Difference between revisions of "The Moabite Rebellion and the Mesha Stele/0"

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<category>Biblical Sources
 
<category>Biblical Sources
<p><a href="MelakhimII3" data-aht="source">Melakhim II 3</a>&#160;tells how Mesha, the King of Moav, had originally paid tribute to Israel, but rebelled after the death of Achav. As a result, Achav's descendant, Yehoram, makes an alliance with Yehoshafat, the king of Judah, and with Edom to retaliate. With Hashem's aid,&#160; Israel is able to smite Moav, but despite the initial success, the battle ends without a clear victor. The verses are ambiguous but suggest that, in desperation, the King of Moav had offered his son as a sacrifice,<fn>See Rashi.&#160; Others suggest that he sacrificed the heir to the throne of Edom, which caused Edom to get angry at his allies and the alliance to break up.</fn> leading to "great wrath on Israel."&#160; Though the nature and reason for this "wrath" is unclear, it led to the premature end of the battle and the return of the troops to Israel.</p>
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<p><a href="MelakhimII3" data-aht="source">Melakhim II 3</a>&#160;tells how Mesha, the King of Moav, had originally paid tribute to Israel, but rebelled after the death of Achav. As a result, Achav's descendant, Yehoram, makes an alliance with Yehoshafat, the king of Judah, and with Edom to retaliate. With Hashem's aid,&#160; Israel is able to smite Moav, but despite the initial success, the battle ends without a clear victor. The verses are ambiguous but suggest that, in desperation, the King of Moav had offered his son as a sacrifice,<fn>See <multilink><a href="RashiMelakhimII3-27" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiMelakhimII3-27" data-aht="source">Melakhim II 3:27</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</a></multilink>.&#160; R"Y Kara and Radak, however, suggest that he sacrificed the heir to the throne of Edom, which caused Edom to get angry at his allies and the alliance to break up.</fn> leading to "great wrath on Israel."&#160; Though the nature and reason for this "wrath" is unclear, it led to the premature end of the battle and the return of the troops to Israel.</p>
 
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<category>Extra-Biblical Sources: The Mesha Stele
 
<category>Extra-Biblical Sources: The Mesha Stele
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<category>Relationship to the Biblical text
 
<category>Relationship to the Biblical text
<p>There are two main points of discrepancy between the account of the rebellion in Tanakh and in the Mesha Stone:</p>
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<p>There are two main points of discrepancy between the account of the rebellion in Tanakh and in the Mesha Stone:</p><ul>
<ul>
 
 
<li>Dating of Subjugation and Rebellion – According to Melakhim, Moav rebelled after the death of Achav, and the Israelites attempted to re-subjugate them in the time of Yehoram. The Mesha Inscription</li>
 
<li>Dating of Subjugation and Rebellion – According to Melakhim, Moav rebelled after the death of Achav, and the Israelites attempted to re-subjugate them in the time of Yehoram. The Mesha Inscription</li>
 
<li>Outcome of the War –</li>
 
<li>Outcome of the War –</li>

Version as of 10:27, 16 January 2018

The Moabite Rebellion and the Mesha Stele

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Biblical Sources

Melakhim II 3 tells how Mesha, the King of Moav, had originally paid tribute to Israel, but rebelled after the death of Achav. As a result, Achav's descendant, Yehoram, makes an alliance with Yehoshafat, the king of Judah, and with Edom to retaliate. With Hashem's aid,  Israel is able to smite Moav, but despite the initial success, the battle ends without a clear victor. The verses are ambiguous but suggest that, in desperation, the King of Moav had offered his son as a sacrifice,1 leading to "great wrath on Israel."  Though the nature and reason for this "wrath" is unclear, it led to the premature end of the battle and the return of the troops to Israel.

Extra-Biblical Sources: The Mesha Stele

The Moabite rebellion is attested to outside of Tanakh, as it is discussed in detail in an inscription known as the Mesha Stele or the Moabite Stone, a victory monument erected by Mesha, King of Moav. The monument was discovered by a missionary named Frederick Klein in 1868 in Dhiban (Biblical Dibon)2 and is presently in the Louvre Museum in Paris.3

The inscription opens by describing Moav's servitude to Israel, declaring that Omri, King of Israel had "humbled Moab many years, for Chemosh4 was angry at his land". Mesha then tells how, in the days of Omri's son, he was able to triumph over Israel and end their oppression.  The rest of the stele discusses Mesha's various victories, the expansion of his borders, and his building projects.

Relationship to the Biblical text

There are two main points of discrepancy between the account of the rebellion in Tanakh and in the Mesha Stone:

  • Dating of Subjugation and Rebellion – According to Melakhim, Moav rebelled after the death of Achav, and the Israelites attempted to re-subjugate them in the time of Yehoram. The Mesha Inscription
  • Outcome of the War –

Additional Significance of the Stele

  • Earliest extra-Biblical reference to Hashem -– The inscription bears the earliest extra-Biblical reference to Hashem, with lines 17-18 reading: "ואקח. משמ. א[ת כ]לי יהו-ה "
  • Earliest extra-Biblical reference to the House of David – According to the reconstruction of Andre Lemaire,5 line 31 contains a reference to the House of David.6  If he is correct, this is the earliest extra-Biblical reference to the Davidic dynasty.