Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksie

Historians usually use the Old Testament as their source of information in writing contemporary works on the history of ancient Israel. This information is usually merely paraphrased in writing a history of Israel, in spite of the non-primary historical and rather ideological character of the Old T...

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Main Author: J A Burger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 1997-12-01
Series:Acta Theologica
Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/6038
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author J A Burger
author_facet J A Burger
author_sort J A Burger
collection DOAJ
description Historians usually use the Old Testament as their source of information in writing contemporary works on the history of ancient Israel. This information is usually merely paraphrased in writing a history of Israel, in spite of the non-primary historical and rather ideological character of the Old Testament. The application of Biblical material about Omri and his house in modern history books is no exception: Information extracted from the Old Testament enjoys preferential status in spite of the fact that extra-Biblical information on Omri also exists, as seen in the Mesha inscription as well as in Assyrian inscriptions.  The question investigated in this article, is how the available information, if at all possible, can be used to recontruct a picture of the reign of Omri. This article reaches the following conclusion after the Old Testament evidence, the Mesha inscription, archaeological information on Omri and also a number of modern historians' treatment of the available information on Omri have been evaluated. In attempting to reconstruct Omri's reign, not only the Old Testament, but all available sources should be used. This includes Deuteronomist, the Mesha inscription, Assyrian inscriptions as well as archaeological information. Precedence, as is common practice in modern historical versions, should not be given to Old Testament information, at the expense of extra-Biblical evidence.
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spelling doaj-art-ec8bfe8439b94624b0edef588abf38552025-02-11T12:38:36ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Theologica1015-87582309-90891997-12-0117210.38140/at.v17i2.6038Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksieJ A Burger Historians usually use the Old Testament as their source of information in writing contemporary works on the history of ancient Israel. This information is usually merely paraphrased in writing a history of Israel, in spite of the non-primary historical and rather ideological character of the Old Testament. The application of Biblical material about Omri and his house in modern history books is no exception: Information extracted from the Old Testament enjoys preferential status in spite of the fact that extra-Biblical information on Omri also exists, as seen in the Mesha inscription as well as in Assyrian inscriptions.  The question investigated in this article, is how the available information, if at all possible, can be used to recontruct a picture of the reign of Omri. This article reaches the following conclusion after the Old Testament evidence, the Mesha inscription, archaeological information on Omri and also a number of modern historians' treatment of the available information on Omri have been evaluated. In attempting to reconstruct Omri's reign, not only the Old Testament, but all available sources should be used. This includes Deuteronomist, the Mesha inscription, Assyrian inscriptions as well as archaeological information. Precedence, as is common practice in modern historical versions, should not be given to Old Testament information, at the expense of extra-Biblical evidence. https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/6038
spellingShingle J A Burger
Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksie
Acta Theologica
title Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksie
title_full Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksie
title_fullStr Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksie
title_full_unstemmed Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksie
title_short Omri van Israel: 'n Poging tot historiese rekonstruksie
title_sort omri van israel n poging tot historiese rekonstruksie
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/6038
work_keys_str_mv AT jaburger omrivanisraelnpogingtothistorieserekonstruksie