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<category>Treaties in the Ancient Near East
 
<category>Treaties in the Ancient Near East
 
<p>Second and first millennium (BCE) treaties have been found involving many countries including Egypt, Assyria, Mari, and Babylonia. However, the vast majority of discoveries stem from two eras and locales: the Hittite kingdom of Anatolia (15th-13th c. BCE),<fn>These treaties were found in two main archives, at the ancient capital of the Hittites, Hattusas, and at Ugarit, modern day Ras Shamra.</fn> and the Neo-Assyrian Empire (8th-7th c. BCE). Both show significant similarities to Biblical covenants.</p>
 
<p>Second and first millennium (BCE) treaties have been found involving many countries including Egypt, Assyria, Mari, and Babylonia. However, the vast majority of discoveries stem from two eras and locales: the Hittite kingdom of Anatolia (15th-13th c. BCE),<fn>These treaties were found in two main archives, at the ancient capital of the Hittites, Hattusas, and at Ugarit, modern day Ras Shamra.</fn> and the Neo-Assyrian Empire (8th-7th c. BCE). Both show significant similarities to Biblical covenants.</p>
<p><b>I. Covenantal Form</b>: Ancient near eastern treaties, and especially the Hittite suzerain treaties (which form the focus of this section)<fn>All examples of the form discussed below are from such Hittite treaties. For a vast collection of Hittite diplomatic texts, see G. Beckman, Hittite Diplomatic Texts, ed. H. A. Hoffner Jr. (Atlanta, 1999).</fn> tend to share the same basic format, including the following six elements:<fn>Not every treaty contains all the elements listed, nor do they always preserve the order presented below, but as a whole they appear to share this pattern. The basic sections were first noted by Viktor Korosec, in his article, Hethitische Staatsverträge, ein Beitrag zu ihrer juristischen Wertung, Leipziger rechtswissenschaftliche Studien, vol. 60 (1931): 12–14. G. Mendenhall built off his work in his article, "Covenant Forms in Israelite Tradition," Biblical Archaeologist 17 (1954): 50-76, where he highlighted the importance of the Hittite treaties for Biblical study.&#160; Many scholars have since discussed the common form of the treaties, though they differ regarding some of the specifics.</fn></p>
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<p><b>Covenantal Form</b>: Ancient near eastern treaties, and especially the Hittite suzerain treaties (which form the focus of this section)<fn>All examples of the form discussed below are from such Hittite treaties. For a vast collection of Hittite diplomatic texts, see G. Beckman, Hittite Diplomatic Texts, ed. H. A. Hoffner Jr. (Atlanta, 1999).</fn> tend to share the same basic format, including the following six elements:<fn>Not every treaty contains all the elements listed, nor do they always preserve the order presented below, but as a whole they appear to share this pattern. The basic sections were first noted by Viktor Korosec, in his article, Hethitische Staatsverträge, ein Beitrag zu ihrer juristischen Wertung, Leipziger rechtswissenschaftliche Studien, vol. 60 (1931): 12–14. G. Mendenhall built off his work in his article, "Covenant Forms in Israelite Tradition," Biblical Archaeologist 17 (1954): 50-76, where he highlighted the importance of the Hittite treaties for Biblical study.&#160; Many scholars have since discussed the common form of the treaties, though they differ regarding some of the specifics.</fn></p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
 
<li><b>Preamble</b> – The opening introduced the person who composed the treaty, giving his title and attributes.<fn>Thus, for example in a Hittite treaty between<a href="TreatyBetweenMursilisandDuppi-TessubofAmurru" data-aht="source"> Muršilis and Duppi-Tešub</a>, we read, "These are the words of the Sun Muršilis, the great king, the king of the Hatti land, the valiant, the favorite of the Storm-god, the son of Šuppiluliumas, the great king, the king of the Hatti land, the valiant."</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Preamble</b> – The opening introduced the person who composed the treaty, giving his title and attributes.<fn>Thus, for example in a Hittite treaty between<a href="TreatyBetweenMursilisandDuppi-TessubofAmurru" data-aht="source"> Muršilis and Duppi-Tešub</a>, we read, "These are the words of the Sun Muršilis, the great king, the king of the Hatti land, the valiant, the favorite of the Storm-god, the son of Šuppiluliumas, the great king, the king of the Hatti land, the valiant."</fn></li>
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<li><b>Curses and Blessings </b>– The treaties usually ended with a list of curses and benedictions.</li>
 
<li><b>Curses and Blessings </b>– The treaties usually ended with a list of curses and benedictions.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
<p><b>II. Covenantal Ceremony</b> – In addition to the above, treaties were often accompanied by both:</p>
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<p><b>Covenantal Ceremony</b> – In addition to the above, treaties were often accompanied by both of the following:</p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li>an<b> oath of acceptance</b> by the vassal</li>
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<li><b>Oath of acceptance</b>&#160; – The vassal swore to keep the conditions of the treaty.</li>
<li>a <b>ratification ceremony</b>, involving blood <b>sacrifices</b>. In several first millenium texts, simile curses, in which an offending vassal is compared to a slaughtered animal, suggests that this part of the ceremony served not only to ratify the treaty but to warnt the vassal of his fate were he to violate the agreement.</li>
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<li><b>Ratification ceremony</b>, involving blood <b>sacrifices<fn>Charles F. Fensham, "Did a Treaty between the Israelites and the Kenites Exist?", BASOR 175 (1964): 51-54, cites examples from a letter from Mari and two treaties from Alalakh as evidence:<br/>
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<ul>
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<li>The Letter from Mari&#160; mentions slaughtering an ass in connection to a treaty between Ḫanaeans and Idamaras</li>
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<li>In a treaty from Alalakh (Donald J. Wiseman, Abban and Alalah, Journal of Cuneiform Studies, Vol. 12, No. 4, 1958, pp. 126, 129),we read that Abban “placed himself under oath” and "had cut the neck of a sheep,” saying, “If I take back that which I gave thee!”</li>
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<li>In another treaty from Alalakh (Sidney Smith, The Statute of Idrimi [1949], pp. 16 f.), it mentions that after a covenant is cut between Idrimi and Sutarna, an oath is made and accompanied by a covenant.</li>
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</ul></fn>&#160;</b>In several first millenium texts, simile curses, in which an offending vassal is compared to a slaughtered animal, suggests that this part of the ceremony served not only to ratify the treaty but to warn the vassal of his fate were he to violate the agreement.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</category>
 
</category>

Version as of 02:51, 14 March 2018

Treaties in Tanakh and the Ancient Near East

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Overview

Archaeological finds have revealed many treaties from the ancient Near East which share much in common with their Biblical counterparts.  As such, these documents can shed light on specific aspects of the Biblical examples which are otherwise obscure or overlooked.  At the same time, the differences between the protocols and content of the treaties serve to highlight some of the unique features of Israelite treaties, and especially of Hashem's covenant with the nation.

Treaties in Tanakh

The term ברית appears 284 times in Tanakh, suggesting that a significant number of relationships in Tanakh are covenantal in nature.  In some cases, the term refers to treaties between individual people or countries, such as the treaties between Avraham and Avimelekh, Shelomo and Chiram, or Achav and Ben Hadad.  At other times it refers to a covenant between Hashem and man, such as Hashem's covenant with Noach, Avraham, or the nation of Israel. 

These covenants/treaties fall into two main categories:

  • Promissory treaties – In these, the more powerful party unconditionally promises something or obligates themselves to the less powerful party.  An example would be Hashem's unconditional promises to Avraham or David.1 
  •  Obligatory treaties – These treaties, in contrast, are conditional on the fulfilling of certain stipulations.  These include both suzerainty treaties between unequal parties, in which a vassal is expected to fulfill the treaty's conditions in obedience to an overlord (who, in turn, might promise protection or the like), and parity agreements where two equal parties agree to obey the same set of conditions. Hashem's covenant with Israel exemplifies the former, while Yaakov and Lavan's treaty illustrates the latter.

Treaties in the Ancient Near East

Second and first millennium (BCE) treaties have been found involving many countries including Egypt, Assyria, Mari, and Babylonia. However, the vast majority of discoveries stem from two eras and locales: the Hittite kingdom of Anatolia (15th-13th c. BCE),2 and the Neo-Assyrian Empire (8th-7th c. BCE). Both show significant similarities to Biblical covenants.

Covenantal Form: Ancient near eastern treaties, and especially the Hittite suzerain treaties (which form the focus of this section)3 tend to share the same basic format, including the following six elements:4

  • Preamble – The opening introduced the person who composed the treaty, giving his title and attributes.5
  • Historical introduction – The prologue recounted the events leading up to the decision to make the covenant.  These often focused on the benefits bestowed by the suzerain on his vassal, providing the basis for the expectation of obedience.6
  • Stipulations – These included both general and specific obligations of the vassal to his overlord. Though these vary from treaty to treaty, some common duties included the payment of tribute, provision of military aid, and extradition of fugitives.  The subordinate king was also often prohibited from entering into alliances with kings other than the sovereign.
  • Deposition and Public Reading – In several treaties,7 provisions for depositing the treaty in the temple (of both the vassal and suzerain) and for periodic public readings thereof were laid forth.8 
  • Divine witnesses – Various gods and the natural elements (perhaps also perceived as deities) were called upon to witness the treaty, and sometimes to  punish those who did not keep its terms9
  • Curses and Blessings – The treaties usually ended with a list of curses and benedictions.

Covenantal Ceremony – In addition to the above, treaties were often accompanied by both of the following:

  • Oath of acceptance  – The vassal swore to keep the conditions of the treaty.
  • Ratification ceremony, involving blood sacrifices10 – In several first millenium texts, simile curses, in which an offending vassal is compared to a slaughtered animal, suggests that this part of the ceremony served not only to ratify the treaty but to warn the vassal of his fate were he to violate the agreement.

Covenental Form: Points of Contact

I. Shared Covenantal Format – The treaty format described above has clear echoes in Tanakh.  The most striking parallel is to Hashem's covenants with the Nation of Israel.  In each of the three covenants, at Sinai (Shemot 19-24), in Moav (Sefer Devarim), and  in Shekhem (Yehoshua 24), many of the above components appear:

  • Covenant at Sinai – The Decalogue opens with a short preamble and historical prologue as Hashem introduces Himself: "‎‎אָנֹכִי י"י אֱלֹהֶיךָ אֲשֶׁר הוֹצֵאתִיךָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם מִבֵּית עֲבָדִים."‎11 The next 11 verses lists various stipulations, including the prohibition against other gods,12 the imperative to keep the Sabbath, and interpersonal directives.13 In contrast to Hittite treaties, the Sinai covenant does not conclude with the calling of Divine witnesses.  These are replaced by the tablets (לֻחֹת הָעֵדֻת) and the ark (אֲרוֹן הָעֵדוּת) who themselves serve as testimony to the covenant. Similarly there is no distinct unit of blessings and curses; these are instead interspersed into the stipulations.14 Shemot 24 describes the nation's ratifying of the covenant with an oath of obedience ("נַעֲשֶׂה וְנִשְׁמָע"), sprinkling of blood, and sacrificial meal. Finally,  Hashem commands that the tablets be housed in the Mishkan (Shemot 25).
  • Covenant in Moav – Sefer Devarim as a whole can also be seen to follow the treaty pattern. Chapters 1-3 constitute the historical prologue, Chapters 4-26 include the various stipulations, while Chapters 27-28 list the various blessings and curses (cf. Vayikra 26). The following chapters discuss the covenantal oath (29:8-14), directive to read the covenant every seven years (31:10-13),15 deposition of the ברית near the Ark of the Covenant (31:24-26) and witnesses in the form of the heavens and earth (30:19, 31:28ff).
  • Covenant in Shekhem – Yehoshua's renewal of the covenant in Yehoshua 24 follows the same general format.  After introducing the speaker (2a), verses 2b-13 review various benevolent deeds done by Hashem for the nation throughout their history.  Verses 14-15 stipulate exclusive worship of Hashem, while verses 19-20 warn that disobedience will result in calamity.  The nation promises obedience (24:16-18, 21) and are themselves set up at witnesses to the covenant (24:20), alongside a monumental stone erected as testimony (24:26-27).

Covenental Form: Unique Features

Despite the overall similarity in form, certain features stand out as unique in the Biblical covenants:

  • Stipulations – In all ancient near eastern treaties the conditions laid forth are aimed solely at the benefit of the overlord and never deal with the interpersonal behavior of the members of the vassal state. Hashem's covenant is thus unique in that He expects His vassals to observe laws not only aimed at Him but also their fellow man.
  • Witnesses – Since monotheistic belief in Hashem precludes the existence of other gods, no individual deities are called as witnesses, and substitutes in the form of natural elements, the people themselves, or tablets of the covenant are found.
  • Deposition in Mishkan – Ancient near eastern treaties were written in duplicate, with a copy to be placed in the temple of the gods of both the sovereign and vassal. In Tanakh, as well, there were two tablets made, but since the sovereign and Deity are one and the same, both copies were deposited in the same place, the Mishkan. According to this, each tablet constituted an entire copy of the covenant and contained all ten utterances,16 and not five as is commonly suggested.17
  • Blessings and Curses - In the Hittite treaties, the list of curses tend to precede the blessings,18 and normally call for total destruction of the disobedient party.19 In contrast, in both Vayikra 26 and Devarim 28, the blessings precede the curses. In addition, in Vayikra 26:44-45 Hashem explicitly states that he will not totally destroy the nation.  Though no such promise is made in Devarim, there, too, Hashem allows for the people's repentance and restoration of the relationship.
  • Focus on individual layman 
     

Significance of the Parallels

Breaking the tablets – Many question what led Moshe to break the tablets when seeing the people sin with the golden calf. In light of the above, it would seem that once the nation broke the terms fo Hashem's covenat, the document of that covenat became null and void, le

Covenental Ceremony In addition to the many similarities in covenental form,