Manasseh of Judah is mentioned in Assyrian …

Years: 669BCE - 658BCE

Manasseh of Judah is mentioned in Assyrian records as a contemporary and loyal vassal of Sennacherib's son and successor, Esarhaddon.

Assyrian records list Manasseh among twenty-two kings required to provide materials for Esarhaddon's building projects.

Esarhaddon’ son Ashurbanipal also names Manasseh as one of a number of vassals who assisted his campaign against Egypt.

The Assyrian records are consistent with archaeological evidence of demographic trends and settlement patterns suggesting a period of stability in Judah during Manasseh's reign.

Despite the criticisms of his religious policies in the biblical texts, archaeologists such as Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman credit Manasseh with reviving Judah's rural economy, arguing that a possible Assyrian grant of most favored nation status stimulated the creation of an export market.

They argue that changes to the economic structure of the countryside would have required the cooperation of the 'countryside aristocracy', with restoration of worship at the high places a quid pro quo for this.

Apparent devastation of the fertile Shephelah during this period, coupled with growth of the population of the highlands and the southeast of the kingdom (especially in the Beersheba valley) during Manasseh's reign point to this possibility, as does evidence in the Gaza area of entrepôt trade, and an apparently flourishing olive oil industry at Ekron at the time.

The construction or reconstruction of forts at sites such as Arad and Horvat Uza, explored by Nadav Na'aman and others, is also argued by Finkelstein and Silberman to be evidence in support of this thesis, as they would have been needed to protect the trade routes.

However, Finkelstein and Silberman argue that the trade led to great disparities between rich and poor, which in turn gave rise to civil unrest.

As a result, the Deuteronomist author or editor of 2 Kings would later rework the traditions about Manasseh to portray his outward-looking involvement in trade as, effectively, apostasy.

Manasseh had reversed some of the religious reforms of his father Hezekiah, possibly for the economic reasons described above, restoring polytheistic worship in the Temple, for which he is condemned by the author of Kings. (2 Kings 21)

He builds altars to pagan gods. (2 Chronicles 33:1-10).

Hence, he is usually portrayed as the most wicked of the kings of Judah.

His reign may be described as reactionary in relation to his father's; and Kings suggests that he may have executed supporters of his father's reforms. (2 Kings 21:16).

According to 2 Chronicles 33:11-13, Manasseh was on one occasion brought in chains to the Assyrian king, presumably for suspected disloyalty.

However, neither 2 Kings 21 nor Assyrian records mention either Manasseh’s captivity or repentance.

Such captive kings were usually treated with great cruelty: they were brought before the conqueror with a hook or ring passed through their lips or their jaws, having a cord attached to it, by which they were led (see also 2 Kings 19:28).

The severity of Manasseh's imprisonment brought him to repentance.

The verse in Chronicles, edifying but probably unhistorical, goes on to indicate that he was later treated well and restored to his throne, abandoning idolatry, removing foreign idols (2 Chronicles 33:15) and enjoining the people to worship in the traditional Israelite manner. (2 Chronicles 33:16)

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