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Judah and her neighbours in the seventh century BCE

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dc.contributor.advisor Van der Westhuizen, J. P. (Jasper Petrus), 1930-
dc.contributor.advisor Nel, Henrietta Wilhelmina
dc.contributor.author Asher, Adèle Hazel Esmè
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-23T04:24:35Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-23T04:24:35Z
dc.date.issued 1996-11
dc.identifier.citation Asher, Adèle Hazel Esmè (1996) Judah and her neighbours in the seventh century BCE, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17947> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17947
dc.description.abstract This thesis investigates the period in Judah which took place precisely a century between the death ofHezekiah (687 BCE) and the final fall of Jerusalem (587 BCE) Seldom has a nation experienced so many dramatically sudden reversals of fortune in so relatively short a time. Throughout the first half of the seventh century BCE the Assyrian empire reigned supreme. In the second half, in rapid succession, Judah, as a vassal, experienced periods of independence and of subjection, first to Egypt, then to Babylonia, before finally destroying herself in a futile rebellion against the latter. The aim of the thesis was to set Judah in the global context and investigate the role she played. To this end the Great Powers, namely Assyria, Egypt and Babylonia were surveyed, as well as were the Small Powers, like Judah, Phoenicia and the Transjordanian states, and the relationships probed. The thesis traces the life of the wicked but extraordinarily successful King Manasseh, and his equally reprobate son, Amon, who was brutally murdered by his servants, and was avenged by 'the people of the land'. Josiah is the only monarch who fits the Deuteronomistic requirements of a good king. Religious and national reform generally go hand in hand with politics, and the cultic reform and centralization of the cult characterise his reign. · With the fall of Assyria, the temporary surge into prominence by Egypt and the tragic death of Josiah in 609 BCE, Judah experienced radical political fluctuations and with them alternate subjugation by, and rebellion against, each of the major powers. Inexperienced leadership and a situation of dual kings, followed Josiah's death. The rapidly changing international scene demanded of the rulers of Judah skillful manoeuvring and exceptional adaptability, and frequently confronted them with ominous political situations. Judaean leaders and the puppet King Zedekiah, propped up by false prophets, failed to grasp the shift in the balance of power, and clung to questionable Egyptian aid against the new world power, Babylonia. Highly vulnerable and left in the lurch, Jerusalem faced protracted siege and famine in Jerusalem, destruction ofthe Temple, and deportation ofthe cream ofher people. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (iii, 225 leaves)
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject Assyrian collapse en
dc.subject Power vacuum en
dc.subject Egyptian-Babylonian hegemony struggle en
dc.subject Geopolitical realities en
dc.subject King Manasseh en
dc.subject Apostasy en
dc.subject Pragmatism en
dc.subject Minor rehabilitation en
dc.subject King Josiah en
dc.subject Cult reformation en
dc.subject Cult centralization en
dc.subject Megiddo tragedy en
dc.subject Fluctuating foreign policies en
dc.subject Inept dual kingship en
dc.subject Jerusalem siege en
dc.subject Temple destroyed en
dc.subject Judaean exile en
dc.subject.ddc 933
dc.subject.lcsh Manasseh, King of Judah en
dc.subject.lcsh Josiah en
dc.title Judah and her neighbours in the seventh century BCE en
dc.type Thesis
dc.description.department Classics and Modern European Languages
dc.description.degree D. Litt. et Phil. (Judaica)


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