fbpx
Wikipedia

Jezebel

Jezebel (/ˈɛzəbəl, -bɛl/;[1][2][3] Hebrew: אִיזֶבֶל, Modern: ʾĪzével, Tiberian: ʾĪzeḇel) was the daughter of Ithobaal I of Tyre and the wife of Ahab, King of Israel, according to the Book of Kings of the Hebrew Bible (1 Kings 16:31).[4]

Jezebel
Queen consort of Israel
19th-century painting of Jezebel by John Liston Byam Shaw
Diedc. 852 BCE
Tel Jezreel
SpouseKing Ahab
IssueAhaziah
Jehoram
Athaliah?
FatherIthobaal I
ReligionCanaanite religion

According to the biblical narrative, Jezebel and her husband purged the Yahwist cult so that Baal and Asherah worship could be institutionalized. This caused irreversible damage to the reputation of the Omride dynasty, who were already unpopular among the Yahwists.[5][6][7][8] For these offences, Jezebel was thrown from a window to her death. Her corpse was trampled by Jehu's horse and then eaten by stray dogs, just as the prophet Elijah had prophesied (2 Kings 9:33–37).

Later, in the Book of Revelation, Jezebel is symbolically associated with false prophets.[9]

Meaning of name edit

Jezebel is the Anglicized transliteration of the Hebrew אִיזֶבֶלʾIzeḇel. The Oxford Guide to People & Places of the Bible states that the name is "best understood as meaning 'Where is the Lord?'" (Hebrew: אֵיזֶה בַּעַל, romanizedʾēze baʿal), a ritual cry from worship ceremonies in honor of Baal during periods of the year when the god was considered to be in the underworld.[10] Alternatively, a feminine Punic name noted by the Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum, Phoenician: 𐤁𐤏𐤋𐤀𐤆𐤁𐤋, romanized: bʿlʾzbl,[11] may have been a cognate to the original form of the name, as the Israelites were known to often alter personal names which invoked the names of foreign gods (cf. instances for Baal, Mephibosheth and Ish-bosheth).

Biblical account edit

 
Jezabel and Ahab (c. 1863) by Frederic Leighton

Jezebel is introduced into the biblical narrative as a Phoenician princess, the daughter of Ithobaal I, king of Tyre (1 Kings 16:31 says she was "Sidonian", which is a biblical term for Phoenicians in general).[10] According to genealogies given in Josephus and other classical sources, she was the great-aunt of Dido, Queen of Carthage.[10] As the daughter of Ithobaal I, she was also the sister of Baal-Eser II. Jezebel eventually married King Ahab of Samaria, the northern kingdom of Israel.

Near Eastern scholar Charles R. Krahmalkov proposed that Psalm 45 records the wedding ceremony of Ahab and Jezebel,[12] but other scholars cast doubt on this association.[13] This marriage was the culmination of the friendly relations existing between Israel and Phoenicia during Omri's reign, and possibly cemented important political designs of Ahab. Jezebel, like the foreign wives of Solomon, required facilities for carrying on her form of worship, so Ahab made a Baalist altar in the house of Baal, which he had built in Samaria.[14] Geoffrey Bromiley points out that it was Phoenician practice to install a royal woman as a priestess of Astarte, thus she would have a more active role in temple and palace relations than was customary in the Hebrew monarchy.[15]

Elijah edit

 
Jezebel and Ahab meeting Elijah, print by Sir Francis Dicksee (1853–1928)

Her coronation as queen upset the balance of power between Yahwism and Baalism.[16][17] As queen, Jezebel institutionalized Baalism and suppressed the worship of other gods through massacre and sacrilege.[18][19] Obadiah, a pro-Yahwist figure in Ahab's royal court, secretly protected the survivors of these purges in a cave.[14][19] Some commentators observe that Jezebel's desecration of Yahwist altars would have normally been condoned since they were built outside of Jerusalem, which contravened the Deuteronomic Code. However, they were overlooked due to Elijah's piety or Jezebel's 'improper' motives. [20][21]

As a result, Elijah invited Jezebel's prophets of Baal and Asherah to a challenge at Mount Carmel.[19][22] The challenge was to see which god, Yahweh or Baal, would burn a bull sacrifice on an altar. Jezebel's prophets failed to summon Baal in burning the bull sacrifice, despite their cries and cutting themselves. Elijah, however, succeeded when he summoned Yahweh, impressing the Israelites. He then ordered the people to seize and kill the prophets of Baal and Asherah at the Kishon River. Jezebel retaliated by vowing to kill Elijah the next day, even embracing divine judgment on herself if she failed to do so.[23][19][22] Elijah fled to Mount Horeb,[24] where he mourned the apostasy of Israel.[14][25]

Attempted kidnapping edit

After these events, Ben-Hadad, the king of Aram-Damascus, besieged Israel and threatened to capture Ahab's wives, including Jezebel. Ahab refused and defeated him in battle. However, he spared Ben-Hadad's life, an act that was denounced by an unnamed prophet. The prophet also declared that Israel would be ravaged by the Arameans as punishment. [26]

Naboth edit

In 855-856BC[27][page needed],[28] Jezebel resolved a failed business deal between Ahab and a civilian named Naboth, concerning a vineyard. To do this, she ordered the execution of Naboth and his sons,[29][30] under false charges of blasphemy against God and the king. Commentators observe that the execution was performed according to the Biblical guidelines so that suspicions of foul play could be minimized.[31] After Naboth's death, his corpse was licked by stray dogs. His execution was criticized by Elijah, who prophesized doom for Jezebel's family as punishment.

Death edit

 
The Death of Jezebel by Gustave Doré

Three years later, Ahab died in battle. Jezebel's son Ahaziah inherited the throne, but died as the result of an accident and was succeeded by his brother, Jehoram. Jehu later usurped the throne [10]and killed Jehoram, and his nephew Ahaziah, who was the son of Jehoram's possible sister Athaliah and her Judahite husband Jehoram. He later approached Jezebel at the royal palace in Jezreel.

Anticipating his arrival, Jezebel put on make-up and a formal wig with adornments and looked out of a window and taunted him. Bromiley says that it should be looked at less as an attempt at seduction and more as the public defiance of the queen mother, invested with the authority of the royal house and cult to confront a rebellious commander.[15] In his two-volume Guide to the Bible (1967 and 1969), Isaac Asimov describes Jezebel's last act: dressing in all her finery, make-up, and jewelry, as deliberately symbolic, indicating her dignity, royal status, and determination to go out of this life as a queen.[32]

Jehu, however, remained unfazed and ordered Jezebel's eunuch servants to throw her from the window. Her blood splattered on the wall and horses, and Jehu's horse trampled her corpse. He entered the palace where, after he ate and drank, he ordered Jezebel's body to be taken for burial. However, only her skull, her feet, and the palms of her hands remained—her flesh had been eaten by stray dogs, just as the prophet Elijah had prophesied. [33][34] Edwin R. Thiele dates Jezebel's death c. 850 BCE.[35]

Historicity edit

 
Queen Jezebel Being Punished by Jehu, by Andrea Celesti

According to Israel Finkelstein, the marriage of King Ahab to the daughter of the ruler of the Phoenician empire was a sign of the power and prestige of Ahab and the northern Kingdom of Israel. He termed it a "brilliant stroke of international diplomacy".[36] He says that the inconsistencies and anachronisms in the biblical stories of Jezebel and Ahab mean that they must be considered "more of a historical novel than an accurate historical chronicle".[36] Among these inconsistencies, 1 Kings 20 states that "Ben-Hadad king of Aram" invaded Samaria during Ahab's reign, but this event did not take place until later in the history of Israel, and "Ben-Hadad" was the title of the ruler of Aram-Damascus.[37] The two books of Kings are part of the Deuteronomistic history, compiled more than two hundred years after the death of Jezebel. Finkelstein states that these accounts are "obviously influenced by the theology of the seventh century BCE writers".[36] The compilers of the biblical accounts of Jezebel and her family were writing in the southern kingdom of Judah centuries after the events and from a perspective of strict monolatry. These writers considered the polytheism of the members of the Omride dynasty to be sinful. In addition, they were hostile to the northern kingdom and its history, as its center of Samaria was a rival to Jerusalem.[36] According to Dr J. Bimson, of Trinity College, Bristol 1 and 2 Kings are not "a straightforward history but a history which contains its own theological commentary". He points to verses like 1 Kings 14:19 that show the author of Kings was drawing on other earlier sources.[38]

A seal from the 9th century BCE, discovered in 1964, has a partially damaged inscription of "YZBL" which could have once read, "belonging to Jezebel". However, there are some issues with this theory. Whereas on the seal it appears the inscription begins with the letter yodh, Jezebel's name starts with an aleph, which is lacking on the seal; furthermore, the possessive lamedh which would translate to the predicate "belonging to ..." is also missing from the seal. However, it is entirely possible these letters simply could have been located where the seal is now damaged. The seal includes motifs associated with both Egyptian and Israelite royalty, such as the Uraeus cobra which is commonly found on pharaonic artifacts, and symbols such as the winged sun and Ankh, which are found on numerous other Israelite royal seals from the 8th century BCE and onwards. Regardless, scholars do not agree on whether the seal is evidence for the historicity of the biblical character. Some scholars have said that the size and intricacy of the seal could mean it was used by royalty.[39]

Cultural symbol edit

 
Jezabel by Léon Auguste Perrey

According to Geoffrey Bromiley, the depiction of Jezebel as "the incarnation of Canaanite cultic and political practices, detested by Israelite prophets and loyalists, has given her a literary life far beyond the existence of a ninth-century Tyrian princess."[15]

Through the centuries, the name Jezebel came to be associated with false prophets. By the early 20th century, it was also associated with fallen or abandoned women.[40] In Christian lore, a comparison to Jezebel suggested that a person was a pagan or an apostate masquerading as a servant of God. By manipulation and seduction, she misled the saints of God into sins of idolatry and sexual immorality.[41] In particular, Christians associated Jezebel with promiscuity. The cosmetics which Jezebel applied before her death also led some Christians to associate makeup with vice. In the Middle Ages, the chronicler Matthew Paris criticised Isabella of Angoulême, the queen consort of John, King of England, by writing that she was "more Jezebel than Isabel".[42] In modern usage, the name of Jezebel is sometimes used as a synonym for sexually promiscuous or controlling women.[43] The Jezebel stereotype is an oppressive image and was used as a justification for sexual assault and sexual servitude during the eras of colonization and slavery in the United States.[44][45][46]

In feminist interpretations and Bible scholarship, Jezebel is re-examined and, for example, seen as unfairly framed[47] or her story altered,[48] or as a resource for womanist theology (Lomax). [49]

In popular culture edit

 
Bette Davis as Julie in the film Jezebel
  • The American gospel vocal group Golden Gate Quartet released a single called "Jezebel" in 1941 which narrates the story of Jezebel.[50][51]
  • Frankie Laine recorded "Jezebel" (1951), written by Wayne Shanklin, which became a hit song.[52] The song begins:

    If ever the Devil was born without a pair of horns
    It was you, Jezebel, it was you
    If ever an angel fell
    Jezebel, it was you, Jezebel, it was you![53]

  • Iron & Wine included a song "Jezebel" on his 2005 EP Woman King. It contains many references to the biblical Jezebel, in particular the dogs associated with her death.[54]
  • Paulette Goddard starred as Jezebel in the film Sins of Jezebel (1953).[55]
  • In Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale (1985) and its Hulu adaptation, Jezebels are women forced to work as prostitutes after they are sterilized for the totalitarian and theocratic Republic of Gilead and are named after the biblical figure of the same name.
  • The popular historian Lesley Hazleton wrote a revisionist account, Jezebel: The Untold Story of the Bible's Harlot Queen (2004), presenting Jezebel as a sophisticated queen engaged in mortal combat with the fundamentalist prophet Elijah.[56]
  • The Jezabels is an Australian indie rock band founded in 2007. The band's name is based on the biblical character, whom one band member describes as "misunderstood or misrepresented" and "an example of how women are really wrongly presented".[57][58]
  • The Faces song "Stay with Me" includes the line, "I hear you're a mean old Jezebel".
  • The Harry Styles song "Little Freak" includes the line, "Little freak, Jezebel".
  • The 1995 KMFDM song "Juke Joint Jezebel" is the band's most well-known song with around 3 million copies sold.
  • The band 10,000 Maniacs song "Jezebel" was released on the band's 1992 album Our Time in Eden and later performed acoustically on the 1993 live album MTV Unplugged (10,000 Maniacs album).

In literature edit

  • Beach, Eleanor Ferris. The Jezebel Letters: religion and politics in ninth-century Israel. Fortress Press, 2005.
  • Bellis, Alice Ogden. Helpmates, harlots, and heroes: Women's stories in the Hebrew Bible. Westminster John Knox Press, 2007.
  • Everhart, Janet S. "Jezebel: Framed by eunuchs?." The Catholic Biblical Quarterly 72, no. 4 (2010): 688-698.
  • Garrett, Ginger. "Reign: The Chronicles of Queen Jezebel", Book #3 in the Lost Loves of the Bible Series (2013), ISBN 143-4-7659-62
  • Hazleton, Lesley. "Jezebel: The Untold Story of the Bible's Harlot Queen" (2009)
  • Jackson, Melissa. "Reading Jezebel from the "other" side: Feminist critique, postcolonialism, and comedy." Review & Expositor 112, no. 2 (2015): 239-255.
  • Lomax, Tamura. Jezebel unhinged: Loosing the Black female body in religion and culture. Duke University Press, 2018.
  • Mokoena, Lerato. "Reclaiming Jezebel and Mrs Job: Challenging Sexist Cultural Stereotypes and the Curse of Invisibility" in Transgression and transformation: Feminist, postcolonial and queer Biblical interpretation as creative interventions (2021).
  • Quick, Catherine S. "Jezebel's last laugh: the rhetoric of wicked women." Women and Language 16, no. 1 (1993): 44-49.
  • Snyder, J.B., 2012. Jezebel and her Interpreters. Women's Bible Commentary: Twentieth–Anniversary Edition. Louisville, KY, pp. 180–183.
  • Wyatt, Stephanie. "Jezebel, Elijah, and the widow of Zarephath: A ménage à trois that estranges the holy and makes the holy the strange." Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 36, no. 4 (2012): 435-458.
  • Barnard, Megan. "Jezebel." Penguin Random House, 2023.

References edit

  1. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (Second ed.). 1989. (US) and . Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 5 May 2019.
  2. ^ "Jezebel". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  3. ^ "Jezebel". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  4. ^ Elizabeth Knowles, "Jezebel", The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, OUP 2006
  5. ^ "Micah 6:16".
  6. ^ "2 Chronicles 21:6".
  7. ^ "2 Kings 8:18".
  8. ^ ISHDA, T. (1975). "The House of Ahab". Israel Exploration Journal. 25 (2/3): 135–137. JSTOR 27925509.
  9. ^ B. Duff, Paul (2001). Who Rides the Beast?: Prophetic Rivalry and the Rhetoric of Crisis in the Churches of the Apocalypse. doi:10.1093/019513835X.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-513835-1.
  10. ^ a b c d Hackett, Jo Ann (2004). Metzger, Bruce M; Coogan, Michael D (eds.). The Oxford Guide to People & Places of the Bible. Oxford University Press. pp. 150–151. ISBN 978-0-19-517610-0.
  11. ^ Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum I. 1926. p. 209.
  12. ^ Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2000), A Phoenician-Punic Grammar, page 2
  13. ^ Rogerson, J W; McKay, John William (1977). Psalms 1-50. Cambridge University Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-521-29160-6.
  14. ^ a b c "JEZEBEL - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com.
  15. ^ a b c Bromiley, Geoffrey W. (28 August 1979). The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8028-3782-0 – via Google Books.
  16. ^ Eakin, Frank E. (1965). "Yahwism and Baalism before the Exile". Journal of Biblical Literature. 84 (4): 407–414. doi:10.2307/3264867. JSTOR 3264867.
  17. ^ Miller, J. M. (1967). "The Fall of the House of Ahab". Vetus Testamentum. 17 (3): 307–324. doi:10.1163/156853367X00042.
  18. ^ Mare, Leonard P. "" Twice as much of your Spirit": Elijah, Elisha, and the Spirit of God." Ekklesiastikos Pharos 91.1 (2009): 72-81.
  19. ^ a b c d Bayor, Conrad Kandelmwin. "The Alienation of Jezebel: Reading the Deuteronomic Historian's Portrait of Jezebel in the Contemporary Global Context." (2017).
  20. ^ "1 Kings 19:10 Benson Commentary". Biblehub. 2023.
  21. ^ Glatt-Gilad, David (21 February 2019). . TheTorah.com. Archived from the original on 3 January 2024.
  22. ^ a b Merecz, Robert J. (n.d.). "Jezebel's Oath (1 Kgs 19,2)". Biblica. 90 (2): 257–259. ISSN 0006-0887. JSTOR 42614902.
  23. ^ Micah 6:16
  24. ^ 1 Kings 19:8
  25. ^ Bromiley, Geoffrey William (2009). The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Grand Rapids, Michigan: W. B. Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-8028-3785-1.
  26. ^ 1 Kings 20:3–43
  27. ^ Thiele, Edwin R. (1965). The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings (2nd ed.). Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans.
  28. ^ 1 Kings 16:29
  29. ^ Hirsch, Emil G. and Seligsohn, M., "Naboth", Jewish Encyclopedia
  30. ^ "1 Kings 21: Coffman's Commentaries on the Bible". StudyLight.org. 2022.
  31. ^ "1 Kings 21: Keil and Delitzsch OT Commentary". Biblehub. 2023.
  32. ^ Asimov, Isaac (1988). Asimov's Guide to the Bible: Two Volumes in One, the Old and New Testaments (reprint ed.). Wings. ISBN 978-0-517-34582-5.
  33. ^ 2 Kings 9:35–36
  34. ^ See also jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/jezebel-midrash-and-aggadah
  35. ^ Edwin Thiele, The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings, (1st ed.; New York: Macmillan, 1951; 2d ed.; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1965; 3rd ed.; Grand Rapids: Zondervan/Kregel, 1983). ISBN 0-8254-3825-X
  36. ^ a b c d Finkelstein, Israel; Silberman, Neil Asher (2001). The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. Simon and Schuster. pp. 169–195. ISBN 978-0-684-86912-4.
  37. ^ Israel Finkelstein; Neil Asher Silberman (6 March 2002). The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Sacred Texts. Simon and Schuster. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-7432-2338-6.
  38. ^ IVP New Bible Commentary (21st Century Edition), p. 335
  39. ^ Korpel, Marjo C. A. (May 2008). "Fit for a Queen: Jezebel's Royal Seal". Biblical Archaeology Society. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  40. ^ Cook, Stanley Arthur (1911). "Jezebel" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 411.
  41. ^ The New Testament, Book of Revelation., Ch. 2, vs. 20-23.
  42. ^ Nicholas Vincent 'John's Jezebel' 1999
  43. ^ "Meaning #2: "an impudent, shameless, or morally unrestrained woman"". Merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  44. ^ Donovan, Roxanne & Williams, Michelle (2002). "Living at the intersection: The effects of racism and sexism on Black rape survivors" (PDF). Women & Therapy. 25 (3–4): 95–105. doi:10.1300/J015v25n03_07. S2CID 143180295. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
  45. ^ Buchanan, Nicole T. & Ormerod, Alayne J. (2002). "Racialized sexual harassment in the lives of African American women" (PDF). Women & Therapy. 25 (3–4): 107–124. doi:10.1300/J015v25n03_08. S2CID 144425126. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
  46. ^ Pilgrim, David. . Jim Crow Museum. Ferris State University. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  47. ^ Bellis, Alice Ogden (1994). "Introduction". Helpmates, harlots, and heroes: women's stories in the Hebrew Bible (PDF). Louisville, Ky: Westminster/John Knox Pr. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-664-25430-8.
  48. ^ Beach, Eleanor Ferris (2005). The Jezebel letters : religion and politics in ninth-century Israel. Internet Archive. Minneapolis : Fortress Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0-8006-3754-5.
  49. ^ Lomax, Tamura A. (2018). Jezebel unhinged: loosing the black female body in religion and culture (PDF). Durham London: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-1-4780-0248-2.
  50. ^ Young, Alan (1997). Woke Me Up This Morning: Black Gospel Singers and the Gospel Life. University Press of Mississippi. p. 50. ISBN 0-87805-943-1.
  51. ^ Jezebel at AllMusic
  52. ^ Frankie Laine's hits in the years 1947-1952. 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  53. ^ . Frankie Laine lyrics. Metro Lyrics. Archived from the original on 19 December 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  54. ^ Leahey, Andrew (9 April 2012). "Iron & Wine, 'Jezebel'". americansongwriter.com. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  55. ^ "At The Imperial: 'Jezebel' Color Spectacle Stars Paulette Goddard In Title Role". The News and Eastern Townships Advocate. 14 January 1954. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  56. ^ "Jezebel: The Untold Story of the Bible's Harlot Queen, by Lesley Hazleton". Kirkus reviews. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  57. ^ Cherrie, Chrysta. "The Jezabels". AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 2 December 2012.
  58. ^ Lam, Lana (20 May 2009). "The Jezabels". Central Coast Express Advocate. News Limited (News Corporation). p. 35. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2012.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Jezebel at Wikimedia Commons

jezebel, jezabel, redirects, here, band, jezabels, other, uses, disambiguation, hebrew, יז, modern, ʾĪzével, tiberian, ʾĪzeḇel, daughter, ithobaal, tyre, wife, ahab, king, israel, according, book, kings, hebrew, bible, kings, queen, consort, israel19th, centur. Jezabel redirects here For the band see The Jezabels For other uses see Jezebel disambiguation Jezebel ˈ dʒ ɛ z e b el b ɛ l 1 2 3 Hebrew א יז ב ל Modern ʾizevel Tiberian ʾizeḇel was the daughter of Ithobaal I of Tyre and the wife of Ahab King of Israel according to the Book of Kings of the Hebrew Bible 1 Kings 16 31 4 JezebelQueen consort of Israel19th century painting of Jezebel by John Liston Byam ShawDiedc 852 BCETel JezreelSpouseKing AhabIssueAhaziahJehoramAthaliah FatherIthobaal IReligionCanaanite religionAccording to the biblical narrative Jezebel and her husband purged the Yahwist cult so that Baal and Asherah worship could be institutionalized This caused irreversible damage to the reputation of the Omride dynasty who were already unpopular among the Yahwists 5 6 7 8 For these offences Jezebel was thrown from a window to her death Her corpse was trampled by Jehu s horse and then eaten by stray dogs just as the prophet Elijah had prophesied 2 Kings 9 33 37 Later in the Book of Revelation Jezebel is symbolically associated with false prophets 9 Contents 1 Meaning of name 2 Biblical account 2 1 Elijah 2 2 Attempted kidnapping 2 3 Naboth 2 4 Death 3 Historicity 4 Cultural symbol 5 In popular culture 6 In literature 7 References 8 External linksMeaning of name editJezebel is the Anglicized transliteration of the Hebrew א יז ב ל ʾIzeḇel The Oxford Guide to People amp Places of the Bible states that the name is best understood as meaning Where is the Lord Hebrew א יז ה ב ע ל romanized ʾeze baʿal a ritual cry from worship ceremonies in honor of Baal during periods of the year when the god was considered to be in the underworld 10 Alternatively a feminine Punic name noted by the Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum Phoenician 𐤁𐤏𐤋𐤀𐤆𐤁𐤋 romanized bʿlʾzbl 11 may have been a cognate to the original form of the name as the Israelites were known to often alter personal names which invoked the names of foreign gods cf instances for Baal Mephibosheth and Ish bosheth Biblical account edit nbsp Jezabel and Ahab c 1863 by Frederic LeightonJezebel is introduced into the biblical narrative as a Phoenician princess the daughter of Ithobaal I king of Tyre 1 Kings 16 31 says she was Sidonian which is a biblical term for Phoenicians in general 10 According to genealogies given in Josephus and other classical sources she was the great aunt of Dido Queen of Carthage 10 As the daughter of Ithobaal I she was also the sister of Baal Eser II Jezebel eventually married King Ahab of Samaria the northern kingdom of Israel Near Eastern scholar Charles R Krahmalkov proposed that Psalm 45 records the wedding ceremony of Ahab and Jezebel 12 but other scholars cast doubt on this association 13 This marriage was the culmination of the friendly relations existing between Israel and Phoenicia during Omri s reign and possibly cemented important political designs of Ahab Jezebel like the foreign wives of Solomon required facilities for carrying on her form of worship so Ahab made a Baalist altar in the house of Baal which he had built in Samaria 14 Geoffrey Bromiley points out that it was Phoenician practice to install a royal woman as a priestess of Astarte thus she would have a more active role in temple and palace relations than was customary in the Hebrew monarchy 15 Elijah edit nbsp Jezebel and Ahab meeting Elijah print by Sir Francis Dicksee 1853 1928 Her coronation as queen upset the balance of power between Yahwism and Baalism 16 17 As queen Jezebel institutionalized Baalism and suppressed the worship of other gods through massacre and sacrilege 18 19 Obadiah a pro Yahwist figure in Ahab s royal court secretly protected the survivors of these purges in a cave 14 19 Some commentators observe that Jezebel s desecration of Yahwist altars would have normally been condoned since they were built outside of Jerusalem which contravened the Deuteronomic Code However they were overlooked due to Elijah s piety or Jezebel s improper motives 20 21 As a result Elijah invited Jezebel s prophets of Baal and Asherah to a challenge at Mount Carmel 19 22 The challenge was to see which god Yahweh or Baal would burn a bull sacrifice on an altar Jezebel s prophets failed to summon Baal in burning the bull sacrifice despite their cries and cutting themselves Elijah however succeeded when he summoned Yahweh impressing the Israelites He then ordered the people to seize and kill the prophets of Baal and Asherah at the Kishon River Jezebel retaliated by vowing to kill Elijah the next day even embracing divine judgment on herself if she failed to do so 23 19 22 Elijah fled to Mount Horeb 24 where he mourned the apostasy of Israel 14 25 Attempted kidnapping edit After these events Ben Hadad the king of Aram Damascus besieged Israel and threatened to capture Ahab s wives including Jezebel Ahab refused and defeated him in battle However he spared Ben Hadad s life an act that was denounced by an unnamed prophet The prophet also declared that Israel would be ravaged by the Arameans as punishment 26 Naboth edit In 855 856BC 27 page needed 28 Jezebel resolved a failed business deal between Ahab and a civilian named Naboth concerning a vineyard To do this she ordered the execution of Naboth and his sons 29 30 under false charges of blasphemy against God and the king Commentators observe that the execution was performed according to the Biblical guidelines so that suspicions of foul play could be minimized 31 After Naboth s death his corpse was licked by stray dogs His execution was criticized by Elijah who prophesized doom for Jezebel s family as punishment Death edit nbsp The Death of Jezebel by Gustave DoreThree years later Ahab died in battle Jezebel s son Ahaziah inherited the throne but died as the result of an accident and was succeeded by his brother Jehoram Jehu later usurped the throne 10 and killed Jehoram and his nephew Ahaziah who was the son of Jehoram s possible sister Athaliah and her Judahite husband Jehoram He later approached Jezebel at the royal palace in Jezreel Anticipating his arrival Jezebel put on make up and a formal wig with adornments and looked out of a window and taunted him Bromiley says that it should be looked at less as an attempt at seduction and more as the public defiance of the queen mother invested with the authority of the royal house and cult to confront a rebellious commander 15 In his two volume Guide to the Bible 1967 and 1969 Isaac Asimov describes Jezebel s last act dressing in all her finery make up and jewelry as deliberately symbolic indicating her dignity royal status and determination to go out of this life as a queen 32 Jehu however remained unfazed and ordered Jezebel s eunuch servants to throw her from the window Her blood splattered on the wall and horses and Jehu s horse trampled her corpse He entered the palace where after he ate and drank he ordered Jezebel s body to be taken for burial However only her skull her feet and the palms of her hands remained her flesh had been eaten by stray dogs just as the prophet Elijah had prophesied 33 34 Edwin R Thiele dates Jezebel s death c 850 BCE 35 Historicity edit nbsp Queen Jezebel Being Punished by Jehu by Andrea CelestiAccording to Israel Finkelstein the marriage of King Ahab to the daughter of the ruler of the Phoenician empire was a sign of the power and prestige of Ahab and the northern Kingdom of Israel He termed it a brilliant stroke of international diplomacy 36 He says that the inconsistencies and anachronisms in the biblical stories of Jezebel and Ahab mean that they must be considered more of a historical novel than an accurate historical chronicle 36 Among these inconsistencies 1 Kings 20 states that Ben Hadad king of Aram invaded Samaria during Ahab s reign but this event did not take place until later in the history of Israel and Ben Hadad was the title of the ruler of Aram Damascus 37 The two books of Kings are part of the Deuteronomistic history compiled more than two hundred years after the death of Jezebel Finkelstein states that these accounts are obviously influenced by the theology of the seventh century BCE writers 36 The compilers of the biblical accounts of Jezebel and her family were writing in the southern kingdom of Judah centuries after the events and from a perspective of strict monolatry These writers considered the polytheism of the members of the Omride dynasty to be sinful In addition they were hostile to the northern kingdom and its history as its center of Samaria was a rival to Jerusalem 36 According to Dr J Bimson of Trinity College Bristol 1 and 2 Kings are not a straightforward history but a history which contains its own theological commentary He points to verses like 1 Kings 14 19 that show the author of Kings was drawing on other earlier sources 38 A seal from the 9th century BCE discovered in 1964 has a partially damaged inscription of YZBL which could have once read belonging to Jezebel However there are some issues with this theory Whereas on the seal it appears the inscription begins with the letter yodh Jezebel s name starts with an aleph which is lacking on the seal furthermore the possessive lamedh which would translate to the predicate belonging to is also missing from the seal However it is entirely possible these letters simply could have been located where the seal is now damaged The seal includes motifs associated with both Egyptian and Israelite royalty such as the Uraeus cobra which is commonly found on pharaonic artifacts and symbols such as the winged sun and Ankh which are found on numerous other Israelite royal seals from the 8th century BCE and onwards Regardless scholars do not agree on whether the seal is evidence for the historicity of the biblical character Some scholars have said that the size and intricacy of the seal could mean it was used by royalty 39 Cultural symbol edit nbsp Jezabel by Leon Auguste PerreyAccording to Geoffrey Bromiley the depiction of Jezebel as the incarnation of Canaanite cultic and political practices detested by Israelite prophets and loyalists has given her a literary life far beyond the existence of a ninth century Tyrian princess 15 Through the centuries the name Jezebel came to be associated with false prophets By the early 20th century it was also associated with fallen or abandoned women 40 In Christian lore a comparison to Jezebel suggested that a person was a pagan or an apostate masquerading as a servant of God By manipulation and seduction she misled the saints of God into sins of idolatry and sexual immorality 41 In particular Christians associated Jezebel with promiscuity The cosmetics which Jezebel applied before her death also led some Christians to associate makeup with vice In the Middle Ages the chronicler Matthew Paris criticised Isabella of Angouleme the queen consort of John King of England by writing that she was more Jezebel than Isabel 42 In modern usage the name of Jezebel is sometimes used as a synonym for sexually promiscuous or controlling women 43 The Jezebel stereotype is an oppressive image and was used as a justification for sexual assault and sexual servitude during the eras of colonization and slavery in the United States 44 45 46 In feminist interpretations and Bible scholarship Jezebel is re examined and for example seen as unfairly framed 47 or her story altered 48 or as a resource for womanist theology Lomax 49 In popular culture edit nbsp Bette Davis as Julie in the film JezebelThe American gospel vocal group Golden Gate Quartet released a single called Jezebel in 1941 which narrates the story of Jezebel 50 51 Frankie Laine recorded Jezebel 1951 written by Wayne Shanklin which became a hit song 52 The song begins If ever the Devil was born without a pair of horns It was you Jezebel it was you If ever an angel fell Jezebel it was you Jezebel it was you 53 Iron amp Wine included a song Jezebel on his 2005 EP Woman King It contains many references to the biblical Jezebel in particular the dogs associated with her death 54 Paulette Goddard starred as Jezebel in the film Sins of Jezebel 1953 55 In Margaret Atwood s The Handmaid s Tale 1985 and its Hulu adaptation Jezebels are women forced to work as prostitutes after they are sterilized for the totalitarian and theocratic Republic of Gilead and are named after the biblical figure of the same name The popular historian Lesley Hazleton wrote a revisionist account Jezebel The Untold Story of the Bible s Harlot Queen 2004 presenting Jezebel as a sophisticated queen engaged in mortal combat with the fundamentalist prophet Elijah 56 The Jezabels is an Australian indie rock band founded in 2007 The band s name is based on the biblical character whom one band member describes as misunderstood or misrepresented and an example of how women are really wrongly presented 57 58 The Faces song Stay with Me includes the line I hear you re a mean old Jezebel The Harry Styles song Little Freak includes the line Little freak Jezebel The 1995 KMFDM song Juke Joint Jezebel is the band s most well known song with around 3 million copies sold The band 10 000 Maniacs song Jezebel was released on the band s 1992 album Our Time in Eden and later performed acoustically on the 1993 live album MTV Unplugged 10 000 Maniacs album In literature editBeach Eleanor Ferris The Jezebel Letters religion and politics in ninth century Israel Fortress Press 2005 Bellis Alice Ogden Helpmates harlots and heroes Women s stories in the Hebrew Bible Westminster John Knox Press 2007 Everhart Janet S Jezebel Framed by eunuchs The Catholic Biblical Quarterly 72 no 4 2010 688 698 Garrett Ginger Reign The Chronicles of Queen Jezebel Book 3 in the Lost Loves of the Bible Series 2013 ISBN 143 4 7659 62 Hazleton Lesley Jezebel The Untold Story of the Bible s Harlot Queen 2009 Jackson Melissa Reading Jezebel from the other side Feminist critique postcolonialism and comedy Review amp Expositor 112 no 2 2015 239 255 Lomax Tamura Jezebel unhinged Loosing the Black female body in religion and culture Duke University Press 2018 Mokoena Lerato Reclaiming Jezebel and Mrs Job Challenging Sexist Cultural Stereotypes and the Curse of Invisibility in Transgression and transformation Feminist postcolonial and queer Biblical interpretation as creative interventions 2021 Quick Catherine S Jezebel s last laugh the rhetoric of wicked women Women and Language 16 no 1 1993 44 49 Snyder J B 2012 Jezebel and her Interpreters Women s Bible Commentary Twentieth Anniversary Edition Louisville KY pp 180 183 Wyatt Stephanie Jezebel Elijah and the widow of Zarephath A menage a trois that estranges the holy and makes the holy the strange Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 36 no 4 2012 435 458 Barnard Megan Jezebel Penguin Random House 2023 References edit Oxford English Dictionary Second ed 1989 Jezebel US and Jezebel Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 5 May 2019 Jezebel Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 5 May 2019 Jezebel Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 5 May 2019 Elizabeth Knowles Jezebel The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable OUP 2006 Micah 6 16 2 Chronicles 21 6 2 Kings 8 18 ISHDA T 1975 The House of Ahab Israel Exploration Journal 25 2 3 135 137 JSTOR 27925509 B Duff Paul 2001 Who Rides the Beast Prophetic Rivalry and the Rhetoric of Crisis in the Churches of the Apocalypse doi 10 1093 019513835X 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 513835 1 a b c d Hackett Jo Ann 2004 Metzger Bruce M Coogan Michael D eds The Oxford Guide to People amp Places of the Bible Oxford University Press pp 150 151 ISBN 978 0 19 517610 0 Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum I 1926 p 209 Krahmalkov Charles R 2000 A Phoenician Punic Grammar page 2 Rogerson J W McKay John William 1977 Psalms 1 50 Cambridge University Press p 213 ISBN 978 0 521 29160 6 a b c JEZEBEL JewishEncyclopedia com www jewishencyclopedia com a b c Bromiley Geoffrey W 28 August 1979 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 3782 0 via Google Books Eakin Frank E 1965 Yahwism and Baalism before the Exile Journal of Biblical Literature 84 4 407 414 doi 10 2307 3264867 JSTOR 3264867 Miller J M 1967 The Fall of the House of Ahab Vetus Testamentum 17 3 307 324 doi 10 1163 156853367X00042 Mare Leonard P Twice as much of your Spirit Elijah Elisha and the Spirit of God Ekklesiastikos Pharos 91 1 2009 72 81 a b c d Bayor Conrad Kandelmwin The Alienation of Jezebel Reading the Deuteronomic Historian s Portrait of Jezebel in the Contemporary Global Context 2017 1 Kings 19 10 Benson Commentary Biblehub 2023 Glatt Gilad David 21 February 2019 Was Elijah Permitted to Make an Offering on Mount Carmel TheTorah com Archived from the original on 3 January 2024 a b Merecz Robert J n d Jezebel s Oath 1 Kgs 19 2 Biblica 90 2 257 259 ISSN 0006 0887 JSTOR 42614902 Micah 6 16 1 Kings 19 8 Bromiley Geoffrey William 2009 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Grand Rapids Michigan W B Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 3785 1 1 Kings 20 3 43 Thiele Edwin R 1965 The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings 2nd ed Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans 1 Kings 16 29 Hirsch Emil G and Seligsohn M Naboth Jewish Encyclopedia 1 Kings 21 Coffman s Commentaries on the Bible StudyLight org 2022 1 Kings 21 Keil and Delitzsch OT Commentary Biblehub 2023 Asimov Isaac 1988 Asimov s Guide to the Bible Two Volumes in One the Old and New Testaments reprint ed Wings ISBN 978 0 517 34582 5 2 Kings 9 35 36 See also jwa org encyclopedia article jezebel midrash and aggadah Edwin Thiele The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings 1st ed New York Macmillan 1951 2d ed Grand Rapids Eerdmans 1965 3rd ed Grand Rapids Zondervan Kregel 1983 ISBN 0 8254 3825 X a b c d Finkelstein Israel Silberman Neil Asher 2001 The Bible Unearthed Archaeology s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts Simon and Schuster pp 169 195 ISBN 978 0 684 86912 4 Israel Finkelstein Neil Asher Silberman 6 March 2002 The Bible Unearthed Archaeology s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Sacred Texts Simon and Schuster p 176 ISBN 978 0 7432 2338 6 IVP New Bible Commentary 21st Century Edition p 335 Korpel Marjo C A May 2008 Fit for a Queen Jezebel s Royal Seal Biblical Archaeology Society Retrieved 17 November 2013 Cook Stanley Arthur 1911 Jezebel In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 411 The New Testament Book of Revelation Ch 2 vs 20 23 Nicholas Vincent John s Jezebel 1999 Meaning 2 an impudent shameless or morally unrestrained woman Merriam webster com Retrieved 24 May 2012 Donovan Roxanne amp Williams Michelle 2002 Living at the intersection The effects of racism and sexism on Black rape survivors PDF Women amp Therapy 25 3 4 95 105 doi 10 1300 J015v25n03 07 S2CID 143180295 Retrieved 17 April 2019 Buchanan Nicole T amp Ormerod Alayne J 2002 Racialized sexual harassment in the lives of African American women PDF Women amp Therapy 25 3 4 107 124 doi 10 1300 J015v25n03 08 S2CID 144425126 Retrieved 17 April 2019 Pilgrim David Jezebel Stereotype Jim Crow Museum Ferris State University Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 29 July 2011 Bellis Alice Ogden 1994 Introduction Helpmates harlots and heroes women s stories in the Hebrew Bible PDF Louisville Ky Westminster John Knox Pr p 3 ISBN 978 0 664 25430 8 Beach Eleanor Ferris 2005 The Jezebel letters religion and politics in ninth century Israel Internet Archive Minneapolis Fortress Press pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0 8006 3754 5 Lomax Tamura A 2018 Jezebel unhinged loosing the black female body in religion and culture PDF Durham London Duke University Press ISBN 978 1 4780 0248 2 Young Alan 1997 Woke Me Up This Morning Black Gospel Singers and the Gospel Life University Press of Mississippi p 50 ISBN 0 87805 943 1 Jezebel at AllMusic Frankie Laine s hits in the years 1947 1952 Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Jezebel lyrics Frankie Laine lyrics Metro Lyrics Archived from the original on 19 December 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Leahey Andrew 9 April 2012 Iron amp Wine Jezebel americansongwriter com Retrieved 8 April 2014 At The Imperial Jezebel Color Spectacle Stars Paulette Goddard In Title Role The News and Eastern Townships Advocate 14 January 1954 Retrieved 17 November 2013 Jezebel The Untold Story of the Bible s Harlot Queen by Lesley Hazleton Kirkus reviews Retrieved 8 April 2014 Cherrie Chrysta The Jezabels AllMusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved 2 December 2012 Lam Lana 20 May 2009 The Jezabels Central Coast Express Advocate News Limited News Corporation p 35 Archived from the original on 15 January 2013 Retrieved 3 December 2012 External links edit nbsp Media related to Jezebel at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jezebel amp oldid 1199070308, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.