Omri

From New World Encyclopedia


Omri (Hebrew עָמְרִי, Standard Hebrew ʿOmri, Tiberian Hebrew ʿOmrî; short for Hebrew עָמְרִיָּה "The Lord is my life", Standard Hebrew ʿOmriyya, Tiberian Hebrew ʿOmriyyāh) was king of Israel and father of Ahab. William F. Albright has dated his reign to 876–869 B.C.E., while E. R. Thiele offers the dates 885–874 B.C.E.

Omri took power during a period of political instability in the northern kingdom and established a dynasty which lasted several generations despite military attacks from Damascus and pressure from the southern kingdom of Judah.

Omri's rule over Israel was secure enough that he could bequeath his kingdom to Ahab, thus beginning a new dynasty (sometimes called the Omrides), and his descendants not only ruled over the kingdom of Israel for the next 40 years, but also briefly over Judah. He was significant enough that his name is mentioned on a stele erected by Mesha, king of Moab, who records his victory over a son of Omri.


He was "commander of the army" for Elah when Zimri slew Elah and made himself king. The troops at Gibbethon chose instead to elect Omri as king, and he led them to Tirzah where they trapped Zimri in the royal palace, and where Zimri died (1 Kings 16:15-19).

Although Zimri was eliminated, "half of the people" supported Tibni in opposition to Omri. It took Omri some years to subdue Tibni and at last proclaim himself undisputed king of Israel in the 21st year of Asa, king of Judah (1 Kings 16:21-23).

Because Omri was not a follower of Yahweh-only monotheism, the writer of the Book of Kings ignored his political and economic accomplishments, considering him an evil king who followed the sin of Jeroboam by refusing to acknowledge the Temple of Jerusalem as the only legitimate religious shrine. While the writer acknowledges Omri built his new capital Samaria on a hill he bought from Shemer (16:24), he omits any mention of the widespread public construction both Omri and his son Ahab commissioned during their reigns. Israel Finkelstein and his student Norma Franklin have identified monumental construction at Samaria, Jezreel, Megiddo and Hazor similar in design and build, including twelve sets of mason marks shared between the archaeological sites.

Omri in the Bible

Omri ended a period of political instability in the Kingdom of Israel following the death of its founder, Jeroboam I, who had led a successful revolt against the oppressive reign of King Solomon's son Rehoboam to establish an independent nation consisting of the ten northern tribes of Israel. Jeroboam's son Asa had reign only two years before being overthrown by Baasha, who proceeded to wipe out any surviving descendants of Jeroboam as well. After approximate a quarter of a century, Baasha was succeeded by his son Elah, who was in turn overthrown after two years by one of his own officials, Zimri. Omri had been the commander of the army for under Elah. With Zimri claiming the kingship, Omri's troop proclaimed him as legitimate ruler Omri and marched to the capital of Tirzah where they trapped Zimri in the royal palace. The Bible reports that Zimri burned the palace down and apparently died in the inferno rather than surrendering (1 Kings 16:15-19).

Although Zimri was eliminated after only seven days in power, "half of the people" supported a certain Tibni in opposition to Omri. Fighting between the two side seems to have continued for several years until Omri was finally recognized as the undisputed king of Israel (1 Kings 16:21-23).

The Bible credits Omri with having built he city of Samaria as his capital in the seventh year of his reign, c. 884 B.C.E. (1 Kings 16:23-24). He 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. 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 also strengthened his kingdom through alliances with his northern and southern neighbors against the threat of the Aramaean kingdom of Damascus to the east. He facilitated a marriage between his son and heir, Ahab, and the Phoenician princess Jezebel, daughter of Ethbaal. Ahab in turn ended old animosities with the southern Kingdom of Judah married his daughter Athaliah to King Jehoshaphat of Judah, with whom he contracted a military alliance against Damascus.

Omri alienated the biblical writers, however, by following Jeroboam's policy of supporting rival shrines to the Temple of Jerusalem, at which the citizens of Israel could offer tithes and sacrifices. For this, he was denounced as waling in the "ways of Jeroboam son of Nebat and in his sin, which he had caused Israel to commit." (1 Kings 16:25)

The Omride Dynasty

Nevertheless, the dynasty founded by Omri constitutes a new chapter in the history of the northern Kingdom of Israel. It ended almost 50 years of constant civil war over the throne. Under his reign, there was peace with the Kingdom of Judah to the south, and even cooperation between the two rival states, while relations with neighboring Sidon to the north were bolstered by marriages negotiated between the two royal courts. This state of peace with two powerful neighbors enabled the Kingdom of Israel to expand its influence and even political control in Transjordan, and these factors combined brought economic prosperity to the kingdom.

On the other hand, peace with Sidon also resulted in the penetration of Phoenician religious ideas into the kingdom and led to a vehement struggle between the Yahweh-only party (as personified by the prophets Elijah and Elisha) and the aristocracy (as personified by Omri's son and heir Ahab and his consort Jezebel). In foreign affairs, this period paralleled the rise of the Kingdom of Aram based in Damascus, and Israel soon found itself at war in the northeast.

The animosity of the Yahweh-only group against the Omrides toleration of Phoenician Baal worship was so strong that the prophet Elisha reportedly anointed Hazael to replace Ben Hadad III on the throne of Damascus, and simultaneously appointed the military commander Jehu to usurp the throne from Arab's descendants and slaughter his entire family, including Jezebel.

Meanwhile Assyria was beginning to expand westward from Mesopotamia. The Battle of Qarqar (853 B.C.E.) pitted Shalmaneser III of Assyria against a coalition of local kings, including Ahab. It was the first in a series of wars that would eventually lead to the destruction of the Kingdom of Israel in 722 B.C.E. and the reduction of the Kingdom of Judah to an Assyrian tributary state.

Omri in archaeological sources

In archaeology, Omri appears several times over the next century or so, beginning with the Moabite Mesha stele, which recounts one of Omri's major acts as king, namely the annexation of Moab. Later, Israel would become identified in sources as the "House of Omri" (Bit-Humria). The kingdom of "Israel, " meanwhile, was often identified as "Samaria," after the capital which Omri established.

Archaeologically speaking, Omri is the first known king of Israel, although it appears that Ahab's fame and power were even greater.

Attitude in contemporary Israel

The Bible displays a negative attitude to King Omri, and it has been followed by later rabbinical tradition. However, Zionism was created mainly by non-religious (sometimes anti-religious) people who re-evaluated many Biblical characters (as well as characters from later Jewish history) according to the criteria of a secular national movement in need of National Heroes. As with many European national movements which served as an example to the founders of Zionism, ancient Jewish warriors in general and warrior kings in particular were often regarded positively. Omri, a successful warrior king and the founder of a strong dynasty, is a conspicuous example.

In the present-day Israeli society, "Omri" is quite a common male name, which would have been unthinkable in a traditional Jewish milieu. (The same is true for the name "Nimrod", another Biblical character negatively regarded by pre-Zionist Jewish tradition.) Omri Sharon, the elder son (and close political associate) of former PM Ariel Sharon seems the most well-known among present bearers of the name. Omri Katz is an Israeli-American actor, born in Los Angeles to Israeli parents.


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