Jericho Mushi in a Differently Organized List of Levites I

Jericho Mushi in a Differently Organized List of Levites I

955 Jeriah/Jerijah 956 3. Son of Mushi mighty men of mostly Transjordanian origin Jeremoth (LXX Ιαριμωθ) is the name of one of three (vv. 41b–47), his tribal or geographical origin is un- sons of Mushi, belonging to one of three levitical known. divisions (the line of Merari, son of Levi), said to Jaeyoung Jeon have been set up by David (1 Chr 23 : 23). The Jeri- moth (MT Yĕrîmôt; LXX still Ιαριμωθ) who again ap- pears together with the same brothers as sons of Jericho Mushi in a differently organized list of Levites I. Archaeology (1 Chr 24 : 30) must refer to the same person. II. Hebrew Bible/Old Testament III. New Testament 4. Descendant of Elam IV. Judaism V. Christianity Jeremoth (LXX Ιαριμωθ), descendant of Elam, is VI. Literature mentioned in a list of Israelites who had married VII. Visual Arts foreign women and were forced to send away wife VIII. Music and children (Ezra 10 : 26). IX. Film 5. Descendant of Zattu I. Archaeology Jeremoth (LXX Ιαρμωθ), descendant of Zattu, also Jericho (MT Yĕrîḥô) was an ancient Canaanite and appears in a list of Israelites who had married for- Israelite town in the lower Jordan Valley, located 10 eign women and who were forced to send away wife km north of the Dead Sea and 10 km west of the and children (Ezra 10 : 27). Jordan River. During the Bronze and Iron Age peri- ods the town was located at Tell es-Sulṭān, an elon- 6. Descendant of Bani gated mound, running roughly north-south, about Jeremoth (MT Yĕrēmôt [Ketib]; LXX [κα] Ρημωθ), de- 4 hectares (10 acres, 40 dunnams) in size. At 250 scendant of Bani, appears in a list of Israelites, who m below sea level, Jericho was the lowest ancient had married foreign women and who was forced to settlement on the face of the earth. Its climate is send away wife and children (Ezra 10 : 29). The Qere tropical, with very hot temperatures in the summer, reads (wĕ)Rāmôt, in line with the LXX. mild temperatures during winter, and very little Thomas Kazen rainfall. The water source of the ancient town was a copious spring (Ein es-Sulṭān, Elisha’s Spring) lo- cated at the eastern base of the tell. Jeriah/Jerijah Jericho is mentioned in several narrative epi- sodes in the HB, as well as several times in passing Jeriah/Jerijah (MT Yĕrîyâ [1 Chr 26 : 31; ET: Jerijah; geographical references, conquest lists, or tribal LXX Ι υδιας]orYĕrîyāhû [1Chr 23 : 19; 24 : 23; ET: border descriptions. Jeriah; LXX Ιδ υδ/Ιεδιας], meaning perhaps “may Four major archaeological expeditions have ex- YHWH teach”) appears in the lists of the Levites, cavated at Tell es-Sultan. The Austrian-German ex- which were supposedly established by David (1 Chr pedition of Ernst Sellin and Carl Watzinger worked 23–26). Yĕrîyâ seems to be a Levite chief linked to at the site in 1907–9, at the time it was under Otto- the Hebronites working for YHWH and the king man rule. John Garstang of the University of Liver- (1 Chr 26 : 30). Since 1 Chr 23–27 reflects the organi- pool excavated at the tell 1930–36, following his zation around the Second Temple (Williamson), one tenure as director of the British School of Archaeol- could assume that Jeriah was part of it. ogy in Jerusalem and director of the department of Bibliography: ■ Williamson, H. G. M., “The Origins of the antiquities director for the British Mandate in Pal- Twenty-Four Priestly Courses: A Study of Chronicles xxiii– estine. Kathleen Kenyon excavated at the tell 1952– xxvii,” in Studies in the Historical Books of the Old Testament 58 on behalf of the British School of Archaeology in (ed. J. A. Emerton; VTSup 30; Leiden 1979) 251–68. Jerusalem. More recently, Lorenzo Nigro of Rome Fabian Pfitzmann La Sapienza University has directed the joint Ital- ian-Palestinian Authority expedition at Tell es- Sulṭān from 1997 to the present. Results of these Jeribai expeditions have produced a complicated picture of Jeribai (MT Yĕrîbay; LXX Ιαριι), the son of Elnaam the ancient town. and brother of Joshaviah is one of David’s mighty The mound was first settled in the 9th millen- men who supported David to gain kingship (1 Chr nium BCE, during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A pe- 11 : 46). He appears in the Chronicler’s additional riod. Consisting of circular huts made from clay list of David’s mighty men (1 Chr 11 : 41b–47), but bricks, the settlement was protected by a massive is missing in the parallel list in 1 Sam 23 (= 1 Chr defense wall, recovered partially on the tell’s west 11 : 26–41a). Even though Jeribai is mentioned to- side. An 8.5 m wide stone tower was connected to gether with his father and brother in this list of the the inside of the defense wall. The tower featured Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception vol. 13 Authenticated | [email protected] © Walter de Gruyter, Berlin/Boston, 2016 Download Date | 11/25/18 9:09 AM 957 Jericho 958 an interior spiral staircase of twentytwo steps, and ued at the site in Late Bronze Age IIB (13th cent. survives to a height of 7.75 m. It dates to ca. 8000 BCE). This has led to express doubt concerning the BCE and is regarded as a remarkable example of biblical narrative of the conquest of Jericho (see prehistoric architecture and community coopera- Josh 6). tion. After abandonment, the mound was again set- Severe erosion also left few remains from the tled in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B period, early in Iron Age atop the mound, but structures and pot- the 7th millennium BCE (ca. 6700). In this period tery from Iron Age IIA (9th cent. BCE), and Iron the town, which has been compared to Ҫatal Hüyük Age IIC (7th cent. BCE) confirm that the town was of the same period in Turkey, was walled and fea- settled during those periods, which would correlate tured rectangular shaped houses. Subsequent pre- to the stories of Hiel and Zedekiah respectively. The historic population at the tell, during the Pottery town was most likely occupied during Iron Age IIB Neolithic A and B periods, was discerned only in (8th cent. BCE) as well. pits dug into the earlier period remains. Habitation at Tell es-Sultan effectively ceased at The urban age began at Jericho during shortly the end of the Iron Age. During the Hellenistic pe- before 3000 BCE when a culture arrived, apparently riod a new town grew up 2 km southeast of the tell, from outside Canaan, which occupied the tell, in the area of the modern Jericho city center. This which became a settled city throughout the 3rd mil- Second Temple period settlement endured through lennium BCE, during all periods of the Early the Hasmonean and Herodian periods, and was the Bronze Age. The city was again surrounded by a Jericho visited by Jesus (see Matt 20 : 29; Mark fortification wall, constructed of mud bricks, which 10 : 46; Luke 19 : 1). The NT story of the “good Sa- ran along the high periphery of the mound, seven- maritan” begins with a traveler “which went down teen different building stages of which have been from Jerusalem to Jericho,” reflecting the stark discerned in excavations. Houses were constructed 1,000 m difference in elevation between Jerusalem on terraces which graded the east and west sides of at 750 m above sea level and Jericho at 250 m below the tell. Burials occurred in rock cut tombs west of sea level, though the towns are only linear separate the town. The long Early Bronze Age duration of by 20 km. During these periods, a series of palaces Jericho ended around 2200 BCE when the town was and pools was built by the Hasmonean royal family destroyed and burnt with fire. Ephemeral evidence on the high banks of the mouth of Wadi Qelt,at of a small, unfortified community at the tell was Tulul Abu el-Alayiq, some 3 km west of the town. found dating to the Intermediate (or Middle Bronze Three more palaces were added to the complex by I) Age. Herod the Great, who named the fortified area Cy- During Middle Bronze Age II the city on the tell pros, after his mother. Excavation at some of these revived again, and a massive mud brick city wall sites was carried out on 1950–51 by American was constructed with a glacis revetment. The glacis teams led by James Kelso and James Pritchard. Be- featured a slope of 35 degrees, and rose some 17 ginning in 1973, extensive excavation at the com- meters up the side of the tell to meet the base of plexes was directed by Ehud Netzer of the Hebrew the city wall itself. An additional sloping revetment University of Jerusalem. It was at Herod’s third pal- wall of very large stones (called the Curvelinear ace, which spanned the Wadi Qelt with an elaborate Stone Structure by the Italian expedition) was built bridge, that Herod the Great died in the spring of as a supporting , protective shell for the glacis. Mud 4 BCE (cf. Matt 2 : 19). brick buildings of the Middle Bronze Age II city Bibliography: ■ Garstang, J., The Story of Jericho (London terminated in a fiery destructive event which has 1948). ■ Kenyon, K. M., Digging Up Jericho (London 1957). been C14 dated to the mid-16th century BCE, and ■ Kenyon, K. M., Excavations at Jericho, vol. 3: The Architecture was perhaps connected with the end of Hyksos rule and Stratigraphy of the Tell (London 1981).

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