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Adullam

Coordinates: 31°39′0″N 35°0′9″E / 31.65000°N 35.00250°E / 31.65000; 35.00250
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Adullam
Khirbat esh-Sheikh Madkur / ʿAīd el Mâ
Pine-covered hill of Adullam, seen from northwest
Adullam is located in Israel
Adullam
Shown within Israel
Alternative name'Eîd el Mieh (Kh. 'Id el-Minya)
LocationIsrael
RegionShfela
Coordinates31°39′0″N 35°0′9″E / 31.65000°N 35.00250°E / 31.65000; 35.00250
Grid position150/118 PAL
History
FoundedCanaanite period and successive periods
Abandonedunknown
PeriodsChalcolithic, Early and Late Bronze, Iron Age periods to the Ottoman period
CulturesCanaanite, Jewish, Greco-Roman, Byzantine, early Islamic, Ottoman
Site notes
Excavation dates2015
ArchaeologistsSurveyed by Y. Dagan, B. Zissu, I. Radashkovsky and E. Liraz
ConditionRuin
OwnershipJewish National Fund
Public accessyes
Khirbet 'Eîd el Mieh, stone water trough (at the lower site)

Adullam (Hebrew: עֲדֻלָּם, romanizedʿəḏullām, Koinē Greek: Οδολλάμ) is an ancient ruin once numbered among the thirty-six cities of Canaan whose kings "Joshua and the children of Israel smote" (Joshua 12:7–24).[1] After that, it fell as an inheritance to the tribe of Judah and was included in the northern division of the Shephelah "lowland" cities of the land of Judah (Joshua 15:35).[2]

The connection between Judah and Adullam and its surroundings was actually already established in the patriarchal period, when Judah "went down from his brothers and turned aside to a certain Adullamite, whose name was Hirah" (Genesis 38:1).[2] At the beginning of the royal period, in the days of King Saul, the area was close to the land of the Philistines, and thus David, fleeing from Saul, sought refuge in the cave of Adullam and made it a place of reconnoitering and organization, both, for him and his men (1 Samuel 22:1–2).[2][3] Here, too, the episode took place when three of David's heroes brought him water from the well of Bethlehem and he did not dare to drink it, but "poured it out unto the Lord" (2 Samuel 23:13–17).[4] It is also learnt from the battle of David and Goliath, which took place in the Valley of Elah directly adjoining the north-side of the ruin, as well as from the raid of the Philistines into Keilah to the immediate south of Adullam, that Adullam was a frontier city during that period.[2]

The current site was formerly known by the Arabic appellation Khurbet esh-Sheikh Madhkur, 9 mi. (15 km.) northeast of Bayt Jibrin,[4] and was built upon a hilltop overlooking the Elah valley, straddling the Green Line between Israel and the West Bank, and with its suburban ruin, [عيد الميا] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: invalid parameter: |fn= (help), lying directly below it.[5] By the late 19th century, the settlement, which had been a town, was in ruins.[6] The hilltop ruin is named after Madkour, one of the sons of the Sultan Beder, for whom is built a shrine (wely) and formerly called by its inhabitants Wely Madkour.[7] The hilltop is mostly flat, with cisterns carved into the rock. The remains of stone structures which once stood there can still be seen. Sedimentary layers of ruins from the old Canaanite and Israelite eras, mostly potsherds, are noticeable everywhere, although olive groves now grow atop of this hill, enclosed within stonewall enclosures. The villages of Aderet, Aviezer and Khirbet al-Deir are located nearby. The ruin lies about 3 km (1.9 mi) south of moshav Neve Michael.

Main archaeological sites; identification

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Kh. esh-Sheikh Madkur (Palestine grid: 1503/1175) sits at an elevation of 434 metres (1,424 ft) above sea-level and is thought by modern historical geographers to be the "upper Adullam", based on its proximity to Kh. 'Id el-Minya. The name of this latter site is believed by historical geographers to be a corruption of the word "Adullam."[8] The identification of the upper site with the biblical Adullam is still inconclusive, as archaeological evidence attesting to its Old Canaanite name has yet to be found. In the late 19th century, the hilltop ruin and its adjacent ruins were explored by French explorer, Victor Guérin, who wrote:

[Upon leaving the hilltop ruin, Khirbet el-Sheikh Madkour], at 11:20 [AM], we descend to the east in the valley. At 11:25 [AM], I examine other ruins, called Khirbet A'id el-Miah. Sixty toppled houses in the wadi formed a village that still existed in the Muslim period, as [proven by] the remains of a mosque there observed. In antiquity, the ruins that cover the plateau of the hill of Sheikh Madkour and which extend in the valley were probably one and the same city, divided into two parts, the upper part and the lower part.[9]

While Guérin does not specifically say that the site in question was the ancient Adullam, he holds that Kh. esh-Sheikh Madkour and Kh. 'Id el Minya are to be recognised as the same city; the upper and the lower. The site is maintained by the Jewish National Fund in Israel, and archaeological surveys and partial excavations have been conducted. The site features ancient caverns, cisterns carved into the rock, and a Muslim shrine known as Wely Sheikh Madkour.

Kh. 'Id el Minya, also known as 'Eid al-Miah (Palestine grid: 1504/1181), is the site recognised as Adullam proper,[10] being now a tell at the southern end of Wadi es-Sûr, an extension of the Elah valley. The site was first recognised as the biblical Adullam by French archaeologist Clermont-Ganneau in 1871, based on its location, a close approximation of the name and the ceramic finds it yielded.[11][12] The ruin sits at an elevation of 351 metres (1,152 ft) above sea-level. The ruin is overgrown with vegetation and trees on the northern flanks of the mountain whereon lies Kh. esh-Sheikh Madkour. Razed stone structures, a stone water trough, and the shaft of a stone column can still be seen there. Palestine Exploration Fund surveyor, C.R. Conder, mentions having seen in ʻAid el-Miyeh an ancient well having stone water-troughs round it.[13]

Earlier attempts at identification have led some to call other cave systems by the name of "Cave of Adullam." Early drawings depicting the so-called "Adullam cave" have tentatively been identified with the cavern of Umm el-Tuweimin, and the cave at Khureitun (named after Chariton the Ascetic),[14] although modern day archaeologists and historical geographers have rejected these early hypotheses as being the Cave of Adullam,[15] and have accepted that ʻAid el-Miyeh is the Adullam of old.[16][17][2][18]

It has been pointed out that Kh. esh-Sheikh Madkour, if indeed it is the biblical Adullam, lies only 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) southwest of Timnah, a site mentioned in Genesis, ch. 38, as being visited by Judah when he went up from Adullam to shear his sheep.[19]

History

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Late Bronze Age, Iron Age and Hebrew Bible

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Millstone in an oil press cave

The "Adullam" mentioned in the Hebrew Bible is thought to be identical with Tell Sheikh Madkhur.[8][20][2][21] The so-called "Biblical period", for time reference-sake, has been referred to by historians and archaeologists as the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age, meaning, the Late Canaanite and Israelite periods, respectively.[22] A.F. Rainey recognized Adullam (Kh. esh-Sheikh Madhkûr) as a Late Bronze Age site.[23]

By the Iron Age,[24] Adullam is referred to in the Hebrew Bible as being one of the royal cities of the Canaanites,[25] and is listed along with the cities Jarmuth and Socho as occupying a place in the region geographically known as the Shefelah,[26] or what is a place of transition between the mountainous region and the coastal plains.

It was here that Judah, the son of Jacob (Israel), came when he left his father and brothers in Migdal Eder. Judah befriended a certain Hirah, an Adullamite.[2][27] In Adullam, Judah met his first wife (unnamed in the Book of Genesis), the daughter of Shuah.

During the period of the Israelite conquest of the land of Canaan, Adullam was one of many city-states with independent and sovereign kings.[28] According to the same biblical source, the king of Adullam was slain by Joshua and the Israelites during their conquest of the land.[29] The immediate lands were, by what was thought to be a "divine act" of casting lots, given as a tribal inheritance to the progeny of Judah.[30]

More than 400 years later, the scene of David's victory over Goliath in the Elah valley was within a short distance from Adullam, at that time a frontier village.[2][31] Although David was elevated and allowed to sit in King Saul's presence, he soon fell into disrepute with the king and was forced to flee.

Ruin of Adullam. Wely Madkour

David sought refuge in Adullam after being expelled from the city of Gath by King Achish. The Book of Samuel refers to the Cave of Adullam where he found protection while living as a refugee from King Saul. Certain caves, grottos and sepulchres are still to be seen on the hilltop, as well as on its northern and eastern slopes. It was there that "every one that was in distress gathered together, and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discontented."[32] There, David thirsted for the well-waters of his native Beth-lehem, then occupied by a Philistine garrison. A party of David's mighty-men of valor went and fetched him water from that place, but, when they returned, David refused to drink it.[33]

In the 10th-century BCE, Adullam was thought to have strategic importance, prompting King David's grandson, Rehoboam (c. 931–913 BCE), to fortify the town, among others, against Ancient Egypt.[2][3][34][35] According to Israeli historian N. Naʾaman, this was not a fortress in the real sense, but only a town inhabited by a civilian population, although it functioned as an administrative military center in which a garrison was stationed and food and armor stored.[36]

Assyrian and Chaldean conquests

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In the late 8th-century BCE, the Book of Micah recalled the cities of the lowlands of Judah during a time of Assyrian encroachment in the country:[37][38] "I will yet bring unto thee, O inhabitant of Mareshah, him that shall possess thee; he shall come even unto Adullam, O glory of Israel."[39]

Sennacherib, during his third military campaign, despoiled many of the cities belonging to Judah.[40] The Assyrian period was followed by the rise of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, a time marked by general unrest and the eventual deportation of the inhabitants of Judah by the Neo-Babylonian army in the sixth century BCE.[41] Adullam, as with other towns of the region, would not have gone unaffected.

Persian period

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The only record of Adullam for this time-period (c. 539–331 BCE) is taken from the Hebrew canonical books, specifically the account of Nehemiah who returned with the Jewish exiles from the Babylonian captivity, during the reign of Artaxerxes I.[3] According to Ezra, the acclaimed author of the book,[42] some of these returnees had settled in Adullam.[2][43][4] According to Nehemiah, the postexilic community that resettled in Adullam traced their lineage to the tribe of Judah.

The political entity that was established in Judea at the time was that of a vassal state, as Judea became a province of the Persian Empire, governed by a satrap.[44]

Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods

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Few records abound for the site during the classical period. In 163 BCE, it was in Adullam that Judas Maccabaeus, the principal leader of the Maccabean Revolt during a time of foreign dominion in the country, retired with his fighting men, after returning from war against the Idumaeans and the Seleucid general, Gorgias.[2][45][46][47][4] Adullam stood near the highway which later became the Roman road in the Valley of Elah, which road led from Jerusalem to Beit Gubrin.

As late as the early 4th century CE, Adullam was described by Eusebius as being "a very large village about ten [Roman] miles east of Eleutheropolis."[48]

Cave-like structure at the Upper site of Adullam

Ottoman period

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Adullam was an inhabited village in the late 16th century. An Ottoman tax ledger of 1596 lists ʻAyn al-Mayyā [sic] (Arabic: عين الميا) in the nahiya Ḫalīl (Hebron subdistrict), and where it is noted that it had thirty-six Muslim heads of households.[49] The copyist of the same tax ledger had erroneously mistaken the Arabic dal in the document for a nun, and which name has since been corrected by historical geographers Yoel Elitzur and Toledano to read ʻA'ïd el-Miah (Arabic: عيد الميا), based on the entry's number of fiscal unit in the daftar and its corresponding place on Hütteroth's map.[50][51] Local inhabitants grew wheat and barley, as well as cultivated olives. Total revenues accruing from the village for that year amounted to 5160 akçe.[52]

Biblical ruin of Adullam, the Lower site known as ʻAid al-Mieh (in foreground)

According to Conder, an ancient road, leading from Beit Sur to Isdud once passed through ʿAīd el Mâ (Adullam) and was still partially visible.[53]

French orientalist and archaeologist, Charles Clermont-Ganneau, visited the site in 1874 and wrote: "The place is absolutely uninhabited, except during the rainy season, when the herdsmen take shelter there for the night."[54]

The Arabs of Bayt Nattif in the 19th century, when asked about the meaning of the name of the nearby ruin, ʻA'ïd el-Miah, related their own legend about the origin of the name. According to their version, the name ʻA'ïd el-Miah = lit. "Holiday of the Hundred," revolves around an event that occurred there, years ago. According to their story, a large fight broke out on a holiday, in which a hundred people were killed and the settlement destroyed. In memory of the event, the ruins of the settlement were named ʻA'ïd el-Miah, which means "Holiday of the Hundred."[2] Scholars explain this as a case of 'popular etymology', where, in Palestinian toponyms, the original denotation of a town's name is often "re-interpreted" by its local population.[55]

Modern period

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In 1957, the establishment of the Adullam region (Hebrew: חבל עדולם) began, a settlement area comprising over 100,000 dunams (25,000 acres),[56] and bearing the name of the biblical city.[57] Near the mound, north of it, Moshav Aderet was established in 1958.

Surveys were conducted on the site in the years 1992 and 1999. As late as 2003, the archaeological site of Adullam, both, Upper and Lower, had not been excavated,[58] but by September of 2015, an excavation to a depth of 0.2 m in six squares of equal size was conducted in the surface of the Upper ruin, in hopes of determining the extent of the settlement at the site during the various periods from the relative distribution of the pottery.[12] The gathered pottery sherds found in situ dated from the Early Bronze Age to the Ottoman period.[59]

References

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  1. ^ Clermont-Ganneau 1875, p. 170
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Amit n.d., pp. 332–333
  3. ^ a b c Clermont-Ganneau 1875, p. 171
  4. ^ a b c d Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, p. 311 (s.v. Adullam)
  5. ^ Survey of Israel, Map 15-11 "Zurif", 1962.[:File:15-11-Zurif-1962.jpg]
  6. ^ Conder & Kitchener 1883, p. 311; On Palestine Exploration Fund Map: Hebron (Sheet XXI), the ruin of Khurbet 'Aid el Ma [sic] appears directly to the north of Khurbet esh-Sheikh Madhkur, in the valley below. The ancient ruin is distinguished by its many razed structures lying in a field the size of a football field, interspersed with terebinths, directly alongside a small paved road that runs parallel to the main RoglitAderet road: see Survey of Western Palestine, 1878 Map, Map 21: IAA, Wikimedia commons, as surveyed and drawn under the direction of Lieut. C.R. Conder and H.H. Kitchener, May 1878. Victor Guerin believed that there was once an Upper Adullam and a Lower Adullam.
  7. ^ Conder & Kitchener 1883, pp. 361–367.
  8. ^ a b Aharoni 1979, p. 429
  9. ^ Guérin 1869, pp. 338–339]
  10. ^ Conder 1879, pp. 156–158, citing M. Clermont-Ganneau.
  11. ^ Clermont-Ganneau 1875, p. 168
  12. ^ a b Radashkovsky & Liraz 2017, p. 1
  13. ^ Conder & Kitchener 1882, p. 441
  14. ^ Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement of 1875, pp. 173–174.
  15. ^ C.R. Conder, Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement of 1875, p. 145.
  16. ^ Tsafrir, Di Segni & Green 1994, p. 197
  17. ^ Abel 1933, p. 239
  18. ^ Avi-Yonah 1976, p. 111
  19. ^ Emerton 1975, pp. 343–344
  20. ^ Shaw 1993, p. 45
  21. ^ Conder 1879, p. 156, who wrote: "The term Shephelah is used in the Talmud to mean the low hills of soft limestone, which, as already explained, form a distinct district between the plain and the watershed mountains. The name Sifla, or Shephelah, still exists in four or five places within the region round Beit Jibrîn, and we can therefore have no doubt as to the position of that district, in which Adullam is to be sought. M. Clermont Ganneau was the fortunate explorer who first recovered the name, and I was delighted to find that Corporal Brophy had also collected it from half a dozen different people, without knowing that there was any special importance attaching to it. The title being thus recovered, without any leading question having been asked, I set out to examine the site, the position of which agrees almost exactly with the distance given by Jerome, between Eleutheropolis and Adullam—ten Roman miles."
  22. ^ Rainey 1983, p. 1
  23. ^ Rainey 1983, p. 3
  24. ^ DiVietro 2022, p. 133 (note 49)
  25. ^ Joshua 12:15
  26. ^ Joshua 15:33–35
  27. ^ Genesis 38:1
  28. ^ Ben-Yosef n.d., p. 31
  29. ^ Joshua 12:7–15
  30. ^ Joshua 14:1–2; Joshua 15:1–35
  31. ^ 1 Samuel 17:2
  32. ^ 1 Samuel 22:2
  33. ^ 2 Samuel 23:13–17
  34. ^ Beyer 1931, pp. 115, 129–134
  35. ^ 2 Chronicles 11:7
  36. ^ Naʾaman 1986, p. 6
  37. ^ Laato 1995, pp. 213–215, esp. p. 214 (note 19)
  38. ^ Rainey 1983, pp. 15–16
  39. ^ Micah 1:15, following the interpretation of the verse by Rashi.
  40. ^ Luckenbill, D.D. (1924). James Henry Breasted (ed.). The Annals of Sennacherib. Vol. 2. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. pp. 32–33. OCLC 610530695. As for Hezekiah, the Jew, who did not submit to my yoke, forty-six of his strong, walled cities, as well as the small cities in their neighborhood, which were without number...I besieged and took. Two-hundred thousand, and one-hundred and fifty people, great and small, male and female, horses, mules, asses, camels, cattle and sheep, without number, I brought away from them and counted as spoil. Himself, like a caged bird, I shut up in Jerusalem his royal city... The cities of his, which I had despoiled, I cut off from his land and to Mitinti, king of Ashdod, [and to] Padi, king of Ekron, [and to] Silli-bel, king of Gaza, I gave. And (thus) I diminished his land.
  41. ^ Faust 2012, pp. 140–143
  42. ^ Among the 24 books of the Hebrew canon, the Book of Ezra and the Book of Nehemiah are numbered as one book, and which, according to Babylonian Talmud (Baba Bathra 15a), was compiled by Ezra the Scribe.
  43. ^ Nehemiah 11:25–30
  44. ^ Ben-Yosef n.d., pp. 36–37 (s.v. סקירה היסטורית-ישובית&lrm, )
  45. ^ 2 Maccabees 12:32–38; Josephus (Antiquities 6.12.3.; 8.10.1.)
  46. ^ Clermont-Ganneau 1875, pp. 171–172
  47. ^ Rainey 1983, p. 18
  48. ^ Notley & Safrai 2005, pp. 27 (§77), 82 (§414). As for the word "east," this is not to be understood directly east in relation to Beit Gubrin (Eleutheropolis), as proven by other descriptions of biblical place names in Eusebius' writings, but can also mean "northeast", as in this case, or "southeast".
  49. ^ Hütteroth & Abdulfattah 1977, p. 122
  50. ^ Elitzur 2004, p. 137; (The number of fiscal unit in the daftar, corresponding to the map, is "P-17").
  51. ^ Toledano 1984, pp. 279–ff.
  52. ^ Hütteroth & Abdulfattah 1977, p. 122
  53. ^ Conder & Kitchener 1883, p. 318
  54. ^ Clermont-Ganneau 1896, p. 459
  55. ^ Zadok 1995–1997, p. 98
  56. ^ Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, p. 311 (s.v. Adullam Region)
  57. ^ Carta's Official Guide to Israel and Complete Gazetteer to all Sites in the Holy Land. (3rd edition 1993) Jerusalem, Carta, p. 71, ISBN 965-220-186-3
  58. ^ Chapmann III & Taylor 2003, p. 105
  59. ^ Radashkovsky & Liraz 2017, p. 2

Bibliography

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Further reading

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  • Albright, W.F. (1924). Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 15. pp. 3–ff.
  • Dalman, Gustaf (1913). Palästinajahrbuch, 9. pp. 33–ff. (in German)
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