146

  Yariḥ, 41

  Yassub, 44

  Yaṭ pan the Drunken Soldier, 45

  Yehoḥanan ben Ḥagqol, 14

  Yehud (Persian province), 98, 115, 180

  Yerubba‘al, 106

  YHWH (Yahu): 10, 25, 33, 35–36, 39–40, 47–48, 50–51, 61, 63–64, 66, 93, 94, 97, 106, 122, 129, 132, 150, 155–56, 59, 181–83; of Samaria, 47; of Teman, 48; Ṣaba’oth, 50

  Yo’aḥ (Joah), 61

  Yon, Marguerite, 33

  Zadok (Ṣadoq), 184

  zarb, 199–200

  Zedekiah (Ṣidqiyah, Ṣidqiyahu), 83–84, 94

  Zeno of Citium, 119

  Zephaniah (Ṣefanyah), 53, 64, 66–67

  Zeus, 114, 127, 132, 152, 241

  ziggurat, 71, 77

  Zion (Ṣiyon), Mount, 90, 173–74, 184

  CREDITS

  Map on page viii courtesy Google Earth, Data SIO, NOAA, U.S. Navy, NGA, GEBCO, and Image Landsat.

  Photographs on insert pages xvi, xvii (bottom), xviii, xix, xx, xxi (top), xxii, xxiii, xxiv, xxv, xxvi, xxvii (top), xxviii, xxx, xxxi, and interior pages 14, 73, 79, 101, 103, 112, 131, 135, 167, 169, 170, 188, 191, 199, 202, 204, 205, 217, 229, and 236 by Robert R. Cargill. Used with permission.

  Photograph on insert page xvii (top) by Benjamin Sitzmann. Used with permission.

  Photograph on insert page xxi (bottom) by Roslyn Cargill. Used with permission.

  Photograph on insert page xxvii (bottom) by Yuval Peleg (). Used with permission.

  Chart on page 20 created by Robert R. Cargill. Used with permission.

  Images on insert page xxix and interior pages 37, 38, 48, 49, 63, 102, 182, 237, and 246 copyright © The Israel Museum, Jerusalem. Used with permission.

  Photograph on page 137 by Stewart M. Perkins. Used with permission.

  Photograph on pages 171, 197, and 198 by John Fothergill. Used with permission.

  Photograph on page 244 of obverse and reverse of Herodian coin from the John F. Wilson collection by Robert R. Cargill, courtesy John F. Wilson. Used with permission.

  PRAISE FOR THE CITIES THAT BUILT THE BIBLE

  “An engaging journey into the Bible and archaeology from a new perspective: instead of sta
rting with kings, prophets, or texts, the author starts with ancient cities in which so much was born—all the while combined with a lively personal account that puts flesh and bones on the tale.”

  —Richard Elliott Friedman, Th.D., author of The Bible with Sources Revealed

  “Cargill offers a riotous gazetteer, one filled with astute observations about the literal and figurative building materials that biblical authors mined—and sometimes had foisted upon them—from key cities of the ancient world. Readers will happily accompany their learned tour guide as they reconsider Near Eastern influence on the Bible and perceive its text from new perspectives.”

  —David Vanderhooft, Ph.D., associate professor of Hebrew Bible in the Department of Theology at Boston College

  “Cargill is a lucid and expert tour guide, taking us from city to city to explain how and why the Bible is an extraordinary product of its material and urban contexts. The people, places, and peculiarities of ancient West Asia come alive in this exhilarating tour of the biblical past.”

  —Francesca Stavrakopoulou, D.Phil., professor of Hebrew Bible and Ancient Religion at the University of Exeter

  “In a compelling narrative that sparkles with life, Cargill takes his readers on a thrilling tour through the cities that built the Bible. The expert guide leaves his readers longing for more. A wonderful way to deepen your knowledge of the biblical writings, their historical context, and the ancient world.”

  —Mark Goodacre, D.Phil., professor of New Testament in the Department of Religious Studies at Duke University

  “With heartfelt sincerity and timely humor, Cargill possesses the historical knowledge, command of biblical languages, and archaeological expertise necessary to successfully communicate the tale of the Bible’s beginnings with a passion that highlights his love for the biblical world.”

  —Oded Lipschits, Ph.D., professor of Jewish history and director of the Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology at Tel Aviv University

  “Cargill explores the urban settings that influenced and shaped some of the Bible’s most profound people and events. He uses archaeology, literature, and personal experience to help readers contextualize the biblical Mediterranean and gain a firm hold on the topography of the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the spread of Christianity. By tying the literature to the geography, Cargill has provided a fascinating, dynamic map for readers to navigate with.”

  —Sarah E. Bond, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Classics at the University of Iowa

  “Woven through from start to finish with insightful scholarship, humor, and the warmth of Cargill’s personal experience. He will take you places you couldn’t otherwise go—under the ground, into a cistern, across a border, and into closely guarded archives—to see things you’d never otherwise see, which in turn will allow you to see the Bible itself in new ways.”

 

‹ Prev