Saturday, August 22, 2020

LACHISH

ruins at Lachish, courtesy, Wikipedia
The Israeli region of Lachish is mainly a farming region surrounding the ancient site of Tel Lachish, located about midway between Jerusalem and Gaza in an area known as the Shephelah. This site was an ancient Canaanite, then Israelite, city. It is now an archaeological site and national park

During the Israelite conquest of Canaan, Japhia, the King of Lachish, was listed as one of the Five Amorite Kings that allied to repel the invasion, according to the Book of Joshua. After a surprise attack from the Israelites, the kings took refuge in a cave, where they were captured and put to death. Joshua and the Israelites then took the city after a two-day siege and exterminated the population. Afterwards, Lachish was assigned to the Tribe of Judah. After Israel split in two – the southern Kingdom of Judah and the northern Kingdom of Israel – its fortifications were built by the king of Judah, Rehoboam, son and successor of King Solomon, as is recorded in II Chronicles 11:9. Of the cities in ancient Judah, Lachish was second in importance only to Jerusalem. It was destroyed c. 925 BCE by Egyptian Pharaoh Sheshonk I. But the city’s rebuilding began soon after and in the first half of the 9th century BCE, under kings Asa and Jehoshaphat, Lachish’s importance was revived. It was heavily fortified with massive walls and ramparts and a royal palace was built on a platform in the center of the city. Lachish was foremost among several fortified cities and strongholds guarding the valleys that lead up to Jerusalem and the interior of the country against enemies which usually approached from the coast. According to II Chronicles 25:27, King Amaziah of Judah fled to Lachish after he was defeated in battle by King Jehoash of Israel, where he was captured and executed. In 701 BCE, during the revolt of King Hezekiah against Assyria, Lachish was besieged and captured by Sennacherib despite the defenders' determined resistance. Some scholars believe that the fall of Lachish actually occurred during a second campaign in the area by Sennacherib c. 688 BCE. Regardless, the town was rebuilt again in the late 7th century BCE during the decline of the Neo-Assyrian Empire. However, the city fell to Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylonia, in his campaign against Judah in 586 BCE. According to the prophet Jeremiah (34:7), Lachish and Azekah were the last two Judean cities to fall before the conquest of Jerusalem. During the period of the Babylonian Captivity, a large residence was built on the spot where the palace once stood. At the end of the Captivity, some exiled Jews returned to Lachish and built a new city with fortifications. But since the time of Alexander the Great, it was abandoned and remained so ever since.

Beginning in the 1890s, archaeologists took an interest in the ancient city. Lachish was identified by Flinders Petrie with Tell el-Hesi, an identification supported when a relevant cuneiform tablet was found there. However, other scholars and archaeologists would identify Lachish with Tel ed Duweir based mostly on the writings of Eusebius, the royal reliefs of Sennacherib, the site excavations, and an ostracon found there. Future expeditions, mainly British, made additional discoveries at both sites. At the same time, the region around Lachish began to be developed beginning in 1939 and throughout the 40s in spite of British Mandate law forbidding Jewish settlement in the area. In the western part of the region for instance, outpost settlements were established including Negbah and Gevaram and after Israeli independence in 1948, a network of 31 moshavim and kibbutzim came into being there. Development in the central and eastern parts, however, was held up by lack of water. With the construction of the Yarkon-Negev conduit in 1954, the Lachish Development Project came into being and became the prototype of regional planning for Israel and also for other developing countries. Most of the 23 villages erected in the region since 1954 were moshavim (including Moshav Lachish founded in 1955), but there were also a few kibbutzim and administered farms. The three rural centers were Nehorah, Even Shemu'el, and Vardon (MenuḼah); for the older village clusters, no such centers were set up, and they were directly dependent on the next regional town. Kiryat Gat functioned as the Lachish region's urban center, but a number of villages in the western part were more closely linked to Ashkelon and Kiryat Malakhi which are within easier reach. In the mid-60s, an Israeli archaeological expedition, directed by Yohanan Aharoni, took place on behalf of Hebrew University and Tel Aviv University. Since 1973, excavations have continued at the site almost without interruption. And the debate between supporters of Tell el Hesi and Tel ed Duweir continues.

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