- Ahab
Ahab (or Ach'av or Hebrew Name|אַחְאָב|Aḥʼav|ʼAḥăʼāḇ, ʼAḫʼāḇ|"Brother of the father") was king of Israel and the son and successor of
Omri ("1 Kings" 16:29-34).William F. Albright dated his reign to 869 BC-850 BC, whileE. R. Thiele offered the dates 874 BC-853 BC.Biography
He married Jezebel, the daughter of King
Ithobaal I of Tyre, and the alliance was doubtless the means of procurin. During Ahab's reign,Moab , which had been conquered by his father, remained tributary; Judah, with whose king,Jehoshaphat , he was allied by marriage, was probably his vassal; only withAram Damascus is he said to have had strained relations.The one event mentioned by external sources is the
Battle of Qarqar (perhaps at Apamea), whereShalmaneser III ofAssyria fought a great confederation of princes fromCilicia , NorthernSyria , Israel,Ammon and the tribes of the Syrian desert (853 BC). Here Ahab ("A-ha-ab-bu mat") ("Adad-'idri"), Ahab's contribution being reckoned at 2,000chariot s and 10,000 men. The numbers are comparatively large and possibly include forces from Tyre, Judah,Edom andMoab . The Assyrian king claimed a victory, but his immediate return and subsequent expeditions in 849 BC and 846 BC against a similar but unspecified coalition seem to show that he met with no lasting success. According to theTanakh , however, Ahab with 7,000 troops had previously overthrownBen-hadad and his thirty-two kings, who had come to lay siege to Samaria, and in the following year obtained a decisive victory over him at Aphek, probably in theplain of Sharon atAntipatris ("1 Kings" 20). A treaty was made whereby Ben-hadad restored the cities which his father had taken from Ahab's father (that is, Omri, but see 15:20, "2 Kings" 13:25), and trading facilities between Damascus and Samaria were granted.A late popular story (20:35-42, akin in tone to 12:33-13:34) condemned Ahab for his leniency and foretold the destruction of the king and his land. Three years later, war broke out on the east of the
Jordan River , and Ahab with Jehoshaphat of Judah went to recover Ramoth-Gilead and was mortally wounded (ch. 22). He was succeeded by his sons (Ahaziah and Jehoram).It is very difficult to obtain any clear idea of the order of these events (the
Septuagint places "1 Kings" 21 immediately after 19). How the hostile kings of Israel and Syria came to fight a common enemy, and how to correlate the Assyrian and Biblical records, are questions which have perplexed all recent writers. The reality of the difficulties will be apparent from the fact that it has been suggested that the Assyrian scribe wrote "Ahab" for his son "Jehoram", and that the very identification of the name with Ahab of Israel has been questioned.Legacy
While the above passages from "1 Kings" view Ahab not unfavourably, there are others which are less friendly. The murder of
Naboth (see Jezebel), an act of royal encroachment, stirred up popular resentment just as the new cult aroused the opposition of certain of the prophets. Indeed, he is referred to, for this and other things as being "more evil than all the kings before him".The latter found their champion in Elijah, whose history reflects the prophetic teaching of more than one age. His denunciation of the royal dynasty, and his emphatic insistence on the worship of Yahweh and Him alone, form the key note to a period which culminated in the accession ofJehu , an event in which Elijah's chosen discipleElisha was the leading figure.
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