Difference between revisions of "Samaria" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[File:Samaria, George Adam Smith.jpg|thumb|250px|Samaria, as depicted in 1894 by George Adam Smith]]
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'''Samaria''' was the capital of the ancient [[Kingdom of Israel]]. It was also the name of the administrative district surrounding the city under later Greek and Roman administrations, referring to the mountainous [[region]] between the Sea of [[Galilee]] to the north and [[Judea]] to the south. The territory of Samaria was the central region of the [[biblical]] [[Land of Israel]], today located in the northern [[West Bank]].
  
{{ redirect5|Shomron|for the [[regional council (Israel)|regional council]]|Shomron Regional Council }}
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Human habitation in Samaria dates back to the fourth millennium B.C.E., but the town was formally founded as Israel's capital by King [[Omri]] in the early ninth century B.C.E.. It was the residence of the northern kingdom's most famous ruler, King [[Ahab]], and his infamous queen, [[Jezebel]]. Many of the northern kings were entombed there. Between c. 884-722 B.C.E. Samaria endured several attacks and remained Israel's capital until it was captured by the [[Assyrian Empire]] and its leading residents were deported.
{{ For|the gorge in Crete see|Samaria Gorge}}
 
'''Samaria''', or the '''Shomron''' ({{lang-he|'''שֹׁמְרוֹן'''}}, <small>[[Hebrew language#Modern Hebrew|Standard]]</small> ''{{unicode|Šoməron}}'' <small>[[Tiberian vocalization|Tiberian]]</small> ''{{Unicode|Šōmərôn}}''; [[Arabic language|Arabic]]: '''سامريّون''', ''{{unicode|Sāmariyyūn}}'' or '''ألسامرة''', ''as-Samarah'' – also known as '''جبال نابلس''', ''Jibal Nablus''; [[Greek language|Greek]]: Σαμάρεια) is a geographic term used for the mountainous [[region]] between the [[Galilee]] to the north and [[Judea]] to the south. It is the name of natural, historical and political regions. It is the central region of the [[Biblical]] [[Land of Israel]]. Most of the region is in the northern [[West Bank]] of the [[Jordan River]].
 
  
The word is perhaps from ''shâmar,'' 'to watch,' hence meaning something like 'outlook'; but, according to 1 Kings 16:24, derived from the individual [or clan] ''Shemer'', from whom [[Omri]] purchased the site.
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Samaria later became the central city of the [[Samaritan]] nation and lent its name to the surrounding administrative district in Greek and Roman times. It was rebuilt as [[Sebaste]] by [[Herod the Great]] in 27 B.C.E. In the [[New Testament]], the territory of Samaria was where [[Jesus]] met the "woman at the well" to whom he revealed his identity as the [[Messiah]]. Samaria was also the origin of the traveler known as the "Good Samaritan" in one of Jesus' best-known parables. In the [[Book of Acts]], the city of Samaria was the location of the first successful Christian evangelical effort outside of [[Jerusalem]]. It is also traditionally believed to be the burial place of [[John the Baptist]].
  
Samaria is one of the several standard statistical "areas" utilized by the [[Israel Central Bureau of Statistics]].[http://www1.cbs.gov.il/reader/cw_usr_view_Folder?ID=141] "The CBS also collects statistics on Judea-Samaria and the Gaza District. It has produced various basic statistical series on the territories, dealing with population, employment, wages, external trade, national accounts, and various other topics."[http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFAArchive/2000_2009/2002/1/Central%20Bureau%20of%20Statistics] Samaria is used by people who want to emphasize [[Israel]]'s and the Jewish people's relationship with their land. For example, Samaria, along with Judea, is now more widely known, outside of Israel, by the neologism "[[West Bank]]." See [[Judea and Samaria]].
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In the twentieth century, the remains of Ahab or Omri's palace were discovered by archaeologists as were the later monumental steps of a major temple constructed by [[Herod the Great]] in Samaria.
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In modern times, the territory of Samaria came under British rule with the defeat of the [[Ottoman Empire]] after [[World War I]]. It came under [[Jordan]]ian control in 1948 but was seized by [[Israel]] during the [[Six Day War]] of 1967, and is currently under the administration of the [[Palestinian Authority]]. [[Israeli settlements]] in Samaria also have been established and are the subject of international controversy.
  
==Geographical location==
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==Location and climate==
To the north, Samaria is bounded by the [[Esdraelon]] valley; to the east by the [[Jordan River]]; to the west by the [[Mount Carmel, Israel|Carmel]] Ridge (in the north) and the [[Sharon plain]] (in the west); to the south by [[Judea]] (the [[Jerusalem]] mountains). Samarian hills are not very high, seldom reaching the height of over 800 meters. Samaria's climate is more hospitable than the climate of Judea.
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To the north, the territory of Samaria is bounded by the [[Esdraelon]] valley; to the east by the [[Jordan River]]; to the west by the [[Mount Carmel, Israel|Carmel]] Ridge (in the north) and the [[Sharon plain]] (in the west); to the south by [[Judea]] (the [[Jerusalem]] mountains). The Samarian hills are not very high, seldom reaching a height of over 800 meters. Samaria's climate is generally more hospitable than the climate of Judea. In ancient times, this combined with more direct access to Mediterranean trade routes to give the northern kingdom a substantial economic advantage over its southern neighbor.
  
==Political control==
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==Capital of ancient Israel==
The history of Samaria in modern times begins when the territory of Samaria, formerly belonging to the [[Ottoman Empire]], is entrusted to the [[United Kingdom]] to administer in the [[aftermath of World War I]] as a [[British Mandate of Palestine]], by the [[League of Nations]]. As as result of the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]], the territory fell into the control of Jordan and residents would later receive Jordanian passports.  
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The city of Samaria, the ancient capital of the northern [[Kingdom of Israel]], was built by King [[Omri]] in the seventh year of his reign, c. 884 B.C.E., on the mountain he had reportedly bought for two talents of silver from a man called Shemer, after whom the city was named (1 Kings 16:23-24). <ref>However, the [[etymology]] of the name may also be "watch mountain."</ref> It was situated six miles from [[Shechem]] and was noted both for its strategic location and the fertility of the surrounding lands. Modern excavations reveal human occupation there dating back to the fourth millennium B.C.E. The site was a center of an extensive wine and oil production area.
  
Samaria was taken by Israeli forces from Jordan during the 1967 [[Six-Day War]]. Jordan withdrew its claim to the West Bank, including Samaria, only in 1988, and later confirmed by the Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty of 1993. Jordan instead recognizes the [[Palestinian Authority]] as sovereign in the territory. In the 1994 [[Oslo accords]], responsibility for the administration over some of the territory of Samaria (Areas 'A' and 'B') was transferred to the Palestinian Authority.
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Omri faced military pressure from the kingdom of [[Syria]] (Aram), and was forced for a time to allow Syrian merchants to open markets in the streets of Samaria (1 Kings 29:34). However, it remained the capital of Israel for more than 150 years, constituting most of the northern kingdom's history, until it was captured by the Assyrians in 722-721 B.C.E.. The city was strongly fortified and endured several sieges before its downfall. Archaeologists believe the city of Samaria was richer and more developed than any other city in Israel or Judah.
  
Israel has been criticized for the policy of establishing settlements in Samaria. Israel's position is that the legal status of the land is unclear. See [[Israeli settlement]]s.
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Omri's son, King [[Ahab]], reportedly built an "ivory palace" in the capital (1 Kings 16:39). The remains of an impressive Iron Age building at the site were excavated in the twentieth century, and in recent years, archaeologists may have discovered royal tombs possibly belonging to the Omride dynasty. A valuable collection of ivory carvings was also unearthed.
  
==Samaritans==
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The city gate of Samaria is mentioned several times in the [[Books of Kings]] and [[Books of Chronicles|Chronicles]], and there is also a reference to "the pool of Samaria" in 1 Kings 22:38. Ahab also reportedly constructed a temple to [[Baal]] at Samaria, probably at the behest of his Phoenician wife [[Jezebel]], much to the dismay of the prophets [[Elijah]] and [[Elisha]]. During the time of Ahab, the city successfully endured two sieges by the Syrians under [[Ben-hadad II]]. At Samaria's famous gate, Ahab met his ally and son-in-law, [[Jehoshaphat]] of Judah, to hear the dramatic words of the prophet [[Micaiah]] (1 Kings 22:10). During the reign of Ahab's son Joram, (2 Kings 6-7) the Syrian siege of Samaria was so intense that some residents were reduced to [[cannibalism]], but the city was rescued by God's miraculous intervention.
{{main|Samaritan}}
 
  
Ethnically, the [[Samaritan]]s are the inhabitants of Samaria after the beginning of the Israelite [[Assyrian Exile]]. (2 Kings 17 and Josephus (Ant 9.277&ndash;91)) When Assyria overran the Northern Kingdom of Israel in 722 B.C.E., part of the population was deported, and other peoples from the Assyrian Empire were resettled in Israel.  Sargon claimed in Assyrian annals that he carried away 27,290 inhabitants from Samaria, the capital of Northern Israel.  The new inhabitants worshipped their own gods, but when the then-sparsely populated areas became infested with dangerous wild beasts, they appealed to the king of Assyria for Israelite priests to instruct them on how to worship the "god of that country."  The result was a syncretistic religion, in which national groups worshipped the Lord, but they also served their own gods in accordance with the customs of the nations from which they had been brought. Some Samaritans claim to be descendants of [[Israelites]] from the Northern Kingdom who escaped deportation and exile.
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The prophet Elisha, however, recruited one of the nation's military commanders, [[Jehu]], to seize the throne from Joram and slaughter Ahab's descendants, execute Jezebel, and destroy Samaria's temple of Baal together with all of its priests. Some 70 of Ahab's sons were slain at Samaria on Jehu's orders.  
  
A genetic study concluded from Y-chromosome analysis that Samaritans descend from the Israelites (including Cohen, or priests), and mitochondrial DNA analysis shows descent from Assyrians and other foreign women, effectively validating both local and foreign origins for the Samaritans. (Shen et al, 2004)[http://evolutsioon.ut.ee/publications/Shen2004.pdf]
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When Jehu's grandson Joash (also called Jehoash--c. 801–786 B.C.E.) warred against Judah and captured [[Jerusalem]], he brought to Samaria the gold, silver, and vessels of the [[Temple of Jerusalem|Temple]] and the king's palace (2 Kings 14:14). Later, King [[Pekah]] (c. 737–732) returned victoriously to Samaria with a great number of captives of Judah. However, upon his arrival in the capital, the intervention of the [[prophet]] Oded resulted in these captives being released (2 Chron. 27: 8-9, 15). Under [[Jeroboam II]], Samaria was famous both for its prosperity and its corruption.
  
[[Samaritanism]] is a religion related to [[Judaism]] in that it accepts the [[Torah]] as its holy book, though little of later Jewish [[theology]]. Their temple was at Mount [[Gerizim]], not Jerusalem, and was destroyed by the [[Maccabees|Macabbean]] ([[Hasmonean]]) [[John Hyrcanus]] late in the [[second century B.C.E.]], although their descendants still worship among its ruins. The purported antagonism between Samaritans and Jews is important in understanding the [[New Testament]] stories of "[[Parable of the Good Samaritan|The Good Samaritan]]" and the Samaritan Woman.
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In the biblical tradition, Samaria was a place of [[idolatry]] and corruption, although it is also clear that several of its kings, including even the wicked Ahab, honored [[Yahweh]]. The city's moral corruption was denounced by [[Amos]], [[Isaiah]], [[Micah]], and other prophets, who also foretold the downfall of the city as a punishment for its sins.<ref>It should be noted that the prophets also criticized Jerusalem and denounced many of Judah's kings for much the same reasons. A particular bone of contention for the biblical writers was the fact that the northern kings supported the Yahwist shrines at Dan and [[Bethel]] at pilgrimage sites, competing with the southern Temple of Jerusalem. In later centuries, the Samaritan temple dedicated to Yahweh at Gerizim would be destroyed by the Jewish ruler John Hyrcanus.</ref>
  
==History==
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Although Samaria had successfully withstood the Syrians, and sometimes allied with them against Judah, the rise of the [[Assyrian Empire]] would eventually spell its doom. In the seventh year of King [[Hoshea]], Samaria was besieged by [[Shalmaneser]]. Three years later it was captured by an Assyrian king (2 Kings 17-18), whose name is not mentioned. Josephus ("Ant." ix. 14, § 1) states that it was Shalmaneser, but Assyrian inscriptions show that it was [[Sargon II]], who ascended the throne in 722 B.C.E., and had captured Samaria by the following year.
'''Shomron''' (Samaria) is literally a watch-mountain or a watch-tower. In the heart of the mountains of Israel, a few miles north-west of [[Shechem]], stands the "hill of Shomeron," a solitary mountain, a great "mamelon." It is an oblong hill, with steep but not inaccessible sides, and a long flat top.
 
  
[[Omri]], the king of [[kingdom of Israel|Israel]], purchased this hill from Shemer its owner for two talents of [[silver]], and built on its broad summit the city to which he gave the name of "Shomeron," i.e., Samaria, as the new capital of his kingdom instead of Tirzah ([[Books of Kings|1 Kings]] 16:24). As such it possessed many advantages. Omri resided here during the last six years of his reign.<!--these paragraphs read like plagiarism—>
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The city, however, was not destroyed (Jer. 41:5). According to Sargon's inscriptions, two years later it made an alliance with the cities of Hamath, Arpad, and Damascus against the Assyrians. This resistance failed when Sargon overthrew the King of Hamath, which he apparently boasts of in 2 Kings 18:32-35. The elite class of citizens from Samaria and other northern towns were replaced by colonists from different countries, sent there by the Assyrian king.
  
As the result of an unsuccessful war with Syria, Omri appears to have been obliged to grant to the Syrians the right to "make streets in Samaria," i.e., probably permission to the Syrian merchants to carry on their trade in the Israelite capital. This would imply the existence of a considerable Syrian population.
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[[Image:Shomroni tora2.jpg|thumb|Contemporary Samaritan priest with a Torah scroll]]
  
<blockquote>It was the only great city of Palestine created by the sovereign. All the others had been already consecrated by patriarchal tradition or previous possession. But Samaria was the choice of Omri alone. He, indeed, gave to the city which he had built the name of its former owner, but its especial connection with himself as its founder is proved by the designation which it seems Samaria bears in Assyrian inscriptions, "Beth-khumri" ("the house or palace of Omri"). (Stanley) <!--who is Stanley—></blockquote>
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The new settlers, probably influenced by the remaining local population, came to believe that the "God of the land" had not been properly propitiated, and thus priests of [[Yahweh]] were sent back by the Assyrian authorities to teach the settlers to worship the [[Israelite]] God (2 Kings 17:24-41). These Assyrian settlers intermarried with native Israelites and, according to Jewish sources, were the founders of the [[Samaritan]] religion, as well as being the ancestors of the Samaritans. The Samaritans themselves, however, claim that they worshiped Yahweh from the time of [[Moses]] onward, at [[Mount Gerezim]], near [[Shechem]]. They denounce the Jewish claim of [[Jerusalem]] being the only authorized shrine of Yahweh as a fraud perpetrated by the priest [[Eli]] and his successors.
  
Samaria was frequently besieged. In the days of [[Ahab]], Benhadad II came up against it with thirty-two vassal kings, but was defeated with a great slaughter (1 Kings 20:1-21). A second time, next year, he assailed it; but was again utterly routed, and was compelled to surrender to Ahab (20:28-34), whose army, as compared with that of Benhadad, was no more than "two little flocks of kids."
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==Under Greek and Roman rule==
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Samaria emerged again into history four centuries after its capture by the Assyrians. By this time Samaria was once again an important city, with its [[Samaritan]] Temple at Gerizim rivaling or exceeding the competing Yahwist [[Temple of Jerusalem]], which had been rebuilt after the Jews of Judah to returned from [[Babylonian exile]]. The Samaritans, having assassinated the Greek governor of Syria in 332 or 331 B.C.E., were severely punished by [[Alexander the Great]]. Alexander sent his own people, the Macedonians, to control the city (Eusebius, "Chronicon"). A few years later, Alexander had Samaria rebuilt. The Samaritans, however, were not easily controlled. In 312, the city was dismantled by Ptolemy, son of Lagus, and 15 years later it was again captured and demolished, by Demetrius Poliorcetes.
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[[Image:Herodes el Gran.jpg|thumb|right|Roman administrative districts during the time of Herod the Great]]
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Almost two centuries elapsed during which nothing is heard of Samaria, but it is evident that the city was again rebuilt and strongly fortified. At the end of the second century B.C.E., the Jewish ruler [[John Hyrcanus]] besieged it for an entire year before he captured and destroyed it, along with the Samaritan temple on Mount Gerizim, probably in or shortly before 107 B.C.E. (Josephus, l.c. xiii. 10). Samaria was later held by [[Alexander Jannæus]] ("Ant." xiii. 15, § 4), and was afterward taken by Pompey, who rebuilt it and attached it to the government of Syria (ib. xiv. 4, § 4). The city was further strengthened by Gabinius.
  
In the days of [[Jehoram of Israel|Jehoram]], Benhadad again laid siege to Samaria. But just when success seemed to be within their reach, they suddenly broke off the siege, alarmed by a mysterious noise of chariots and horses and a great army, and fled, leaving their camp with all its contents behind them. The famished inhabitants of the city were soon relieved from the abundance of the spoil of the Syrian camp; and it came to pass, according to the word of Elisha, that "a measure of fine flour was sold for a shekel, and two measures of [[barley]] for a shekel, in the gates of Samaria" (2 Kings 7:1-20).
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Caesar [[Augustus]] entrusted Samaria to [[Herod the Great]], under whom it flourished anew as [[Sebaste]]. Herod rebuilt it in 27 B.C.E. on a much larger scale and embellished it with magnificent buildings, including the new Temple of Augustus. In the same year he married the beautiful Samaritan princess Malthace, to whom two of his heirs were born. Under Herod the city became the capital of the Roman administrative district of Samaria, which was one of the subdivisions of the Roman province of ''Syria Iudaea,'' the other two being [[Judea]] and [[Galilee]].
  
[[Shalmaneser V]] invaded Israel in the days of [[Hoshea]], and reduced it to vassalage. He laid siege to Samaria (723 B.C.E.), which held out for three years, and was at length captured by [[Sargon II]], who completed the conquest Shalmaneser had begun (2 Kings 18:9-12; 17:3), and removed vast numbers of the tribes into captivity. See [[Lost ten tribes]].
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The [[New Testament]] contains several references to Samaria. In Matthew 10:5, Jesus instructs his disciples: "Do not... enter any town of the Samaritans." However, Luke's Gospel displays a different attitude in its famous parable of the [[Good Samaritan]] (Luke 10). The district of Samaria is further mentioned in Luke 17:11-20, in the miraculous healing of the ten lepers, which took place on the border of Samaria and Galilee. [[Gospel of John|John]] 4:1-26 records Jesus' encounter in Samarian territory at [[Jacob's well]] with the Samaritan woman of Sychar, in which Jesus declares himself to be the [[Messiah]]. In [[Acts of the Apostles|Acts]] 8:5-14, it is recorded that [[Philip the Evangelist|Philip]] went to the city of Samaria and preached there, converting many residents, including the famous local miracle-worker Simon, called "[[Simon Magus]]" in Christian tradition.
  
===Ancient occupation===
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[[Image:Herod Archelaus.jpg|thumb|200px|Coin issued by Archelaus, the son of Herod the Great who ruled as ethnarch of Samaria]]
  
SAMARIA (Hebrew: shomron, modern: Sebaste), established as the capital of the [[Northern Kingdom of Israel]] during the reign of [[Omri]] circa 884 B.C.E. Prior to the Omride period the site appears to have been the center of an extensive wine and oil production area, which may have accounted for its choice as the new capital. Apparently the origin of the name of the site was from Shemer the eponymous owner of the land that Omri purchased for two talents of silver [[1 Kings 16:23-24]].
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Sebaste is mentioned in the Mishnah ('Ar. iii. 2), where its orchards are praised. After Herod's death, Sebaste and the province of Samaria came under the administration of his son [[Archelaus]], after whose banishment it passed to the control of Roman procurators. It then came under Herod [[Agrippa I]], and later again came under the procurators ("Ant." xvii. 11, § 4). At the outbreak of the Jewish war in 66 C.E. it was attacked by the Jewish forces ("B. J." ii. 18, § 1). Josephus ("B. J." ii. 3, § 4) also speaks of the Jewish soldiers of Sebaste who had served in Herod's army and later sided with the Romans when the Jews revolted. In the aftermath of the Bar Kochba revolt of the second century C.E., [[Hadrian]] consolidated the older political units of Judea, Galilee, and Samaria into the new province of Syria Palaestina ([[Palestine]]).
  
The site has been excavated by two archaeological expeditions. The first was the [[Harvard Expedition]], initially directed by [[G. Schumacher]] in 1908 and then by [[George Andrew Reisner]] in 1909 and 1910; with the assistance of architect C.S. Fisher and D.G. Lyon. The second expedition was known as the ‘[[Joint Expedition]],a consortium of 5 institutions directed by [[J.W. Crowfoot]] between 1931 and 1935; with the assistance of [[Kathleen Mary Kenyon ]], [[Eliezer Sukenik]] and G.M. Crowfoot. The leading institutions were the [[British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem]], the [[Palestine Exploration Fund]], and the [[Hebrew University]].  In the 1960’s small scale excavations directed by F. Zayadine were carried out on behalf of the [[Department of Antiquities of Jordan]].
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Under Emperor [[Septimius Severus]] at the end of the second century, Sebaste became a Roman colony, but with the growth of nearby [[Nablus]] it lost its importance. In the fourth century Sebaste was a small town (Eusebius, "Onomasticon," s.v.). [[Saint Jerome]] (Commentary on Obadiah) records the tradition that Samaria was the burial-place of [[Elisha]], Obadiah, and [[John the Baptist]].
  
The city is built on the summit of a rocky hill, and the foundations of the monumental buildings from later periods often ploughed down through the earlier strata to the bedrock, which was never far below. In the modern times the site has been used as farmland by the contemporary villagers of neighboring Sebaste, this meant that most of the excavated areas had to be back-filled and returned to agricultural use. These two points hindered excavation and later analysis of the remains. The earliest remains consist of extensive rock cut installations, initially thought to date to the Early Bronze Age by Kenyon, these have recently been re-evaluated, first by Stager and then by Franklin, and are now recognized to be the remains of an extensive early Iron Age oil and wine industry (designated Building Period 0).
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==Modern history==
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[[Image:BarrierFeb2005.png|thumb|The West Bank today, with disputed boundaries in blue]]
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The history of Samaria in modern times begins when the territory of Samaria, formerly belonging to the [[Ottoman Empire]], came under the administration of the [[United Kingdom]] in the [[aftermath of World War I]] by mandate of the [[League of Nations]]. After the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]], the territory came under the control of [[Jordan]].  
  
===Assyrian invasion===
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Samaria was taken from Jordan by Israeli forces during the 1967 [[Six-Day War]]. Jordan withdrew its claim to the [[West Bank]], including Samaria, only in 1988, as was later confirmed by the Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty of 1993. Jordan now recognizes the [[Palestinian Authority]] as sovereign in the territory. In the 1994 [[Oslo accords]], responsibility for the administration over some of the territory of Samaria was transferred to the Palestinian Authority.
  
During the reign of the last king of the northern kingdom, [[Hosea]] [[2 Kings 10]] the [[Assyrians]] invaded in 722/721 B.C.E. (initially under [[Shalmaneser V]] and finally under [[Sargon II]]) when they established complete control over the capital city and the remainder of the northern kingdom. The fragment of a stela with an Assyrian inscription attributed to Sargon II was found on the eastern slope of the acropolis testifying to their presence. In addition, according to inscriptions from Sargon’s palace at [[Khorsabad]], the inhabitants of Samaria were deported to Assyria. The remains of a wall relief in Room 5 of Sargon’s palace is thought to depict Samaria and its defeated defenders. New inhabitants were brought in (from [[Cuthah]] and the Syro-Mesopotamian area, [[2 Kings 17:24]]) and they formed a new [[Samaritan]] population, also known as [[Cuthim]]. The city together with the neighboring highland area became known as [[Samerina]] and was ruled by an Assyrian governor. There are only meager remains from the succeeding [[Babylonian]] period and it was only in the [[Persian Empire|Persian]] period, in the mid 5th century, that the city reemerged in importance. The tensions between the ruling family of [[Sanballat]] and [[Jerusalem]] under the governorship of [[Nehemiah]] are documented in the Bible ([[Ezra 4:10]], [[Neh 2:1-8]]). Samaria became a [[Hellenistic]] town in 332 B.C.E. and thousands of [[Anient Macedonian|Macedonian]] soldiers were settled there following a revolt by the Samaritans. Three 13 m diameter round towers dating to that period have been excavated (the first two by Harvard who attributed them to the Israelite period) and a later, massive, fortification wall with square towers. These fortifications were breached during the destruction of the city by [[John Hyrcanus]] in 108. Traces of the destruction wrought by Hyrcanus were found by the excavators, but the city was apparently resettled under [[Alexander Yannai]]. In 63 B.C.E. Samaria was annexed to the Roman province of Syria.
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Israel has been criticized for the policy of establishing settlements in Samaria. The area's borders are disputed and Israel's position is that the legal status of the land is unclear.  
  
===Sebastia ===
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===Excavations===
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The acropolis of Samaria has been extensively excavated down to the bedrock, the most significant find being the Palace of [[Omri]] and/or [[Ahab]]. The Omride palace was located on an elevated four meter high rock-cut platform that isolated it from its immediate surroundings. While immediately below the palace, cut into the face of the bedrock platform, there are two rock-cut tomb chambers that have only recently been recognized and attributed to the kings of Israel. West of the palace there are meager remains of other buildings from this period.
  
In 30 B.C.E. the emperor [[Augustus]] awarded the city to [[Herod the Great]] who renamed it '''Sebaste''' in honor of Augustus ("Sebaste" is the feminine form of Gr. [[Sebastos]] = Augustus). The outstanding remains from this period are; the Augusteum, consisting of a temple and a large forecourt built over the Omride palace at the summit of the acropolis; a city gate and an east-west colonnaded street; a theater on the north-east slope of the acropolis; a Temple to [[Kore]] on a terrace north of the acropolis, and a stadium to the north-east in the valley below. East of the acropolis and in an area that today links the ancient city with the modern village of Sebaste lies the forum flanked on the west by a partially excavated basilica. Water for Roman Sebaste was provided by an underground aqueduct that led into the area of the forum from springs in the east. The city was encompassed by a city wall 2½ mi. (4 km) long, with imposing towers that linked the gateways in the west and north. A number of mausoleums with ornate sarcophagi were excavated in the area of the modern village and adjoining fields.
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The acropolis area was extended in all directions by the addition of a massive perimeter wall built in the casemate style, and the new enlarged rectangular acropolis measured c. 290 ft. (90 m.) from north to south and at least c. 585 ft. (180 m.) from west to east. Massive stone stairs have also been uncovered, believed to have been constructed by [[Herod the Great]] as the entry to the temple he dedicated to Augustus at Sebaste.
  
In late 1976, the Israeli settlement movement, [[Gush Emunim]], attempted to establish a settlement at the abandoned train station (dating from the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] period). The Israeli government did not approve and the group that was removed from the site would later found the settlement of [[Elon Moreh]] adjacent to [[Nablus]]/[[Shechem]].
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A large rock-cut pool near the northern casemate wall was initially identified with the biblical "Pool of Samaria." It is now thought to be a grape-treading area that originated before the Omride dynasty but was also used in later years. North of the palace, a rich cache of Phoenician ivory furniture ornamentations were retrieved, which may be related to the supposed "Ivory Palace" that [[Ahab]] built ([[1 Kings 22:39]]).
  
===Reconstruction===
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==Notes==
 
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<references/>
The city was rebuilt without any major changes in the 2nd century C.E. by [[Septimius Severus]] when the city was established as a colony.  Samaria has been associated with  [[John the Baptist]], whose body was believed to be buried there. A small basilica church, first founded in the 5th century, was excavated on the southern slope of the acropolis. The church was believed to be the burial place of the head of John the Baptist. A monastery was added to it at a later date. In the 12th century C.E. a Latin cathedral also dedicated to John the Baptist was built east of the Roman forum and combined elements of the Roman period city wall. It later became the Sebaste village mosque.
 
 
 
===Excavation===
 
 
 
Only the acropolis of Samaria has been extensively excavated down to the bedrock. The palace was excavated solely by the Harvard Expedition and recognized by them as the Palace of Omri (designated Building Period I). The Omride palace was located on an elevated 4 meter high rock-cut platform that isolated it from its immediate surroundings. While immediately below the palace, cut into the face of the bedrock platform, there are two rock-cut tomb chambers that have only recently been recognized and attributed to Omri and Ahab. West of the palace there are meager remains of other Building Period I buildings but much of the rock surface has been severely damaged by later buildings. The Omride palace continued in use during the next building phase (designated Building Period II), but it was no longer isolated on an elevated platform. The acropolis area was extended in all direction by the addition of a massive perimeter wall built in the casemate style; the new enlarged rectangular acropolis measured c. 290 ft. (90 m.) from north to south and at least c. 585 ft. (180 m.) from west to east, and the surface was now raised to a uniform elevation by the addition of a massive fill. This phase (Building Period II) was traditionally attributed to Ahab due to the misallocation of Wall 161 that run parallel to the northern casemates and the identification of a large rock-cut pool near the northern casemate wall as the Bibilical ‘Pool of Samaria;’ the wall (Wall 161) is now recognized to belong to Building Period II and the ‘pool’ is a rock-cut grape-treading area that originated in Building Period 0 and continued in a reduced form in Building Period I. Consequently the onset of Building Period II can only be relatively fixed. There is neither a biblical anchor nor securely dated pottery to establish the chronological affiliation of Building Period II. The Omride Palace was still in use and the royal tombs were still accessible (now via subterranean rooms) and there was an administrative building the [[Ostraca House]] (due to the 63 ostraca retrieved from the floor’s make-up)  built west of the palace on the newly extended acropolis. The ostraca provide a wealth of data concerning oil and wine supplies, and can possibly be attributed to the period of Jeroboam II c. 785-749, thus providing a probable date for Building Period II. North of the palace a rich cache of Phoenician ivories (furniture ornamentation) were retrieved, these were mixed with later debris but it was presumed by the excavators (The Joint) that it was in this area that the ‘Ivory House’ that [[Ahab]] built for [[Jezebel]] [[1 Kings 22:39]] stood. North-east and below the acropolis a number of Iron Age tombs were found and their location probably delimits the area of the city in that direction. In essence only the acropolis was excavated down to the Iron Age but it is presumed by the excavators (The Joint) that the city extended down over the northern and southern slopes of the hill.
 
 
 
==New Testament reference==
 
The [[New Testament]] mentions Samaria in [[Luke]] chapter 17:11-20, in the miraculous healing of the ten lepers, which took place on the border of Samaria and Galilee. [[Gospel of John|John]] 4:1-26 records Jesus' encounter at Jacob's well with the woman of Sychar, in which He declares Himself to be the Messiah. In [[Acts of the Apostles|Acts]] 8:5-14, it is recorded that [[Philip the Evangelist|Philip]] went down to the city of Samaria and preached there. In the time of [[Jesus]], ''Syria Iudaea'' of the Romans was divided into three provinces, Judea, Samaria, and Galilee. Samaria occupied the centre of ''Syria Iudaea'' (John 4:4). (''Syria Iudaea'' was later renamed ''Syria Palaestina'' in 135, following the [[Bar Kokhba revolt]].) In the [[Talmud]], Samaria is called the "land of the Cuthim."
 
 
 
==See also==
 
* [[Lost Ten Tribes]] - specifically relating to the northern [[Kingdom of Israel]] with its capital at Samaria and the wars that took place with the [[Kingdom of Judah]] before the fall of the Kingdom of Judah and its occupants becoming lost to the pages of history. However, many theories abound as to what became of the "lost ten tribes" and the advocates do not necessarily agree with each other.
 
* The name of the chemical element [[samarium]] is not related to Samaria.
 
* [[Samaritan]] - a similar article concentrating more on the ethnic and religious group.
 
* The [[Good Samaritan]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
<div class="references-small">
+
* Albright, William F. ''Archeology of Palestine.'' Peter Smith Pub. Inc., 2nd edition, 1985. ISBN 0844600032
*{{cite book
+
* Becking, Bob. ''The Fall of Samaria: An Historical and Archaeological Study.'' Brill Academic Publishers, 1992. ISBN 9004096337
|last=Reisner
+
* Bright, John. ''A History of Israel.'' Westminster John Knox Press; 4th edition, 2000. ISBN 0664220681
|first=G. A.
+
* Grant, Michael. ''The History of Ancient Israel.'' Charles Scribner's Sons, 1984. ISBN 0684180812
|coauthors=C.S. Fisher, and D.G. Lyon
+
* Keller, Werner. ''The Bible as History.'' Bantam; 2nd Rev edition, 1983. ISBN 0553279432
|title=Harvard excavations at Samaria, 1908-1910
+
* Miller, J. Maxwell. ''A History of Ancient Israel and Judah.'' Westminster John Knox Press, 1986. ISBN 066421262X
|publisher=Harvard University Press
+
* Tappy, Ron E. ''The Archeology of Israelite Samaria, Volume 1: Early Iron Age Through the Ninth Century B.C.E.'' Harvard Semitic Studies 44. Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1992. ISBN 978-1555407704
|date=1924
 
|location=Cambridge, Mass.
 
}}
 
  
*{{cite book
+
==External links==
|last=Crowfoot
+
All links retrieved December 22, 2022.
|first=J. W.
 
|coauthors=G.M. Crowfoot
 
|title=Early Ivories from Samaria (Samaria-Sebaste 2)
 
|publisher=Palestine Exploration Fund
 
|date=1938
 
|location=London
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite book
 
|last=Crowfoot
 
|first=J. W.
 
|coauthors=K.M. Kenyon and E.L. Sukenik
 
|title=The Buildings at Samaria (Samaria-Sebaste 1)
 
|publisher=Palestine Exploration Fund
 
|date=1942
 
|location=London
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite book
 
|last=Crowfoot
 
|first=J. W.
 
|coauthors=K.M. Kenyon and G.M. Crowfoot
 
|title=The Objects from Samaria (Samaria-Sebaste 3)
 
|publisher=Palestine Exploration Fund
 
|date=1957
 
|location=London
 
}}
 
  
*{{cite journal
+
*[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=109&letter=S&search=samaria Samaria ] ''Jewish Encyclopedia''.  
| last = Zayadine
 
| first = F
 
| year = 1966
 
| month =
 
| title = Samaria-Sebaste: Clearance and Excavations (October 1965-June 1967)
 
| journal = Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan
 
| volume = 12
 
| issue =
 
| pages = 77-80
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite journal
 
| last = Rainey
 
| first = A. F.
 
| year = 1988
 
| month = November
 
| title = Toward a Precise Date for the Samaria Ostraca
 
| journal = Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research
 
| volume = 272
 
| issue =
 
| pages = 69-74
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite journal
 
| last = Stager
 
| first = L. E.
 
| year = 1990
 
| month = February&ndash;May
 
| title = Shemer's Estate
 
| journal = Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research
 
| volume = 277/278
 
  | issue =
 
| pages = 93-107
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite book
 
|last=Becking
 
|first=B.
 
|title=The Fall of Samaria: An Historical and Archaeological Study
 
|publisher=E. J. Brill
 
|date=1992
 
|location=Leiden; New York
 
|isbn=9004096337
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite book
 
|last=Tappy
 
|first=R.
 
|title=The Archaeology of Israelite Samaria, Volume 1: Early Iron Age Through the Ninth Century B.C.E. (Harvard Semitic Studies 44)
 
|publisher=Scholars Press
 
|date=1992
 
|location=Atlanta
 
|isbn= 9781555407704
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite book
 
|last=Tappy
 
|first=R.
 
|title=The Archaeology of Israelite Samaria. The Eighth Century B.C.E. Volume II (Harvard Semitic Studies 50)
 
|publisher=Eisenbrauns
 
|date=2001
 
|location=Winona Lake, Indiana
 
|isbn= 978-1575069166
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite journal
 
| last = Franklin
 
| first = N.
 
| year = 2003
 
| month =
 
| title = The Tombs of the Kings of Israel
 
| journal = Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins
 
| volume = 119
 
| issue = 1
 
| pages = 1-11
 
}}
 
 
 
*{{cite journal
 
| last = Franklin
 
| first = N.
 
| year = 2004
 
| month =
 
| title = Samaria: from the Bedrock to the Omride Palace
 
| journal = Levant 
 
| volume = 36
 
| issue =
 
| pages = 189-202
 
}}</div>
 
 
 
==External links==
 
* [http://30.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SA/SAMARIA.htm Entry for Samaria in [[1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica]]]
 
  
 
[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
 
[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
 
{{Credit|124846569}}
 
{{Credit|124846569}}

Latest revision as of 02:05, 23 December 2022

Samaria, as depicted in 1894 by George Adam Smith

Samaria was the capital of the ancient Kingdom of Israel. It was also the name of the administrative district surrounding the city under later Greek and Roman administrations, referring to the mountainous region between the Sea of Galilee to the north and Judea to the south. The territory of Samaria was the central region of the biblical Land of Israel, today located in the northern West Bank.

Human habitation in Samaria dates back to the fourth millennium B.C.E., but the town was formally founded as Israel's capital by King Omri in the early ninth century B.C.E. It was the residence of the northern kingdom's most famous ruler, King Ahab, and his infamous queen, Jezebel. Many of the northern kings were entombed there. Between c. 884-722 B.C.E. Samaria endured several attacks and remained Israel's capital until it was captured by the Assyrian Empire and its leading residents were deported.

Samaria later became the central city of the Samaritan nation and lent its name to the surrounding administrative district in Greek and Roman times. It was rebuilt as Sebaste by Herod the Great in 27 B.C.E. In the New Testament, the territory of Samaria was where Jesus met the "woman at the well" to whom he revealed his identity as the Messiah. Samaria was also the origin of the traveler known as the "Good Samaritan" in one of Jesus' best-known parables. In the Book of Acts, the city of Samaria was the location of the first successful Christian evangelical effort outside of Jerusalem. It is also traditionally believed to be the burial place of John the Baptist.

In the twentieth century, the remains of Ahab or Omri's palace were discovered by archaeologists as were the later monumental steps of a major temple constructed by Herod the Great in Samaria.

In modern times, the territory of Samaria came under British rule with the defeat of the Ottoman Empire after World War I. It came under Jordanian control in 1948 but was seized by Israel during the Six Day War of 1967, and is currently under the administration of the Palestinian Authority. Israeli settlements in Samaria also have been established and are the subject of international controversy.

Location and climate

To the north, the territory of Samaria is bounded by the Esdraelon valley; to the east by the Jordan River; to the west by the Carmel Ridge (in the north) and the Sharon plain (in the west); to the south by Judea (the Jerusalem mountains). The Samarian hills are not very high, seldom reaching a height of over 800 meters. Samaria's climate is generally more hospitable than the climate of Judea. In ancient times, this combined with more direct access to Mediterranean trade routes to give the northern kingdom a substantial economic advantage over its southern neighbor.

Capital of ancient Israel

The city of Samaria, the ancient capital of the northern Kingdom of Israel, was built by King Omri in the seventh year of his reign, c. 884 B.C.E., on the mountain he had reportedly bought for two talents of silver from a man called Shemer, after whom the city was named (1 Kings 16:23-24). [1] It was situated six miles from Shechem and was noted both for its strategic location and the fertility of the surrounding lands. Modern excavations reveal human occupation there dating back to the fourth millennium B.C.E. The site was a center of an extensive wine and oil production area.

Omri faced military pressure from the kingdom of Syria (Aram), and was forced for a time to allow Syrian merchants to open markets in the streets of Samaria (1 Kings 29:34). However, it remained the capital of Israel for more than 150 years, constituting most of the northern kingdom's history, until it was captured by the Assyrians in 722-721 B.C.E. The city was strongly fortified and endured several sieges before its downfall. Archaeologists believe the city of Samaria was richer and more developed than any other city in Israel or Judah.

Omri's son, King Ahab, reportedly built an "ivory palace" in the capital (1 Kings 16:39). The remains of an impressive Iron Age building at the site were excavated in the twentieth century, and in recent years, archaeologists may have discovered royal tombs possibly belonging to the Omride dynasty. A valuable collection of ivory carvings was also unearthed.

The city gate of Samaria is mentioned several times in the Books of Kings and Chronicles, and there is also a reference to "the pool of Samaria" in 1 Kings 22:38. Ahab also reportedly constructed a temple to Baal at Samaria, probably at the behest of his Phoenician wife Jezebel, much to the dismay of the prophets Elijah and Elisha. During the time of Ahab, the city successfully endured two sieges by the Syrians under Ben-hadad II. At Samaria's famous gate, Ahab met his ally and son-in-law, Jehoshaphat of Judah, to hear the dramatic words of the prophet Micaiah (1 Kings 22:10). During the reign of Ahab's son Joram, (2 Kings 6-7) the Syrian siege of Samaria was so intense that some residents were reduced to cannibalism, but the city was rescued by God's miraculous intervention.

The prophet Elisha, however, recruited one of the nation's military commanders, Jehu, to seize the throne from Joram and slaughter Ahab's descendants, execute Jezebel, and destroy Samaria's temple of Baal together with all of its priests. Some 70 of Ahab's sons were slain at Samaria on Jehu's orders.

When Jehu's grandson Joash (also called Jehoash—c. 801–786 B.C.E.) warred against Judah and captured Jerusalem, he brought to Samaria the gold, silver, and vessels of the Temple and the king's palace (2 Kings 14:14). Later, King Pekah (c. 737–732) returned victoriously to Samaria with a great number of captives of Judah. However, upon his arrival in the capital, the intervention of the prophet Oded resulted in these captives being released (2 Chron. 27: 8-9, 15). Under Jeroboam II, Samaria was famous both for its prosperity and its corruption.

In the biblical tradition, Samaria was a place of idolatry and corruption, although it is also clear that several of its kings, including even the wicked Ahab, honored Yahweh. The city's moral corruption was denounced by Amos, Isaiah, Micah, and other prophets, who also foretold the downfall of the city as a punishment for its sins.[2]

Although Samaria had successfully withstood the Syrians, and sometimes allied with them against Judah, the rise of the Assyrian Empire would eventually spell its doom. In the seventh year of King Hoshea, Samaria was besieged by Shalmaneser. Three years later it was captured by an Assyrian king (2 Kings 17-18), whose name is not mentioned. Josephus ("Ant." ix. 14, § 1) states that it was Shalmaneser, but Assyrian inscriptions show that it was Sargon II, who ascended the throne in 722 B.C.E., and had captured Samaria by the following year.

The city, however, was not destroyed (Jer. 41:5). According to Sargon's inscriptions, two years later it made an alliance with the cities of Hamath, Arpad, and Damascus against the Assyrians. This resistance failed when Sargon overthrew the King of Hamath, which he apparently boasts of in 2 Kings 18:32-35. The elite class of citizens from Samaria and other northern towns were replaced by colonists from different countries, sent there by the Assyrian king.

Contemporary Samaritan priest with a Torah scroll

The new settlers, probably influenced by the remaining local population, came to believe that the "God of the land" had not been properly propitiated, and thus priests of Yahweh were sent back by the Assyrian authorities to teach the settlers to worship the Israelite God (2 Kings 17:24-41). These Assyrian settlers intermarried with native Israelites and, according to Jewish sources, were the founders of the Samaritan religion, as well as being the ancestors of the Samaritans. The Samaritans themselves, however, claim that they worshiped Yahweh from the time of Moses onward, at Mount Gerezim, near Shechem. They denounce the Jewish claim of Jerusalem being the only authorized shrine of Yahweh as a fraud perpetrated by the priest Eli and his successors.

Under Greek and Roman rule

Samaria emerged again into history four centuries after its capture by the Assyrians. By this time Samaria was once again an important city, with its Samaritan Temple at Gerizim rivaling or exceeding the competing Yahwist Temple of Jerusalem, which had been rebuilt after the Jews of Judah to returned from Babylonian exile. The Samaritans, having assassinated the Greek governor of Syria in 332 or 331 B.C.E., were severely punished by Alexander the Great. Alexander sent his own people, the Macedonians, to control the city (Eusebius, "Chronicon"). A few years later, Alexander had Samaria rebuilt. The Samaritans, however, were not easily controlled. In 312, the city was dismantled by Ptolemy, son of Lagus, and 15 years later it was again captured and demolished, by Demetrius Poliorcetes.

Roman administrative districts during the time of Herod the Great

Almost two centuries elapsed during which nothing is heard of Samaria, but it is evident that the city was again rebuilt and strongly fortified. At the end of the second century B.C.E., the Jewish ruler John Hyrcanus besieged it for an entire year before he captured and destroyed it, along with the Samaritan temple on Mount Gerizim, probably in or shortly before 107 B.C.E. (Josephus, l.c. xiii. 10). Samaria was later held by Alexander Jannæus ("Ant." xiii. 15, § 4), and was afterward taken by Pompey, who rebuilt it and attached it to the government of Syria (ib. xiv. 4, § 4). The city was further strengthened by Gabinius.

Caesar Augustus entrusted Samaria to Herod the Great, under whom it flourished anew as Sebaste. Herod rebuilt it in 27 B.C.E. on a much larger scale and embellished it with magnificent buildings, including the new Temple of Augustus. In the same year he married the beautiful Samaritan princess Malthace, to whom two of his heirs were born. Under Herod the city became the capital of the Roman administrative district of Samaria, which was one of the subdivisions of the Roman province of Syria Iudaea, the other two being Judea and Galilee.

The New Testament contains several references to Samaria. In Matthew 10:5, Jesus instructs his disciples: "Do not... enter any town of the Samaritans." However, Luke's Gospel displays a different attitude in its famous parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10). The district of Samaria is further mentioned in Luke 17:11-20, in the miraculous healing of the ten lepers, which took place on the border of Samaria and Galilee. John 4:1-26 records Jesus' encounter in Samarian territory at Jacob's well with the Samaritan woman of Sychar, in which Jesus declares himself to be the Messiah. In Acts 8:5-14, it is recorded that Philip went to the city of Samaria and preached there, converting many residents, including the famous local miracle-worker Simon, called "Simon Magus" in Christian tradition.

Coin issued by Archelaus, the son of Herod the Great who ruled as ethnarch of Samaria

Sebaste is mentioned in the Mishnah ('Ar. iii. 2), where its orchards are praised. After Herod's death, Sebaste and the province of Samaria came under the administration of his son Archelaus, after whose banishment it passed to the control of Roman procurators. It then came under Herod Agrippa I, and later again came under the procurators ("Ant." xvii. 11, § 4). At the outbreak of the Jewish war in 66 C.E. it was attacked by the Jewish forces ("B. J." ii. 18, § 1). Josephus ("B. J." ii. 3, § 4) also speaks of the Jewish soldiers of Sebaste who had served in Herod's army and later sided with the Romans when the Jews revolted. In the aftermath of the Bar Kochba revolt of the second century C.E., Hadrian consolidated the older political units of Judea, Galilee, and Samaria into the new province of Syria Palaestina (Palestine).

Under Emperor Septimius Severus at the end of the second century, Sebaste became a Roman colony, but with the growth of nearby Nablus it lost its importance. In the fourth century Sebaste was a small town (Eusebius, "Onomasticon," s.v.). Saint Jerome (Commentary on Obadiah) records the tradition that Samaria was the burial-place of Elisha, Obadiah, and John the Baptist.

Modern history

The West Bank today, with disputed boundaries in blue

The history of Samaria in modern times begins when the territory of Samaria, formerly belonging to the Ottoman Empire, came under the administration of the United Kingdom in the aftermath of World War I by mandate of the League of Nations. After the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the territory came under the control of Jordan.

Samaria was taken from Jordan by Israeli forces during the 1967 Six-Day War. Jordan withdrew its claim to the West Bank, including Samaria, only in 1988, as was later confirmed by the Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty of 1993. Jordan now recognizes the Palestinian Authority as sovereign in the territory. In the 1994 Oslo accords, responsibility for the administration over some of the territory of Samaria was transferred to the Palestinian Authority.

Israel has been criticized for the policy of establishing settlements in Samaria. The area's borders are disputed and Israel's position is that the legal status of the land is unclear.

Excavations

The acropolis of Samaria has been extensively excavated down to the bedrock, the most significant find being the Palace of Omri and/or Ahab. The Omride palace was located on an elevated four meter high rock-cut platform that isolated it from its immediate surroundings. While immediately below the palace, cut into the face of the bedrock platform, there are two rock-cut tomb chambers that have only recently been recognized and attributed to the kings of Israel. West of the palace there are meager remains of other buildings from this period.

The acropolis area was extended in all directions by the addition of a massive perimeter wall built in the casemate style, and the new enlarged rectangular acropolis measured c. 290 ft. (90 m.) from north to south and at least c. 585 ft. (180 m.) from west to east. Massive stone stairs have also been uncovered, believed to have been constructed by Herod the Great as the entry to the temple he dedicated to Augustus at Sebaste.

A large rock-cut pool near the northern casemate wall was initially identified with the biblical "Pool of Samaria." It is now thought to be a grape-treading area that originated before the Omride dynasty but was also used in later years. North of the palace, a rich cache of Phoenician ivory furniture ornamentations were retrieved, which may be related to the supposed "Ivory Palace" that Ahab built (1 Kings 22:39).

Notes

  1. However, the etymology of the name may also be "watch mountain."
  2. It should be noted that the prophets also criticized Jerusalem and denounced many of Judah's kings for much the same reasons. A particular bone of contention for the biblical writers was the fact that the northern kings supported the Yahwist shrines at Dan and Bethel at pilgrimage sites, competing with the southern Temple of Jerusalem. In later centuries, the Samaritan temple dedicated to Yahweh at Gerizim would be destroyed by the Jewish ruler John Hyrcanus.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Albright, William F. Archeology of Palestine. Peter Smith Pub. Inc., 2nd edition, 1985. ISBN 0844600032
  • Becking, Bob. The Fall of Samaria: An Historical and Archaeological Study. Brill Academic Publishers, 1992. ISBN 9004096337
  • Bright, John. A History of Israel. Westminster John Knox Press; 4th edition, 2000. ISBN 0664220681
  • Grant, Michael. The History of Ancient Israel. Charles Scribner's Sons, 1984. ISBN 0684180812
  • Keller, Werner. The Bible as History. Bantam; 2nd Rev edition, 1983. ISBN 0553279432
  • Miller, J. Maxwell. A History of Ancient Israel and Judah. Westminster John Knox Press, 1986. ISBN 066421262X
  • Tappy, Ron E. The Archeology of Israelite Samaria, Volume 1: Early Iron Age Through the Ninth Century B.C.E. Harvard Semitic Studies 44. Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1992. ISBN 978-1555407704

External links

All links retrieved December 22, 2022.

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