<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P115"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXXI"></SPAN>XXI<br/> THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE JEWS</h2>
<p>And now we can tell of the Hebrews, a Semitic people, not so important in their
own time as in their influence upon the later history of the world. They were
settled in Judea long before 1000 <small>B.C.</small>, and their capital city
after that time was Jerusalem. Their story is interwoven with that of the great
empires on either side of them, Egypt to the south and the changing empires of
Syria, Assyria and Babylon to the north. Their country was an inevitable high
road between these latter powers and Egypt.</p>
<p>Their importance in the world is due to the fact that they
produced a written literature, a world history, a collection
of laws, chronicles, psalms, books of wisdom, poetry and
fiction and political utterances which became at last what
Christians know as the Old Testament, the Hebrew Bible. This
literature appears in history in the fourth or fifth century
<small>B.C.</small></p>
<p>Probably this literature was first put together in Babylon.
We have already told how the Pharaoh, Necho II, invaded the
Assyrian Empire while Assyria was fighting for life against
Medes, Persians and Chaldeans. Josiah King of Judah opposed
him, and was defeated and slain at Megiddo (608
<small>B.C.</small>). Judah became a tributary to Egypt, and
when Nebuchadnezzar the Great, the new Chaldean king in
Babylon, rolled back Necho into Egypt, he attempted to manage
Judah by setting up puppet kings in Jerusalem. The
experiment failed, the people massacred his Babylonian
officials, and he then determined to break up this little
state altogether, which had long been playing off Egypt
against the northern empire. Jerusalem was sacked and burnt,
and the remnant of the people was carried off captive to
Babylon.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P116"></SPAN></span>There
they remained until Cyrus took Babylon (538
<small>B.C.</small>). He then collected them together and sent
them back to resettle their country and rebuild the walls and
temple of Jerusalem.</p>
<p>Before that time the Jews do not seem to have been a very
civilized or united people. Probably only a very few of them
could read or write. In their own history one never hears of
the early books of the Bible being read; the first mention of
a book is in the time of Josiah. The Babylonian captivity
civilized them and consolidated them. They returned aware of
their own literature, an acutely self-conscious and political
people.</p>
<p>Their Bible at that time seems to have consisted only of the
Pentateuch, that is to say the first five books of the Old
Testament as we know it. In addition, as separate books they
already had many of the other books that have since been
incorporated with the Pentateuch into the present Hebrew
Bible, Chronicles, the Psalms and Proverbs for example.</p>
<p>The accounts of the Creation of the World, of Adam and Eve
and of the Flood, with which the Bible begins, run closely
parallel with similar Babylonian legends; they seem to have
been part of the common beliefs of all the Semitic peoples.
So too the stories of Moses and of Samson have Sumerian and
Babylonian parallels. But with the story of Abraham and
onward begins something more special to the Jewish race.</p>
<p>Abraham may have lived as early as the days of Hammurabi in
Babylon. He was a patriarchal Semitic nomad. To the book of
Genesis the reader must go for the story of his wanderings
and for the stories of his sons and grandchildren and how
they became captive in the Land of Egypt. He travelled
through Canaan, and the God of Abraham, says the Bible story,
promised this smiling land of prosperous cities to him and to
his children.</p>
<p>And after a long sojourn in Egypt and after fifty years of
wandering in the wilderness under the leadership of Moses,
the children of Abraham, grown now to a host of twelve
tribes, invaded the land of Canaan from the Arabian deserts
to the East. They may have done this somewhen between 1600
<small>B.C.</small> and 1300 <small>B.C.</small>;
there are no Egyptian records of Moses nor
of Canaan at this time to help out the story. But at any
rate they did not succeed in conquering any <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P117"></SPAN></span>more than the
hilly backgrounds of the promised land. The coast was now in
the hands, not of the Canaanites but of newcomers, those
Ægean peoples, the Philistines; and their cities, Gaza,
Gath, Ashdod, Ascalon and Joppa successfully withstood the
Hebrew attack. For many generations the children of Abraham
remained an obscure people of the hilly back country engaged
in incessant bickerings with the Philistines and with the
kindred tribes about them, the Moabites, the Midianites and
so forth. The reader will find in the book of Judges a
record of their struggles and disasters during this period.
For very largely it is a record of disasters and failures
frankly told.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-117"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-117.jpg" alt="Map: The Land of the Hebrews" width-obs="500" height-obs="813" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P118"></SPAN></span>For most
of this period the Hebrews were ruled, so far as there was
any rule among them, by priestly judges selected by the
elders of the people, but at last somewhen towards 1000
<small>B.C.</small> they chose themselves a king, Saul, to
lead them in battle. But Saul’s leading was no great
improvement upon the leading of the Judges; he perished under
the hail of Philistine arrows at the battle of Mount Gilboa,
his armour went into the temple of the Philistine Venus, and
his body was nailed to the walls of Beth-shan.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-118"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-118.jpg" alt="MOUND AT BABYLON" width-obs="450" height-obs="626" /> <p class="caption">
THE MOUND AT BABYLON
<br/>
<small>Beneath which are the remains of a great palace of
Nebuchadnezzar
<br/>
<i>Photo: Underwood & Underwood</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>His successor David was more successful and more politic.
With David dawned the only period of prosperity the Hebrew
peoples were ever to know. It was based on a close alliance
with the Phœnician city of Tyre, whose King Hiram seems
to have been a man of very great intelligence and enterprise.
He wished to secure a trade route to the Red Sea through the
Hebrew hill country. Normally Phœnician trade went to
the Red Sea by Egypt, but Egypt was in a state of profound
disorder at this <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P119"></SPAN></span>time; there may have been other
obstructions to Phœnician trade along this line, and at
any rate Hiram established the very closest relations both
with David and with his son and successor Solomon. Under
Hiram’s auspices the walls, palace and temple of
Jerusalem arose, and in return Hiram built and launched his
ships on the Red Sea. A very considerable trade passed
northward and southward through Jerusalem. And Solomon
achieved a prosperity and magnificence unprecedented in the
experience of his people. He was even given a daughter of
Pharaoh in marriage.</p>
<p>But it is well to keep the proportion of things in mind. At
the climax of his glories Solomon was only a little
subordinate king in a little city. His power was so
transitory that within a few years of his death, Shishak the
first Pharaoh of the twenty-second dynasty, had taken
Jerusalem and looted most of its splendours. The account of
Solomon’s magnificence given in the books of Kings and
Chronicles is questioned by many critics. They say that it
was added to and exaggerated by the patriotic pride of later
writers. But the Bible account read carefully is not so
overwhelming as it appears at the first reading.
Solomon’s temple, if one works out the measurements,
would go inside a small suburban church, and his fourteen
hundred chariots cease to impress us when we learn from an
Assyrian monument that his successor Ahab sent a contingent
of two thousand to the Assyrian army. It is also plainly
manifest from the Bible narrative that Solomon spent himself
in display and overtaxed and overworked his people. At his
death the northern part of his kingdom broke off from
Jerusalem and became the independent kingdom of Israel.
Jerusalem remained the capital city of Judah.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P120"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-120"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-120.jpg" alt="THE ISHTAR GATEWAY, BABYLON" width-obs="600" height-obs="824" /> <p class="caption">
THE ISHTAR GATEWAY, BABYLON
<br/>
<small>The bulls are in richly coloured enamel on baked brick
<br/>
<i>Photo: Underwood & Underwood</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>The prosperity of the Hebrew people was short-lived. Hiram
died, and the help of Tyre ceased to strengthen Jerusalem.
Egypt grew strong again. The history of the kings of Israel
and the kings of Judah becomes a history of two little states
ground between, first, Syria, then Assyria and then Babylon
to the north and Egypt to the south. It is a tale of
disasters and of deliverances that only delayed disaster. It
is a tale of barbaric kings ruling a barbaric people. In 721
<small>B.C.</small> the kingdom of Israel was swept
away into captivity by the Assyrians and its people utterly
lost to history. Judah struggled <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P121"></SPAN></span>on until in 604 <small>B.C.</small>,
as we have told, it shared the fate of
Israel. There may be details open to criticism in the Bible
story of Hebrew history from the days of the Judges onward,
but on the whole it is evidently a true story which squares
with all that has been learnt in the excavation of Egypt and
Assyria and Babylon during the past century.</p>
<p>It was in Babylon that the Hebrew people got their history
together and evolved their tradition. The people who came
back to Jerusalem at the command of Cyrus were a very
different people in spirit and knowledge from those who had
gone into captivity. They had learnt civilization. In the
development of their peculiar character a very great part was
played by certain men, a new sort of men, the Prophets, to
whom we must now direct our attention. These Prophets mark
the appearance of new and remarkable forces in the steady
development of human society.</p>
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