The Philistine cities of the Pentapolis are …
Years: 993BCE - 982BCE
The Philistine cities of the Pentapolis are ruled by seranim (“lords”) until after the Philistines are finally defeated in the tenth century by David, according to the Bible, when the seranim are replaced by kings.
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Showing 10 events out of 66882 total
David finally defeats the Amalekites, a nomadic tribe, listed in Genesis 36:12 as descended from Esau, who have been more or less constant enemies of Israel.
Numerous revolts, two led by his own sons, plague the latter part of David's reign.
In one of them, his son Absalom raises a rebel army against him, forcing David to take refuge in the rugged and fertile highlands of Gilead, east of the Jordan and northeast of the Dead Sea.
Absalom fails in his attempt and, while fleeing, is caught by his long hair in a tree, then killed by Joab, the commander of David’s loyalist forces.
David’s counselor Ahithopel, who had joined Absalom’s revolt, hangs himself.
Osorkon the Elder, the son of Shoshenq, the Great Chief of the Ma by the latter's wife Mehtenweskhet who is given the prestigious title of King's Mother in a document, in 992 BCE becomes the fifth king of the twenty-first dynasty of Egypt; he is the first pharaoh of Libyan extraction in Egypt.
The reign of King Zhao, which had begun, supposedly, in 996 BCE, has occurred at a point when the Zhou Dynasty had expanded across the Zhouyuan or central plains of China and turned its attention to South China.
In 977, Zhao is killed and his campaigning army wiped out south of the Han river, establishing the limit of direct control of the south during the Western Zhou Dynasty.
Zhao’s son Mu succeeds him as the fifth sovereign of the Zhou Dynasty.
The early Western Zhou supports a strong military split into two major units: “The Six Armies of the West” and “The Eight Armies of Chengzhou”.
The armies campaigns in the northern Loess Plateau, modern Ningxia and the Huanghe floodplain.
The military prowess of Zhou peaks during the nineteenth year of King Zhao's reign, when the Six Armies are wiped out along with King Zhao on a campaign around the Han River.
Ashur-rabi II, one of the longest-reigning kings of Assyria, has reigned for forty-one years.
Little is known about his reign, of which few records survive.
He was apparently a younger son of Ashurnasirpal I.
He had become king in 1013 BCE following the reigns of his elder brother, Shalmaneser II, and his nephew Ashur-nirari IV, and reigns until his death in 972 BCE, when he is succeeded by his son Ashur-resh-ishi II.
Bethlehem-born David, a member of the Israelite tribe of Judah is, according to the Bible, the second of the Israelite kings (after Saul, of the tribe of Ephraim), reigning from about 1000 BCE to about 962 BCE.
He establishes what Bible Scholars will call the United Monarchy over the twelve tribes of Israel, with Jerusalem as its capital.
In Jewish tradition, this talented, violent, passionate, adulterous, murdering, but eminently pious ruler will become the ideal king, the founder of an enduring dynasty, around whose figure and reign will cluster messianic expectations of the Jews.
He is also held in high esteem in the Islamic tradition.
David is, according to the Bible, a redhead.
Hori, son of Nespaneferhor, is inducted into the Priesthood at Karnak during the reign of Neterkheperre or Netjerkheperre-setepenamun Siamun, the sixth pharaoh of Egypt during the Twenty-first dynasty, a Year Seventeen I Shemu day [lost], as recorded in an inscription in fragment 3B, lines 3-5 dated to Siamun from the Karnak Priestly Annals.
This date was a lunar Tepi Shemu feast day, and based on the calculation of this lunar Tepi Shemu feast, Year Seventeen of Siamun has been shown by the German Egyptologist Rolf Krauss to be equivalent to 970 BCE.
Hence, Siamun would have taken the throne in 986 BCE, about sixteen years earlier.
A stela dated to Siamun's Year Sixteen records a land-sale between some minor priests of Ptah at Memphis.
The Year Seventeen inscription is an important palaeographical development because it is the first time in Egyptian recorded history that the word pharaoh is employed as a title and linked directly to a king's royal name—as in Pharaoh Siamun here.
References to Pharaoh Psusennes (Psusennes II here), Pharaoh Shoshenq, Pharaoh Osorkon and so forth will henceforth become commonplace.
Prior to Siamun's reign and all throughout the Middle and New Kingdom, the word pharaoh referred only to the office of the king.
One fragmentary but well known surviving triumphal relief scene from the Temple of Amun at Tanis depicts an Egyptian pharaoh smiting his enemies with a mace.
The king's name is explicitly given as [(Neterkheperre Setepenamun) Siamun, beloved of Am(un)] in the relief and there can be no doubt that this person was Siamun as the eminent British Egyptologist, Kenneth Kitchen stresses in his book, On the Reliability of the Old Testament.
Siamun appears here "in typical pose brandishing a mace to strike down prisoners(?) now lost at the right except for two arms and hands, one of which grasps a remarkable double-bladed ax by its socket."
The writer observes that this double bladed ax or 'halbread' has a flared crescent shaped blade which is close in form to the Aegean influenced double ax but is quite distinct from the Palestinian/Canaanite double headed ax, which has a different shape that resembles an X.
Thus, Kitchen concludes Siamun's foes were the Philistines who were descendants of the Aegean-based Sea Peoples and that Siamun was commemorating his recent victory over them at Gezer by depicting himself in a formal battle scene relief at the Temple in Tanis.
Ashur-resh-ishi II, who had succeeded his long-reigning father Ashur-rabi II in 972, has reigned as King of Assyria until his death in 967 BCE, when he is succeeded by his son, Tiglath-Pileser II.
His reign, about which little is known, is a time of political eclipse for Assyria.
China’s Zhou Dynasty is at its peak during the reign of Mu Wang, perhaps the most pivotal emperor of dynasty.
He is reputed to have lived until the age of one hundred and five and reigned nearly sixty-six years, from about 1023 BCE to about 957 BCE.
He liked to travel, and in particular visited the Kunlun Mountains several times during his reign. (The actual place for Kunlun Mountains would be somewhere close to today's Jiuquan County, Gansu Province. Mount Kunlun, extending for almost two thousand miles, from Kara-Kunlun bordering Tibet in the west to Qilian Mountain in the east, is a source of many Chinese myths and legends.)
King Mu, more ambitious than wise, had tried to stamp out invaders in the western part of China and ultimately expand Zhou's influence to the east.
In the height of his passion for conquests, he led an immense army against the Jung tribes, supposedly native to India, that had colonized the western part of China.
His visits and travels allowed him to contact many tribes and swayed them to either join under the Zhou banner or be conquered in war with his mighty army.
This expedition must have been more of a failure than a success, proven by the fact that he brought back only four white wolves and four white deer.
Unintentionally and inadvertently, he thus sowed the seeds of hatred, which will culminate in an invasion of China by the same tribes in 771 BCE.
