53 People in the BAS Library
Lawrence Mykytiuk’s popular BAR feature “Archaeology Confirms 50 Real People in the Bible” describes 50 Hebrew Bible figures that have been identified archaeologically. His follow-up article, “Archaeology Confirms 3 More Bible People,” adds another three people to the list. In this BAS Library Special Collection, BAR editors have arranged an extensive list of Biblical Archaeology Review, Bible Review and Archaeology Odyssey articles that provide additional context for each figure.
Mykytiuk has supplemented his BAR articles with a complete online list of endnotes detailing the archaeological evidence identifying each Biblical figure. We know that not all of our readers have access to some of the relatively obscure scholarly publications mentioned in his endnotes, so we put together a list of BAS Library-exclusive articles on each of the 53 figures.
In some cases (such as King David), the BAS Library has dozens of articles on the Biblical and archaeological evidence related to a single figure. In these cases, we only included the three articles that best explore the archaeological evidence for the Biblical figure, or best explain their relevance to the period’s history. In other cases, the figure Mykytiuk identified is relatively obscure (such as Ben-hadad, son of Hadadezer) and we have included articles from Biblical Archaeology Review, Bible Review or Archaeology Odyssey that briefly mention the figure or provide the historical context in which they can be understood.
Egypt
1. Shishak (= Shoshenq I), pharaoh, r. 945–924, 1 Kings 11:40 and 14:25
2. So (= Osorkon IV), pharaoh, r. 730–715, 2 Kings 17:4
3. Tirhakah (= Taharqa), pharaoh, r. 690–664, 2 Kings 19:9, etc.
Rewriting Jerusalem History: Jerusalem Under Siege
William H. Shea, Biblical Archaeology Review, Nov/Dec 1999
4. Necho II (= Neco II), pharaoh, r. 610–595, 2 Chronicles 35:20, etc.
5. Hophra (= Apries = Wahibre), pharaoh, r. 589–570, Jeremiah 44:30
8. Ben-hadad, son of Hadadezer, r. or served as co-regent 844/842, 2 Kings 6:24, etc.
“David” Found at Dan
Biblical Archaeology Review, Mar/Apr 1994. [Minor references only]
Tripartite Buildings: Divided Structures Divide Scholars
Moshe Kochavi, Biblical Archaeology Review, May/Jun 1999 [Minor references only]
How Bad Was Ahab?
Ephraim Stern, Biblical Archaeology Review, Mar/Apr 1993
The Black Obelisk
Sidebar to: Erika Belibtreu, “Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death.” Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 1991
15. Joash (= Jehoash), king, r. 805–790, 2 Kings 13:9, etc.
The Persisting Uncertainties of Kuntillet Ajrud
Hershel Shanks, Biblical Archaeology Review, Nov/Dec 2012
16. Jeroboam II, king, r. 790–750/749, 2 Kings 13:13, etc.
18. Pekah, king, r. 750(?)–732/731, 2 Kings 15:25, etc.
19. Hoshea, king, r. 732/731–722, 2 Kings 15:30, etc.
Royal Signature: Name of Israel’s Last King Surfaces in a Private Collection
André Lemaire, Biblical Archaeology Review, Nov/Dec 1995
24. Hezekiah, king, r. 726–697/696, 2 Kings 16:20, etc.
In the Path of Sennacherib
Oded Borowski, Biblical Archaeology Review, May/Jun 2005
Sennacherib’s Siege of Jerusalem: Once or Twice?
Mordechai Cogan, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 2001
25. Manasseh, king, r. 697/696–642/641, 2 Kings 20:21, etc.
Arad—An Ancient Israelite Fortress with a Temple to Yahweh
Miriam Aharoni, Ze’ev Herzog and Anson F. Rainey, Biblical Archaeology Review, Mar/Apr 1987
26. Hilkiah, high priest during Josiah’s reign, within 640/639–609, 2 Kings 22:4, etc.
Name of Deuteronomy’s Author Found on Seal Ring
Josette Elayi, Biblical Archaeology Review, Sep/Oct 1987
Six Biblical Signatures
Tsvi Schneider, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jul/Aug 1991
“Signature” of King Hezekiah’s Servant Recovered
Biblical Archaeology Review, Dec 1975
27. Shaphan, scribe during Josiah’s reign, within 640/639–609, 2 Kings 22:3, etc.
Six Biblical Signatures
Tsvi Schneider, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jul/Aug 1991
Royal Rosettes: Fit for a King
Jane M. Cahill, Biblical Archaeology Review, Sep/Oct 1997
28. Azariah, high priest during Josiah’s reign, within 640/639–609, 1 Chronicles 5:39, etc.
Six Biblical Signatures
Tsvi Schneider, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jul/Aug 1991
Name of Deuteronomy’s Author Found on Seal Ring
Josette Elayi, Biblical Archaeology Review, Sep/Oct 1987
29. Gemariah, official during Jehoiakim’s reign, within 609–598, Jeremiah 36:10, etc.
Six Biblical Signatures
Tsvi Schneider, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jul/Aug 1991
30. Jehoiachin (= Jeconiah = Coniah), king, r. 598–597, 2 Kings 24:5, etc.
31. Shelemiah, father of Jehucal the official, late 7th century, Jeremiah 37:3; 38:1
and
33. Pashhur, father of Gedaliah the official, late 7th century, Jeremiah 38:1
and
34. Gedaliah, official during Zedekiah’s reign, fl. within 597–586, Jeremiah 38:1 only
The Interchange Between Bible and Archaeology
Nadav Na’aman, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 2014
Assyria
35. Tiglath-pileser III (= Pul), king, r. 744–727, 2 Kings 15:19, etc.
Israel in Exile
Zvi Gal, Biblical Archaeology Review, May/Jun 1998
Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death
Erika Bleibtreu, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 1991
36. Shalmaneser V (= Ululaya), king, r. 726–722, 2 Kings 17:2, etc.
Did King Jehu Kill His Own Family?
Tammi Schneider, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 1995
Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death
Erika Bleibtreu, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 1991
37. Sargon II, king, r. 721–705, Isaiah 20:1
Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death
Erika Bleibtreu, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 1991
Israelites in Exile
K. Lawson Younger, Jr., Biblical Archaeology Review, Nov/Dec 2003
38. Sennacherib, king, r. 704–681, 2 Kings 18:13, etc.
Rewriting Jerusalem History: Jerusalem Under Siege
William H. Shea, Biblical Archaeology Review, Nov/Dec 1999
Destruction of Judean Fortress Portrayed in Dramatic Eighth-Century B.C. Pictures
Hershel Shanks, Biblical Archaeology Review, Mar/Apr 1984
Will King Hezekiah Be Dislodged from His Tunnel?
Hershel Shanks, Biblical Archaeology Review, Sep/Oct 2013
In the Path of Sennacherib
Oded Borowski, Biblical Archaeology Review, May/Jun 2005
39. Adrammelech (= Ardamullissu = Arad-mullissu), son and assassin of Sennacherib, fl. early 7th century, 2 Kings 19:37, etc.
Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and Death
Erika Bleibtreu, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 1991
Babylonia
41. Merodach-baladan II (=Marduk-apla-idinna II), king, r. 721–710 and 703, 2 Kings 20:12, etc.
Nebuchadnezzar and Solomon
Bill T. Arnold, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 2007 [Minor Reference only]
42. Nebuchadnezzar II, king, r. 604–562, 2 Kings 24:1, etc.
Nebuchadnezzar and Solomon
Bill T. Arnold, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 2007
Nebuchadnezzar and Solomon
Ephraim Stern, Biblical Archaeology Review, Nov/Dec 2000
The Fury of Babylon: Ashkelon and the Archaeology of Destruction
Lawrence E. Stager, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 1996
43. Nebo-sarsekim, chief official of Nebuchadnezzar II, fl. early 6th century, Jeremiah 39:3.
44. Nergal-sharezer (= Nergal-sharuṣur the Sin-magir = Nergal-šarru-uṣur the simmagir), officer of Nebuchadnezzar II, early sixth century, Jeremiah 39:3
Biblical Archaeology Review, Jul/Aug 2014
45. Nebuzaradan (= Nabuzeriddinam = Nabû-zēr-iddin),
a chief officer of Nebuchadnezzar II, early sixth century, 2 Kings 25:8, etc. & Jeremiah 39:9, etc.
Reconstructing the Magnificent Temple Herod Built
Joseph Patrich, Bible Review, Oct 1988 [Biblical reference only]
Exile and Return: From the Babylonian Destruction to the Reconstruction of the Jewish State
Eric M. Meyers and James D. Purvis, Ancient Israel, 1999 [Biblical reference only]
The Book of Jeremiah: a Work in Progress
Emanuel Tov, Bible Review, Jun 2000 [Biblical reference only]
46. Evil-merodach (=Awel Marduk, = Amel Marduk), king, r. 561–560, 2 Kings 25:27, etc.
Thus Far the Words of Jeremiah
Steve Delamarter, Bible Review, Oct 1999
47. Belshazzar, son and co-regent of Nabonidus, fl. ca. 543?–540, Daniel 5:1, etc.
Daniel and Belshazzar in History
Alan R. Millard, Biblical Archaeology Review, May/Jun 1985.
Persia
48. Cyrus II (=Cyrus the great), king, r. 559–530, 2 Chronicles 36:22, etc.
Cyrus the Messiah
Lisbeth S. Fried, Bible Review, Oct 2003
Big City, Few People
David Ussishkin, Biblical Archaeology Review, Jul/Aug 2005
49. Darius I (=Darius the Great), king, r. 520–486, Ezra 4:5, etc.
Why Darius Built Persepolis
Ali Mousavi, Archaeology Odyssey, Nov/Dec 2005
Making (Up) History
Matt Waters, Archaeology Odyssey, Nov/Dec 2005
Who Returned First: Ezra or Nehemiah?
Aaron Demsky, Bible Review, Apr 1996
53. Darius II Nothus, king, r. 425/424-405/404, Nehemiah 12:22
Who Returned First: Ezra or Nehemiah?
Aaron Demsky, Bible Review, Apr 1996 [No direct reference, though this provides context for the period]
Articles
“In the fifth year of King Rehoboam, King Shishak of Egypt marched against Jerusalem.”
The Assyrian monarch Sennacherib’s military campaign against King Hezekiah of Judah is one of the best-documented and most discussed events in the history of ancient Israel. The late-eighth-century B.C.E. encounter is reported in both Kings (2 Kings 18:13–19:37) and Chronicles (2 Chronicles 32:1–23). It is likely the backdrop for several prophetic teachings (for […]
Rarely do Biblical texts and extra-Biblical materials supplement one another so well as those that describe the last two decades before the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem, which marked the end of the Judahite state in 586 B.C.E. As a result, we can reconstruct a kind of microanalytical study of this period. We can trace […]
F. A. Klein was an Anglican minister, born in Alsace, who came to the Holy Land as a medical missionary in the mid-1800s. Although he lived in Jerusalem, he traveled widely on both sides of the Jordan, seeking to relieve pain and win converts. As a result of his work in Palestine, he spoke […]
In his highly interesting article, “Why the Moabite Stone Was Blown to Pieces,” BAR 12:03, Professor Siegfried Horn recounts the ninth-century B.C. war between Moab and an alliance of Israel, Judah and Edom. When the alliance besieged the Moabite capital of Kir-Hareseth, the Moabite king Mesha, in desperation, sacrificed his eldest son to the […]
We unexpectedly found a Moabite temple, the first of its kind ever discovered, during an excavation in 1999.
One of the most dramatic finds ever made relating to the Bible is the famous Black Obelisk of the Assyrian king Shalmaneser III (ruled 858–824 B.C.E.), excavated by Austen Henry Layard at Nimrud in 1846 and now prominently displayed in the British Museum. The four-sided limestone monument is decorated with five registers of relief […]
It’s not often that an archaeological find makes the front page of the New York Times (to say nothing of Time magazine). But that is what happened last summer to a discovery at Tel Dan, a beautiful mound in northern Galilee, at the foot of Mt. Hermon beside one of the headwaters of the […]
Three of the five cities of the famous Philistine Pentapolis have long been known—Ashkelon, Ashdod and Gaza. A fourth, Ekron, has recently been confirmed by an inscription, locating it at modern Tel Miqne. Gath, the fifth, remains somewhat of a mystery. We believe we have found it—at Tell es-Safi, where we have been […]
The popularly told story of the Israelites’ exile under Assyrian rule is a simple one: The Assyrians conquered the northern kingdom of Israel in 722 B.C.E. and deported the population. These Israelites—the “Ten Lost Tribes”—were never heard from again. Actually, the situation was more complicated—and more interesting. The demise of the northern kingdom […]
One day in 1989 rumor reached me that monumental Israelite architecture had accidentally been uncovered at Tel Jezreel in the Jezreel Valley in northern Israel. I was then, as now, a professional archaeologist who studies the Biblical period. I have always been inspired by the Bible and the historical events described in it, […]
Has archaeology provided us with a visual portrait of an Israelite king? Well, yes and no. Or rather, no and yes. The “yes” is on the famous Black Obelisk in the British Museum, often thought to include a portrait of the Israelite King Jehu bowing before the Assyrian monarch. Alas, it is really a […]
Everything about it has been difficult. Located in the Sinai desert about 10 miles west of the ancient Gaza Road (Darb Ghazza, in Arabic) as it passes through Bedouin territory separating the Negev from Egypt, it is remote and isolated from any other settlement. In 1975, a Tel Aviv University archaeologist named Ze’ev Meshel, […]
Over a century ago, the great would-be reconstructor of early Israelite history, Julius Wellhausen, claimed that “no historical knowledge” of the patriarchs could be gotten from Genesis. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were merely a “glorified mirage” from later Hebrew history, projected back in time.1 Then between the 1940s and 1960s, such scholars as William […]
The name of the northern kingdom of Israel’s last king has turned up on a beautiful seal from the eighth century B.C.E.! Although the seal did not belong to the king himself, it was the property of one of his high-ranking ministers. The king is Hoshea (HWSû‘ in Hebrew; the same name as that […]
When the Ta‘âmireh bedouin penetrated the Daliyeh cave (as described in the previous article by Paul Lapp) they found within more than 300 skeletons lying on or covered by mats. The bones were mixed with fragments of manuscripts. These manuscripts were not burial documents, but everyday business records. The artifacts found in the cave […]
According to the first-century Jewish historian Josephus, the Samaritan leader Sanballat promised to build a temple on Gerizim, the Samaritan’s holy mountain, in imitation of the Jerusalem temple. This, Josephus tells us, occurred at the time of Alexander the Great’s conquest of the Land of Israel (332 B.C.E.).
The recent discovery at Tel Dan of a fragment of a stela containing a reference to the “House of David” (that is, the dynasty of David) is indeed sensational and deserves all the publicity it has received.a The Aramaic inscription, dated to the ninth century B.C.E., was originally part of a victory monument […]
A leading Egyptologist has recently suggested that the name of the Biblical king David may appear in a tenth-century B.C.E. Egyptian inscription. If correct, this mention of David dates a hundred years earlier than the mention of the “House of David” in the now-famous stele from Tel Dan and fewer than 50 years after […]
The City of Salt has been found. The late, much-lamented Pesach Bar-Adon identified it. Bar-Adon died in 1985 at the age of 77.
It is time to give BAR readers a look at the first seal impression of a Hebrew king ever found. BAR editor Hershel Shanks knew of its existence before I showed it at the Annual Meeting in New Orleans in November 1996, so before the meeting he announced a contest to guess the name […]
The recent discovery at Tel Dan of a ninth-century B.C.E. inscription—the first extra-biblical reference to the House of David—is causing extraordinary contortions among scholars who have maintained that the Bible’s history of the early Israelite monarchy is simply fiction. According to these scholars, the history of the Israelite monarchy was made up after the […]
“I laid waste the large district of Judah and made the overbearing and proud Hezekiah, its king, bow in submission,” boasts Sennacherib, monarch of Assyria, in a preserved cuneiform inscription.1 “I laid siege to 46 of his strong cities: … and conquered (them),” Sennacherib elsewhere claims, obviously hoping to secure his place in history. […]
The ancient Persian empire, founded by Cyrus the Great (559–530 B.C.), was on the verge of chaos. In 525 B.C. Cyrus’s son and successor, Cambyses II, led a campaign in Egypt to expand the empire’s territories. Just three years later, however, Cambyses was forced to return to Persia to put down a revolt by […]
Persepolis is a mystery. The ancient Persian city boasts some of the world’s most impressive ruins, but no one knows exactly why it was built. The ruling Achaemenid Persian dynasty already had a capital at Pasargadae when Persepolis was founded by Darius I (522–486 B.C.), also known as Darius the Great, and they […]
Author Lawrence Mykytiuk has updated his popular BAR article “Archaeology Confirms 50 Real People in the Bible” from the March/April 2014 issue with evidence of more real Hebrew Bible people. Who makes the new cut?
The Israelite fortress at Arad is unique in the Land of Israel. It’s the only site excavated with modern archaeological methods that contains a continuous archaeological record from the period of the Judges (c. 1200 B.C.) to the Babylonian destruction of the First Temple (580 B.C.). This distinction promises to make Arad the […]
It was at a party sponsored by the University of Paris in June 1984. We were chatting about nothing in particular when a friend of my husband’s mentioned that he had recently seen some Phoenician antiquities at the home of a Paris collector, more specifically a beautiful ring containing a seal that appeared to […]
Hebrew University professor Nahman Avigad, the world’s leading authority on Hebrew seals, lamented that “among the hundreds of Hebrew seals and seal-impressions dating from biblical times known up to now, not one of their owners can be identified with absolute certainty with a person mentioned in the Bible.”1 That was in 1978. Today, […]
Although we didn’t recognize it at the time, during our recent excavation of the City of David we uncovered a wine decanter that may have graced the table of a high royal official of one of the last kings of Judah. This is not simply idle speculation. We know that the vessel is a […]
There can be little doubt that King David had a palace. The Bible tells us that Hiram of Tyre (who would later help King Solomon build the Temple) constructed the palace for David: “King Hiram of Tyre sent envoys to David, with cedar logs, carpenters and stonemasons; and they built a palace for […]
Even before Nehemiah came from Babylonia to Jerusalem in the middle of the fifth century B.C.E., he knew that he wanted to rebuild the broken-down walls of Jerusalem (Nehemiah 1:3). When he arrived, he promptly made his famous night journey around the city, surveying the dilapidated city wall (Nehemiah 2:11–15). On the eastern slope, […]
Evidence from the Bible and from archaeology must be interpreted independently of each other, but in the end they must be compared and interpreted.
Assyrian national history, as it has been preserved for us in inscriptions and pictures, consists almost solely of military campaigns and battles. It is as gory and bloodcurdling a history as we know. Assyria emerged as a territorial state in the 14th century B.C. Its territory covered approximately the northern part of modern Iraq. […]
In the late eighth century B.C., Lachish was the second most important city in the kingdom of Judah. Only Jerusalem surpassed it. At that time, Assyria had risen to unprecedented power, dominating the known world. On the eve of Sennacherib’s accession to the Assyrian throne in 705 B.C., the Assyrian empire extended from Elam […]
It is one of the most famous sites in Jerusalem—right up there after the Dome of the Rock, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Western Wall. And it is also one of the most exciting to visit—Hezekiah’s Tunnel. But is it really his? The story is well known and oft told. In […]
Although the Bible gives a detailed description of Solomon’s Temple, we have no physical remains of the building destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C.E. Thanks to the recent excavation of several hitherto-unknown ancient Near Eastern temples, however, archaeologists are shedding new light on similarities and differences between these temples and King Solomon’s structure.
When we received a copy of Kenneth A. Kitchen’s new book, On the Reliability of the Old Testament, we knew that we should review it. Kitchen is one of the world’s leading scholars (he specializes in Egyptology), and the subject matter of the book—how historically accurate is the Bible?—is of central interest to many of our readers. We asked Ronald Hendel, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley and a columnist for our sister magazine, Bible Review, to review it for us.
Departments
One of the most famous Hebrew seals ever discovered has been lost for 95 years. It is known only from a photograph—and from the myriad replicas (including belt buckles) made from an impression produced before the seal was lost. It was recovered in March 1904 during the earliest excavation of Megiddo, led by Gottlieb […]
When April 15 rolls around this year, taxpayers may take some small comfort in the fact that taxes are by no means a modern invention. Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain both famously remarked about the certainty of death and taxes, and a recent archaeological discovery from Jerusalem has added to scholars’ certainty about a tax system in ancient Israel—or rather, Judah.
You wouldn’t expect an old receipt to have major significance for Biblical studies. And yet just such a receipt came to light while Dr. Michael Jursa was studying some of the archived cuneiform tablets in the Babylonian collection of the British Museum. Jursa, an Austrian Assyriologist from the University of Vienna, was deciphering the small clay tablet when he came across the name of a secondary character mentioned in the Bible.
Since its discovery more than 130 years ago, the Cyrus Cylinder has been a striking example of an archaeological artifact that independently confirms a Biblical account.
After being posted to India in 1827, a young cavalry officer named Henry Creswicke Rawlinson (1810–1895) demonstrated a remarkable aptitude for languages, mastering Hindustani, modern Persian and Arabic. In 1833 he was sent to Persia to help train the Shah’s troops. While visiting the mountainous region of western Kurdistan, he became fascinated by a […]