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Solomon

Solomon (/ˈsɒləmən/),[a] also called Jedidiah,[b] was a monarch of ancient Israel and the son and successor of King David, according to the Hebrew Bible and the Old Testament.[4][5] He is described as having been the penultimate ruler of an amalgamated Israel and Judah. The hypothesized dates of Solomon's reign are from 970–931 BCE. After his death, his son and successor Rehoboam would adopt a harsh policy towards the northern tribes, eventually leading to the splitting of the Israelites between the Kingdom of Israel in the north and the Kingdom of Judah in the south. Following the split, his patrilineal descendants ruled over Judah alone.[6]

Solomon
שְׁלֹמֹה
King Solomon in Old Age (1866)
Gustave Doré
King of Israel
Reignc. 970–931 BCE (hypothesised)
PredecessorDavid
SuccessorRehoboam
Burial
Jerusalem
SpouseNaamah
Pharaoh's daughter
700 wives of royal birth and 300 concubines[1][2]
Issue
3 recorded children:
HouseHouse of David
FatherDavid
MotherBathsheba

The Bible says Solomon built the First Temple in Jerusalem,[5] dedicating the temple to Yahweh, or God in Judaism.[7] Solomon is portrayed as wealthy, wise and powerful, and as one of the 48 Jewish prophets.[8] He is also the subject of many later references and legends, most notably in the Testament of Solomon (part of first-century biblical apocrypha).

In the New Testament, he is portrayed as a teacher of wisdom excelled by Jesus of Nazareth,[9] and as arrayed in glory but excelled by "the lilies of the field".[10] In the Quran, he is considered to be a major Islamic prophet. In mostly non-biblical circles, Solomon also came to be known as a magician and an exorcist, with numerous amulets and medallion seals dating from the Hellenistic period invoking his name.[11]

Biblical account edit

The life of Solomon is primarily described in 2 Samuel, 1 Kings and 2 Chronicles. His two names mean "peaceful" and "friend of God", both considered "predictive of the character of his reign".[12]

Chronology edit

The conventional dates of Solomon's reign are derived from biblical chronology and are set from about 970 to 931 BCE.[13] Regarding the Davidic dynasty, to which King Solomon belongs, its chronology can be checked against datable Babylonian and Assyrian records at a few points, and these correspondences have allowed archaeologists to date its kings in a modern framework.[14][dubious ] According to the most widely used chronology, based on that by the Old Testament professor Edwin R. Thiele, the death of Solomon and the division of his kingdom would have occurred in the fall of 931 BCE.[15]

Childhood edit

Solomon was born in Jerusalem,[16] the second-born child of David and his wife Bathsheba (widow of Uriah the Hittite). The first child (unnamed in that account), a son conceived adulterously during Uriah's lifetime, had died seven days after birth. It is suggested in Scripture that this was a judgment from God. Solomon had three named full brothers born to Bathsheba: Nathan, Shammua, and Shobab,[17] besides six known older half-brothers born of as many mothers.[18]

The biblical narrative shows that Solomon served as a peace offering between God and David, due to David's adulterous relationship with Bathsheba. In an effort to hide this sin, for example, he sent the woman's husband to battle, in the subsequently realised hope that he would be killed there. After he died, David was finally able to marry Bathsheba. As punishment, the first child, who was conceived during the adulterous relationship, died.[19] Solomon was born after David was forgiven. It is this reason why his name, which means peace, was chosen. Some historians cited that Nathan the Prophet brought up Solomon as his father was busy governing the realm.[20] This could also be attributed to the notion that the prophet held great influence over David because he knew of his adultery, which was considered a grievous offense under the Mosaic Law.[21]

Succession and administration edit

 
The Anointing of Solomon by Cornelis de Vos (c. 1630). According to 1 Kings 1:39, Solomon was anointed by Zadok.

According to the First Book of Kings, when David was old, "he could not get warm".[22] "So they sought a beautiful young woman throughout all the territory of Israel, and found Abishag the Shunamite, and brought her to the king. The young woman was very beautiful, and she was of service to the king and attended to him, but the king knew her not."[22]

While David was in this state, court factions were maneuvering for power. David's heir apparent, Adonijah, acted to have himself declared king, but was outmaneuvered by Bathsheba and the prophet Nathan, who convinced David to proclaim Solomon king according to his earlier promise (not recorded elsewhere in the biblical narrative),[23] despite Solomon's being younger than his brothers.

Solomon, as instructed by David, began his reign with an extensive purge, including his father's chief general, Joab, among others, and further consolidated his position by appointing friends throughout the administration, including in religious positions as well as in civic and military posts.[24] It is said that Solomon ascended to the throne when he was only about fifteen.[25]

Solomon greatly expanded his military strength, especially the cavalry and chariot arms. He founded numerous colonies, some of which doubled as trading posts and military outposts.

Trade relationships were a focus of his administration. In particular he continued his father's very profitable relationship with the Phoenician king Hiram I of Tyre (see 'wealth' below); they sent out joint expeditions to the lands of Tarshish and Ophir to engage in the trade of luxury products, importing gold, silver, sandalwood, pearls, ivory, apes, and peacocks. Solomon is considered the most wealthy of the Israelite kings named in the Bible.

Wisdom edit

 
Luca Giordano: The Dream of Solomon: God promises Solomon wisdom

Solomon was the biblical king most famous for his wisdom. In 1 Kings he sacrificed to God, and God later appeared to him in a dream,[26] asking what Solomon wanted from God. Solomon asked for wisdom in order to better rule and guide his people. Pleased, God personally answered Solomon's prayer, promising him great wisdom because he did not ask for self-serving rewards like long life or the death of his enemies.

Perhaps the best known story of his wisdom is the Judgement of Solomon; two women each lay claim to being the mother of the same child. Solomon easily resolved the dispute by commanding the child to be cut in half and shared between the two. One woman promptly renounced her claim, proving that she would rather give the child up than see it killed. Solomon declared the woman who showed compassion to be the true mother, entitled to the whole child.[27]

Solomon has traditionally been considered the author of several biblical books, including Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and the Song of Songs as well as later apocryphal writings such as the Wisdom of Solomon.[28]

Wealth edit

 
Solomon receiving envoys of the tributary nations

According to the Hebrew Bible, the ancient Kingdom of Israel gained its highest splendour and wealth during Solomon's reign of 40 years. In a single year, according to 1 Kings 10:14, Solomon collected tribute amounting to 666 talents (18,125 kilograms) of gold. Solomon is described as surrounding himself with all the luxuries and the grandeur of an Eastern monarch, and his government prospered. He entered into an alliance with Hiram I, king of Tyre, who in many ways greatly assisted him in his numerous undertakings.

Construction projects edit

 
Solomon and the plan for the First Temple. Illustration from a Bible card

For some years before his death, David was engaged in collecting materials for building a temple in Jerusalem as a permanent home for Yahweh and the Ark of the Covenant. Solomon is described as undertaking the construction of the temple, with the help of an architect, also named Hiram, and other materials, sent from King Hiram of Tyre.

After the completion of the temple, Solomon is described in the biblical narrative as erecting many other buildings of importance in Jerusalem. For 13 years, he was engaged in the building of a royal palace on Ophel (a hilly promontory in central Jerusalem). This complex included buildings referred to as:

The House (or Hall) of the Forest of Lebanon[29]
The Hall or Porch of Pillars
The Hall of the Throne or the Hall of Justice as well as his own residence and a residence for his wife, Pharaoh's daughter.[30]
 
A sketch of Solomon's Temple, based on descriptions in the Scriptures.

Solomon's throne is said to have been spectacularly opulent and possessed moving parts, making it one of the earliest mechanical devices in history. Solomon also constructed great water works for the city, and the Millo (Septuagint, Acra) for the defense of the city. However, excavations of Jerusalem have discovered no monumental architecture from the era, and no remains of either the Temple or Solomon's palace have been found.

Solomon is also described as rebuilding cities elsewhere in Israel, creating the port of Ezion-Geber, and constructing Palmyra in the wilderness as a commercial depot and military outpost. Although the location of the port of Ezion-Geber is known, no remains have ever been found. More archaeological success has been achieved with the major cities Solomon is said to have strengthened or rebuilt, for example, Hazor, Megiddo and Gezer.[31] These all have substantial ancient remains, including impressive six-chambered gates, and ashlar palaces; however it is no longer the scholarly consensus that these structures date to the time, according to the Bible, when Solomon ruled.[32]

According to the Bible, during Solomon's reign, Israel enjoyed great commercial prosperity, with extensive traffic being carried on by land with Tyre, Egypt, and Arabia, and by sea with Tarshish, Ophir, and South India.[33]

Wives and concubines edit

 
King Solomon with his wives. Illustrated in 1668 by Giovanni Battista Venanzi.

According to the biblical account, Solomon had 700 wives and 300 concubines.[34] The wives were described as foreign princesses, including Pharaoh's daughter[35] and women of Moab, Ammon, Edom, Sidon and of the Hittites. His marriage to Pharaoh's daughter appears to have cemented a political alliance with Egypt, whereas he clung to his other wives and concubines "in love".[36][37] The only wife mentioned by name is Naamah the Ammonite, mother of Solomon's successor, Rehoboam.

The biblical narrative notes with disapproval that Solomon permitted his foreign wives to import their national deities, building temples to Ashtoreth and Milcom.[38]

In the branch of literary analysis that examines the Bible, called higher criticism, the story of Solomon falling into idolatry by the influence of Pharaoh's daughter and his other foreign wives is "customarily seen as the handiwork of the 'deuteronomistic historian(s)'", who are held to have written, compiled, or edited texts to legitimize the reforms of Hezekiah's great-grandson, King Josiah who reigned from about 641 to 609 BCE (over 280 years after Solomon's death according to Bible scholars).[39] Scholarly consensus in this field holds that "Solomon's wives/women were introduced in the 'Josianic' (customarily Dtr) edition of Kings as a theological construct to blame the schism [between Judah and the Northern Kingdom of Israel] on his misdeeds".[39]

Relationship with Queen of Sheba edit

 
The Visit of the Queen of Sheba to King Solomon. Oil on canvas painting by Edward Poynter, 1890.

In a brief, unelaborated, and enigmatic passage, the Hebrew Bible describes how the fame of Solomon's wisdom and wealth reached even the far-off Queen of Sheba. The queen is described as visiting with gifts including gold, spices and precious stones. When Solomon gave her "all her desire, whatsoever she asked", she left satisfied (1 Kings 10:13).

Whether the passage is simply to provide a brief foreign witness of Solomon's wealth and wisdom, or whether the visit is meant to have more significance, is unknown; nevertheless the Queen of Sheba has become the subject of numerous stories.

Sheba is typically identified as Saba, a nation once spanning the Red Sea on the coasts of what are now Eritrea, Somalia, Ethiopia and Yemen, in Arabia Felix; although other sources place it in the area of what is now northern Ethiopia and Eritrea.[40][41]

In a Rabbinical account (e.g. Targum Sheni, Colloquy of the Queen of Sheba), Solomon was accustomed to ordering animals to dance before him (a power granted by God), and upon summoning the mountain-cock or hoopoe (Aramaic name: nagar tura), the bird told him it had discovered a land in the east, rich in gold, silver, and plants, whose capital was called Kitor and whose ruler was the Queen of Sheba. Solomon then sent the bird to request the queen's visit.

An Ethiopian account from the 14th century (Kebra Nagast) maintains that the Queen of Sheba had sexual relations with King Solomon and gave birth beside the Mai Bella stream in the province of Hamasien, Eritrea. The Ethiopian tradition has a detailed account of the affair. The child was a son who became Menelik I, King of Axum, and founded a dynasty that would reign as the Jewish, then Christian, Empire of Ethiopia which lasted 2900 years until Haile Selassie was overthrown in 1974. Menelik was said to be a practicing Jew who was given a replica of the Ark of the Covenant by King Solomon; and, moreover, that the original Ark was switched and went to Axum with him and his mother, and is still there, guarded by a single dedicated priest.

The claim of such a lineage and of possession of the Ark was an important source of legitimacy and prestige for the Ethiopian monarchy through the centuries, and had important and lasting effects on Ethiopian culture. The Ethiopian government and church deny all requests to view the alleged ark.[c]

Some classical-era Rabbis, attacking Solomon's moral character, have claimed instead that the child was an ancestor of Nebuchadnezzar II, who destroyed Solomon's temple some 300 years later.[12]

Sins and punishment edit

 
"Vanity of vanities; all is vanity". Isaak Asknaziy illustrates an old and meditative King Solomon.

Jewish scribes say that Solomon's teacher was Shimei (son of Gera), and while he lived, he prevented Solomon from marrying foreign wives. The Talmud says at Ber. 8a: "For as long as Shimei the son of Gera was alive Solomon did not marry the daughter of Pharaoh" (see also Midrash Tehillim to Ps. 3:1). Solomon's execution of Shimei was his first descent into sin.[12]

According to 1 Kings 11:4 Solomon's "wives turned his heart after other gods", their own national deities, to whom Solomon built temples, thus incurring divine anger and retribution in the form of the division of the kingdom after Solomon's death (1 Kings 11:9–13). 1 Kings 11 describes Solomon's descent into idolatry, particularly his turning after Ashtoreth, the goddess of the Sidonians, and after Milcom, the god of the Ammonites. In Deuteronomy 17:16–17, a king is commanded not to multiply horses or wives, neither greatly multiply to himself gold or silver. Solomon sinned in all three of these areas. In addition to his wives, he collected 666 talents of gold each year (1 Kings 10:14), a huge amount for a small nation like Israel. He gathered multitudes of horses and chariots from as far as Egypt, and as Deuteronomy 17 warns, took Israel back to Egypt in spirit.

 
Solomon was said to have sinned by acquiring many foreign wives. Solomon's descent into idolatry, Willem de Poorter, Rijksmuseum.

According to 1 Kings 11:30–34 and 1 Kings 11:9–13, it was because of these sins that the Lord punished Solomon by removing most of the tribes of Israel from rule by Solomon's house.[42]

And the Lord was angry with Solomon, because his heart had turned away from the Lord, the God of Israel, who had appeared to him twice and had commanded him concerning this thing, that he should not go after other gods. But he did not keep what the Lord commanded. Therefore the Lord said to Solomon, "Since this has been your practice and you have not kept my covenant and my statutes that I have commanded you, I will surely tear the kingdom from you and will give it to your servant. Yet for the sake of David your father I will not do it in your days, but I will tear it out of the hand of your son. However, I will not tear away all the kingdom, but I will give one tribe to your son, for the sake of David my servant and for the sake of Jerusalem that I have chosen.

Enemies edit

Near the end of his life, Solomon was beset by several enemies, including Hadad of Edom, Rezon of Zobah, and his own official Jeroboam of the tribe of Ephraim.

Death, succession of Rehoboam, and kingdom division edit

 
The United Monarchy breaks up—Jeroboam rules Israel (blue) and Rehoboam rules Judah

King Solomon is a central biblical figure, who, according to the Hebrew Bible, was the builder of the First Temple in Jerusalem and the last ruler of the united Kingdom of Israel. After a reign of forty years (1 Kings 11:42), he died of natural causes,[43] at around 55 years of age.

Upon Solomon's death, his son, Rehoboam, succeeded him, but ten of the Tribes of Israel refused him as king, splitting the monarchy into the northern Kingdom of Israel under Jeroboam, while Rehoboam continued to reign over the smaller southern Kingdom of Judah. Henceforth the two kingdoms were never again united.

Solomon is associated with the peak "golden age" of the independent Kingdom of Israel and is a legendary source of judicial and religious wisdom.

According to Jewish tradition, King Solomon wrote three books of the Bible:

  • Mishlei (Book of Proverbs), a collection of fables and wisdom of life.
  • Kohelet (Ecclesiastes), a book of contemplation and self-reflection.
  • Shir ha-Shirim (Song of Songs), a collection of erotic verse. The verse has been interpreted both literally (describing a romantic and sexual relationship between a man and a woman) and metaphorically (describing a relationship between God and his people).

The Hebrew word לשלמה appears in the title of two hymns (72 and 127) in the Psalms. This Hebrew word means "to Solomon", but it can also be translated as "by Solomon", thus suggesting to some that Solomon wrote the two psalms.[44][45][46]

Apocryphal or deuterocanonical texts edit

Rabbinical tradition attributes the Book of Wisdom (included within the Septuagint) to Solomon, although this book was probably written in the 2nd century BCE. In this work, Solomon is portrayed as an astronomer.[where?] Other books of wisdom poetry such as the Odes of Solomon and the Psalms of Solomon also bear his name. The Jewish historian Eupolemus, who wrote about 157 BCE, included copies of apocryphal letters exchanged between Solomon and the kings of Egypt and Tyre.

The Gnostic Apocalypse of Adam, which may date to the 1st or 2nd century, refers to a legend in which Solomon sends out an army of demons to seek a virgin who had fled from him, perhaps the earliest surviving mention of the later common tale that Solomon controlled demons and made them his slaves. This tradition of Solomon's control over demons appears fully elaborated in the early pseudoepigraphical work called the Testament of Solomon with its elaborate and grotesque demonology.[47]

Historicity edit

As with most biblical personages in the middle era of Israelite society, the historicity of Solomon is hotly debated. Current consensus states that regardless of whether or not a man named Solomon truly reigned as king over the Judean hills in the tenth century BCE, the biblical description of his apparent empire's lavishness is almost surely an anachronistic exaggeration.[48]

As for Solomon himself, scholars on both the maximalist and minimalist sides of the spectrum of biblical archeology generally agree that he probably existed.[48] However, a historically accurate picture of the Davidic king is difficult to construct. According to some archaeologists, Solomon could have only been the monarch or chieftain of Judah, and that the northern kingdom was a separate development. Such positions have been criticized by other archaeologists and scholars, who argue that a united monarchy did exist in the 10th century BCE, while agreeing that the biblical account contains exaggerations.[49][50][51][52][53]

Arguments against biblical description edit

 
Judgement of Solomon. Engraving by Gustave Doré, 19th century.

Historical evidence of King Solomon other than the biblical accounts has been so minimal that some scholars have understood the period of his reign as a 'Dark Age' (Muhly 1998). The first-century Romano-Jewish scholar Josephus in Against Apion, citing Tyrian court records and Menander, gives a specific year during which King Hiram I of Tyre sent materials to Solomon for the construction of the Temple.[54] However, no material evidence indisputably of Solomon's reign has been found. Yigael Yadin's excavations at Hazor, Megiddo, Beit Shean and Gezer uncovered structures that he and others have argued date from Solomon's reign,[55][56] but others, such as Israel Finkelstein and Neil Silberman, argue that they should be dated to the Omride period, more than a century after Solomon.[32]

According to Finkelstein and Silberman, authors of The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts,[57] at the time of the kingdoms of David and Solomon, Jerusalem was populated by only a few hundred residents or less, which is insufficient for an empire stretching from the Euphrates to Eilath. According to The Bible Unearthed, archaeological evidence suggests that the kingdom of Israel at the time of Solomon was little more than a small city state, and so it is implausible that Solomon received tribute as large as 666 talents of gold per year. Although both Finkelstein and Silberman accept that David and Solomon were real inhabitants of Judah about the 10th century BCE,[48] they claim that the earliest independent reference to the Kingdom of Israel is about 890 BCE, and for Judah about 750 BCE. They suggest that because of religious prejudice, the authors of the Bible suppressed the achievements of the Omrides (whom the Hebrew Bible describes as being polytheist), and instead pushed them back to a supposed golden age of Judaism and monotheists, and devotees of Yahweh. Some Biblical minimalists like Thomas L. Thompson go further, arguing that Jerusalem became a city and capable of being a state capital only in the mid-7th century.[58] Likewise, Finkelstein and others consider the claimed size of Solomon's temple implausible.

Arguments in favour of biblical description edit

 
Solomon's Wealth and Wisdom, as in 1 Kings 3:12–13. Illustration from a 1896 Bible card.

André Lemaire states in Ancient Israel: From Abraham to the Roman Destruction of the Temple that the principal points of the biblical tradition of Solomon are generally trustworthy,[59] although elsewhere he writes that he could find no substantiating archaeological evidence that supports the Queen of Sheba's visit to king Solomon, saying that the earliest records of trans-Arabian caravan voyages from Tayma and Sheba unto the Middle-Euphrates etc. occurred in the mid-8th century BCE,[60] placing a possible visit from the Queen of Sheba to Jerusalem around this time—some 250 years later than the timeframe traditionally given for king Solomon's reign.[61] Seventeen years later, traces of cinnamon were found in Phoenician clay flasks from three small sites in the Israeli coastal plain dating from the 10th century BCE. The authors suggested that trade routes with South Asia existed much earlier than previously thought.[62]

Kenneth Kitchen argues that Solomon ruled over a comparatively wealthy "mini-empire", rather than a small city-state, and considers 666 gold talents a modest amount of money. Kitchen calculates that over 30 years, such a kingdom might have accumulated up to 500 tons of gold, which is small compared to other examples, such as the 1,180 tons of gold that Alexander the Great took from Susa.[63] Similarly, Kitchen[64] and others consider the temple of Solomon a reasonable and typically sized structure for the region at the time. Dever states "that we now have direct Bronze and Iron Age parallels for every feature of the 'Solomonic temple' as described in the Hebrew Bible".[65]

Middle way edit

Some scholars have charted a middle path between minimalist scholars like Finkelstein, Silberman, and Philip Davies[66] (who believes that "Solomon is a totally invented character")[67] and maximalist scholars like Lemaire and Kitchen. For instance, the archaeologist Avraham Faust has argued that biblical depictions of Solomon date to later periods and do overstate his wealth, buildings, and kingdom, but that Solomon did have an acropolis and ruled over a polity larger than Jerusalem.[68] In particular, his archaeological research in regions near Jerusalem, like Sharon, finds commerce too great not to be supported by a polity and such regions probably were ruled loosely by Jerusalem.[69][70] Scholars like Lester Grabbe also believe that there must have been a ruler in Jerusalem during this period and that he likely built a temple, although the town was quite small.[71] William G. Dever argues that Solomon only reigned over Israel and did build a temple, but that descriptions of his lavishness and the other conquests are strongly exaggerated.[72]

Archaeology edit

General observations edit

The archaeological remains that are considered to date from the time of Solomon are notable for the fact that Canaanite material culture appears to have continued unabated; there is a distinct lack of magnificent empire, or cultural development—indeed comparing pottery from areas traditionally assigned to Israel with that of the Philistines points to the latter having been significantly more sophisticated.[citation needed] However, there is a lack of physical evidence of its existence, despite some archaeological work in the area.[32] This is not unexpected because the area was devastated by the Babylonians, then rebuilt and destroyed several times.[64]

In 2014, professor of anthropology Jimmy Hardin and his team discovered six official clay bullae seals at a site east of Gaza called Khirbet Summeily. He states that these bullae are associated with an Iron Age IIA political entity typified by elite activities dated to the 10th century BCE. The bullae appear to be the only known examples that date to this period. In his view, this lends general support to the historical veracity of David and Solomon as recorded in the Hebrew biblical texts.[73]

Temple Mount in Jerusalem edit

Little archaeological excavation has been done around the area known as the Temple Mount, in what is thought to be the foundation of Solomon's Temple, because attempts to do so are met with protests by Muslim authorities of the Jerusalem Waqf.[74][75]

Precious metals from Tarshish edit

The biblical passages that understand Tarshish as a source of King Solomon's great wealth in metals—especially silver, but also gold, tin and iron (Ezekiel 27)—were linked to archaeological evidence from silver-hoards found in Phoenicia in 2013. The metals from Tarshish were reportedly obtained by Solomon in partnership with King Hiram of Phoenician Tyre (Isaiah 23) and the fleets of Tarshish and ships that sailed in their service. The silver hoards provide the first recognized material evidence that agrees with the ancient texts concerning Solomon's kingdom and his wealth (see 'Wealth' above).

Possible evidence for the described wealth of Solomon and his kingdom was discovered in ancient silver hoards, which were found in Israel and Phoenicia and recognized for their importance in 2003. The evidence from the hoards shows that the Levant was a center of wealth in precious metals during the reigns of Solomon and Hiram, and matches the texts that say the trade extended from Asia to the Atlantic Ocean.[76]

Biblical criticism: Solomon's religiosity edit

From a critical point of view, Solomon's building of a temple for Yahweh should not be considered an act of particular devotion to Yahweh because Solomon is also described as building places of worship for a number of other deities.[12] Some scholars and historians argue that the passages, such as his dedication prayer (1 Kings 8:14–66), that describe Solomon's apparent initial devotion to Yahweh were written much later, after Jerusalem had become the religious centre of the kingdom, replacing locations such as Shiloh and Bethel. Earlier historians maintain that there is evidence that these passages in Kings are derived from official court records at the time of Solomon and from other writings of that time that were incorporated into the canonical books of Kings.[77][78][79] More recent scholars believe that passages such as these in the Books of Kings were not written by the same authors who wrote the rest of the text, instead probably by the Deuteronomist.[65]

Religious views edit

Judaism edit

King Solomon sinned by acquiring many foreign wives and horses because he thought he knew the reason for the biblical prohibition and thought it did not apply to him. When King Solomon married Pharaoh's daughter, a sandbank formed which eventually formed the "great nation of Rome"—the nation that destroyed Herod's Temple. Solomon gradually lost more and more prestige until he became like a commoner. Some say he regained his status while others say he did not. In the end, however, he is regarded as a righteous king and is especially praised for his diligence in building the Temple.[80]

King Josiah was also said to have had the Ark of the Covenant, Aaron's rod, vial of manna and the anointing oil placed within a hidden chamber which had been built by Solomon.[81][82]

The Seder Olam Rabbah holds that Solomon's reign was not in 1000 BCE, but rather in the ninth century BCE, during which time he built the First Temple in 832 BCE.[83] However, The Jewish Encyclopedia of 1906 gives the more common date of "971 to 931 BCE".[12]

Christianity edit

 
Russian icon of King Solomon holding a model of the Temple (18th century, iconostasis of Kizhi monastery, Russia).

Christianity has traditionally accepted the historical existence of Solomon, though some modern Christian scholars have also questioned at least his authorship of those biblical texts ascribed to him. Such disputes tend to divide Christians into traditionalist and modernist camps.

Of the two genealogies of Jesus given in the Gospels, Matthew mentions Solomon, but Luke does not. Some commentators see this as an issue that can be reconciled while others disagree. For instance, it has been suggested that Matthew is using Joseph's genealogy and Luke is using Mary's, but Darrell Bock states that this would be unprecedented, "especially when no other single woman appears in the line". Other suggestions include the use by one of the royal and the other of the natural line, one using the legal line and the other the physical line, or that Joseph was adopted.[84]

Jesus refers to Solomon, using him for comparison in his admonition against worrying about life. This account is recorded in Matthew 6:29 and the parallel passage in Luke 12:27.

In the Eastern Orthodox Church, Solomon is commemorated as a saint, with the title of "Righteous Prophet and King". His feast day is celebrated on the Sunday of the Holy Forefathers (two Sundays before the Great Feast of the Nativity of the Lord).

The staunchly Catholic King Philip II of Spain sought to model himself after King Solomon. Statues of King David and Solomon stand on either side of the entrance to the basilica of El Escorial, Philip's palace, and Solomon is also depicted in a great fresco at the center of El Escorial's library. Philip identified the warrior-king David with his own father Charles V, and himself sought to emulate the thoughtful and logical character which he perceived in Solomon. Moreover, the structure of the Escorial was inspired by that of Solomon's Temple.[85][86]

Islam edit

 
Throne of Solomon, Aqsa Mosque compound, Jerusalem

In Islamic tradition, Solomon is also known as Sulaimān ibn Dāwūd, and is recognised as a prophet and a messenger of God, as well as a divinely appointed monarch.[87] Solomon inherited his position from his father as the prophetic King of the Israelites. Unlike in the Bible, according to Muslim tradition, Solomon never participated in idolatry.[88]

The Quran ascribes to Solomon a great level of wisdom, knowledge and power.[89] He knew the language of the birds (Arabic: منطق الطير, romanizedmanṭiq al-ṭayr).[89]

Solomon was also known in Islam to have other supernatural abilities bestowed upon him by God, like controlling the wind, ruling over the jinn, enslaving divs, and hearing the communication of ants:

And to Solomon ˹We subjected˺ the wind: its morning stride was a month's journey and so was its evening stride. And We caused a stream of molten copper to flow for him, and ˹We subjected˺ some of the jinn to work under him by his Lord's Will. And whoever of them deviated from Our command, We made them taste the torment of the blaze.

— Surah Saba 34:12

And when they came across a valley of ants, an ant warned, "O ants! Go quickly into your homes so Solomon and his armies do not crush you, unknowingly."

— Surah An-Naml 27:18-19

The Quran absolves Solomon from practising sorcery:

They ˹instead˺ followed the magic promoted by the devils during the reign of Solomon. Never did Solomon disbelieve, rather the devils disbelieved. They taught magic to the people, along with what had been revealed to the two angels, Hârût and Mârût, in Babylon. The two angels never taught anyone without saying, "We are only a test ˹for you˺, so do not abandon ˹your˺ faith." Yet people learned ˹magic˺ that caused a rift ˹even˺ between husband and wife; although their magic could not harm anyone except by Allah's Will. They learned what harmed them and did not benefit them—although they already knew that whoever buys into magic would have no share in the Hereafter. Miserable indeed was the price for which they sold their souls, if only they knew!

— Surah Al-Baqara 2:102

The Quran makes a reference to a "puppet" posing as Solomon in exegetical literature understood as a jinni or demon, who escaped captivity and took over his kingdom.[90] Solomon's loss of his throne to the demons has been understood in Islamic spirituality to represent a human losing its soul to demonic passion.[91] Attar of Nishapur writes: "If you bind the div (demon), you will set out for the royal pavilion with Solomon" and "You have no command over your self's kingdom, for in your case the div is in the place of Solomon".[92]

Solomon's gifts are often used allegorically in popular literature. The demons taking over Solomon's kingdom mirrors the Sufi concept of the mind giving in to evil urges.[93] The ant is depicted as a wise creature, revealing to Solomon the reason behind his gift to control the wind and his name.[94]

During the Islamization of Iran, Solomon became merged with Jamshid, a great king from Persian mythology, about who similar attributes are ascribed to.[95]

Baháʼí Faith edit

In the Baháʼí Faith, Solomon is regarded as one of the lesser prophets along with David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, along with others.[96] Baháʼís see Solomon as a prophet who was sent by God to address the issues of his time.[97] Baha'ullah wrote about Solomon in the Hidden Words.[98] He also mentions Solomon in the Tablet of Wisdom, where he is depicted as a contemporary of Pythagoras.[99]

Legends edit

One Thousand and One Nights edit

A well-known story in the collection One Thousand and One Nights describes a genie who had displeased King Solomon and was punished by being locked in a bottle and thrown into the sea. Since the bottle was sealed with Solomon's seal, the genie was helpless to free himself, until he was freed many centuries later by a fisherman who discovered the bottle.[100] In other stories from the One Thousand and One Nights, protagonists who had to leave their homeland and travel to the unknown places of the world saw signs which proved that Solomon had already been there. Sometimes, protagonists discovered words of Solomon that were intended to help those who were lost and had unluckily reached those forbidden and deserted places.

Angels and magic edit

According to Rabbinic literature, on account of his modest request for wisdom only, Solomon was rewarded with riches and an unprecedented glorious realm, which extended over the upper world inhabited by the angels and over the whole of the terrestrial globe with all its inhabitants, including all the beasts, fowl, and reptiles, as well as the demons and spirits. His control over the demons, spirits, and animals augmented his splendor, the demons bringing him precious stones, besides water from distant countries to irrigate his exotic plants. The beasts and fowl of their own accord entered the kitchen of Solomon's palace, so that they might be used as food for him, and extravagant meals for him were prepared daily by each of his 700 wives and 300 concubines, with the thought that perhaps the king would feast that day in her house.

Seal of Solomon edit

The Seal of Solomon is the legendary signet ring attributed to Solomon in medieval mystical traditions, from which it developed in parallel within Jewish mysticism, Islamic mysticism and Western occultism. It is the predecessor to the Star of David, the contemporary cultural and religious symbol of the Jewish people. It was often depicted in the shape of either a pentagram or a hexagram. In religious lore, the ring is described as having given Solomon the power to command the supernatural and also the ability to speak with animals. Due to the proverbial wisdom of Solomon, it came to be seen as an amulet or talisman, or a symbol or character in medieval magic and Renaissance magic, occultism, and alchemy.

Solomon and Asmodeus edit

One legend concerning Asmodeus (see: The Story of King Solomon and Ashmedai) goes on to state that Solomon one day asked Asmodeus what could make demons powerful over man, and Asmodeus asked to be freed and given the ring so that he could demonstrate; Solomon agreed but Asmodeus threw the ring into the sea and it was swallowed by a fish. Asmodeus then swallowed the king, stood up fully with one wing touching heaven and the other earth, and spat out Solomon to a distance of 400 miles. The Rabbis claim this was a divine punishment for Solomon's having failed to follow three divine commands, and Solomon was forced to wander from city to city, until he eventually arrived in an Ammonite city where he was forced to work in the king's kitchens. Solomon gained a chance to prepare a meal for the Ammonite king, which the king found so impressive that the previous cook was sacked and Solomon put in his place; the king's daughter, Naamah, subsequently fell in love with Solomon, but the family (thinking Solomon a commoner) disapproved, so the king decided to kill them both by sending them into the desert. Solomon and the king's daughter wandered the desert until they reached a coastal city, where they bought a fish to eat, which just happened to be the one which had swallowed the magic ring. Solomon was then able to regain his throne and expel Asmodeus.[101] The element of a ring thrown into the sea and found back in a fish's belly also appeared in Herodotus' account of Polycrates, the tyrant of Samos (c. 538–522 BCE).

In another familiar version of the legend of the Seal of Solomon, Asmodeus disguises himself. In some myths, he's disguised as King Solomon himself. The concealed Asmodeus tells travelers who have ventured up to King Solomon's grand lofty palace that the Seal of Solomon was thrown into the sea. He then convinces them to plunge in and attempt to retrieve it, for if they do they would take the throne as king.[citation needed]

Artifacts edit

Other magical items attributed to Solomon are his key and his Table. The latter was said to be held in Toledo in Visigothic Spain and was part of the loot taken by Tariq ibn Ziyad during the Muslim conquest of Spain according to ibn Abd al-Hakam's History of the Conquest of Spain. The former appears in the title of The Lesser Key of Solomon, a Christian grimoire whose framing story is Solomon capturing demons using his ring, and forcing them to explain themselves to him.

In The Book of Deadly Names, purportedly translated from Arabic manuscripts found hidden in a building in Spain, the "King of the Jinn" Fiqiṭush brings 72 jinn before King Solomon to confess their corruptions and places of residence. Fiqitush tells King Solomon the recipes for curing such corruptions as each evil jinn confesses.[citation needed]

Angels edit

Angels also helped Solomon in building the Temple, though not by choice. The edifice was, according to rabbinical legend, miraculously constructed throughout, the large heavy stones rising and settling in their respective places of themselves. The general opinion of the Rabbis is that Solomon hewed the stones by means of a shamir, a mythical worm whose mere touch cleft rocks. According to Midrash Tehillim, the shamir was brought from paradise by Solomon's eagle; but most of the rabbis state that Solomon was informed of the worm's haunts by Asmodeus. The shamir had been entrusted by the prince of the sea to the mountain rooster alone, and the rooster had sworn to guard it well, but Solomon's men found the bird's nest, and covered it with glass. When the bird returned, it used the shamir to break the glass, whereupon the men scared the bird, causing it to drop the worm, which the men could then bring to Solomon.

In the Kabbalah edit

Early adherents of the Kabbalah portray Solomon as having sailed through the air on a throne of light placed on an eagle, which brought him near the heavenly gates as well as to the dark mountains behind which the fallen angels Uzza and Azzazel were chained; the eagle would rest on the chains, and Solomon, using the magic ring, would compel the two angels to reveal every mystery he desired to know.

The palace without entrance edit

According to one legend, while traveling magically, Solomon noticed a magnificent palace to which there appeared to be no entrance. He ordered the demons to climb to the roof and see if they could discover any living being within the building but they found only an eagle, which said that it was 700 years old, but that it had never seen an entrance. An elder brother of the eagle, 900 years old, was then found, but it also did not know the entrance. The eldest brother of these two birds, which was 1,300 years old, then declared it had been informed by its father that the door was on the west side, but that it had become hidden by sand drifted by the wind. Having discovered the entrance, Solomon found an idol inside that had in its mouth a silver tablet saying in Greek (a language not thought by modern scholars to have existed 1000 years before the time of Solomon) that the statue was of Shaddad, the son of 'Ad, and that it had reigned over a million cities, rode on a million horses, had under it a million vassals and slew a million warriors, yet it could not resist the angel of death.[12]

Throne edit

 
Solomon at his throne, painting by Andreas Brugger, 1777

Solomon's throne is described at length in Targum Sheni, which is compiled from three different sources, and in two later Midrash. According to these, there were on the steps of the throne twelve golden lions, each facing a golden eagle. There were six steps to the throne, on which animals, all of gold, were arranged in the following order: on the first step a lion opposite an ox; on the second, a wolf opposite a sheep; on the third, a tiger opposite a camel; on the fourth, an eagle opposite a peacock, on the fifth, a cat opposite a cock; on the sixth, a sparrow-hawk opposite a dove. On the top of the throne was a dove holding a sparrow-hawk in its claws, symbolizing the dominion of Israel over the Gentiles. The first midrash claims that six steps were constructed because Solomon foresaw that six kings would sit on the throne, namely, Solomon, Rehoboam, Hezekiah, Manasseh, Amon, and Josiah. There was also on the top of the throne a golden candelabrum, on the seven branches of the one side of which were engraved the names of the seven patriarchs Adam, Noah, Shem, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Job, and on the seven of the other the names of Levi, Kohath, Amram, Moses, Aaron, Eldad, Medad, and, in addition, Hur (another version has Haggai). Above the candelabrum was a golden jar filled with olive oil and beneath it a golden basin which supplied the jar with oil and on which the names of Nadab, Abihu, and Eli and his two sons were engraved. Over the throne, twenty-four vines were fixed to cast a shadow on the king's head.[12]

By a mechanical contrivance the throne followed Solomon wherever he wished to go. Supposedly, due to another mechanical trick, when the king reached the first step, the ox stretched forth its leg, on which Solomon leaned, a similar action taking place in the case of the animals on each of the six steps. From the sixth step the eagles raised the king and placed him in his seat, near which a golden serpent lay coiled. When the king was seated the large eagle placed the crown on his head, the serpent uncoiled itself, and the lions and eagles moved upward to form a shade over him. The dove then descended, took the scroll of the Law from the Ark, and placed it on Solomon's knees. When the king sat, surrounded by the Sanhedrin, to judge the people, the wheels began to turn, and the beasts and fowls began to utter their respective cries, which frightened those who had intended to bear false testimony. Moreover, while Solomon was ascending the throne, the lions scattered various fragrant spices. After Solomon's death, Pharaoh Shishak, when taking away the treasures of the Temple (I Kings xiv. 26), carried off the throne, which remained in Egypt until Sennacherib conquered that country. After Sennacherib's fall Hezekiah gained possession of it, but when Josiah was slain by Pharaoh Necho, the latter took it away. However, according to rabbinical accounts, Necho did not know how the mechanism worked and so accidentally struck himself with one of the lions causing him to become lame; Nebuchadnezzar, into whose possession the throne subsequently came, shared a similar fate. The throne then passed to the Persians, whose king Darius was the first to sit successfully on Solomon's throne after his death; subsequently the throne came into the possession of the Greeks and Ahasuerus.[12]

Freemasonry edit

Masonic rituals refer to King Solomon and the building of his Temple.[102] Masonic Temples, where a Masonic Lodge meets, are an allegorical reference to King Solomon's Temple.[103]

Places edit

The Solomon Islands, a country and archipelago in Melanesia, were named for King Solomon by the Spanish navigator Álvaro de Mendaña, who became the first European to see the islands in 1568.[104][105]

In literature, art, and music edit

Literature edit

  • In H. Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines (1885) the protagonists discover multiple settings said to have belonged to or to have been built at the request of King Solomon, such as 'Solomon's Great Road' and the mines themselves. Also, the two mountains which form the entrance to Kukuana Land (where the mines are located in the novel) are referred to as 'Sheba's Breasts' which could be an allusion to the Queen of Sheba, with whom King Solomon had a relationship, or Solomon's mother, who was named Bathsheba. When in the mines, the characters also contemplate what must have occurred to prevent King Solomon from returning to retrieve the massive amounts of diamonds, gold and ivory tusks that were found buried in his great 'Treasure Chamber'.
  • In the Divine Comedy, the spirit of Solomon appears to Dante Alighieri in the Heaven of the Sun with other exemplars of inspired wisdom.
  • In Friedrich Dürrenmatt's The Physicists, the physicist Möbius claims that Solomon appears to him and dictates the "theory of all possible inventions" (based on unified field theory).
  • Solomon appears in Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories.
  • O. Henry's short story The Gift of the Magi (1905) contains the following description to convey the preciousness of character Jim Dillingham Young's pocket watch: "Had King Solomon been the janitor, with all his treasures piled up in the basement, Jim would have pulled out his watch every time he passed, just to see him pluck at his beard from envy."
  • In Neal Stephenson's three-volume The Baroque Cycle, 17th-century alchemists like Isaac Newton believe that Solomon created a kind of "heavier" gold with mystical properties and that it was cached in the Solomon Islands where it was accidentally discovered by the crew of a wayward Spanish galleon. In the third volume of The Baroque Cycle, The System of the World, a mysterious member of the entourage of tsar Peter the Great, named "Solomon Kohan" appears in early 18th-century London. The czar, traveling incognito to purchase English-made ships for his navy, explains that he added him to his court after the Sack of Azov, where Kohan had been a guest of the Pasha. Solomon Kohan is later revealed as one of the extremely long-lived "Wise," such as Enoch Root, and compares a courtyard full of inventors' workstations to "an operation I used to have in Jerusalem a long time ago", denominating either facility as "a temple". Stephenson's sequel to Reamde, 2019's Fall; or, Dodge in Hell was also a surprise sequel to the Baroque Cycle novels and Cryptonomicon. In the mid- to late-21st century span of Fall, Solomon Kohan has joined the faculty of Princeton University, going by Solly Pesador, and is described by a student as "one of those guys who had been around forever and played roles in tech companies going at least as far back as Hewlett-Packard" and as an "old-school tech geek turned neuro-hacker".
  • In The Ring of Solomon, both King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba are featured prominently.
  • Solomon, King of Urushalim, is a significant character in The Shadow Prince,[106] the first novel of Philip Armstrong's epic historical fantasy, The Chronicles of Tupiluliuma. His Ring is an Atalantaën Relic, by which is he able to command daemons. He uses it to summon a daemon army, thereafter called the Cohort of Free Daemons, to oppose the forces of the Chaos God, Sutekh, thus allowing the young Hittite musician, Lisarwa, to repair the Veil that separates the physical world from the dangerous wild energies of the Netherworld, using another of the relics, the Harp of Daud, once owned by his father (King David). Solomon's son, Rehoboam also appears in a minor capacity.
  • In the Japanese manga series Magi: The Labyrinth of Magic, Solomon was a powerful magician who united all of the world under his peaceful rule. However, when this world was destroyed by a calamity, he created the world Magi is set in and saved mankind by sending them there. A special power originated from him, the "Wisdom of Solomon", allows the main character Aladdin to talk directly with the soul of a person, alive or dead.
  • In the manga Devils and Realist, Solomon is a friend of Lucifer and is the "Elector"—the one who can choose the interim ruler over Hell as its emperor rests to regain his strength and had powers over demons known as his seventy-two pillars. He's also known as the one who can control Hell or Heaven with the power of his ring.
  • Chapter 14 of the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ends with Huck and Jim debating over how wise Solomon really was.
  • In Francis Bacon's Essay 'Of Revenge', Solomon is paraphrased: "And Solomon, I am sure, saith, It is the glory of a man, to pass by an offence."
  • In DC Comics, Solomon is one of the Immortal Elders of the hero Captain Marvel.
  • In a subject called in art the Idolatry of Solomon, the foreign wives are depicted as leading Solomon away from Yahweh toward idolatry because they worshiped gods other than Yahweh (1 Kings 11:1–3). This forms part of the Power of Women topos in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, showing the dangers women posed to even the most virtuous men.[107]
  • Naamah, a princess of Ammon (now in Jordan) who arrives in Jerusalem at age fourteen to marry King Solomon and tells of their life together, is the narrator of Aryeh Lev Stollman's novel Queen of Jerusalem, which was published in 2020 by Aryeh Nir/Modan (Tel Aviv) in Hebrew translation under the title Divrei Y'mai Naamah (דברי ימי נעמה).[108]

Film edit

Music edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hebrew: שְׁלֹמֹה, Modern: Šlōmō, Tiberian: Šălōmō, lit.'peaceful';[3] Syriac: ܫܠܶܝܡܽܘܢ, Šlēmūn; Arabic: سُلَيْمَان, Sulaymān, Silimān, Slemān; Greek: Σολομών, Solomōn; Latin: Salomon
  2. ^ Hebrew: יְדִידְיָהּ, Modern: Yǝdīdyah, Tiberian: Yăḏīḏyāh, "beloved of Yah"
  3. ^ Recent History Channel promotional production about Indiana Jones's[citation needed] positive impact on archaeology (released mid-May 2008, the week before the 22 May 2008 US release of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull); History Channel producers were shown interviewing the guardian priest, and expert discussions about the Ark were part of the fare.

References edit

  1. ^ "In Our Time With Melvyn Bragg: King Solomon". UK: BBC Radio 4. 7 June 2012. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  2. ^ 1 Kings 11:1–3
  3. ^ Khan, Geoffrey (2020). The Tiberian Pronunciation Tradition of Biblical Hebrew. Vol. 1. Open Book Publishers. p. 305. ISBN 978-1-78374-676-7.
  4. ^ Book of Kings: 1  Kings 1–11; Books of Chronicles: 1 Chronicles 28–29, 2 Chronicles 1–9
  5. ^ a b Barton, George A. (1906). "Temple of Solomon". Jewish Encyclopedia. pp. 98–101. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  6. ^ Stefon, Matt (27 June 2023). "Solomon king of Israel". Britannica.
  7. ^ 1 Kings 5:5; 8:20
  8. ^ Rashi, to Megillah, 14a
  9. ^ Matthew 12:42; Luke 11:31
  10. ^ Matthew 6:28–29; Luke 12:27
  11. ^ "Archaeology, Culture, and other Religions". FMC terra santa. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h   Hirsch, Emil G.; Price, Ira Maurice; Bacher, Wilhelm; Seligsohn, M.; Montgomery, Mary W.; toy, Crawford Howell (1905). "Solomon". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. pp. 436–448.
  13. ^ E. Clarity, 2012, p. 305.
  14. ^ Kitchen, Kenneth A. (September–October 2001). "How We Know When Solomon Ruled". Biblical Archaeology Review. BAS. 5 (27).
  15. ^ Thiele 1983, p. 78.
  16. ^ 1 Chronicles 14:4
  17. ^ 1 Chronicles 3:5
  18. ^ 1 Chronicles 3:1–4
  19. ^ Vance, Jennifer (2015). Solomon. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-68146-118-2.
  20. ^ Golden childhood. The Little People's Own Pleasure—Book of Delight and Instruction. London: Ward, Lock, and Co. 1878. p. 116.
  21. ^ Farrel, Pam; Jones, Jean (2017). Discovering Hope in the Psalms: A Creative Bible Study Experience. Eugene: Harvest House Publishers. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-7369-6997-0.
  22. ^ a b "1 Kings 1 (ESV)". BibleGateway.com. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  23. ^ Lumby, J. R., Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Kings 1, accessed 24 September 2017
  24. ^ 1 Kings 4:1–19
  25. ^ Wiersbe, Warren (2003). The Bible Exposition Commentary, Volume 1. Eastbourne: Cook Communications. pp. 496. ISBN 978-0-7814-3531-4.
  26. ^ 1 Kings 3:3–15
  27. ^ 1 Kings 3:16–28
  28. ^ Coogan 2009, p. 375.
  29. ^ 1 Kings 10:17 and 2 Chronicles 9:20: "House" in the King James Version and Revised Standard Version, "Hall" in the Jerusalem Bible and Good News Translation
  30. ^ 1 Kings 7:1–8
  31. ^ 1 Kings 9:15
  32. ^ a b c Finkelstein & Silberman 2001, pp. 186–195.
  33. ^ Bhaktivejanyana, Swami (23 January 2013). Ithihaasa: the mystery of his story is my story of history. Bloomington, IN. ISBN 978-1-4772-4272-8. OCLC 826444777.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  34. ^ 1 Kings 11:3; not in the 2 Chronicles account
  35. ^ See also 1 Kings 3:1
  36. ^ 1 Kings 11:2–3: NKJV
  37. ^ "1 Kings 12—2 Kings 25", Introduction to the Hebrew Bible, Fortress Press, pp. 281–304, 2018, doi:10.2307/j.ctt1w6tbx5.24, ISBN 978-1-5064-4605-9
  38. ^ 1 Kings 11:5–9: NKJV
  39. ^ a b "Loving too well: The negative portrayal of Solomon and the composition of the Kings history". Retrieved on Jan. 17, 2007
  40. ^ Stuart Munro-Hay, The Quest for the Ark of the Covenant: The True History of the Tablets of Moses.
  41. ^ Donald N. Levine, Wax and Gold: Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopia Culture (Chicago: University Press, 1972).
  42. ^ "NIV 1 Kings 11 (Solomon's Wives)". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  43. ^ "Ancient Jewish History: The Kings of Ancient Israel". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  44. ^ Gottlieb, Isaac (2010). "Mashal Le-Melekh: The Search for Solomon". Hebrew Studies. 51: 107–127. doi:10.1353/hbr.2010.a400580. S2CID 170687286 – via Gale Literature Resource Center.
  45. ^ Dahood, Mitchell (1968). Psalms II, 51-100: Introduction, Translation, and Notes. New York: Doubleday. pp. 179–180. ISBN 0-385-03759-7.
  46. ^ The Anchor Bible. New York: Doubleday. 1964. p. 47.
  47. ^ "Solomon, Testament of". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  48. ^ a b c Finkelstein & Silberman 2006, p. 20.
  49. ^ Finkelstein & Silberman 2006, p. [page needed].
  50. ^ Lipschits, Oded (2014). "The history of Israel in the biblical period". In Berlin, Adele; Brettler, Marc Zvi (eds.). The Jewish Study Bible (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-997846-5.
  51. ^ Kuhrt, Amélie (1995). The Ancient Near East, c. 3000-330 BC, Band 1. New York: Routledge. p. 438. ISBN 978-0-41516-762-8.
  52. ^ Wright, Jacob L. (July 2014). "David, King of Judah (not Israel)". The Bible and Interpretation. from the original on 1 March 2021.
  53. ^ . Magazine. 1 December 2010. Archived from the original on 23 February 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  54. ^ Against Apion i:17, 18.
  55. ^ Dever 2001, p. 43.
  56. ^ Kalimi 2018, p. 26.
  57. ^ Finkelstein & Silberman 2001, p. 133.
  58. ^ Thompson, Thomas L., 1999, The Bible in History: How Writers Create a Past, Jonathan Cape, London, ISBN 978-0-224-03977-2 p. 207
  59. ^ Shanks, Hershel (1999), Ancient Israel: From Abraham to the Roman Destruction of the Temple, p. 113
  60. ^ See: Lemaire, South Arabia. In André Lemaire's own words: "The first mention of Sheba in Neo-Assyrian texts is to be dated mid-8th century BCE with the story of a caravan of 200 camels coming from Tayma and Sheba to Hindanu (Middle-Euphrates) (Cavigneaux–Ismaïl 1990: 339–357; Frame 1995: 300; Younger 2003: 279–282; Holladay 2006: 319–321)."
  61. ^ André Lemaire, The Queen of Sheba and the Trade Between South Arabia and Judah, pub. in Bayn ʻEver LaʻArav: Contacts between Arabic Literature and Jewish Literature in the Middle Ages and Modern Times, volume 6; A Collection of Studies Dedicated to Prof. Yosef Tobi on the Occasion of his Retirement, ed. Ali A. Hussein and Ayelet Oettinger (Haifa: University of Haifa Press, 2013), xi–xxxiv
  62. ^ Gilboa, Ayelet; Namdar, Dvory (2015). "On the Beginnings of South Asian Spice Trade with the Mediterranean Region: A Review". Radiocarbon. 57 (2): 265–283. Bibcode:2015Radcb..57..265G. doi:10.2458/azu_rc.57.18562. ISSN 0033-8222. S2CID 55719842.
  63. ^ Kitchen 2003, p. 135.
  64. ^ a b Kitchen 2003, p. 123.
  65. ^ a b Dever 2001, p. 145.
  66. ^ Davies, Philip R. 1992. In Search of 'Ancient Israel': A Study in Biblical Origins. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, T and T Clark.
  67. ^ . www.bibleodyssey.org. Archived from the original on 10 November 2017. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
  68. ^ Faust, Avraham. 2012. The Archaeology of Israelite Society in Iron Age II. Translated by Ruth Ludlum. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns.
  69. ^ Faust, Avraham. 2007. "The Sharon and the Yarkon Basin in the Tenth Century BCE: Ecology, Settlement Patterns and Political Involvement". Israel Exploration Journal:65–82.
  70. ^ Faust, Avraham. 2017. "Jebus, the City of David, and Jerusalem: Jerusalem from the Iron I to the Neo-Babylonian Period [in Hebrew]." In Jerusalem: From its Beginning to the Ottoman Conquest, edited by Avraham Faust, J. Schwartz and E. Baruch, 35–72. Ramat Gan: Ingeborg Renner Center for Jerusalem Studies.
  71. ^ Grabbe, Lester L. 2016. 1 & 2 Kings: An Introduction and Study Guide: History and Story in Ancient Israel: Bloomsbury Publishing.
  72. ^ Dever, William G. (18 August 2020). Has Archaeology Buried the Bible?. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4674-5949-5.
  73. ^ "MSU department announces major archaeological find | Mississippi State University News Archive".
  74. ^ . Sacred destinations. Archived from the original on 21 June 2009. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  75. ^ Jacqueline Schaalje. . Jewish Magazine. Archived from the original on 6 October 2009. Retrieved 7 April 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  76. ^ Thompson, Christine; Skaggs, Sheldon (2013). "King Solomon's Silver? Southern Phoenician Hacksilber Hoards and the Location of Tarshish". Internet Archaeology (35). doi:10.11141/ia.35.6.
  77. ^ Harrison, RK (1969), Introduction to the Old Testament, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, pp. 722–724
  78. ^ Archer, GL (1964), A Survey of Old Testament Introduction, Chicago: Moody Press, pp. 276–277
  79. ^ Thiele 1983, pp. 193–204.
  80. ^ "tractate Sanhendrin", Talmud Bavli, p. 21b
  81. ^ Tosefta (Sotah 13:1); cf. Babylonian Talmud: "Keritot 5b:17-18". www.sefaria.org. 17 The baraita continues: And also sequestered with the Ark was the chest that the Philistines sent as a gift to the God of Israel after they captured the Ark and were stricken by several plagues, as it is stated: "And put the jewels of gold that you return to Him for a guilt offering, in a coffer by its side, and send it away that it may go" (I Samuel 6:8). And who sequestered the Ark? Josiah, king of Judah, sequestered it, as it is stated: And the king said to the priests: Put the sacred Ark in the house that Solomon, the son of David, king of Israel, built (see II Chronicles 35:3). 18 And Rabbi Elazar says: How do we know that all these items needed to be sequestered together with the Ark? The halakha that the jar of manna was to be kept with the Ark is derived through a verbal analogy between the words "there" and "there." The word "there" is stated with regard to the Ark: "Where I will meet with you there" (Exodus 30:6), and it is also stated with regard to the manna: "And put there" (Exodus 16:33).
  82. ^ "A Buried Treasure: The Entombment of the Ark". www.chabad.org.
  83. ^ Seder Olam Rabba, Jerusalem 1971 (Hebrew)
  84. ^ Bock, Darell (1996). Luke. The NIV Application Commentary. Zondervan. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-310-49330-3.
  85. ^ Taylor, René, Arquitectura y Magia. Consideraciones sobre la Idea de El Escorial [Architecture and magic. Considerations on the idea of the Escorial] (in Spanish), Madrid: Siruela, enhanced from monograph in Rudolph Wittkower's 1968 festschrift.
  86. ^ Wittkower, Rudolf; Jaffe, Irma, "Hermetism and the Mystical Architecture of the Society of Jesus", Baroque Art: The Jesuit Contribution
  87. ^ Quran 2:102
  88. ^ Shalev-Eyni, Sarit. "Solomon, his demons and jongleurs: The meeting of Islamic, Judaic and Christian culture." Al-Masaq 18.2 (2006): 155.
  89. ^ a b Quran 27:15-19
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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • , LT: VDU, archived from the original on 15 January 2008.
  • Oussani, Gabriel (1913), "Solomon", Catholic Encyclopedia (entry).
  • Solomon at IMDb   Animated depiction of the life of Solomon
  • Solomon at IMDb   Artistic movie about the rise and the reign of King Solomon
  • , Wars of Israel, archived from the original on 25 January 2010, retrieved 5 May 2006.
  • Salomon engravings, The De Verda collection.
Solomon
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of the United Kingdom
of Israel and Judah

971–931 BCE
Succeeded by
Succeeded by

solomon, other, uses, disambiguation, king, redirects, here, ghanaian, football, team, king, also, called, jedidiah, monarch, ancient, israel, successor, king, david, according, hebrew, bible, testament, described, having, been, penultimate, ruler, amalgamated. For other uses see Solomon disambiguation King Solomon redirects here For the Ghanaian football team see King Solomon F C Solomon ˈ s ɒ l e m e n a also called Jedidiah b was a monarch of ancient Israel and the son and successor of King David according to the Hebrew Bible and the Old Testament 4 5 He is described as having been the penultimate ruler of an amalgamated Israel and Judah The hypothesized dates of Solomon s reign are from 970 931 BCE After his death his son and successor Rehoboam would adopt a harsh policy towards the northern tribes eventually leading to the splitting of the Israelites between the Kingdom of Israel in the north and the Kingdom of Judah in the south Following the split his patrilineal descendants ruled over Judah alone 6 Solomonש ל מ ה King Solomon in Old Age 1866 Gustave DoreKing of IsraelReignc 970 931 BCE hypothesised PredecessorDavidSuccessorRehoboamBurialJerusalemSpouseNaamahPharaoh s daughter700 wives of royal birth and 300 concubines 1 2 Issue3 recorded children RehoboamTaphathBasemathHouseHouse of DavidFatherDavidMotherBathshebaThe Bible says Solomon built the First Temple in Jerusalem 5 dedicating the temple to Yahweh or God in Judaism 7 Solomon is portrayed as wealthy wise and powerful and as one of the 48 Jewish prophets 8 He is also the subject of many later references and legends most notably in the Testament of Solomon part of first century biblical apocrypha In the New Testament he is portrayed as a teacher of wisdom excelled by Jesus of Nazareth 9 and as arrayed in glory but excelled by the lilies of the field 10 In the Quran he is considered to be a major Islamic prophet In mostly non biblical circles Solomon also came to be known as a magician and an exorcist with numerous amulets and medallion seals dating from the Hellenistic period invoking his name 11 Contents 1 Biblical account 1 1 Chronology 1 2 Childhood 1 3 Succession and administration 1 4 Wisdom 1 5 Wealth 1 6 Construction projects 1 7 Wives and concubines 1 8 Relationship with Queen of Sheba 1 9 Sins and punishment 1 10 Enemies 1 11 Death succession of Rehoboam and kingdom division 2 Apocryphal or deuterocanonical texts 3 Historicity 3 1 Arguments against biblical description 3 2 Arguments in favour of biblical description 3 3 Middle way 3 4 Archaeology 3 4 1 General observations 3 4 2 Temple Mount in Jerusalem 3 4 3 Precious metals from Tarshish 3 5 Biblical criticism Solomon s religiosity 4 Religious views 4 1 Judaism 4 2 Christianity 4 3 Islam 4 4 Bahaʼi Faith 5 Legends 5 1 One Thousand and One Nights 5 2 Angels and magic 5 2 1 Seal of Solomon 5 2 2 Solomon and Asmodeus 5 2 3 Artifacts 5 2 4 Angels 5 2 5 In the Kabbalah 5 2 6 The palace without entrance 5 3 Throne 6 Freemasonry 7 Places 8 In literature art and music 8 1 Literature 8 2 Film 8 3 Music 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksBiblical account editThe life of Solomon is primarily described in 2 Samuel 1 Kings and 2 Chronicles His two names mean peaceful and friend of God both considered predictive of the character of his reign 12 Chronology edit The conventional dates of Solomon s reign are derived from biblical chronology and are set from about 970 to 931 BCE 13 Regarding the Davidic dynasty to which King Solomon belongs its chronology can be checked against datable Babylonian and Assyrian records at a few points and these correspondences have allowed archaeologists to date its kings in a modern framework 14 dubious discuss According to the most widely used chronology based on that by the Old Testament professor Edwin R Thiele the death of Solomon and the division of his kingdom would have occurred in the fall of 931 BCE 15 Childhood edit Solomon was born in Jerusalem 16 the second born child of David and his wife Bathsheba widow of Uriah the Hittite The first child unnamed in that account a son conceived adulterously during Uriah s lifetime had died seven days after birth It is suggested in Scripture that this was a judgment from God Solomon had three named full brothers born to Bathsheba Nathan Shammua and Shobab 17 besides six known older half brothers born of as many mothers 18 The biblical narrative shows that Solomon served as a peace offering between God and David due to David s adulterous relationship with Bathsheba In an effort to hide this sin for example he sent the woman s husband to battle in the subsequently realised hope that he would be killed there After he died David was finally able to marry Bathsheba As punishment the first child who was conceived during the adulterous relationship died 19 Solomon was born after David was forgiven It is this reason why his name which means peace was chosen Some historians cited that Nathan the Prophet brought up Solomon as his father was busy governing the realm 20 This could also be attributed to the notion that the prophet held great influence over David because he knew of his adultery which was considered a grievous offense under the Mosaic Law 21 Succession and administration edit nbsp The Anointing of Solomon by Cornelis de Vos c 1630 According to 1 Kings 1 39 Solomon was anointed by Zadok According to the First Book of Kings when David was old he could not get warm 22 So they sought a beautiful young woman throughout all the territory of Israel and found Abishag the Shunamite and brought her to the king The young woman was very beautiful and she was of service to the king and attended to him but the king knew her not 22 While David was in this state court factions were maneuvering for power David s heir apparent Adonijah acted to have himself declared king but was outmaneuvered by Bathsheba and the prophet Nathan who convinced David to proclaim Solomon king according to his earlier promise not recorded elsewhere in the biblical narrative 23 despite Solomon s being younger than his brothers Solomon as instructed by David began his reign with an extensive purge including his father s chief general Joab among others and further consolidated his position by appointing friends throughout the administration including in religious positions as well as in civic and military posts 24 It is said that Solomon ascended to the throne when he was only about fifteen 25 Solomon greatly expanded his military strength especially the cavalry and chariot arms He founded numerous colonies some of which doubled as trading posts and military outposts Trade relationships were a focus of his administration In particular he continued his father s very profitable relationship with the Phoenician king Hiram I of Tyre see wealth below they sent out joint expeditions to the lands of Tarshish and Ophir to engage in the trade of luxury products importing gold silver sandalwood pearls ivory apes and peacocks Solomon is considered the most wealthy of the Israelite kings named in the Bible Wisdom edit nbsp Luca Giordano The Dream of Solomon God promises Solomon wisdomSolomon was the biblical king most famous for his wisdom In 1 Kings he sacrificed to God and God later appeared to him in a dream 26 asking what Solomon wanted from God Solomon asked for wisdom in order to better rule and guide his people Pleased God personally answered Solomon s prayer promising him great wisdom because he did not ask for self serving rewards like long life or the death of his enemies Perhaps the best known story of his wisdom is the Judgement of Solomon two women each lay claim to being the mother of the same child Solomon easily resolved the dispute by commanding the child to be cut in half and shared between the two One woman promptly renounced her claim proving that she would rather give the child up than see it killed Solomon declared the woman who showed compassion to be the true mother entitled to the whole child 27 Solomon has traditionally been considered the author of several biblical books including Proverbs Ecclesiastes and the Song of Songs as well as later apocryphal writings such as the Wisdom of Solomon 28 Wealth edit nbsp Solomon receiving envoys of the tributary nationsSee also Solomon s Temple According to the Hebrew Bible the ancient Kingdom of Israel gained its highest splendour and wealth during Solomon s reign of 40 years In a single year according to 1 Kings 10 14 Solomon collected tribute amounting to 666 talents 18 125 kilograms of gold Solomon is described as surrounding himself with all the luxuries and the grandeur of an Eastern monarch and his government prospered He entered into an alliance with Hiram I king of Tyre who in many ways greatly assisted him in his numerous undertakings Construction projects edit nbsp Solomon and the plan for the First Temple Illustration from a Bible cardFor some years before his death David was engaged in collecting materials for building a temple in Jerusalem as a permanent home for Yahweh and the Ark of the Covenant Solomon is described as undertaking the construction of the temple with the help of an architect also named Hiram and other materials sent from King Hiram of Tyre After the completion of the temple Solomon is described in the biblical narrative as erecting many other buildings of importance in Jerusalem For 13 years he was engaged in the building of a royal palace on Ophel a hilly promontory in central Jerusalem This complex included buildings referred to as The House or Hall of the Forest of Lebanon 29 The Hall or Porch of Pillars The Hall of the Throne or the Hall of Justice as well as his own residence and a residence for his wife Pharaoh s daughter 30 nbsp A sketch of Solomon s Temple based on descriptions in the Scriptures Solomon s throne is said to have been spectacularly opulent and possessed moving parts making it one of the earliest mechanical devices in history Solomon also constructed great water works for the city and the Millo Septuagint Acra for the defense of the city However excavations of Jerusalem have discovered no monumental architecture from the era and no remains of either the Temple or Solomon s palace have been found Solomon is also described as rebuilding cities elsewhere in Israel creating the port of Ezion Geber and constructing Palmyra in the wilderness as a commercial depot and military outpost Although the location of the port of Ezion Geber is known no remains have ever been found More archaeological success has been achieved with the major cities Solomon is said to have strengthened or rebuilt for example Hazor Megiddo and Gezer 31 These all have substantial ancient remains including impressive six chambered gates and ashlar palaces however it is no longer the scholarly consensus that these structures date to the time according to the Bible when Solomon ruled 32 According to the Bible during Solomon s reign Israel enjoyed great commercial prosperity with extensive traffic being carried on by land with Tyre Egypt and Arabia and by sea with Tarshish Ophir and South India 33 Wives and concubines edit nbsp King Solomon with his wives Illustrated in 1668 by Giovanni Battista Venanzi According to the biblical account Solomon had 700 wives and 300 concubines 34 The wives were described as foreign princesses including Pharaoh s daughter 35 and women of Moab Ammon Edom Sidon and of the Hittites His marriage to Pharaoh s daughter appears to have cemented a political alliance with Egypt whereas he clung to his other wives and concubines in love 36 37 The only wife mentioned by name is Naamah the Ammonite mother of Solomon s successor Rehoboam The biblical narrative notes with disapproval that Solomon permitted his foreign wives to import their national deities building temples to Ashtoreth and Milcom 38 In the branch of literary analysis that examines the Bible called higher criticism the story of Solomon falling into idolatry by the influence of Pharaoh s daughter and his other foreign wives is customarily seen as the handiwork of the deuteronomistic historian s who are held to have written compiled or edited texts to legitimize the reforms of Hezekiah s great grandson King Josiah who reigned from about 641 to 609 BCE over 280 years after Solomon s death according to Bible scholars 39 Scholarly consensus in this field holds that Solomon s wives women were introduced in the Josianic customarily Dtr edition of Kings as a theological construct to blame the schism between Judah and the Northern Kingdom of Israel on his misdeeds 39 Relationship with Queen of Sheba edit See also Kebra Nagast nbsp The Visit of the Queen of Sheba to King Solomon Oil on canvas painting by Edward Poynter 1890 In a brief unelaborated and enigmatic passage the Hebrew Bible describes how the fame of Solomon s wisdom and wealth reached even the far off Queen of Sheba The queen is described as visiting with gifts including gold spices and precious stones When Solomon gave her all her desire whatsoever she asked she left satisfied 1 Kings 10 13 Whether the passage is simply to provide a brief foreign witness of Solomon s wealth and wisdom or whether the visit is meant to have more significance is unknown nevertheless the Queen of Sheba has become the subject of numerous stories Sheba is typically identified as Saba a nation once spanning the Red Sea on the coasts of what are now Eritrea Somalia Ethiopia and Yemen in Arabia Felix although other sources place it in the area of what is now northern Ethiopia and Eritrea 40 41 In a Rabbinical account e g Targum Sheni Colloquy of the Queen of Sheba Solomon was accustomed to ordering animals to dance before him a power granted by God and upon summoning the mountain cock or hoopoe Aramaic name nagar tura the bird told him it had discovered a land in the east rich in gold silver and plants whose capital was called Kitor and whose ruler was the Queen of Sheba Solomon then sent the bird to request the queen s visit An Ethiopian account from the 14th century Kebra Nagast maintains that the Queen of Sheba had sexual relations with King Solomon and gave birth beside the Mai Bella stream in the province of Hamasien Eritrea The Ethiopian tradition has a detailed account of the affair The child was a son who became Menelik I King of Axum and founded a dynasty that would reign as the Jewish then Christian Empire of Ethiopia which lasted 2900 years until Haile Selassie was overthrown in 1974 Menelik was said to be a practicing Jew who was given a replica of the Ark of the Covenant by King Solomon and moreover that the original Ark was switched and went to Axum with him and his mother and is still there guarded by a single dedicated priest The claim of such a lineage and of possession of the Ark was an important source of legitimacy and prestige for the Ethiopian monarchy through the centuries and had important and lasting effects on Ethiopian culture The Ethiopian government and church deny all requests to view the alleged ark c Some classical era Rabbis attacking Solomon s moral character have claimed instead that the child was an ancestor of Nebuchadnezzar II who destroyed Solomon s temple some 300 years later 12 Sins and punishment edit nbsp Vanity of vanities all is vanity Isaak Asknaziy illustrates an old and meditative King Solomon Jewish scribes say that Solomon s teacher was Shimei son of Gera and while he lived he prevented Solomon from marrying foreign wives The Talmud says at Ber 8a For as long as Shimei the son of Gera was alive Solomon did not marry the daughter of Pharaoh see also Midrash Tehillim to Ps 3 1 Solomon s execution of Shimei was his first descent into sin 12 According to 1 Kings 11 4 Solomon s wives turned his heart after other gods their own national deities to whom Solomon built temples thus incurring divine anger and retribution in the form of the division of the kingdom after Solomon s death 1 Kings 11 9 13 1 Kings 11 describes Solomon s descent into idolatry particularly his turning after Ashtoreth the goddess of the Sidonians and after Milcom the god of the Ammonites In Deuteronomy 17 16 17 a king is commanded not to multiply horses or wives neither greatly multiply to himself gold or silver Solomon sinned in all three of these areas In addition to his wives he collected 666 talents of gold each year 1 Kings 10 14 a huge amount for a small nation like Israel He gathered multitudes of horses and chariots from as far as Egypt and as Deuteronomy 17 warns took Israel back to Egypt in spirit nbsp Solomon was said to have sinned by acquiring many foreign wives Solomon s descent into idolatry Willem de Poorter Rijksmuseum According to 1 Kings 11 30 34 and 1 Kings 11 9 13 it was because of these sins that the Lord punished Solomon by removing most of the tribes of Israel from rule by Solomon s house 42 And the Lord was angry with Solomon because his heart had turned away from the Lord the God of Israel who had appeared to him twice and had commanded him concerning this thing that he should not go after other gods But he did not keep what the Lord commanded Therefore the Lord said to Solomon Since this has been your practice and you have not kept my covenant and my statutes that I have commanded you I will surely tear the kingdom from you and will give it to your servant Yet for the sake of David your father I will not do it in your days but I will tear it out of the hand of your son However I will not tear away all the kingdom but I will give one tribe to your son for the sake of David my servant and for the sake of Jerusalem that I have chosen Enemies edit Near the end of his life Solomon was beset by several enemies including Hadad of Edom Rezon of Zobah and his own official Jeroboam of the tribe of Ephraim Death succession of Rehoboam and kingdom division edit nbsp The United Monarchy breaks up Jeroboam rules Israel blue and Rehoboam rules JudahKing Solomon is a central biblical figure who according to the Hebrew Bible was the builder of the First Temple in Jerusalem and the last ruler of the united Kingdom of Israel After a reign of forty years 1 Kings 11 42 he died of natural causes 43 at around 55 years of age Upon Solomon s death his son Rehoboam succeeded him but ten of the Tribes of Israel refused him as king splitting the monarchy into the northern Kingdom of Israel under Jeroboam while Rehoboam continued to reign over the smaller southern Kingdom of Judah Henceforth the two kingdoms were never again united Solomon is associated with the peak golden age of the independent Kingdom of Israel and is a legendary source of judicial and religious wisdom According to Jewish tradition King Solomon wrote three books of the Bible Mishlei Book of Proverbs a collection of fables and wisdom of life Kohelet Ecclesiastes a book of contemplation and self reflection Shir ha Shirim Song of Songs a collection of erotic verse The verse has been interpreted both literally describing a romantic and sexual relationship between a man and a woman and metaphorically describing a relationship between God and his people The Hebrew word לשלמה appears in the title of two hymns 72 and 127 in the Psalms This Hebrew word means to Solomon but it can also be translated as by Solomon thus suggesting to some that Solomon wrote the two psalms 44 45 46 Apocryphal or deuterocanonical texts editRabbinical tradition attributes the Book of Wisdom included within the Septuagint to Solomon although this book was probably written in the 2nd century BCE In this work Solomon is portrayed as an astronomer where Other books of wisdom poetry such as the Odes of Solomon and the Psalms of Solomon also bear his name The Jewish historian Eupolemus who wrote about 157 BCE included copies of apocryphal letters exchanged between Solomon and the kings of Egypt and Tyre The Gnostic Apocalypse of Adam which may date to the 1st or 2nd century refers to a legend in which Solomon sends out an army of demons to seek a virgin who had fled from him perhaps the earliest surviving mention of the later common tale that Solomon controlled demons and made them his slaves This tradition of Solomon s control over demons appears fully elaborated in the early pseudoepigraphical work called the Testament of Solomon with its elaborate and grotesque demonology 47 Historicity editSee also David Historicity United Monarchy Historicity and Jeroboam s Revolt Historicity As with most biblical personages in the middle era of Israelite society the historicity of Solomon is hotly debated Current consensus states that regardless of whether or not a man named Solomon truly reigned as king over the Judean hills in the tenth century BCE the biblical description of his apparent empire s lavishness is almost surely an anachronistic exaggeration 48 As for Solomon himself scholars on both the maximalist and minimalist sides of the spectrum of biblical archeology generally agree that he probably existed 48 However a historically accurate picture of the Davidic king is difficult to construct According to some archaeologists Solomon could have only been the monarch or chieftain of Judah and that the northern kingdom was a separate development Such positions have been criticized by other archaeologists and scholars who argue that a united monarchy did exist in the 10th century BCE while agreeing that the biblical account contains exaggerations 49 50 51 52 53 Arguments against biblical description edit nbsp Judgement of Solomon Engraving by Gustave Dore 19th century Historical evidence of King Solomon other than the biblical accounts has been so minimal that some scholars have understood the period of his reign as a Dark Age Muhly 1998 The first century Romano Jewish scholar Josephus in Against Apion citing Tyrian court records and Menander gives a specific year during which King Hiram I of Tyre sent materials to Solomon for the construction of the Temple 54 However no material evidence indisputably of Solomon s reign has been found Yigael Yadin s excavations at Hazor Megiddo Beit Shean and Gezer uncovered structures that he and others have argued date from Solomon s reign 55 56 but others such as Israel Finkelstein and Neil Silberman argue that they should be dated to the Omride period more than a century after Solomon 32 According to Finkelstein and Silberman authors of The Bible Unearthed Archaeology s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts 57 at the time of the kingdoms of David and Solomon Jerusalem was populated by only a few hundred residents or less which is insufficient for an empire stretching from the Euphrates to Eilath According to The Bible Unearthed archaeological evidence suggests that the kingdom of Israel at the time of Solomon was little more than a small city state and so it is implausible that Solomon received tribute as large as 666 talents of gold per year Although both Finkelstein and Silberman accept that David and Solomon were real inhabitants of Judah about the 10th century BCE 48 they claim that the earliest independent reference to the Kingdom of Israel is about 890 BCE and for Judah about 750 BCE They suggest that because of religious prejudice the authors of the Bible suppressed the achievements of the Omrides whom the Hebrew Bible describes as being polytheist and instead pushed them back to a supposed golden age of Judaism and monotheists and devotees of Yahweh Some Biblical minimalists like Thomas L Thompson go further arguing that Jerusalem became a city and capable of being a state capital only in the mid 7th century 58 Likewise Finkelstein and others consider the claimed size of Solomon s temple implausible Arguments in favour of biblical description edit nbsp Solomon s Wealth and Wisdom as in 1 Kings 3 12 13 Illustration from a 1896 Bible card Andre Lemaire states in Ancient Israel From Abraham to the Roman Destruction of the Temple that the principal points of the biblical tradition of Solomon are generally trustworthy 59 although elsewhere he writes that he could find no substantiating archaeological evidence that supports the Queen of Sheba s visit to king Solomon saying that the earliest records of trans Arabian caravan voyages from Tayma and Sheba unto the Middle Euphrates etc occurred in the mid 8th century BCE 60 placing a possible visit from the Queen of Sheba to Jerusalem around this time some 250 years later than the timeframe traditionally given for king Solomon s reign 61 Seventeen years later traces of cinnamon were found in Phoenician clay flasks from three small sites in the Israeli coastal plain dating from the 10th century BCE The authors suggested that trade routes with South Asia existed much earlier than previously thought 62 Kenneth Kitchen argues that Solomon ruled over a comparatively wealthy mini empire rather than a small city state and considers 666 gold talents a modest amount of money Kitchen calculates that over 30 years such a kingdom might have accumulated up to 500 tons of gold which is small compared to other examples such as the 1 180 tons of gold that Alexander the Great took from Susa 63 Similarly Kitchen 64 and others consider the temple of Solomon a reasonable and typically sized structure for the region at the time Dever states that we now have direct Bronze and Iron Age parallels for every feature of the Solomonic temple as described in the Hebrew Bible 65 Middle way edit Some scholars have charted a middle path between minimalist scholars like Finkelstein Silberman and Philip Davies 66 who believes that Solomon is a totally invented character 67 and maximalist scholars like Lemaire and Kitchen For instance the archaeologist Avraham Faust has argued that biblical depictions of Solomon date to later periods and do overstate his wealth buildings and kingdom but that Solomon did have an acropolis and ruled over a polity larger than Jerusalem 68 In particular his archaeological research in regions near Jerusalem like Sharon finds commerce too great not to be supported by a polity and such regions probably were ruled loosely by Jerusalem 69 70 Scholars like Lester Grabbe also believe that there must have been a ruler in Jerusalem during this period and that he likely built a temple although the town was quite small 71 William G Dever argues that Solomon only reigned over Israel and did build a temple but that descriptions of his lavishness and the other conquests are strongly exaggerated 72 Archaeology edit General observations edit The archaeological remains that are considered to date from the time of Solomon are notable for the fact that Canaanite material culture appears to have continued unabated there is a distinct lack of magnificent empire or cultural development indeed comparing pottery from areas traditionally assigned to Israel with that of the Philistines points to the latter having been significantly more sophisticated citation needed However there is a lack of physical evidence of its existence despite some archaeological work in the area 32 This is not unexpected because the area was devastated by the Babylonians then rebuilt and destroyed several times 64 In 2014 professor of anthropology Jimmy Hardin and his team discovered six official clay bullae seals at a site east of Gaza called Khirbet Summeily He states that these bullae are associated with an Iron Age IIA political entity typified by elite activities dated to the 10th century BCE The bullae appear to be the only known examples that date to this period In his view this lends general support to the historical veracity of David and Solomon as recorded in the Hebrew biblical texts 73 Temple Mount in Jerusalem edit Little archaeological excavation has been done around the area known as the Temple Mount in what is thought to be the foundation of Solomon s Temple because attempts to do so are met with protests by Muslim authorities of the Jerusalem Waqf 74 75 Precious metals from Tarshish edit The biblical passages that understand Tarshish as a source of King Solomon s great wealth in metals especially silver but also gold tin and iron Ezekiel 27 were linked to archaeological evidence from silver hoards found in Phoenicia in 2013 The metals from Tarshish were reportedly obtained by Solomon in partnership with King Hiram of Phoenician Tyre Isaiah 23 and the fleets of Tarshish and ships that sailed in their service The silver hoards provide the first recognized material evidence that agrees with the ancient texts concerning Solomon s kingdom and his wealth see Wealth above Possible evidence for the described wealth of Solomon and his kingdom was discovered in ancient silver hoards which were found in Israel and Phoenicia and recognized for their importance in 2003 The evidence from the hoards shows that the Levant was a center of wealth in precious metals during the reigns of Solomon and Hiram and matches the texts that say the trade extended from Asia to the Atlantic Ocean 76 Biblical criticism Solomon s religiosity edit From a critical point of view Solomon s building of a temple for Yahweh should not be considered an act of particular devotion to Yahweh because Solomon is also described as building places of worship for a number of other deities 12 Some scholars and historians argue that the passages such as his dedication prayer 1 Kings 8 14 66 that describe Solomon s apparent initial devotion to Yahweh were written much later after Jerusalem had become the religious centre of the kingdom replacing locations such as Shiloh and Bethel Earlier historians maintain that there is evidence that these passages in Kings are derived from official court records at the time of Solomon and from other writings of that time that were incorporated into the canonical books of Kings 77 78 79 More recent scholars believe that passages such as these in the Books of Kings were not written by the same authors who wrote the rest of the text instead probably by the Deuteronomist 65 Religious views editJudaism edit King Solomon sinned by acquiring many foreign wives and horses because he thought he knew the reason for the biblical prohibition and thought it did not apply to him When King Solomon married Pharaoh s daughter a sandbank formed which eventually formed the great nation of Rome the nation that destroyed Herod s Temple Solomon gradually lost more and more prestige until he became like a commoner Some say he regained his status while others say he did not In the end however he is regarded as a righteous king and is especially praised for his diligence in building the Temple 80 King Josiah was also said to have had the Ark of the Covenant Aaron s rod vial of manna and the anointing oil placed within a hidden chamber which had been built by Solomon 81 82 The Seder Olam Rabbah holds that Solomon s reign was not in 1000 BCE but rather in the ninth century BCE during which time he built the First Temple in 832 BCE 83 However The Jewish Encyclopedia of 1906 gives the more common date of 971 to 931 BCE 12 Christianity edit nbsp Russian icon of King Solomon holding a model of the Temple 18th century iconostasis of Kizhi monastery Russia Christianity has traditionally accepted the historical existence of Solomon though some modern Christian scholars have also questioned at least his authorship of those biblical texts ascribed to him Such disputes tend to divide Christians into traditionalist and modernist camps Of the two genealogies of Jesus given in the Gospels Matthew mentions Solomon but Luke does not Some commentators see this as an issue that can be reconciled while others disagree For instance it has been suggested that Matthew is using Joseph s genealogy and Luke is using Mary s but Darrell Bock states that this would be unprecedented especially when no other single woman appears in the line Other suggestions include the use by one of the royal and the other of the natural line one using the legal line and the other the physical line or that Joseph was adopted 84 Jesus refers to Solomon using him for comparison in his admonition against worrying about life This account is recorded in Matthew 6 29 and the parallel passage in Luke 12 27 In the Eastern Orthodox Church Solomon is commemorated as a saint with the title of Righteous Prophet and King His feast day is celebrated on the Sunday of the Holy Forefathers two Sundays before the Great Feast of the Nativity of the Lord The staunchly Catholic King Philip II of Spain sought to model himself after King Solomon Statues of King David and Solomon stand on either side of the entrance to the basilica of El Escorial Philip s palace and Solomon is also depicted in a great fresco at the center of El Escorial s library Philip identified the warrior king David with his own father Charles V and himself sought to emulate the thoughtful and logical character which he perceived in Solomon Moreover the structure of the Escorial was inspired by that of Solomon s Temple 85 86 Islam edit nbsp Throne of Solomon Aqsa Mosque compound JerusalemMain article Solomon in Islam In Islamic tradition Solomon is also known as Sulaiman ibn Dawud and is recognised as a prophet and a messenger of God as well as a divinely appointed monarch 87 Solomon inherited his position from his father as the prophetic King of the Israelites Unlike in the Bible according to Muslim tradition Solomon never participated in idolatry 88 The Quran ascribes to Solomon a great level of wisdom knowledge and power 89 He knew the language of the birds Arabic منطق الطير romanized manṭiq al ṭayr 89 Solomon was also known in Islam to have other supernatural abilities bestowed upon him by God like controlling the wind ruling over the jinn enslaving divs and hearing the communication of ants And to Solomon We subjected the wind its morning stride was a month s journey and so was its evening stride And We caused a stream of molten copper to flow for him and We subjected some of the jinn to work under him by his Lord s Will And whoever of them deviated from Our command We made them taste the torment of the blaze Surah Saba 34 12 And when they came across a valley of ants an ant warned O ants Go quickly into your homes so Solomon and his armies do not crush you unknowingly Surah An Naml 27 18 19 The Quran absolves Solomon from practising sorcery They instead followed the magic promoted by the devils during the reign of Solomon Never did Solomon disbelieve rather the devils disbelieved They taught magic to the people along with what had been revealed to the two angels Harut and Marut in Babylon The two angels never taught anyone without saying We are only a test for you so do not abandon your faith Yet people learned magic that caused a rift even between husband and wife although their magic could not harm anyone except by Allah s Will They learned what harmed them and did not benefit them although they already knew that whoever buys into magic would have no share in the Hereafter Miserable indeed was the price for which they sold their souls if only they knew Surah Al Baqara 2 102 The Quran makes a reference to a puppet posing as Solomon in exegetical literature understood as a jinni or demon who escaped captivity and took over his kingdom 90 Solomon s loss of his throne to the demons has been understood in Islamic spirituality to represent a human losing its soul to demonic passion 91 Attar of Nishapur writes If you bind the div demon you will set out for the royal pavilion with Solomon and You have no command over your self s kingdom for in your case the div is in the place of Solomon 92 Solomon s gifts are often used allegorically in popular literature The demons taking over Solomon s kingdom mirrors the Sufi concept of the mind giving in to evil urges 93 The ant is depicted as a wise creature revealing to Solomon the reason behind his gift to control the wind and his name 94 During the Islamization of Iran Solomon became merged with Jamshid a great king from Persian mythology about who similar attributes are ascribed to 95 Bahaʼi Faith edit In the Bahaʼi Faith Solomon is regarded as one of the lesser prophets along with David Isaiah Jeremiah Ezekiel along with others 96 Bahaʼis see Solomon as a prophet who was sent by God to address the issues of his time 97 Baha ullah wrote about Solomon in the Hidden Words 98 He also mentions Solomon in the Tablet of Wisdom where he is depicted as a contemporary of Pythagoras 99 Legends editOne Thousand and One Nights edit A well known story in the collection One Thousand and One Nights describes a genie who had displeased King Solomon and was punished by being locked in a bottle and thrown into the sea Since the bottle was sealed with Solomon s seal the genie was helpless to free himself until he was freed many centuries later by a fisherman who discovered the bottle 100 In other stories from the One Thousand and One Nights protagonists who had to leave their homeland and travel to the unknown places of the world saw signs which proved that Solomon had already been there Sometimes protagonists discovered words of Solomon that were intended to help those who were lost and had unluckily reached those forbidden and deserted places Angels and magic edit According to Rabbinic literature on account of his modest request for wisdom only Solomon was rewarded with riches and an unprecedented glorious realm which extended over the upper world inhabited by the angels and over the whole of the terrestrial globe with all its inhabitants including all the beasts fowl and reptiles as well as the demons and spirits His control over the demons spirits and animals augmented his splendor the demons bringing him precious stones besides water from distant countries to irrigate his exotic plants The beasts and fowl of their own accord entered the kitchen of Solomon s palace so that they might be used as food for him and extravagant meals for him were prepared daily by each of his 700 wives and 300 concubines with the thought that perhaps the king would feast that day in her house Seal of Solomon edit Main article Seal of Solomon The Seal of Solomon is the legendary signet ring attributed to Solomon in medieval mystical traditions from which it developed in parallel within Jewish mysticism Islamic mysticism and Western occultism It is the predecessor to the Star of David the contemporary cultural and religious symbol of the Jewish people It was often depicted in the shape of either a pentagram or a hexagram In religious lore the ring is described as having given Solomon the power to command the supernatural and also the ability to speak with animals Due to the proverbial wisdom of Solomon it came to be seen as an amulet or talisman or a symbol or character in medieval magic and Renaissance magic occultism and alchemy Solomon and Asmodeus edit One legend concerning Asmodeus see The Story of King Solomon and Ashmedai goes on to state that Solomon one day asked Asmodeus what could make demons powerful over man and Asmodeus asked to be freed and given the ring so that he could demonstrate Solomon agreed but Asmodeus threw the ring into the sea and it was swallowed by a fish Asmodeus then swallowed the king stood up fully with one wing touching heaven and the other earth and spat out Solomon to a distance of 400 miles The Rabbis claim this was a divine punishment for Solomon s having failed to follow three divine commands and Solomon was forced to wander from city to city until he eventually arrived in an Ammonite city where he was forced to work in the king s kitchens Solomon gained a chance to prepare a meal for the Ammonite king which the king found so impressive that the previous cook was sacked and Solomon put in his place the king s daughter Naamah subsequently fell in love with Solomon but the family thinking Solomon a commoner disapproved so the king decided to kill them both by sending them into the desert Solomon and the king s daughter wandered the desert until they reached a coastal city where they bought a fish to eat which just happened to be the one which had swallowed the magic ring Solomon was then able to regain his throne and expel Asmodeus 101 The element of a ring thrown into the sea and found back in a fish s belly also appeared in Herodotus account of Polycrates the tyrant of Samos c 538 522 BCE In another familiar version of the legend of the Seal of Solomon Asmodeus disguises himself In some myths he s disguised as King Solomon himself The concealed Asmodeus tells travelers who have ventured up to King Solomon s grand lofty palace that the Seal of Solomon was thrown into the sea He then convinces them to plunge in and attempt to retrieve it for if they do they would take the throne as king citation needed Artifacts edit Other magical items attributed to Solomon are his key and his Table The latter was said to be held in Toledo in Visigothic Spain and was part of the loot taken by Tariq ibn Ziyad during the Muslim conquest of Spain according to ibn Abd al Hakam s History of the Conquest of Spain The former appears in the title of The Lesser Key of Solomon a Christian grimoire whose framing story is Solomon capturing demons using his ring and forcing them to explain themselves to him In The Book of Deadly Names purportedly translated from Arabic manuscripts found hidden in a building in Spain the King of the Jinn Fiqiṭush brings 72 jinn before King Solomon to confess their corruptions and places of residence Fiqitush tells King Solomon the recipes for curing such corruptions as each evil jinn confesses citation needed Angels edit Angels also helped Solomon in building the Temple though not by choice The edifice was according to rabbinical legend miraculously constructed throughout the large heavy stones rising and settling in their respective places of themselves The general opinion of the Rabbis is that Solomon hewed the stones by means of a shamir a mythical worm whose mere touch cleft rocks According to Midrash Tehillim the shamir was brought from paradise by Solomon s eagle but most of the rabbis state that Solomon was informed of the worm s haunts by Asmodeus The shamir had been entrusted by the prince of the sea to the mountain rooster alone and the rooster had sworn to guard it well but Solomon s men found the bird s nest and covered it with glass When the bird returned it used the shamir to break the glass whereupon the men scared the bird causing it to drop the worm which the men could then bring to Solomon In the Kabbalah edit Early adherents of the Kabbalah portray Solomon as having sailed through the air on a throne of light placed on an eagle which brought him near the heavenly gates as well as to the dark mountains behind which the fallen angels Uzza and Azzazel were chained the eagle would rest on the chains and Solomon using the magic ring would compel the two angels to reveal every mystery he desired to know The palace without entrance edit According to one legend while traveling magically Solomon noticed a magnificent palace to which there appeared to be no entrance He ordered the demons to climb to the roof and see if they could discover any living being within the building but they found only an eagle which said that it was 700 years old but that it had never seen an entrance An elder brother of the eagle 900 years old was then found but it also did not know the entrance The eldest brother of these two birds which was 1 300 years old then declared it had been informed by its father that the door was on the west side but that it had become hidden by sand drifted by the wind Having discovered the entrance Solomon found an idol inside that had in its mouth a silver tablet saying in Greek a language not thought by modern scholars to have existed 1000 years before the time of Solomon that the statue was of Shaddad the son of Ad and that it had reigned over a million cities rode on a million horses had under it a million vassals and slew a million warriors yet it could not resist the angel of death 12 Throne edit Main article Throne of Solomon nbsp Solomon at his throne painting by Andreas Brugger 1777Solomon s throne is described at length in Targum Sheni which is compiled from three different sources and in two later Midrash According to these there were on the steps of the throne twelve golden lions each facing a golden eagle There were six steps to the throne on which animals all of gold were arranged in the following order on the first step a lion opposite an ox on the second a wolf opposite a sheep on the third a tiger opposite a camel on the fourth an eagle opposite a peacock on the fifth a cat opposite a cock on the sixth a sparrow hawk opposite a dove On the top of the throne was a dove holding a sparrow hawk in its claws symbolizing the dominion of Israel over the Gentiles The first midrash claims that six steps were constructed because Solomon foresaw that six kings would sit on the throne namely Solomon Rehoboam Hezekiah Manasseh Amon and Josiah There was also on the top of the throne a golden candelabrum on the seven branches of the one side of which were engraved the names of the seven patriarchs Adam Noah Shem Abraham Isaac Jacob and Job and on the seven of the other the names of Levi Kohath Amram Moses Aaron Eldad Medad and in addition Hur another version has Haggai Above the candelabrum was a golden jar filled with olive oil and beneath it a golden basin which supplied the jar with oil and on which the names of Nadab Abihu and Eli and his two sons were engraved Over the throne twenty four vines were fixed to cast a shadow on the king s head 12 By a mechanical contrivance the throne followed Solomon wherever he wished to go Supposedly due to another mechanical trick when the king reached the first step the ox stretched forth its leg on which Solomon leaned a similar action taking place in the case of the animals on each of the six steps From the sixth step the eagles raised the king and placed him in his seat near which a golden serpent lay coiled When the king was seated the large eagle placed the crown on his head the serpent uncoiled itself and the lions and eagles moved upward to form a shade over him The dove then descended took the scroll of the Law from the Ark and placed it on Solomon s knees When the king sat surrounded by the Sanhedrin to judge the people the wheels began to turn and the beasts and fowls began to utter their respective cries which frightened those who had intended to bear false testimony Moreover while Solomon was ascending the throne the lions scattered various fragrant spices After Solomon s death Pharaoh Shishak when taking away the treasures of the Temple I Kings xiv 26 carried off the throne which remained in Egypt until Sennacherib conquered that country After Sennacherib s fall Hezekiah gained possession of it but when Josiah was slain by Pharaoh Necho the latter took it away However according to rabbinical accounts Necho did not know how the mechanism worked and so accidentally struck himself with one of the lions causing him to become lame Nebuchadnezzar into whose possession the throne subsequently came shared a similar fate The throne then passed to the Persians whose king Darius was the first to sit successfully on Solomon s throne after his death subsequently the throne came into the possession of the Greeks and Ahasuerus 12 Freemasonry editMasonic rituals refer to King Solomon and the building of his Temple 102 Masonic Temples where a Masonic Lodge meets are an allegorical reference to King Solomon s Temple 103 Places editThe Solomon Islands a country and archipelago in Melanesia were named for King Solomon by the Spanish navigator Alvaro de Mendana who became the first European to see the islands in 1568 104 105 In literature art and music editThis article may contain irrelevant references to popular culture Please remove the content or add citations to reliable and independent sources May 2021 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Literature edit In H Rider Haggard s King Solomon s Mines 1885 the protagonists discover multiple settings said to have belonged to or to have been built at the request of King Solomon such as Solomon s Great Road and the mines themselves Also the two mountains which form the entrance to Kukuana Land where the mines are located in the novel are referred to as Sheba s Breasts which could be an allusion to the Queen of Sheba with whom King Solomon had a relationship or Solomon s mother who was named Bathsheba When in the mines the characters also contemplate what must have occurred to prevent King Solomon from returning to retrieve the massive amounts of diamonds gold and ivory tusks that were found buried in his great Treasure Chamber In the Divine Comedy the spirit of Solomon appears to Dante Alighieri in the Heaven of the Sun with other exemplars of inspired wisdom In Friedrich Durrenmatt s The Physicists the physicist Mobius claims that Solomon appears to him and dictates the theory of all possible inventions based on unified field theory Solomon appears in Rudyard Kipling s Just So Stories O Henry s short story The Gift of the Magi 1905 contains the following description to convey the preciousness of character Jim Dillingham Young s pocket watch Had King Solomon been the janitor with all his treasures piled up in the basement Jim would have pulled out his watch every time he passed just to see him pluck at his beard from envy In Neal Stephenson s three volume The Baroque Cycle 17th century alchemists like Isaac Newton believe that Solomon created a kind of heavier gold with mystical properties and that it was cached in the Solomon Islands where it was accidentally discovered by the crew of a wayward Spanish galleon In the third volume of The Baroque Cycle The System of the World a mysterious member of the entourage of tsar Peter the Great named Solomon Kohan appears in early 18th century London The czar traveling incognito to purchase English made ships for his navy explains that he added him to his court after the Sack of Azov where Kohan had been a guest of the Pasha Solomon Kohan is later revealed as one of the extremely long lived Wise such as Enoch Root and compares a courtyard full of inventors workstations to an operation I used to have in Jerusalem a long time ago denominating either facility as a temple Stephenson s sequel to Reamde 2019 s Fall or Dodge in Hell was also a surprise sequel to the Baroque Cycle novels and Cryptonomicon In the mid to late 21st century span of Fall Solomon Kohan has joined the faculty of Princeton University going by Solly Pesador and is described by a student as one of those guys who had been around forever and played roles in tech companies going at least as far back as Hewlett Packard and as an old school tech geek turned neuro hacker In The Ring of Solomon both King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba are featured prominently Solomon King of Urushalim is a significant character in The Shadow Prince 106 the first novel of Philip Armstrong s epic historical fantasy The Chronicles of Tupiluliuma His Ring is an Atalantaen Relic by which is he able to command daemons He uses it to summon a daemon army thereafter called the Cohort of Free Daemons to oppose the forces of the Chaos God Sutekh thus allowing the young Hittite musician Lisarwa to repair the Veil that separates the physical world from the dangerous wild energies of the Netherworld using another of the relics the Harp of Daud once owned by his father King David Solomon s son Rehoboam also appears in a minor capacity In the Japanese manga series Magi The Labyrinth of Magic Solomon was a powerful magician who united all of the world under his peaceful rule However when this world was destroyed by a calamity he created the world Magi is set in and saved mankind by sending them there A special power originated from him the Wisdom of Solomon allows the main character Aladdin to talk directly with the soul of a person alive or dead In the manga Devils and Realist Solomon is a friend of Lucifer and is the Elector the one who can choose the interim ruler over Hell as its emperor rests to regain his strength and had powers over demons known as his seventy two pillars He s also known as the one who can control Hell or Heaven with the power of his ring Chapter 14 of the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ends with Huck and Jim debating over how wise Solomon really was In Francis Bacon s Essay Of Revenge Solomon is paraphrased And Solomon I am sure saith It is the glory of a man to pass by an offence In DC Comics Solomon is one of the Immortal Elders of the hero Captain Marvel In a subject called in art the Idolatry of Solomon the foreign wives are depicted as leading Solomon away from Yahweh toward idolatry because they worshiped gods other than Yahweh 1 Kings 11 1 3 This forms part of the Power of Women topos in the Middle Ages and Renaissance showing the dangers women posed to even the most virtuous men 107 Naamah a princess of Ammon now in Jordan who arrives in Jerusalem at age fourteen to marry King Solomon and tells of their life together is the narrator of Aryeh Lev Stollman s novel Queen of Jerusalem which was published in 2020 by Aryeh Nir Modan Tel Aviv in Hebrew translation under the title Divrei Y mai Naamah דברי ימי נעמה 108 Film edit Solomon and Sheba 1959 Epic film directed by King Vidor starring Yul Brynner and Gina Lollobrigida Solomon amp Sheba 1995 Showtime film directed by Robert M Young starring Halle Berry and Jimmy Smits Solomon 1997 TNT directed by Roger Young starring Ben Cross Brooklyn Babylon 2001 a modern retelling of the story of Solomon and the Queen of Sheba set during the Crown Heights riot The Kingdom of Solomon 2009 Iranian production directed by Shahriar Bahrani The Song 2014 a modern retelling directed by Richard Ramsey starring Alan Powell Ali Faulkner and Caitlin Nicol Thomas 109 110 Three Thousand Years of Longing 2022 King Solomon woos the Queen of Sheba in the first tale told by the DjinnMusic edit Giacomo Carissimi The Judgement of Solomon for three chorus two violins and organ Marc Antoine Charpentier Judicium Salomnis H 422 Oratorio for soloists chorus orchestra and continuo 1702 Sebastien de Brossard Solomon s fall cantata Handel composed an oratorio entitled Solomon in 1748 The story follows the basic biblical plot 111 Ernest Bloch composed a Hebraic Rhapsody for cello and orchestra entitled Schelomo based on King Solomon Kate Bush wrote a song called Song of Solomon in 1993 for her album The Red Shoes Toivo Tulev composed a piece for choir soloists and chamber orchestra entitled Songs in 2005 The text is taken directly from the Song of Songs in its English Spanish and Latin translations Derrick Harriott has a rocksteady song titled Solomon later covered by Junior Murvin in which he warns a woman that he is wiser than Solomon in the ways of women Jamaican dancehall rapper Sean Paul mentions King Solomon in his 2005 hit song We Be Burnin Specifically Sean Paul references the legend that marijuana was found on the grave of King Solomon The New Pornographers included a song entitled One Kind of Solomon on their 2019 album In the Morse Code of Brake Lights Cassandra Wilson performs the self penned Solomon Sang on her 1995 Blue Note album New Moon Daughter Grateful Dead have a song called King Solomon s Marbles on their 1975 album Blues for Allah M Nasir s Tanya Sama Itu Hud Hud revolves around the correspondence of the hoopoe hudhud with the figure especially as told through the poem The Conference of the Birds 112 Momus debut album Circus Maximus featured a song called King Solomon s Song And Mine The British Coronation Anthem Zadok The Priest mentions the anointing of King Solomon by Zadok and Nathan the Prophet The lyrics are derived from 1 Kings 1 34 45 113 See also editGoetia Heichal Shlomo Kings of Israel and Judah Solomon and Marcolf Solomon in Islam Solomon s Pools Solomonic column Solomonic dynasty The Judgement of Solomon Giorgione Prison of Solomon Throne of SolomonNotes edit Hebrew ש ל מ ה Modern Slōmō Tiberian Sălōmō lit peaceful 3 Syriac ܫܠ ܝܡ ܘܢ Slemun Arabic س ل ي م ان Sulayman Siliman Sleman Greek Solomwn Solomōn Latin Salomon Hebrew י ד יד י ה Modern Yǝdidyah Tiberian Yăḏiḏyah beloved of Yah Recent History Channel promotional production about Indiana Jones s citation needed positive impact on archaeology released mid May 2008 the week before the 22 May 2008 US release of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull History Channel producers were shown interviewing the guardian priest and expert discussions about the Ark were part of the fare References edit In Our Time With Melvyn Bragg King Solomon UK BBC Radio 4 7 June 2012 Retrieved 10 June 2012 1 Kings 11 1 3 Khan Geoffrey 2020 The Tiberian Pronunciation Tradition of Biblical Hebrew Vol 1 Open Book Publishers p 305 ISBN 978 1 78374 676 7 Book of Kings 1 Kings 1 11 Books of Chronicles 1 Chronicles 28 29 2 Chronicles 1 9 a b Barton George A 1906 Temple of Solomon Jewish Encyclopedia pp 98 101 Retrieved 24 October 2018 Stefon Matt 27 June 2023 Solomon king of Israel Britannica 1 Kings 5 5 8 20 Rashi toMegillah 14a Matthew 12 42 Luke 11 31 Matthew 6 28 29 Luke 12 27 Archaeology Culture and other Religions FMC terra santa Retrieved 21 June 2013 a b c d e f g h nbsp Hirsch Emil G Price Ira Maurice Bacher Wilhelm Seligsohn M Montgomery Mary W toy Crawford Howell 1905 Solomon In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Funk amp Wagnalls pp 436 448 E Clarity 2012 p 305 Kitchen Kenneth A September October 2001 How We Know When Solomon Ruled Biblical Archaeology Review BAS 5 27 Thiele 1983 p 78 1 Chronicles 14 4 1 Chronicles 3 5 1 Chronicles 3 1 4 Vance Jennifer 2015 Solomon New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 68146 118 2 Golden childhood The Little People s Own Pleasure Book of Delight and Instruction London Ward Lock and Co 1878 p 116 Farrel Pam Jones Jean 2017 Discovering Hope in the Psalms A Creative Bible Study Experience Eugene Harvest House Publishers p 70 ISBN 978 0 7369 6997 0 a b 1 Kings 1 ESV BibleGateway com Retrieved 3 March 2010 Lumby J R Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Kings 1 accessed 24 September 2017 1 Kings 4 1 19 Wiersbe Warren 2003 The Bible Exposition Commentary Volume 1 Eastbourne Cook Communications pp 496 ISBN 978 0 7814 3531 4 1 Kings 3 3 15 1 Kings 3 16 28 Coogan 2009 p 375 1 Kings 10 17 and 2 Chronicles 9 20 House in the King James Version and Revised Standard Version Hall in the Jerusalem Bible and Good News Translation 1 Kings 7 1 8 1 Kings 9 15 a b c Finkelstein amp Silberman 2001 pp 186 195 Bhaktivejanyana Swami 23 January 2013 Ithihaasa the mystery of his story is my story of history Bloomington IN ISBN 978 1 4772 4272 8 OCLC 826444777 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link 1 Kings 11 3 not in the 2 Chronicles account See also 1 Kings 3 1 1 Kings 11 2 3 NKJV 1 Kings 12 2 Kings 25 Introduction to the Hebrew Bible Fortress Press pp 281 304 2018 doi 10 2307 j ctt1w6tbx5 24 ISBN 978 1 5064 4605 9 1 Kings 11 5 9 NKJV a b Loving too well The negative portrayal of Solomon and the composition of the Kings history Retrieved on Jan 17 2007 Stuart Munro Hay The Quest for the Ark of the Covenant The True History of the Tablets of Moses Donald N Levine Wax and Gold Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopia Culture Chicago University Press 1972 NIV 1 Kings 11 Solomon s Wives Bible Gateway Retrieved 21 June 2013 Ancient Jewish History The Kings of Ancient Israel Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 3 March 2010 Gottlieb Isaac 2010 Mashal Le Melekh The Search for Solomon Hebrew Studies 51 107 127 doi 10 1353 hbr 2010 a400580 S2CID 170687286 via Gale Literature Resource Center Dahood Mitchell 1968 Psalms II 51 100 Introduction Translation and Notes New York Doubleday pp 179 180 ISBN 0 385 03759 7 The Anchor Bible New York Doubleday 1964 p 47 Solomon Testament of Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved 3 March 2010 a b c Finkelstein amp Silberman 2006 p 20 Finkelstein amp Silberman 2006 p page needed Lipschits Oded 2014 The history of Israel in the biblical period In Berlin Adele Brettler Marc Zvi eds The Jewish Study Bible 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 997846 5 Kuhrt Amelie 1995 The Ancient Near East c 3000 330 BC Band 1 New York Routledge p 438 ISBN 978 0 41516 762 8 Wright Jacob L July 2014 David King of Judah not Israel The Bible and Interpretation Archived from the original on 1 March 2021 Kings of Controversy Magazine 1 December 2010 Archived from the original on 23 February 2021 Retrieved 16 March 2021 Against Apion i 17 18 Dever 2001 p 43 Kalimi 2018 p 26 Finkelstein amp Silberman 2001 p 133 Thompson Thomas L 1999 The Bible in History How Writers Create a Past Jonathan Cape London ISBN 978 0 224 03977 2 p 207 Shanks Hershel 1999 Ancient Israel From Abraham to the Roman Destruction of the Temple p 113 See Lemaire South Arabia In Andre Lemaire s own words The first mention of Sheba in Neo Assyrian texts is to be dated mid 8th century BCE with the story of a caravan of 200 camels coming from Tayma and Sheba to Hindanu Middle Euphrates Cavigneaux Ismail 1990 339 357 Frame 1995 300 Younger 2003 279 282 Holladay 2006 319 321 Andre Lemaire The Queen of Sheba and the Trade Between South Arabia and Judah pub in Bayn ʻEver LaʻArav Contacts between Arabic Literature and Jewish Literature in the Middle Ages and Modern Times volume 6 A Collection of Studies Dedicated to Prof Yosef Tobi on the Occasion of his Retirement ed Ali A Hussein and Ayelet Oettinger Haifa University of Haifa Press 2013 xi xxxiv Gilboa Ayelet Namdar Dvory 2015 On the Beginnings of South Asian Spice Trade with the Mediterranean Region A Review Radiocarbon 57 2 265 283 Bibcode 2015Radcb 57 265G doi 10 2458 azu rc 57 18562 ISSN 0033 8222 S2CID 55719842 Kitchen 2003 p 135 a b Kitchen 2003 p 123 a b Dever 2001 p 145 Davies Philip R 1992 In Search of Ancient Israel A Study in Biblical Origins London Bloomsbury Publishing T and T Clark David and Solomon www bibleodyssey org Archived from the original on 10 November 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Faust Avraham 2012 The Archaeology of Israelite Society in Iron Age II Translated by Ruth Ludlum Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns Faust Avraham 2007 The Sharon and the Yarkon Basin in the Tenth Century BCE Ecology Settlement Patterns and Political Involvement Israel Exploration Journal 65 82 Faust Avraham 2017 Jebus the City of David and Jerusalem Jerusalem from the Iron I to the Neo Babylonian Period in Hebrew In Jerusalem From its Beginning to the Ottoman Conquest edited by Avraham Faust J Schwartz and E Baruch 35 72 Ramat Gan Ingeborg Renner Center for Jerusalem Studies Grabbe Lester L 2016 1 amp 2 Kings An Introduction and Study Guide History and Story in Ancient Israel Bloomsbury Publishing Dever William G 18 August 2020 Has Archaeology Buried the Bible Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 1 4674 5949 5 MSU department announces major archaeological find Mississippi State University News Archive Temple Mount Excavation Controversy Sacred destinations Archived from the original on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 3 March 2010 Jacqueline Schaalje Special The Temple Mount in Jerusalem Jewish Magazine Archived from the original on 6 October 2009 Retrieved 7 April 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Thompson Christine Skaggs Sheldon 2013 King Solomon s Silver Southern Phoenician Hacksilber Hoards and the Location of Tarshish Internet Archaeology 35 doi 10 11141 ia 35 6 Harrison RK 1969 Introduction to the Old Testament Grand Rapids Eerdmans pp 722 724 Archer GL 1964 A Survey of Old Testament Introduction Chicago Moody Press pp 276 277 Thiele 1983 pp 193 204 tractate Sanhendrin Talmud Bavli p 21b Tosefta Sotah 13 1 cf Babylonian Talmud Keritot 5b 17 18 www sefaria org 17 The baraita continues And also sequestered with the Ark was the chest that the Philistines sent as a gift to the God of Israel after they captured the Ark and were stricken by several plagues as it is stated And put the jewels of gold that you return to Him for a guilt offering in a coffer by its side and send it away that it may go I Samuel 6 8 And who sequestered the Ark Josiah king of Judah sequestered it as it is stated And the king said to the priests Put the sacred Ark in the house that Solomon the son of David king of Israel built see II Chronicles 35 3 18 And Rabbi Elazar says How do we know that all these items needed to be sequestered together with the Ark The halakha that the jar of manna was to be kept with the Ark is derived through a verbal analogy between the words there and there The word there is stated with regard to the Ark Where I will meet with you there Exodus 30 6 and it is also stated with regard to the manna And put there Exodus 16 33 A Buried Treasure The Entombment of the Ark www chabad org Seder Olam Rabba Jerusalem 1971 Hebrew Bock Darell 1996 Luke The NIV Application Commentary Zondervan p 124 ISBN 978 0 310 49330 3 Taylor Rene Arquitectura y Magia Consideraciones sobre la Idea de El Escorial Architecture and magic Considerations on the idea of the Escorial in Spanish Madrid Siruela enhanced from monograph in Rudolph Wittkower s 1968 festschrift Wittkower Rudolf Jaffe Irma Hermetism and the Mystical Architecture of the Society of Jesus Baroque Art The Jesuit Contribution Quran 2 102 Shalev Eyni Sarit Solomon his demons and jongleurs The meeting of Islamic Judaic and Christian culture Al Masaq 18 2 2006 155 a b Quran 27 15 19 Robert Lebling Legends of the Fire Spirits Jinn and Genies from Arabia to Zanzibar I B Tauris 2010 ISBN 978 0 857 73063 3 Moiseeva Anna Vladimirovna Prophet Sulaiman V Klassische Persische Poesie Semantik Und Struktur Des Bildes Orientalistik Afrikanistik 2020 Nr 3 URL https cyberleninka ru article n prorok sulaym n v klassicheskoy persidskoy poezii semantika i struktura obraza retrieved 14 October 2021 Hamori Andras On the Art of Medieval Arabic Literature USA Princeton University Press 2015 p 158 Hamori Andras On the Art of Medieval Arabic Literature USA Princeton University Press 2015 p 158 Peacock A C S 2019 Islam Literature and Society in Mongol Anatolia Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108582124 ISBN 978 1 108 58212 4 S2CID 211657444 Eva Orthmann Anna Kollatz The Ceremonial of Audience Transcultural Approaches Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht 11 11 2019 isbn 978 3 847 00887 3 p 155 Smith Peter 2008 An Introduction to the Baha i Faith p 108 Steier E Joseph III Timmering Dianne H 2008 My God Our God p 176 Ryba Thomas Bond George D Tull Herman 2004 The Comity and Grace of Method Essays in Honor of Edmund F Perry p 399 Garlington William 2005 The Baha i Faith in America p 160 Nights 3 9 The Story of the Fisherman 1909 14 Stories from the Thousand and One Nights The Harvard Classics www bartleby com 30 September 2022 1 Legends of the Jews Index of lodgechelmsford com Retrieved 29 August 2014 Freemasons NSW ACT Home masons org au Archived from the original on 10 August 2014 Retrieved 29 August 2014 Lord GORONWY ROBERTS speaking in the House of Lords HL Deb 27 April 1978 vol 390 cc2003 19 Parliamentary Debates Hansard 27 April 1978 Retrieved 19 November 2014 HOGBIN H In Experiments in Civilization The Effects of European Culture on a Native Community of the Solomon Islands New York Schocken Books 1970 Armstrong Philip 17 July 2016 The Shadow Prince CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 978 1 5336 7350 3 H Diane Russell ed Eva Ave Women in Renaissance and Baroque Prints pp 162 164 National Gallery of Art Washington 1990 ISBN 1558610391 Queen of Jerusalem by Arie Lev Stollman Wife and Mother of a King Reviews by Amos Lassen 20 August 2020 Retrieved 15 February 2023 The Song Movie Inspired by the Song of Solomon The Song Movie Inspired by the Song of Solomon The Song is a modern story of love faith www catholicsentinel org Catholic Sentinel Archived from the original on 24 February 2016 Retrieved 30 December 2023 G F Handel s Compositions The Handel Institute Archived from the original on 24 September 2013 Retrieved 28 September 2013 Syakir Aqil 17 July 2020 Dipengaruhi hadis nabi Ini 4 lagu M Nasir yang punyai maksud tersirat SosCili in Malay Retrieved 20 November 2021 Office for the Royal Maundy PDF Westminster Abbey 21 April 2011 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Bibliography editCoogan Michael D 2009 A Brief Introduction to the Old Testament Oxford University Press Dever William G 2001 What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It What Archaeology Can Tell Us about the Reality of Ancient Israel Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans Pub ISBN 978 0 8028 4794 2 OCLC 45487499 2003 Who Were the Early Israelites and Where Did They Come From William B Eermans ISBN 978 0 8028 0975 9 Finkelstein Israel Silberman Neil Asher 2001 The Bible Unearthed Archaeology s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 2338 6 Silberman Neil Asher 2006 David and Solomon In Search of the Bible s Sacred Kings and the Roots of the Western Tradition Free Press ISBN 978 0 7432 4362 9 Kalimi Isaac 2018 Writing and Rewriting the Story of Solomon in Ancient Israel Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 47126 8 Levy Thomas E Higham Thomas eds 2005 The Bible and Radiocarbon Dating Archaeology Text and Science London Oakville CT Equinox ISBN 978 1 84553 056 3 OCLC 60453952 Kitchen Kenneth A 2003 On the reliability of the Old Testament Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 4960 1 Thiele ER 1983 The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings 3rd ed Grand Rapids Zondervan Kregel External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Solomon Biblical figure nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Solomon nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Solomon A collection of King Solomon links on the Web LT VDU archived from the original on 15 January 2008 Oussani Gabriel 1913 Solomon Catholic Encyclopedia entry Solomon at IMDb nbsp Animated depiction of the life of Solomon Solomon at IMDb nbsp Artistic movie about the rise and the reign of King Solomon The Wars of King Solomon Summaries and Studies Wars of Israel archived from the original on 25 January 2010 retrieved 5 May 2006 Salomon engravings The De Verda collection SolomonHouse of DavidRegnal titlesPreceded byDavid King of the United Kingdomof Israel and Judah971 931 BCE Succeeded byRehoboamin JudahSucceeded byJeroboam Iin Israel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Solomon amp oldid 1195844015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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