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By
Steve Weitzman
Associate Professor, Religious Studies
Indiana University, Bloomington
Nearly
three thousand years ago, in the eighth century
B.C.E., the ancient Israelite city of Beth Shemesh
was destroyed by the Assyrian empire. The event did
not make any headlines then. But it is doing so now
thanks to Indiana University (IU) students who have
been helping to excavate Beth Shemesh over the last
five years.
In 1994 IU associate professor Steve Weitzman began
an overseas studies program with Israeli
archaeologists Zvi Lederman and Sholomo Bunimovitz.
The program has been bringing IU students to Israel
every summer for three weeks of excavations, study
and travel. The dig itself began in 1990.
In the very first year of the program, IU students
uncovered a long series of steps that lead down into
an underground chamber. The entry to the chamber had
been blocked up with hundreds of pounds of rocks and
dirt, perhaps by those who destroyed the city. The
chamber itself turned out to be a massive,
underground water cistern that sustained the city in
times of attack, one of the most impressive
engineering feats in Israel in that period.
The cistern's construction was so complex that the
people of Beth Shemesh probably had help in building
it. The directors of the dig believe that help came
from the kingdom of David centered in Jerusalem, the
kingdom that produced much of what would later be
called the Old Testament. IU students have found
other evidence suggesting that Beth Shemesh played
an especially important role in state formation in
the kingdom of Judah, a role that seems to have had
something to do with its location.
Beth Shemesh was a border town located between
Israel and the Philistines who probably migrated to
the area from the Aegean world. Israel had to
protect itself against the Philistines who
threatened them in much the same way their distant
cousins, the Greeks, were threatening the famous
city of Troy in the same period. One way in which
the Israelites did so, it appears, was to build up
the city of Beth Shemesh, giving it the means to
withstand attack. Troy was defeated and Beth Shemesh
was not. It survived until it was destroyed by a
much more powerful enemy, the Assyrians, from
Mesopotamia.
Of course, Troy had Homer to preserve its memory.
Beth Shemesh is not the subject of epic, but it has
left its mark on literary history. The stories of
Samson, the famous biblical strongman, are set in
the area of Beth Shemesh. The site of the dig
overlooks his supposed birthplace, and the name
Samson is related to the word "Shemesh,"
(= sun), suggesting some kind of association.
The dig has shed light on the Samson saga by
revealing the complicated relationship between the
Israelites and the Philistines. They were rivals,
but just as in the Samson story where Samson marries
a Philistine, they seem to have had other kinds of
interaction as well, even commingling to some
extent. The Samson saga is regarded by modern
biblical scholar as legendary indeed, it shares a
number of motifs with the Greek myths of Hercules,
but thanks to the efforts of IU students, we are
learning more and more about the historical reality
behind the story.
Beth Shemesh might also tell us something about the
religious life of ancient Israel. "Beth Shemesh"
means "House of the Sun." It was probably
named for a temple to the sun once located in the
city long before Israel arrived on the scene. No
such temple has been found, but this last summer
(2000), students found a bowl with the Hebrew word
"holy" on it, an exceedingly rare find.
That, together with a biblical story claiming that
the famous Ark of the Covenant was once kept at Beth
Shemesh, suggest that the city may have had some
cultic role in Israelite culture, but more precise
conclusions will have to await future excavation.
In the summer of 2001, Indiana University will
return for a sixth season. Individuals wishing to
participate as students through Indiana University's
overseas studies program should visit its Website
at: http://www.indiana.edu/~overseas/flyers/betshem.html.
This program awards four academic credits from
Indiana University. Individuals wishing to
participate as private volunteers should contact its
Israeli director, Zvi Lederman at ledermn@netvision.net.il.
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