Chattanooga Times Free Press

New exhibit depicts life and war in Biblical times

- BY ANDREW SCHWARTZ STAFF WRITER

COLLEGEDAL­E — Thousands of years ago, the kingdom of Judah was under attack. Among the few remaining records of that? The Bible, which says an angel vanquished the troops of an aggressive Assyrian king — and thus miraculous­ly saved the city of Jerusalem.

Records produced by that attacking king, Sennacheri­b, centered a different, perhaps more personally flattering story, however. An elaborate display found in the ruins of his ancient palace focused not on his failure in Jerusalem, but rather on his successful conquest of a prominent nearby city: Lachish.

Lachish, which itself receives only passing mention in the Bible, has for years been studied by researcher­s from Southern Adventist University in Collegedal­e, who, through excavation­s and analysis, sought to learn more about that

Old Testament time and place through the pottery, tools and detritus its people left behind.

Among their finds was an ivory lice comb, carrying what may be the oldest complete sentence yet found in the ancient Canaanite writing system — a precursor to the modern alphabet.

Now, the university has opened an exhibit at its campus featuring many other finds from the excavation. The exhibit depicts the daily life and destructio­n of Lachish, the archaeolog­ical efforts that helped bring that history to light, as well as the challenges of decipherin­g an elusive and sparsely preserved historical record, itself inevitably shaped by interested parties of the past.

“Archaeolog­y is often a lot of guesswork,” said Michael Hasel, who directs the university’s Institute of Archaeolog­y and co-led the excavation.

At the exhibit Monday, he said the historical record of Lachish comes from an

uncommon diversity of sources — and thus its story can be told in an uncommonly balanced way.

Lachish had been the subject of three prior archaeolog­ical

expedition­s, all of which were disrupted by the ongoing tumult of a politicall­y unstable region.

For example, the British

archaeolog­ist who led the first expedition was murdered in 1938, during the sixth digging season, when his car was ambushed. The motives remain unclear, the Southern Adventist University exhibit said.

Hasel’s own five-year expedition was itself disrupted in 2014, when hundreds of rockets flew overhead from Gaza amid escalating tensions in the region, Hasel remembered. The researcher­s evacuated and left their work for the next year.

Archaeolog­ical digs often take place slowly, as workers comb through stratified layers of earth, which generally correspond to specific time periods. For years, Southern Adventist University students along with counterpar­ts from research institutio­ns around the world awoke at 4 a.m. for long days of digging and mapping and organizing before passing their findings to profession­al researcher­s like Hasel for further analysis.

That analysis has been taking place ever since — and one of its early products is the new exhibit titled “Peace and War: The Assyrian Conquest of Lachish.”

Though the team’s excavation efforts focused in part on prior, lesser known periods, the exhibit centers on a time depicted extensivel­y in the Book of Isaiah and other Old Testament texts: the Assyrian invasion of a region standing between it and Egypt, the other great nearby empire of the time.

Judah formed the southern part of that buffer region, and attackers came through Lachish and other cities before making their way to Jerusalem, where, according to the Bible, they were defeated with divine help.

After the discussion of archaeolog­ical history, the exhibit depicts life in peacetime Lachish, showcasing tools of commerce such as looms or domestic life such as bowls.

The exhibit was mapped out before the arrival of the objects themselves, which are on loan from the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority until May of 2025, for the duration of the exhibit, Hasel said.

The objects were flown via Lufthansa Airlines to Atlanta before being driven to the university along with a high-ranking Israeli courier.

Forklifts were ready when the projects arrived, Hasel said. The objects had to remain in their specialize­d packaging for a couple of days as they adjusted to the new climate, before they were opened and arranged near the plaques that had, generally, already been written and placed, Hasel said.

By around 700 BCE, the Assyrians, who had already swept through Northern Israel, had their sights on Judah. In the Biblical account, the prophets warned the king of Judah, Hezekiah, that the wicked faith systems running rampant through his land would sow its destructio­n.

The Bible notes Hezekiah’s efforts to root out rogue worship, Hasel said, “but he evidently didn’t get rid of it completely.”

The Assyrians attacked Judah and burned much of it to the ground, as was their custom.

After Jerusalem, Judah’s next most prominent city was Lachish, Hasel said. The exhibit shows a threedimen­sional model of the battle for the city, as well as physical remnants researcher­s unearthed, like slingshot balls and armor.

The exhibit also, of course, displays the historical records left by Sennacheri­b, the Assyrian king, whose old palace around present-day Iraq featured displays prominentl­y and vividly depicting the battle for Lachish.

Those and other records from the Assyrian king tend to to be triumphali­st in nature. His army continued toward Jerusalem, Hasel said. Though they were ultimately defeated, in his annals recounting the events in Judah, the Assyrian king describes his counterpar­t sitting in Jerusalem, like a bird in a cage.

The Assyrian record goes no farther, Hasel said.

“And the Biblical record says, ‘yeah, but that was for one night.’”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ANDREW SCHWARTZ ?? Southern Adventist University archaeolog­ist Michael Hasel peers down Monday at an artist’s model of the ancient Assyrian attack on Lachish.
STAFF PHOTO BY ANDREW SCHWARTZ Southern Adventist University archaeolog­ist Michael Hasel peers down Monday at an artist’s model of the ancient Assyrian attack on Lachish.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ANDREW SCHWARTZ ?? A recreated loom is shown Monday at Southern Adventist University.
STAFF PHOTO BY ANDREW SCHWARTZ A recreated loom is shown Monday at Southern Adventist University.

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